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The Lives of the Saints Volume 1 - St. Patrick's Basilica

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www.freecatholicebooks.com<br />

sent a substitute to dictate for him; so exact and punctual he was in<br />

his duty as a pr<strong>of</strong>essor. I never knew one more ready to go to <strong>the</strong><br />

confession-seat, at <strong>the</strong> first intimation <strong>of</strong> any, even <strong>the</strong> least or<br />

youngest boy. He heard his penitents with wonderful meekness; and his<br />

penetration, learning, judgment, and piety, were such as to move <strong>the</strong>m to<br />

place in him a singular confidence. He frequently visited <strong>the</strong> military<br />

hospital, to instruct, exhort, and hear <strong>the</strong> confessions <strong>of</strong> Irish<br />

soldiers. He sometimes assembled a number <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong>m (when <strong>the</strong>y happened to<br />

be quartered in Douay) in <strong>the</strong> college-church <strong>of</strong> <strong>St</strong>. Thomas <strong>of</strong><br />

Canterbury, and preached to <strong>the</strong>m. In one <strong>of</strong> his sermons I remember he<br />

told <strong>the</strong>m, for <strong>the</strong>ir example and encouragement, that <strong>the</strong>re are more<br />

soldiers saints than <strong>of</strong> any o<strong>the</strong>r vocation, or state, or condition. As<br />

poor, and <strong>of</strong>ten distressed, Irish men and women frequently came to<br />

Douay, he was always ready to relieve <strong>the</strong>m, and administer both corporal<br />

and spiritual succors. It can never be forgotten what attention,<br />

solicitude, and care he had, in <strong>the</strong> year 1745, <strong>of</strong> our English soldiers,<br />

wounded and maimed, who were brought prisoners to Douay, and quartered<br />

in <strong>the</strong> barracks, in great numbers, after <strong>the</strong> battle <strong>of</strong> Fontenoy. He<br />

animated both by words and example all <strong>the</strong> young priests, and all in<br />

holy orders at <strong>the</strong> college, to visit <strong>the</strong>m, to instruct and instil into<br />

<strong>the</strong>m serious thoughts <strong>of</strong> saving <strong>the</strong>ir souls by embracing <strong>the</strong> only saving<br />

faith, and by true repentance.{018} He also procured for <strong>the</strong>m temporal<br />

succor and relief so beneficently, that <strong>the</strong> duke <strong>of</strong> Cumberland, <strong>the</strong>n<br />

generalissimo <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> British and allied armies, being informed <strong>of</strong> it,<br />

promised him a special protection whensoever he came over into England.<br />

Scarce any thing affords one a better pro<strong>of</strong> <strong>of</strong> Mr. Alban's eminent<br />

spirit <strong>of</strong> piety and great understanding, discretion, and light in<br />

spiritual matters, than his familiarity and friendship with M. Jean<br />

Baptiste de Villérs, president <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> seminary des Evéques in <strong>the</strong><br />

university <strong>of</strong> Douay, who died October <strong>the</strong> 7th, 1746, <strong>the</strong> death <strong>of</strong> a<br />

saint, after having lived <strong>the</strong> life <strong>of</strong> one for seventy-eight years. This<br />

M. de Villérs was eminent in all supernatural and moral virtues, but he<br />

concealed <strong>the</strong>m under an amiable simplicity, and a plain unaffected<br />

behavior or exterior, unless charity and zeal for <strong>the</strong> glory <strong>of</strong> God and<br />

salvation <strong>of</strong> souls required <strong>the</strong>ir open and full exertion; and,<br />

notwithstanding his great learning, (which he had acquired by an<br />

excellent genius and diligent application to sacred studies,) and his<br />

great and solid fund <strong>of</strong> piety, he was as docile as an infant; so<br />

timorous and diffident <strong>of</strong> his own judgment, that he would nei<strong>the</strong>r do nor<br />

decide any thing without counsel. With this sentiment <strong>of</strong> diffidence and<br />

humility, he <strong>of</strong>ten visited (says M. Leroy, <strong>the</strong> faithful imitator and<br />

writer <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> history <strong>of</strong> his life) a young pr<strong>of</strong>essor, a foreigner, (that<br />

is, Alban Butler,) and passed an hour or two in his company in <strong>the</strong><br />

afternoon, once every week, and sometimes twice, several years, until<br />

his edifying death. <strong>The</strong>ir conversation toge<strong>the</strong>r was solely about various<br />

points <strong>of</strong> morality; about <strong>the</strong> direction <strong>of</strong> souls, and <strong>the</strong> method <strong>of</strong>

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