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1. "And God said Let the earth bring forth grass, the herb
yielding seed, and the fruit tree yielding fruit after his kind, whose
seed is in itself." It was deep wisdom that commanded the earth,
when it rested after discharging the weight of the waters, first to
bring forth grass, then wood as we see it doing still at this time.
For the voice that was then heard and this command were aS a natural
and permanent law for it; it gave fertility and the power to produce
fruit for all ages to come; "Let the earth bring forth." The
production of vegetables shows first germination. When the germs begin
to sprout they form grass; this develops and becomes a plant, which
insensibly receives its different articulations, and reaches its
maturity in the seed. Thus all things which sprout and are green are
developed. "Let the earth bring forth green grass." Let the earth
bring forth by itself without having any need of help from without.
Some consider the sun as the source of all productiveness on the
earth. It is, they say, the action of the sun's heat which attracts
the vital force from the centre of the earth to the surface. The
reason why the adornment of the earth was before the sun is the
following; that those who worship the sun, as the source of life, may
renounce their error. If they be well persuaded that the earth was
adorned before the genesis of the sun, they will retract their
unbounded admiration for it, because they see grass and plants vegetate
before it rose. If then the food for the flocks was prepared, did our
race appear less worthy of a like solicitude? He, who provided
pasture for horses and cattle, thought before all of your riches and
pleasures. If he fed your cattle, it was to provide for all the needs
of your life. And what object was there in the bringing forth of
grain, if not for your subsistence? Moreover, many grasses and
vegetables serve for the food of man.
2. "Let the earth bring forth grass yielding seed after his kind."
So that although some kind of grass is of service to animals, even
their gain is our gain too, and seeds are especially designed for our
use. Such is the true meaning of the words that I have i quoted.
"Let the earth bring forth grass, the herb yielding seed after his
kind." this manner we can re-establish the order of the words, of
which the construction seems faulty in the actual version, and the
economy of nature will be rigorously observed. In fact, first comes
germination, then verdure, then the growth of the plant, which alter
having attained its full growth arrives at perfection in seed.
How then, they say, can Scripture describe all the plants of the
earth as seed-bearing, when the reed, couch-grass, mint, crocus,
garlic, and the flowering rush and countless other species, produce no
seed? To this we reply that many vegetables have their seminal virtue
in the lower part and in the roots. The need, for example, after its
annual growth sends forth a protuberance from its roots, which takes
the place of seed for future trees. Numbers of other vegetables are
the same and all over the earth reproduce by the roots. Nothing then
is truer than that each plant produces its seed or contains some seminal
virtue; this is what is meant by "after its kind." So that the
shoot of a reed does not produce an olive tree, but from a reed grows
another reed, and from one sort of seed a plant of the same sort always
germinates. Thus, all which sprang from the earth, in its first
bringing forth, is kept the same to our time, thanks to the constant
reproduction of kind.
"Let the earth bring forth." See how, at this short word, at this
brief command, the cold and sterile earth travailed and hastened to
bring forth its fruit, as it east away its sad and dismal covering to
clothe itself in a more brilliant robe, proud of its proper adornment
and displaying the infinite variety of plants.
I want creation to penetrate you with so much admiration that
everywhere, wherever you may be, the least plant may bring to yon the
clear remembrance of the Creator. If you see the grass of the
fields, think of human nature, and remember the comparison of the wise
Isaiah. "All flesh is grass, and all the goodliness thereof is as
the flower of the field." Truly the rapid flow of life, the short
gratification and pleasure that an instant of happiness gives a man,
all wonderfully suit the comparison of the prophet. To-day he is
vigorous in body, fattened by luxury, and in the prime of life, with
complexion fair like the flowers, strong and powerful and of
irresistible energy; tomorrow and he will be an object of pity,
withered by age or exhausted by sickness. Another shines in all the
splendour of a brilliant fortune. and around him are a multitude of
flatterers, an escort of false friends on the track of his good
graces; a crowd of kinsfolk, but of no true kin; a swarm Of servants
who crowd after him to provide for his food and for all his needs; and
in his comings and goings this innumerable suite, which he drags after
him, excites the envy of all whom he meets. To fortune may be added
power in the State, honours bestowed by the imperial throne, the
government of a province, or the command of armies; a herald who
precedes him is crying in a loud voice; lictors right and left also
fill his subjects with awe, blows, confiscations, banishments,
imprisonments, and all the means by which he strikes intolerable terror
into all whom he has to rule. And what then? One night, a fever, a
pleurisy, or an inflammation of the lungs, snatches away this man from
the midst of men, stripped in a moment of all his stage accessories,
and all this, his glory, is proved a mere dream. Therefore the
Prophet has compared human glory to the weakest flower.
3. Up to this point, the order in which plants shoot bears witness
to their first arrangement. Every herb, every plant proceeds from a
germ. If, like the couch-grass and the crocus, it throws out a
shoot from its root and from this lower protuberance, it must always
germinate and start outwards. If it proceeds from a seed, there is
still, by necessity, first a germ, then the sprout, theft green
foliage, and finally the fruit which ripens upon a stalk hitherto dry
and thick. "Let the earth bring forth grass." When the seed falls
into the earth, which contains the right combination of heat and
moisture, it swells and becomes porous, and, grasping the surrounding
earth, attracts to itself all that is suitable for it and that has
affinity to it. These particles of earth, however small they may be,
as they fall and insinuate themselves into all the pores of the seed,
broaden its bulk and make it send forth roots below, and shoot
upwards, sending forth stalks no less numerous than the roots. As the
germ is always growing warm, the moisture, pumped up through the
roots, and helped by the attraction of heat, draws a proper amount of
nourishment from the soil, and distributes it to the stem, to the
bark, to the husk, to the steel itself and to the beards with which it
is armed. It is owing to these successive accretions that each plant
attains its natural development, as well corn as vegetables, herbs or
brushwood. A single plant, a blade of grass is sufficient to occupy
all your intelligence in the contemplation of the skill which produced
it. Why is the wheat stalk better with joints? Are they not like
fastenings, which help it to bear easily the weight of the ear, when
it is swollen with fruit and bends towards the earth? Thus, whilst
oats, which have no weight to bear at the top, are without these
supports, nature has provided them for wheat. It has hidden the grain
in a case, so that it may not be exposed to birds' pillage, and has
furnished it with a rampart of barbs, which, like darts, protect it
against the attacks of tiny creatures.
4. What shall I say? What shall I leave unsaid? In the rich
treasures of creation it is difficult to select what is most precious;
the loss of what is omitted is too severe. "Let the earth bring forth
grass;" and instantly, with useful plants, appear noxious plants;
with corn, hemlock; with the other nutritious plants, hellebore,
monkshood, mandrake and the juice of the poppy. What then? Shall we
show no gratitude for so many beneficial gifts, and reproach the
Creator for those which may be harmful to our life? And shall we not
reflect that all has not been created in view of the wants of our
bellies? The nourishing plants, which are destined for our use, are
close at hand, and known by all the world. But in creation nothing
exists without a reason. The blood of the bull is a poison: ought
this animal then, whose strength is so serviceable to man, not to have
been created, or, if created, to have been bloodless? But you have
sense enough in yourself to keep you free froth deadly things. What!
Sheep and goats know how to turn away from what threatens their life,
discerning danger by instinct alone: and you, who have reason and the
art of medicine to supply what you need, and the experience of your
forebears to tell you to avoid all that is dangerous, you tell me that
you find it difficult to keep yourself from poisons! But not a single
thing has been created without reason, not a single thing is useless.
One serves as food to some animal; medicine has found in another a
relief for one of our maladies. Thus the starling eats hemlock, its
constitution rendering it insusceptible to the action of the poison.
Thanks to the tenuity of the pores of its heart, the malignant juice
is on sooner swallowed than it is digested, before its chill can attack
the vital parts. The quail, thanks to its peculiar temperament,
whereby it escapes the dangerous effects, feeds on hellebore. There
are even circumstances where poisons are useful to men; with mandrake
doctors give us sleep; with opium they lull violent pain. Hemlock has
ere now been used to appease the rage of unruly diseases; and many
times hellebore has taken away long standing disease. These plants,
then, instead of making you accuse the Creator, give you a new
subject for gratitude.
5. "Let the earth bring forth grass." What spontaneous provision
is included in these words,--that which is present in the root, in
the plant itself, and in the fruit, as well as that which our labour
and husbandry add! God did not command the earth immediately to give
forth seed and fruit, but to produce germs, to grow green, and to
arrive at maturity in the seed; so that this first command teaches
nature what she has to do in the course of ages. But, they ask, is
it true that the earth produces seed after his kind, when often, after
having sown wheat, we gather black grain? This is not a change of
kind, but an alteration, a disease of the grain. It has not ceased
to be wheat; it is on account of having been burnt that it is black,
as one can learn from its name. If a severe frost had burnt it, it
would have had another colour and a different flavour. They even
pretend that, if it could find suitable earth and moderate
temperature, it might return to its first form. Thus, you find
nothing in nature contrary to the divine command. As to the darnel and
all those bastard grains which mix themselves with the harvest, the
tares of Scripture, far from being a variety of corn, have their own
origin and their own kind; image of those who alter the doctrine of the
Lord and, not being rightly instructed in the word, but, corrupted
by the teaching of the evil one, mix themselves with the sound body of
the Church to spread their pernicious errors secretly among purer
souls. The Lord thus compares the perfection of those who believe in
Him to the growth of seed, "as if a man should cast seed into the
ground; and should sleep and rise, night and day, and the seed should
spring and grow up, he knoweth not how. For the earth bringeth forth
fruit of herself; first the blade, then the ear, after that the full
corn in the ear." "Let the earth bring forth grass." In a moment
earth began by germination to obey the laws of the Creator, completed
every stage of growth, and brought germs to perfection. The meadows
were covered with deep grass, the fertile plains quivered with
harvests, and the movement of the corn was like the waving of the sea.
Every plant, every herb, the smallest shrub, the least vegetable,
arose from the earth in all its luxuriance. There was no failure in
this first vegetation: no husbandman's inexperience, no inclemency of
the weather, nothing could injure it; then the sentence of
condemnation was not fettering the earth's fertility. All this was
before the sin which condemned us to eat our bread by the sweat of our
brow.
6. "Let the earth," the Creator adds, "bring forth the fruit
tree yielding fruit after his kind, whose seed is in itself."
At this command every copse was thickly planted; all the trees, fir,
cedar, cypress, pine, rose to their greatest height, the shrubs were
straightway clothed with thick foliage. The plants called
crown-plants, roses, myrtles, laurels, did not exist; in one
moment they came into being, each one with its distinctive
peculiarities. Most marked differences separated them from other
plants, and each one was distinguished by a character of its own. But
then the rose was without thorns; since then the thorn has been added
to its beauty, to make us feel that sorrow is very near to pleasure,
and to remind us of our sin, which condemned the earth to produce
thorns and caltrops. But, they say, the earth has received the
command to produce trees "yielding fruit whose seed was in itself,"
and we see many trees which have neither fruit, nor seed. What shall
we reply? First, that only the more important trees are mentioned;
and then, that a careful examination will show us that every tree has
seed, or some property which takes the place of it. The black
poplar, the willow, the elm, the white poplar, all the trees of this
family, do not produce any apparent fruit; however, an attentive
observer finds seed in each of them. This grain which is at the base
of the leaf, and which those who busy themselves with inventing words
call mischos, has the property of seed. And there are trees which
reproduce by their branches, throwing out roots from them. Perhaps we
ought even to consider as seeds the saplings which spring from the roots
of a tree: for cultivators tear them out to multiply the species.
But, we have already said, it is chiefly a question of the trees
which contribute most to out life; which offer their various fruits to
man and provide him with plentiful nourishment. Such is the vine,
which produces wine to make glad the heart of man; such is the olive
tree, whose fruit brightens his face with oil. How many things in
nature are combined in the same plant! In a vine, roots, green and
flexible branches, which spread themselves far over the earth, buds,
tendrils, bunches of sour grapes and ripe grapes. The sight of a
vine, when observed by an intelligent eye, serves to remind you of
your nature. Without doubt you remember the parable where the Lord
calls Himself a vine and His Father the husbandman, and every one of
us who are grafted by faith into the Church the branches. He invites
us to produce fruits in abundance, for fear lest our sterility should
condemn us to the fire. He constantly compares our souls to vines.
"My well beloved," says He, "hath a vineyard in a very fruitfull
hill," and elsewhere, I have "planted a vineyard and hedged it
round about." Evidently He calls human souls His vine, those souls
whom He has surrounded with the authority of His precepts and a guard
of angels. "The angel of the Lord encampeth round shout them that
fear him." And further: He has planted for us, so to say, props,
in establishing in His Church apostles, prophets, teachers; and
raising our thoughts by the example of the blessed in olden times, He
has not allowed them to drag on the earth and be crushed under foot.
He wishes that the claspings of love, like the tendrils of the vine,
should attach us to our neighbours and make us rest on them, so that,
in our continual aspirations towards heaven, we may imitate these
vines, which raise themselves to the tops of the tallest trees. He
also asks us to allow ourselves to be dug about; and that is what the
soul does when it disembarrasses itself from the cares of the world,
which are a weight on our hearts. He, then, who is freed from carnal
affections and from the love of riches, and, far from being dazzled by
them, disdains and despises this miserable vain glory, is, so to
say, dug about and at length breathes, free from the useless weight of
earthly thoughts. Nor must we, in the spirit of the parable, put
forth too much wood, that is to say, live with ostentation, and gain
the applause of the world; we must bring forth fruits, keeping the
proof of our works for the husbandman. Be "like a green olive tree in
the house of God," never destitute of hope, but decked through faith
with the bloom of salvation. Thus you will resemble the eternal
verdure of this plant and will rival it in fruitfulness, if each clay
sees you giving abundantly in alms.
7. But let us return to the examination of the ingenious contrivances
of creation. How many trees then arose, some to give us their
fruits, others to roof our houses, others to build our ships, others
to feed our fires! What a variety in the disposition of their several
parts! And yet, how difficult is it to find the distinctive property
of each of them, and to grasp the difference which separates them from
other species. Some strike deep roots, others do not; some shoot
straight up and have only one stem, others appear to love the earth
and, from their root upwards, divide into several shoots. Those
whose long branches stretch up afar into the air, have also deep roots
which spread within a large circumference, a true foundation placed by
nature to support the weight of the tree. What variety there is in
bark! Some plants have smooth bark, others rough, some have only one
layer, others several. What a marvellous thing! You may find in the
youth and age of plants resemblances to those of man. Young and
vigorous, their bark is distended; when they grow old, it is rough
and wrinkled. Cut one, it sends forth new buds; the other remains
henceforward sterile and as if struck with a mortal wound. But
further, it has been observed that pines, cut down, or even submitted
to the action of fire, are changed into a forest of oaks. We know
besides that the industry of agriculturists remedies the natural defects
of certain trees. Thus the sharp pomegranate and bitter almonds, if
the trunk of the tree is pierced near the root to introduce into the
middle of the pith a fat plug of pine, lose the acidity of their
juice, and become delicious fruits. Let not the sinner then despair
of himself, when he thinks, if agriculture can change the juices of
plants, the efforts of the soul to arrive at virtue, can certainly
triumph over all infirmities.
Now there is such a variety of fruits in fruit trees that it is beyond
all expression; a variety not only in the fruits of trees of different
families, but even in those of the same species, if it be true, as
gardeners say, that the sex of a tree influences the character of its
fruits. They distinguish male from female in palms; sometimes we see
those which they call female lower their branches, as though with
passionate desire. and invite the embraces of the male. Then, those
who take care of these plants shake over these palms the fertilizing
dust from the male palm-tree, the psen as they call it: the tree
appears to share the pleasures of enjoyment; then it raises its
branches, and its foliage resumes its usual form. The same is said of
the fig tree. Some plant wild fig trees near cultivated fig trees,
and there are others who, to remedy the weakness of the productive fig
tree of our gardens, attach to the branches unripe figs and so retain
the fruit which had already begun to drop and to be lost. What lesson
does nature here give us? That we must often borrow, even from those
who are strangers to the faith, a certain vigour to show forth good
works. If you see outside the Church, in pagan life, or in the
midst of a pernicious heresy, the example of virtue and fidelity to
moral laws, redouble your efforts to resemble the productive fig tree,
who by the side of the wild fig tree, gains strength, prevents the
fruit from being shed, and nourishes it with more care.
8. Plants reproduce themselves in so many different ways, that we
can only touch upon the chief among them. As to fruits themselves,
who could review their varieties, their forms, their colours, the
peculiar flavour, and the use of each of them? Why do some fruits
ripen when exposed bare to the rays of the sun, while others fill out
while encased in shells? Trees of which the fruit is tender have,
like the fig tree, a thick shade of leaves; those, on the contrary,
of which the fruits are stouter, like the nut, are only covered by a
light shade. The delicacy of the first requires more care; if the
latter had a thicker case, the shade of the leaves would be harmful.
Why is the vine leaf serrated, if not that the bunches of grapes may
at the same time resist the injuries of the air and receive through the
openings all the rays of the sun? Nothing has been done without
motive, nothing by chance. All shows ineffable wisdom.
What discourse can touch all? Can the human mind make an exact
review, remark every distinctive property, exhibit all the
differences, unveil with certainty so many mysterious causes? The
same water, pumped up through the root, nourishes in a different way
the root itself, the bark of the trunk, the wood and the pith. It
becomes leaf, it distributes itself among the branches and twigs and
makes the fruits swell -- it gives to the plant its gum and its sap.
Who will explain to us the difference between all these? There is a
difference between the gum of the mastich and the juice of the balsam,
a difference between that which distils in Egypt arid Libya from the
fennel. Amber is, they say, the crystallized sap of plants. And
for a proof, see the bits of straws and little insects which have been
caught in the sap while still liquid and imprisoned there. In one
word, no one without long experience could find terms to express the
virtue of it. How, again, does this water become wine in the vine,
and oil in the olive tree? Yet what is marvellous is, not to see it
become sweet in one fruit, fat and unctuous in another, but to see in
sweet fruits an inexpressible variety of flavour. There is one
sweetness of the grape, another of the apple, another of the fig,
another of the date. I shall willingly give you the gratification of
continuing this research. How is it that this same water has sometimes
a sweet taste, softened by its remaining in certain plants, and at
other times stings the palate because it has become acid by passing
through others? How is it, again, that it attains extreme
bitterness, and makes the mouth rough when it is found in wormwood and
in scammony? That it has in acorns and dogwood a sharp and rough
flavour? That in the turpentine tree and the walnut tree it is changed
into a soft and oily matter?
9. But what need is there to continue. when in the same fig tree we
have the most opposite flavours, as bitter in the sap as it is sweet in
the fruit? And in the vine, is it not as sweet in the grapes as it is
astringent in the branches? And what a variety of colour! Look how
in a meadow this same water becomes red in one flower, purple in
another, blue in this one, white in that. And this diversity of
colours, is it to be compared to that of scents? But I perceive that
an insatiable curiosity is drawing out my discourse beyond its limits.
If I do not stop and recall it to the law of creation, day will fail
me whilst making you see great wisdom in small things.
"Let the earth bring forth the fruit tree yielding fruit."
Immediately the tops of the mountains were covered with foliage:
paradises were artfully laid out, and an infinitude of plants
embellished the banks of the rivers. Some were for the adornment of
man's table; some to nourish animals with their fruits and their
leaves; some to provide medicinal help by giving us their sap, their
juice, their chips, their bark or their fruit. In a word, the
experience of ages, profiting from every chance, has not been able to
discover anything useful, which the penetrating foresight of the
Creator did not first perceive and call into existence. Therefore,
when you see the trees in our gardens, or those of the forest, those
which love the water or the land, those which bear flowers, or those
which do not flower, I should like to see you recognising grandeur
even in small objects, adding incessantly to your admiration of, and
redoubling your love for the Creator. Ask yourself why He has made
some trees evergreen and others deciduous; why, among the first, some
lose their leaves, and others always keep them. Thus the olive and
the pine shed their leaves, although they renew them insensibly and
never appear to be despoiled of their verdure. The palm tree, on the
contrary, from its birth to its death, is always adorned with the same
foliage. Think again of the double life of the tamarisk; it is an
aquatic plant, and yet it covers the desert. Thus, Jeremiah
compares it to the worst of characters -- the double character.
10. "Let the earth bring forth." This short command was in a
moment a vast nature, an elaborate system. Swifter than thought it
produced the countless qualities of plants. It is this command which,
still at this day, is imposed on the earth, and in the course of each
year displays all the strength of its power to produce herbs, seeds and
trees. Like tops, which after the first impulse, continue their
evolutions, turning upon themselves when once fixed in their centre;
thus nature, receiving the impulse of this first command, follows
without interruption the course of ages, until the consummation of all
things. Let us all hasten to attain to it, full of fruit and of good
works; and thus, planted in the house of the Lord we shall flourish
in the court of our God, in our Lord Jesus Christ, to whom be
glory and power for ever and ever. Amen.
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