FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   437   438   439   440   441   442   443   444   445   446   447   448   449   450   451   452   453   454   455   456   457   458   459   460   461  
462   463   464   465   466   467   468   >>  
he churches had been enriched generation after generation by wealthy penitence, which had thus purchased absolution for crime and smoothed a pathway to heaven. And now, for the space of only six or seven summer days and nights, there raged a storm by which all these treasures were destroyed. Nearly every one of these temples was entirely rifled of its contents; not for the purpose of plunder, but of destruction. Hardly a province or a town escaped. Art must forever weep over this bereavement; Humanity must regret that the reforming is thus always ready to degenerate into the destructive principle; but it is impossible to censure very severely the spirit which prompted the brutal, but not ferocious deed. Those statues, associated as they were with the remorseless persecution which had so long desolated the provinces, had ceased to be images. They had grown human and hateful, so that the people arose and devoted them to indiscriminate massacre. No doubt the iconoclastic fury is to be regretted; for such treasures can scarcely be renewed. The age for building and decorating great cathedrals is past. Certainly, our own age, practical and benevolent, if less poetical, should occupy itself with the present, and project itself into the future. It should render glory to God rather by causing wealth to fertilize the lowest valleys of humanity, than by rearing gorgeous temples where paupers are to kneel. To clothe the naked, redeem the criminal, feed the hungry, less by alms and homilies than by preventive institutions and beneficent legislation; above all, by the diffusion of national education, to lift a race upon a level of culture hardly attained by a class in earlier times, is as lofty a task as to accumulate piles of ecclesiastical splendor. It would be tedious to recount in detail the events which characterized the remarkable image-breaking in the Netherlands. As Antwerp was the central point in these transactions, and as there was more wealth and magnificence in the great cathedral of that city than in any church of northern Europe, it is necessary to give a rapid outline of the events which occurred there. From its exhibition in that place the spirit every where will best be shown. The Church of Our Lady, which Philip had so recently converted into a cathedral, dated from the year 1124, although it may be more fairly considered a work of the fourteenth century. Its college of canons had been founded in another lo
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   437   438   439   440   441   442   443   444   445   446   447   448   449   450   451   452   453   454   455   456   457   458   459   460   461  
462   463   464   465   466   467   468   >>  



Top keywords:

temples

 

treasures

 
events
 

spirit

 

cathedral

 

wealth

 

generation

 

culture

 

education

 
lowest

earlier
 

attained

 

fertilize

 
causing
 
diffusion
 

rearing

 

redeem

 
accumulate
 

criminal

 
gorgeous

paupers

 
clothe
 
hungry
 

legislation

 

valleys

 

beneficent

 
institutions
 

humanity

 

homilies

 
preventive

national
 

Philip

 

recently

 

converted

 

Church

 

exhibition

 

college

 

considered

 

fourteenth

 
century

canons
 
fairly
 

founded

 

occurred

 

outline

 
remarkable
 

breaking

 

Netherlands

 

characterized

 

detail