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If large numbers of men are to be ruled by one of their number, as
seems more or less inevitable in the ordinary course of things, then,
without doubt, the best model of what such a monarch's life should
be, is to be found in that of Louis IX., who for nearly half a
century was the ruler of France during our period. Of all the rulers
of men of whom we have record in history he probably took his duties
most seriously, with most regard for others, and least for himself and
for his family. There is not a single relation of life in which he is
not distinguished and in which his career is not worth studying, as an
example of what can be done by a simple, earnest, self-forgetful
man, to make life better and happier for all those who come in contact
with him.
His relations with his mother are those of an affectionate son in whom
indeed, from his easy compliance with her wishes in his younger years
one might suspect some weakness, but whose strength of character is
displayed at every turn once he himself assumed the reins of
government. After many years of ruling however, when his departure on
the Crusade compelled him to be absent from the kingdom it was to her
he turned again to act as his representative and the wisdom of the
choice no one can question. As a husband Louis' life was a model,
and though he could not accomplish the impossible, and was not able to
keep the relations of his mother and his wife as cordial as he would
have liked them to be, judging from human experience generally it is
hard to think this constitutes any serious blot on his fair name. As a
father, few men have ever thought less of material advantages for their
children, or more of the necessity for having them realize that
happiness in life does not consist in the possession of many things,
but rather in the accomplishment of duty and in the recognition of the
fact that the giving of happiness to others constitutes the best source
of felicity for one's self. His letters and instructions to his
children, as preserved for us by Joinville and other contemporaries,
give us perhaps the most taking picture of the man that we have, and
round out a personality, which, while it has in the telling French
phrase "the defects of its virtues," is surely one of the most
beautiful characters that has ever been seen upon earth, in a man who
took an active and extremely important part in the great events of the
world of his time.
The salient points of his character are his devotion to the three great
needs of humanity as they present themselves in his time. He made it
the aim of his life that men should have justice, and education, and
when for any misfortune they needed it, -- charity; and every
portion of his career is taken up with successful achievement in these
great departments of social action. It is well known that when he
became conscious that the judges sometimes abused their power and gave
sentences for partial reasons, the monarch himself took up the onerous
duty of hearing appeals and succeeded in making the judges of his
kingdom realize, that only the strictest justice would save them from
the king's displeasure, and condign punishment. For an unjust judge
there was short shrift. The old tree at Versailles, under which he
used to hear the causes of the poor who appealed to him, stood for many
centuries as a reminder of Louis' precious effort to make the
dispensing of justice equal to all men. When the duty of hearing
appeals took up too much of his time it was transferred to worthy
shoulders, and so the important phase of jurisprudence in France
relating to appeals, came to be thoroughly established as a part of the
organic law of the kingdom.
As regards education, too much can not be said of Louis' influence.
It is to him more than to anybody else that the University of Paris
owes the success it achieved as a great institution of learning at the
end of the Thirteenth Century. Had the monarch been opposed to the
spread of education with any idea that it might possibly undermine his
authority, had he even been indifferent to it, Paris would not have
come to be the educational center of the world. As it was, Louis not
only encouraged it in every way, but also acted as the patron of great
subsidiary institutions which were to add to its prestige and enhance
its facilities. Among the most noteworthy is the Sorbonne. La
Sainte Chapelle deserves to be mentioned, however, and the library
attached to it, which owed its foundation and development to Louis,
were important factors in attracting students to Paris and in
furnishing them interestingly suggestive material for thought and the
development of taste during their residence there. His patronage of
Vincent of Beauvais, the encyclopedist, was but a further
manifestation of his interest in everything educational. His
benefactions to the Hotel Dieu must be considered rather under the
head of charity, and yet they also serve to represent his encouragement
of medical education and of the proper care for the poor in educated
hands.
Voltaire, to whom Louis' character as a supreme believer in revealed
religion must have been so utterly unsympathetic, and whose position as
the historical symbol of all that Voltaire most held in antipathy in
medievalism, might have been expected to make the French philosopher
avoid mention of him since he could not condemn, has been forced into
some striking utterances in praise of Louis, one of which we quote:
"Louis IX appeared to be a prince destined to reform Europe, if
she could have been reformed, to render France triumphant and
civilized, and to be in all things a pattern for men. His piety which
was that of an anchorite, did not deprive him of any kingly virtue. A
wise economy took nothing from his liberality. A profound policy was
combined with strict justice and he is perhaps the only sovereign who is
entitled to this praise; prudent and firm in counsel, intrepid without
rashness in his wars, he was as compassionate as if he had always been
unhappy. No man could have carried virtue further."
Guizot, the French statesman and historian, whose unbending
Calvinism made the men and institutions of the Middle Ages almost
incomprehensible to him from their Catholic aspects, has much of good
to say of Louis, though there is not wanting rather definite evidence
of the reluctance of his admiration:
"The world has seen more profound politicians on the throne, greater
generals, men of more mighty and brilliant intellect, princes who have
exercised a more powerful influence over later generations and events
subsequent to their own times; but it has never seen such a king as
this St. Louis, never seen a man possessing sovereign power and yet
not contracting the vices and passions which attend it, displaying upon
the throne in such a high degree every human virtue purified and
ennobled by Christian faith. St. Louis did not give any new or
personal impulse to his age; he did not strongly influence the nature
or the development of civilization in France; whilst he endeavored to
reform the gravest abuses of the feudal system by the introduction of
justice and public order, he did not endeavor to abolish it either by
the substitution of a pure monarchy, or by setting class against class
in order to raise the royal authority high above all. He was neither
an egotist nor a scheming diplomatist; he was, in all sincerity, in
harmony with his age and sympathetic alike with the faith, the
institutions, the customs, and the tastes of France in the
Thirteenth Century. And yet, both in the Thirteenth Century and
in later times St. Louis stands apart as a man of profoundly original
character, an isolated figure without any peer among his contemporaries
or his successors. As far as it was possible in the Middle Ages, he
was an ideal man, king, and Christian."
Guizot goes even further than this when he says, "It is reported
that in the Seventeenth Century, during the brilliant reign of Louis
XIV., Montecuculli, on learning of the death of his illustrious
rival, Turenne, said to his officers, 'A man has died to-day who
did honor to mankind.' St. Louis did honor to France, to
royalty, to humanity, and to Christianity. This was the feeling of
his contemporaries, and after six centuries it is still confirmed by
the judgment of the historian."
Of Louis' wonderful influence for good as a ruler all historians are
agreed in talking in the highest terms. His private life however, is
even more admirable for our purpose of bringing out the greatness of the
Thirteenth Century. Of course many legends and myths have gathered
around his name, but still enough remains of absolutely trustworthy
tradition and even documentary evidence, to make it very clear that he
was a man among men, a nobleman of nature's making, who in any
position of life would have acquitted himself with a perfection sure to
make his life worthy of admiration. One of the most striking traits of
his character is his love of justice, his insatiable desire to render
to all men what was rightly theirs. A biographer has told the story
that gives the most telling proof of this in relating the solicitude
with which he tried to right all the wrongs not only of his own reign,
but of those of his predecessors, before he set out on the Crusade.
He wished to have the absolute satisfaction that he, nor his, owed
any man any reparation, as the most precious treasure he could take
with him on his perilous expedition. He wished even to undo any wrongs
that might have been done in his name though he was entirely unconscious
of them.
"As he wished to be in a state of grace at the moment of departure,
and to take with him to the Holy Land a quiet conscience by leaving
the kingdom in as happy a condition as possible, he resolved to carry
out one of the noblest measures ever undertaken by a king. By his
order, inquisitors were sent into all the provinces annexed to the
royal dominion since the accession of Philip Augustus. All those who
had been maltreated or despoiled by the bailiffs, seneschals,
provosts, sergeants, and other representatives of the royal
authority, came to declare their wrongs to these newly appointed
judges, and to demand the reparation which was due to them; the number
was great, since for forty years there had been much suffering in the
country districts and even in the towns. . . . The royal officers
had too often acted as if they were in a conquered country; they
believed themselves to be safe from observation, so that they might do
as they pleased. The people had much to endure during these forty
years, and it was a noble idea to make reparation freely and with
elaborate care. No prince had been known, of his own accord and at
his own cost, to redress the wrongs inflicted on the people during the
reigns of his father and grandfather. This made an immense
impression, which lasted for centuries. Blanche's son was not merely
a good king, be became the unrivalled sovereign, the impeccable
judge, the friend and consoler of his subjects."
It is no wonder that so inappeasable a lover of justice should commend
that virtue above all others to his son. When we read his letters to
that son who was to be his successor, in the light of Louis' own
career, we appreciate with what utter sincerity they were written.
Louis realized that simple justice between men would undo more of the
world's wrongs than most of the vaunted cures for social ills, which
are only too often the result of injustice.
"Dear son," he writes in his Instruction, "if you come to reign,
do that which befits a king, that is, be so just as to deviate in
nothing from justice, whatever may befall you. If a poor man goes to
law with one who is rich, support the poor rather than the rich man
until you know the truth, and when the truth is known, do that which
is just. And if it happen that any man has a dispute with yourself,
maintain the cause of your adversary before the council so as not to
appear partial to your own cause, until the truth is known. Unless
you do this, those who are of the council may fear to speak against
you, and this ought not to be . . . . And if you find that you
possess anything unjustly acquired, either in your time or in that of
your predecessors, make restitution at once, however great its value,
either in land, money, or any other thing . . . . If the matter
is doubtful and you cannot find out the truth, follow the advice of
trusty men, and make such an agreement as may fully deliver your soul
and that of your predecessors. If you hear that your predecessors have
made restitution of anything, take great trouble to discover if
anything more should be restored, and if you find that this is the
case, restore it at once so as to deliver your own soul and that of
your predecessors."
"The education of his children, their future position and
well-being, engrossed the attention of the King as entirely, and
were subjects of as keen an interest, as if he had been a father with
no other task than the care of his children. After supper they
followed him to his apartment, where he made them sit around him for a
time whilst he instructed them in their duty; he then sent them to
bed. He would direct their attention particularly to the good and bad
actions of Princes. He used to visit them in their own apartment when
he had any leisure, inquire as to their progress, and like a second
Tobias, give them excellent instruction . . . . On Maundy
Thursday, he and his children used to wash the feet of a dozen poor
persons, give them large alms, and afterward wait upon them whilst
they dined. The King together with his son-in-law King Thibault,
whom he loved and looked upon as his own son, carried the first poor
man to the hospital of Compeigne, and his two oldest sons, Louis and
Philippe, carried the second. They were accustomed to act with him
in all things, showing him great reverence, and he desired that they
and Thibault should also obey him implicitly in everything that he
commanded."
Anyone who still retains any trace of the old-fashioned notion, which
used to be unfortunately a commonplace among English speaking people,
that the medieval Monks were unworthy of their great calling, and that
the monasteries were the homes of lazy, fat-witted men whose only
object in taking up the life was to secure an easy means of livelihood,
will be thoroughly undeceived, if he but read with some attention the
stories of Louis' relations to the monasteries. In all his journeys
he stopped in them, he always asked to see their libraries, he
insisted on not being treated better than the community and in every way
he tried to show his esteem for them. There is a story which may or
may not be true in the "Little Flowers of St. Francis," which
comes from almost a contemporary source, however, that once on his
travels he called on Brother Giles, the famous simple-minded
companion of St. Francis, of whom so many delightfully humorous
stories are told. Brother Giles received his affectionate greeting
but said never a word in return. After the first words the King
himself said nothing, but both sat and communed in silence for some
time, and then the King departed apparently well-pleased with his
visit. Needless to say when Brother Giles told the story of the
King of France having called on him there was a commotion in the
community. But by this time the King was far distant on his way.
Indeed Louis took so many opportunities to stop in monasteries and
follow monastic regulations as to prayer and the taking of meals while
there, that he quite disgusted some of the members of his retinue who
were most with him. One of the ladies of the court in her impatience
at him for this, is once said to have remarked under such indiscreet
circumstances that it was reported to Louis, that she wished they had
a man and not a monk for King. Louis is said to have asked her very
gently if she would prefer that he spend most of his time in sport and
in excesses of various kinds. Even such remarks, however, had no
effect in turning him from his purpose to live as simply and as
beneficently for others as possible. His genuine appreciation of the
monks must be recognized from his wishes with regard to his children.
On the other hand his readiness to secure their happiness as far as
possible in the way they wished for themselves shows the tenderness of
his fatherly heart. A modern biographer has said of him
"He was very anxious that his three children born in the East during
the Crusade -- Jean Tristan, Pierre, and Blanche -- and even
his eldest daughter Isabella, should enter the monastic life, which
he looked upon as the most likely to insure their salvation; he
frequently exhorted them to take this step, writing letters of the
greatest tenderness and piety, especially to his daughter Isabella;
but, as they did not show any taste for it, he did not attempt to
force their inclinations. Thenceforth, he busied himself in making
suitable marriages for them, and establishing them according to their
rank; at the same time he gave them the most judicious advice as to
their conduct and actions in the world upon which they were entering.
When he was before Tunis and found that he was sick unto death, he
gave the instructions which he had written out in French with his own
hand to his eldest son, Philip. They are models of virtue, wisdom
and paternal tenderness, worthy of a King and a Christian."
Perhaps the most interesting feature of St. Louis' life was his
treatment of the poor. He used literally to recall the fact that they
must stand to him in the place of God. "Whatever you do to the least
of these you do even unto me" was a favorite expression frequently in
his mouth. He waited on them personally and no matter how revolting
their appearance would not be deterred from this personal service. It
is easy to understand that his courtiers did not sympathize with this
state of mind, though Louis used to encourage them not only by his
example but by personal persuasion. Every Holy Thursday he used to
wash the feet of twelve poor people at a public ceremonial, in honor of
the washing of the feet of the Apostles by Christ. It must not be
thought moreover, that such a proceeding was perhaps less repugnant to
the feelings of the men of that time than they are to the present
generation. It might be considered that the general paucity of means
for maintaining personal cleanliness in medieval times would make the
procedure less disgusting. As a proof of the contrary of this we have
the words of Joinville who tells of the following conversation
"Many a time," says Joinville, "I have seen him cut their bread
for them, and pour out their drink. One day he asked me if I washed
the feet of the poor on Maundy Thursday. "Sire," I answered,
"What, the feet of those dirty wretches! No indeed, I shall never
wash them." "Truly," replied the King, "you have spoken ill,
for you ought not to despise that which God intended for your
instruction. I pray you, therefore, first of all for the love of
God, and then by your love towards me, that you make a habit of
washing their feet."
Even more striking than this however, was his attitude toward the
lepers of the time. These poor creatures were compelled to live apart
from the population and were not allowed to approach healthy
individuals. They were of exceeding interest to Louis however, who
took every opportunity to mitigate the trials and hardships of their
existence. Whenever he met them on his journeys he insisted on
abundant alms being given them, and gave orders that every possible
provision tor their welfare, consonant with the care that their
affection should not be permitted to spread, be made for them. Over
and over again he greeted them as his brothers and when his retinue
feared to approach them, would himself go to them, in order to console
them by his words and his exhibition of personal interest. There is an
incident told of his having on one occasion, when a muddy stream
intervened between him and some lepers, forded the stream alone in
order to get to them, and neither any personal fear of contagion nor
any natural repugnance was permitted to deter him from this sublime work
of charity. It is no wonder that his people proclaimed him a saint,
that is "one who thinks first of others and only second of himself,"
even during his lifetime.
The only supposed blot upon Louis' character is the denunciation by
certain modern writers of what they call the fanaticism, which prompted
him to go on the Crusades instead of remaining at home properly to care
for his people. The opinion with regard to the place that must be
assigned to the Crusades as a factor in history and national as well as
European development, has changed very much in recent years.
Formerly it was the custom almost entirely to condemn them and to look
upon them as a serious mistake. Such ideas however, are only
entertained by those who do not realize the conditions under which they
were undertaken or the important results which flowed from them.
Bishop Stubbs in his lectures on Medieval and Modern History,
delivered while he was professor of History at Oxford, has been at
some pains to correct this false notion, and his passage constitutes
one of the best apologies for Louis' interest in the Crusades which
could be written. He said
"The Crusades are not, in my mind, either the popular delusions
that our cheap literature has determined them to be, nor papal
conspiracies against kings and peoples, as they appear to Protestant
controversialists; nor the savage outbreak of expiring barbarism,
thirsting for blood and plunder, nor volcanic explosions of religious
intolerance. I believe them to have been in their deep sources, and
in the minds of their best champions, and in the main tendency of their
results, capable of ample justification. They were the first great
effort of medieval life to go beyond the pursuit of selfish and isolated
ambitions; they were the trial-feat of the young world, essaying to
use, to the glory of God and the benefit of man, the arms of its new
knighthood. That they failed in their direct object is only what may
be alleged against almost every great design which the great disposer of
events has moulded to help the world's progress; for the world has
grown wise from the experience of failure, rather than by the winning
of high aims. That the good they did was largely leavened with evil
may be said of every war that has ever been waged; that bad men rose by
them while good men fell, is and must be true, wherever and whenever
the race is to the swift and the battle to the strong. But that in the
end they were a benefit to the world no one who reads can doubt; and
that in their course they brought out a love for all that is heroic in
human nature, the love of freedom, the honor of prowess, sympathy
with sorrow, perseverance to the last, the chronicles of the age
abundantly prove; proving, moreover, that it was by the experience of
these times that the forms of those virtues were realized and presented
to posterity."[23]
With the stigma of supposed imprudence or foolhardiness for having gone
on the Crusade turned into a new cause for honor, Louis must be
considered as probably the greatest monarch who ever occupied an
important throne. Instead of being surprised that such a monarch
should have come in the heart of the Middle Ages and during a century
so distant as the Thirteenth, readers must now be ready to appreciate
to some degree at least the fact, that his environment instead of being
a hindrance in any sense of the word to the development of Louis'
greatness, should rather be considered as one of the principal sources
of it. Louis' character was representative of the men of that time
and exhibits in their most striking form the qualities that were set up
as ideals in that period. If the century had produced nothing else but
Louis, it would have to be considered as a great epoch in history,
for he was no mere accident but typically a son of his age. If this is
but properly appreciated the true significance not only of Louis' life
but the period in which he lived will be better understood than would be
possible by any other means. Those who want to know the men of this
wonderful century as they actually were should study Louis' life in
detail, for we have been only able to hint at its most striking
characteristics.
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