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St. Edmund Campion
English Jesuit and martyr; he was the son and namesake of a Catholic bookseller, and was born in London, 25 Jan., 1540; executed at Tyburn, 1 Dec., 1581. A city company sent the promising child to a grammar school and to Christ Church Hospital. When Mary Tudor entered London in state as queen, he was the schoolboy chosen to give the Latin salutatory to her majesty. Sir Thomas White, lord mayor, who built and endowed St. John's College at Oxford, accepted Campion as one of his first scholars, appointed him junior fellow at seventeen, and, dying, gave him his last messages for his academic family. Campion shone at Oxford in 1560, when he delivered one oration at the reburial of Amy Robsart, and another at the funeral of the founder of his own college; and for twelve years he was to be followed and imitated as no man ever was in an English university except himself and Newman. He took both his degrees, and became a celebrated tutor, and, by 1568, junior proctor. Queen Elizabeth had visited Oxford two years before; she and Dudley, then chancellor, won by Campion's bearing, beauty, and wit, bade him ask for what he would. Successes, local responsibilities, and allurements, his natural ease of disposition, the representations, above all, of his friend Bishop Cheyney of Gloucester, blinded Campion in regard to his course as a Catholic: he took the Oath of Supremacy, and deacon's orders according to the new rite. Afterthoughts developing into scruples, scruples into anguish, he broke off his happy Oxford life when his proctorship ended, and betook himself to Ireland, to await the reopening of Dublin University, an ancient papal foundation temporarily extinct. Sir Henry Sidney, the lord deputy, was interested in Campion's future as well as in the revival which, however, fell through. With Philip Sidney, then a boy, Campion was to have a touching interview in 1577.
As too Catholic minded an Anglican, Campion was suspected, and exposed to
danger. Hidden in friendly houses, he composed his treatise called A History of
Ireland
Written from an English standpoint it gave much offence to the native
Irish, and was severely criticized, in the next century, by Geoffrey Keating In
his Irish history of Ireland. Urged to further effort by the zeal of Gregory
Martin, he crossed to England in disguise and under an assumed name, reaching
London in time to witness the trial of one of the earliest Oxonian martyrs, Dr.
John Storey. Campion now recognized his vocation and hastened to the seminary at
Douai. Cecil lamented to Richard Stanihurst the expatriation of one of the
diamonds of England.
At Douai Campion remained for his theological course and
its lesser degree, but then set out as a barefoot pilgrim to Rome, arriving
there just before the death of St. Francis Borgia; for I meant
, as he said at
his examination, to enter into the Society of Jesus, thereof to vow and to be
professed
. This he accomplished promptly in April (1573), being the first
novice received by Mercurianus, the fourth general. As the English province was
as yet non-existent, he was allotted to that of Bohemia, entering on his
noviceship at Prague and passing his probation year at Brunn in Moravia.
Returning to Prague, he taught in the college and wrote a couple of sacred
dramas; and there he was ordained in 1578. Meanwhile, Dr. Allen was organizing
the apostolic work of the English Mission, and rejoiced to secure Fathers Robert
Parsons and Edmund Campion as his first Jesuit helpers. In the garden at Brunn,
Campion had had a vision, in which Our Lady foretold to him his martyrdom.
Comrades at Prague were moved to make a scroll for P. Edmundus Campianus Martyr,
and to paint a prophetic garland of roses within his cell. Parsons and Campion
set out from Rome, had many adventures, and called upon St. Charles Borromeo in
Milan, and upon Beza in Geneva. Campion was met in London, and fitly clothed,
armed, and mounted by a devoted young convert friend. His office was chiefly to
reclaim Catholics who were wavering or temporizing under the pressure of
governmental tyranny; but his zeal to win Protestants, his preaching, his whole
saintly and soldierly personality, made a general and profound impression. An
alarm was raised and he fled to the North, where he fell again to writing and
produced his famous tract, the Decem Rationes
. He returned to London, only to
withdraw again, this time towards Norfolk. A spy, a former steward of the Roper
family, one George Eliot, was hot upon his track, and ran him and others down at
Lyford Grange near Wantage in Berkshire on 17 July, 1581.
Amid scenes of violent excitement, Campion was derisively paraded through the
streets of his native city, bound hand and foot, riding backwards, with a paper
stuck in his hat to denote the seditious Jesuit
. First thrown into Little Ease
at the Tower, he was carried privately to the house of his old patron, the Earl
of Leicester; there he encountered the queen herself, and received earnest
proffers of liberty and preferments would he but forsake his papistry. Hopton
having tried in vain the same blandishments, on Campion's return to the Tower,
the priest was then examined under torture, and was reported to have betrayed
those who had harboured him. Several arrests were made on the strength of the
lie. He had asked for a public disputation. But when it came off in the Norman
chapel of the Tower, before the Dean of St. Paul's and other divines, Campion
had been denied opportunity to prepare his debate, and had been severely racked.
Thus weakened, he stood through the four long conferences, without chair, table,
or notes, and stood undefeated. Philip Howard, Earl of Arundel, who was looking
on in the flush of worldly pride, became thereby inspired to return to God's
service. The privy council, at its wits' end over so purely spiritual a
traitor
, hatched a plot to impeach Campion's loyalty, and called in the
hirelings Eliot and Munday as accusers. A ridiculous trial ensued in Westminster
Hall, 20 Nov., 1581. Campion, pleading not guilty, was quite unable to hold up
his often-wrenched right arm, seeing which, a fellow prisoner, first kissing it,
raised it for him. He made a magnificent defence. But the sentence was death, by
hanging, drawing, and quartering: a sentence received by the martyrs with a
joyful shout of Haec dies and Te Deum. Campion, with Sherwin and Briant, who
were on a separate hurdle, was dragged to Tyburn on 1 December. Passing Newgate
arch, he lifted himself as best he could to salute the statue of Our Lady still
in situ. On the scaffold, when interrupted and taunted to express his mind
concerning the Bull of Pius V excommunicating Elizabeth, he answered only by a
prayer for her, your Queen and my Queen
. He was a Catholic Englishman with
political opinions which were not Allen's, though he died, as much as ever
Felton did, for the primacy of the Holy See. The people loudly lamented his fate;
and another great harvest of conversions began. A wild, generous-hearted youth,
Henry Walpole, standing by, got his white doublet stained with Campion's blood;
the incident made him, too, in time, a Jesuit and a martyr.
Historians of all schools are agreed that the charges against Campion were
wholesale sham. They praise his high intelligence, his beautiful gaiety, his
fiery energy, his most chivalrous gentleness. He had renounced all opportunity
for a dazzling career in a world of master men. Every tradition of Edmund
Campion, every remnant of his written words, and not least his unstudied golden
letters, show us that he was nothing less than a man of genius; truly one of the
great Elizabethans, but holy as none other of them all. He was beatified by Pope
Leo XIII on 9 December, 1886, and canonized by Pope Paul VI in 1970. Relics of
him are preserved in Rome and Prague, in London, Oxford, Stonyhurst, and
Roehampton. A not very convincing portrait was made soon after his death for the
Gesù in Rome under the supervision of many who had known him. Of this there is a
copy in oils at Stonyhurst, and a brilliantly engraved print in Hazart's
Kerckelycke Historie
(Antwerp, 1669), Vol. III (Enghelandt, etc.), though not
in every copy of that now scarce work.
CAMPION'S Historie of Ireland was first published by STANIHURST in HOLINSHED, Chronicles (1587), then in WARE'S book under the same title (1633). and again by the Hibernia Press (Dublin, 1809); Edmundi Campiani Decem Rationes et alia Opuscula, carefully edited (Antwerp, 1631); this included Orations, Letters, and the Narratio Divortii Henrici VIII, Regis Angliae, ab Uzore et ab Ecclesia, first printed by HARPESFIELD. There is no modern ed. or tr. The standard biography is SIMPSON, Edmund Campion, Jesuit Protomartyr of England (London, 1866; reissued, London, 1907). Accounts of Campion's life, labours, and death are in CHALLONER, Memoirs of Missionary Priests; FOLEY, Records of the English Province of the Society of Jesus, and STANTON, Menology of England and Wales.
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