Page:For Remembrance (ed. Repplier) 076.jpg

 and prayer, would possibly begin to hold themselves as the superiors of priests, bishops, archbishops! Changing his tone suddenly from playfulness to earnestness, His Grace deigned to speak in terms of kind laudation of the exercises of the day,—of the exquisite poem, "A Prayer and a Memory," which would indeed remain a memory as well as a prayer to all who had enjoyed the privilege of hearing it. It was worthy of its authoress, Miss Smith, whose great gifts were never employed for other than the highest purposes.

His Grace then reverted to the Society of the Sacred Heart itself, and remarked that while the orator of the morning had rendered so just and moving a tribute to Mother Hardey, the foundress of Eden Hall and of all the houses of the Eastern Province, he, Archbishop Ryan, felt it a duty to give testimony to those great and noble women of the Order whom he had known and honored in the West,—Mother Galway, Mother Tucker, Mother Boudreau, Mother Beauduy-Garesché. He alluded also to the two daughters of Madame Garesché, still devotedly carrying on the work of God.

The Archbishop then proceeded to speak of the religious life in its more hidden and more distinctive aspects, of its deeper joys, veiled from the world, the delight of duty fulfilled for God alone, the testimony of a calm and free conscience,—deeper and holier yet, the spiritual delights of prayer, meditation, self-denial, union of the soul with its Divine Redeemer and in His Sacred Heart, by contemplation and by Holy Communion.

This portion of His Grace's discourse was at once the most beautiful and the most difficult to reproduce in any words but his own. It moved every heart, and was inspired evidently by the tenderest piety, and by an enthusiastic personal love of our Lord.

Passing from grave to gay, the Archbishop, with great tact and felicity, introduced into prominence his guest, the Right Reverend J. B. Brondel, Bishop of Helena, Montana, and drew forth from the modest missionary prelate some remarkable details exhibiting his Indian neophytes in an interesting and edifying light.



56