HIS STUDIES IN PARIS, AND OTHER INCIDENTS OF HIS LIFE
He left for Paris on foot and alone,
and, according to his own reckoning, arrived there
toward the beginning of February, 1528. While
in prison, the Prince of Spain was born, and from this
event we can determine the date of what preceded and
followed. At Paris he lived with some Spaniards,
and attended the lectures given at the College of
Montaigu. As he had been advanced too rapidly
to the higher studies, he returned to those of a lower
grade, because he felt that in great part he lacked
the proper groundwork. He therefore studied in
a class with children. When he first came to
Paris, he received from a merchant twenty-five gold
crowns on an order sent from Barcelona. These
he put for safekeeping in the hands of one of the Spaniards
with whom he lived. This latter very soon appropriated
them for his own use, and when called upon, could
not restore them. The result was that when Lent
was over Ignatius found himself unprovided for, partly
on account of the loss mentioned, and partly on account
of other expenses. In consequence, he was forced
to seek his livelihood by begging, and to leave the
house where he lived.
Afterward he was received into the
Hospital of St. James, near the Church of the Holy
Innocents. This residence proved no slight hindrance
to his studies. The hospital was at a great distance
from the college, and while he could not gain admission
at night unless he returned before the sound of the
Angelus, in the morning he was not allowed to depart
before daylight. He could not, in consequence,
be present at, nor give his time to, the lectures
with profit. He found another hindrance, also,
in loss of the time needed in getting alms wherewith
to purchase food.
As he had not experienced interior
spiritual suffering for almost five years, he mortified
himself by austere fasts and penances. After he
had spent some time in this way, living in the hospital
and begging his food, he noticed that his progress
in letters was not rapid. He then considered
what course to follow. He had observed that many
who lived as servants of the lecturers in the colleges
had abundant time for study. He resolved to seek
some one whom he might serve in the same way.
He weighed the matter well, and not without consolation
thought of it as follows: “I shall imagine
that my master is Christ, and I shall call one of
the students Peter, another John, and to the rest
I shall give the names of the remaining Apostles.
Then, when my master gives me a command, I shall think,
that Christ commands me. When any one else gives
orders, I shall think that the order comes from St.
Peter or some other Apostle.” He was very
diligent in seeking a master, and spoke of the matter
to a bachelor and to a Carthusian monk, who knew many
masters, and to others, but he was never able to find
one.
Deprived of every resource, he was
told by a Spanish monk that it would be a wise step
for him to go every year to Flanders, and there in
two months he could procure enough for the whole year.
He approved of the plan, after recommending the matter
to God. On adopting this plan, he brought back
yearly from Flanders whatever he needed for his maintenance.
Once even he passed over into England, and from there
brought greater alms than he had gathered in the previous
years.
When he first returned from Flanders
he began to devote himself earnestly to spiritual
work. About the same time he gave the Exercises
to three persons, to Peralta, to Castro,
a friend who dwelt at Sorbonne, and to a Cantabrian
who lived in the College of St. Barbara, by name Amator.
A great change was made in the lives of these men.
At once they gave to the poor whatever they had, even
their books, while they themselves began to live on
the alms they begged, and to dwell in the Hospital
of St. James, where Ignatius had previously dwelt,
and which he left as stated above. This incident
aroused a great outcry in the University of Paris,
because the two first were very famous men. The
other Spaniards at once undertook to oppose them, but
unable to persuade them by any argument to return
to the university, a great crowd went armed to the
hospital and led, or rather dragged, them away.
On coming to the university they agreed
with their captors to complete their course of studies,
and afterward to follow out their determination.
Castro went afterward to Spain, and after preaching
for a while at Burgos, joined the Order of the Carthusians
at Valencia. Peralta undertook a journey to Jerusalem
on foot and after the fashion of a pilgrim. In
this garb he was seized in Italy by a military leader,
his relative, who found a pretext for bringing him
before the Sovereign Pontiff, from whom he obtained
a command for Peralta to return to Spain. All
these events did not occur then, but years afterward.
Exaggerated reports arose against Ignatius at Paris,
especially among the Spaniards. De Govea was wont
to say that Amator, who remained in his college,
had been brought by Ignatius to the verge of insanity.
He therefore made up his mind that as soon as Ignatius
came to the College of St. Barbara, he would give him
a public whipping as a seducer of the pupils.
Now the Spaniard who had spent the
money of Ignatius and had not paid him, had set out
to journey to Spain and fallen sick. As soon as
Ignatius learned of this, he was seized with a longing
to visit and help him, hoping by this to lead him
to abandon the world and give himself wholly to God.
And indeed to accomplish this he wished to make the
journey barefooted, without food or drink. While
praying for this purpose, he felt himself seized with
great fear until, entering the Church of St. Dominic,
he resolved to make the journey in this manner.
The fear that it might be tempting God then left him;
on the morning of the following day, upon arising,
so great a fear seized him that it seemed to him that
he could not even put on his clothes. In this
interior strife he left the house and went out of the
city, and the fear did not leave him till he was nine
miles from Paris. At this distance there is a
village which the inhabitants call Argenteuil, where
the Holy Coat of Our Lord is said to be preserved.
As he left this place in great trouble of spirit,
a feeling of great consolation and strength filled
his soul with such joy that he began to shout aloud
and to talk with God as he walked through the fields.
That night, having completed forty-five miles, he
went to rest with a beggar in a hospital. On
the next day toward nightfall he lodged in a straw-thatched
cabin. On the third day he arrived on foot.
According to his resolve, he took neither food nor
drink. Upon his arrival he consoled the sick
man, helped him on board a vessel which was about to
sail for Spain, and gave him letters to his companions,
Calisto, Caceres, and Artiaga, who were in Salamanca.
Here we may dwell for a moment on the fate of these
companions. While Ignatius was at Paris he often
sent them letters, telling them of the little hope
left of calling them to Paris for their studies.
Still he urged by letter Donna Leonora de Mascarenas
to use her influence with the King of Portugal for
Calisto, that he might receive one of the burses which
the King had established. A certain yearly aid
is called a burse. Donna Leonora gave Calisto
a mule and money to take him to the court of the King
of Portugal. He set out, but never reached that
place. He came back afterward to Spain and went
to India. He returned rich, to the great surprise
of all at Salamanca, who had known him in former days.
Caceres, after returning to Segovia, his native city,
began to grow unmindful of his former purpose and
life. Artiaga was first made a magistrate.
Afterward, when the Society was established at Rome,
a bishopric was given to him. He wrote to Ignatius,
“I wish this bishopric to be given to one of
the Society.” But as soon as the answer
came that this was not to be done, he went to India,
was made bishop, and died there a strange death.
While sick it chanced that two phials of liquid were
placed in water to cool, one containing a medicine
ordered for him by the doctor, the other a diluted
poison called Sollimanus. His attendant gave
him by mistake the poisoned draught, which he drank,
and thus ended his life.
Returning to Paris Ignatius heard
many rumors connecting his name with that of Caceres
and Peralta, and learned that he had been summoned
before the judge. As he did not wish to remain
in doubt, he went of his own accord to the Inquisitor,
a Dominican friar. “I heard that I had
been sought for, and I now present myself.”
During the conversation he asked the Inquisitor to
terminate the matter speedily. He had determined
to begin his course in arts on the approaching feast
of St. Remigius, and therefore wished all other business
completed in order to apply himself to his studies
with greater profit. The Inquisitor on his part
told him that it was true that certain charges had
been made against him, but he allowed him to depart,
and did not summon him again.
Toward the first of October, the feast
of St. Remigius, he began his course under the preceptor
Master John Pegna, with the intention of fostering
the vocations of those who wished to serve God.
He intended to add others in order the more freely
to give his mind to his studies. He followed
the lectures in philosophy, and experienced the same
temptations with which he had been assailed when studying
grammar at Barcelona. During the lectures he
was troubled by so many spiritual thoughts that he
could not listen attentively. Accordingly, as
he saw he was making but little progress in his studies,
he spoke to his preceptor and promised to attend the
lectures, as long as he could find bread and water
enough to keep him alive. After making this promise,
all these untimely devotions ceased to disturb him,
and he quietly pursued his studies. He was at
this period a friend of Peter Faber and Francis Xavier,
whom he afterward led to the service of God by giving
them the Exercises. During the last years he was
not persecuted as at first. Speaking of this
to him one day, Doctor Fragus remarked that he was
surprised that no one molested him. Ignatius
replied: “This is owing to the fact that
I do not speak on religious topics. But when
the course is completed, we shall act as formerly.”
During the course of this conversation
a monk approached Doctor Fragus and begged his aid
in visiting a house, in which there were many corpses
of those whom he thought died of the plague. At
that time the plague was beginning to spread in Paris.
Doctor Fragus and Ignatius wished to visit the house,
and procured the aid of a woman who was very skilful
in detecting the disease. After she had entered
the house she answered that the plague was certainly
there. Ignatius, also, entered and consoled and
revived a sick man he found lying there. When
he had touched the wounds with his hand, Ignatius departed
alone. His hand began to cause him great pain,
and it seemed as if he had caught the disease.
The fear that came upon him was so great that he was
unable to vanquish and drive it away, until with a
great effort he placed his fingers in his mouth, and
for a long time kept them there, saying, “If
you have the plague in your hand, you will also have
it in your mouth.” As soon as this was
done, the illusion left him and the pain he had felt
in his hand ceased.
He was not allowed to enter the College
of St. Barbara where he was then living, for all fled
from him when they learned that he had entered a house
infected with the plague. He was obliged to remain
several days outside of the college.
At Paris it is customary for those
who follow the philosophical studies to receive in
their third year the Petra, as it is called, in order
to obtain the bachelor’s degree. Now those
who are very poor are unable to comply with this custom,
as it costs a gold crown. While Ignatius was
in great hesitation, he submitted the matter to the
judgment of his preceptor. The latter advised
him to receive it. He did so, but not without
a complaint on the part of some, especially of a certain
Spaniard who had taken note of the fact.
While in Paris he suffered great pains
of the stomach for several days. On the twenty-fifth
day, for the space of an hour, a very severe pain
seized him, bringing with it a fever. One day
the pains lasted for sixteen or seventeen hours.
At that time he had already concluded his course,
had spent some years in the study of theology, and
had collected his companions.
As the disease grew worse day by day,
and the many remedies employed brought no relief,
the doctors said that the only one left for him was
to revisit his native land, as nothing but his native
air could cure him. His companions gave him the
same advice. By this time all had determined
on their future conduct, namely, to go first to Venice,
and then to Jerusalem, where they would pass their
whole life in helping souls. If, however, they
should not be allowed to remain in Jerusalem, they
were to return to Rome and offer themselves to the
Sovereign Pontiff, Christ’s Vicar, that he might
use their aid as he thought would be for God’s
glory and the salvation of souls. They also agreed
to wait one year at Venice for ships to carry them
to the Holy Land; but if during the year no ship were
at hand, they should be absolved from the vow, and
go to the Sovereign Pontiff. Finally Ignatius
yielded to the advice of his companions, in order to
attend to their business in Spain. It was agreed
among them, that after the recovery of his health
he should settle their affairs and they should go to
Venice, and there await him.
He left Paris in the year 1535, but
according to the agreement his companions were to
leave two years afterward on the feast of the conversion
of St. Paul. However, owing to the wars, they
were obliged to anticipate that time, and to set out
from Paris in the month of November in the year 1536.
On the very eve of his departure, as Ignatius had
heard that an accusation had been made against him
before the Inquisitor, while no summons had as yet
been served, he went to that official and stated what
he had heard. At the same time he told him that
he had several companions, and that he himself was
about to travel to Spain, and requested that sentence
should be passed upon him. The Inquisitor admitted
that the accusation had been made, but that he did
not think it worthy of consideration. He said
that he wished merely to see the writings of Ignatius,
meaning the Exercises. Having seen these he approved
of them very highly, and begged Ignatius to give him
a copy. Ignatius complied with his request, but
insisted that his trial be brought to an end, and
that judgment be passed. As his request met with
a refusal, he brought a notary and witnesses to the
Inquisitor’s house, and received their testimony
in writing concerning his innocence of the charges.