Chronicles of the Schonberg-Cotta Family Part 72
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"I have not heard that he is ill," I said. "He was engaged with the arbitration again to-day."
"I cannot get those words of his out of my head," she said; "they haunt me--'_Here we will close_.' I cannot help thinking what it would be never to hear that faithful voice again."
"You are depressed, my love," I said, "at the thought of Dr. Luther's leaving us this week. But by-and-by we will stay some little time at Wittemberg, and hear him again there."
"If G.o.d will!" she said gravely. "What G.o.d has given us, through him, can never be taken away."
I have inquired again about him, however, frequently to-day, but there seems no cause for anxiety. He retired from the Great Hall where the conferences and the meals take place, at eight o'clock; and this evening, as often before during his visit, Dr. Jonas overheard him praying aloud at the window of his chamber.
_Thursday, 18th February_.
The worst--the very worst--has come to pa.s.s! The faithful voice is, indeed, silenced to us on earth for ever.
Here where the life began it has closed. He who, sixty-three years ago, lay here a little helpless babe, lies here again a lifeless corpse. Yet it is not with sixty-three years ago, but with three days since that we feel the bitter contrast. Three days ago he was among us the counsellor, the teacher, the messenger of G.o.d, and now that heart, so open, so tender to sympathize with sorrows, and so strong to bear a nation's burden, has ceased to beat.
Yesterday it was observed that he was feeble and ailing. The Princes of Anhalt and the Count Albert of Mansfeld, with Dr. Jonas and his other friends, entreated him to rest in his own room during the morning. He was not easily persuaded to spare himself, and probably would not have yielded then, had he not felt that the work of reconciliation was accomplished, in all save a few supplementary details. Much of the forenoon, therefore, he reposed on a leathern couch in his room, occasionally rising, with the restlessness of illness, and pacing the room, or standing in the window praying, so that Dr. Jonas and Coelius, who were in another part of the room, could hear him. He dined, however, at noon, in the Great Hall, with those a.s.sembled there.
At dinner he said to some near him, "If I can, indeed, reconcile the rulers of my birth-place with each other, and then, with G.o.d's permission, accomplish the journey back to Wittemberg, I would go home and lay myself down to sleep in my grave, and let the worms devour my body."
He was not one weakly to sigh for sleep before night; and we now know too well from how deep a sense of bodily weariness and weakness that wish sprang. Tension of heart and mind, and incessant work,--the toil of a daily mechanical labourer, with the keen, continuous thought of the highest thinker,--working as much as any drudging slave, and as intensely as if all he did was his delight,--at sixty-three the strong, peasant frame was worn out as most men's are at eighty, and he longed for rest.
In the afternoon he complained of painful pressure on the breast, and requested that it might be rubbed with warm cloths. This relieved him a little; and he went to supper again with his friends in the Great Hall.
At table he spoke much of eternity, and said he believed his own death was near; yet his conversation was not only cheerful, but at times gay, although it related chiefly to the future world. One near him asked whether departed saints would recognize each other in heaven. He said, Yes, he thought they would.
When he left the supper-table he went to his room.
In the night,--last night,--his two sons, Paul and Martin, thirteen and fourteen years of age, sat up to watch with him, with Justus Jonas, whose joys and sorrows he had shared through so many years. Coelius and Aurifaber also were with him. The pain in the breast returned, and again they tried rubbing him with hot cloths. Count Albert came, and the Countess, with two physicians, and brought him some shavings from the tusk of a sea-unicorn, deemed a sovereign remedy He took it, and slept till ten. Then he awoke, and attempted once more to pace the room a little; but he could not, and returned to bed. Then he slept again till one. During those two or three hours of sleep, his host Albrecht, with his wife, Ambrose, Jonas, and Luther's son, watched noiselessly beside him, quietly keeping up the fire. Everything depended on how long he slept, and how he woke.
The first words he spoke when he awoke sent a shudder of apprehension through their hearts.
He complained of cold, and asked them to pile up more fire. Alas! the chill was creeping over him which no effort of man could remove.
Dr. Jonas asked him if he felt very weak.
"Oh," he replied, "how I suffer! My dear Jonas, I think I shall die here, at Eisleben, where I was born and baptized."
His other friends were awakened, and brought in to his bed-side.
Jonas spoke of the sweat on his brow as a hopeful sign, but Dr. Luther answered--
"It is the cold sweat of death. I must yield up my spirit, for my sickness increaseth."
Then he prayed fervently, saying--
"Heavenly Father! everlasting and merciful G.o.d thou hast revealed to me thy dear Son, our Lord Jesus Christ. Him have I taught; Him have I experienced; Him have I confessed; Him I love and adore as my beloved Saviour, Sacrifice, and Redeemer--Him whom the G.o.dless persecute, dishonour, and reproach. O heavenly Father, though I must resign my body, and be borne away from this life, I know that I shall be with Him for ever. Take my poor soul up to Thee!"
Afterwards he took a little medicine, and, a.s.suring his friends that he was dying, said three times--
"Father, into thy hands do I commend my spirit. Thou hast redeemed me, thou faithful G.o.d. Truly _G.o.d hath so loved the world_!"
Then he lay quiet and motionless. Those around sought to rouse him, and began to rub his chest and limbs, and spoke to him, but he made no reply. Then Jonas and Coelius, for the solace of the many who had received the truth from his lips, spoke aloud, and said--
"Venerable father, do you die trusting in Christ, and in the doctrine you have constantly preached?"
He answered by an audible and joyful "Yes!"
That was his last word on earth. Then turning on his right side, he seemed to fall peaceably asleep for a quarter of an hour. Once more hope awoke in the hearts of his children and his friends; but the physician told them it was no favourable symptom.
A light was brought near his face; a death-like paleness was creeping over it, and his hands and feet were becoming cold.
Gently once more he sighed; and, with hands folded on his breast, yielded up his spirit to G.o.d without a struggle.
This was at four o'clock in the morning of the 18th of February.
And now, in the house opposite the church where he was baptized, and signed with the cross for the Christian warfare, Martin Luther lies--his warfare accomplished, his weapons laid aside, his victory won--at rest beneath the standard he has borne so n.o.bly. In the place where his eyes opened on this earthly life his spirit has awakened to the heavenly life. Often he used to speak of death as the Christian's true birth, and of this life as but a growing into the chrysalis-sh.e.l.l in which the spirit lives till its being is developed, and it bursts the sh.e.l.l, casts off the web, struggles into life, spreads its wings and sours up to G.o.d.
To Eva and me it seems a strange, mysterious seal set on his faith, that his birth-place and his place of death--the scene of his nativity to earth and heaven--should be the same.
We can only say, amidst irrepressible tears, those words often on his lips, "O death! bitter to those whom thou leavest in life!" and "Fear not, _G.o.d liveth still_."
x.x.xVIII.
Else's Story.
_March_, 1546
It is all over. The beloved, revered form is with us again, but Luther our Father, our pastor, our friend, will never be amongst us more. His ceaseless toil and care for us all have worn him out,--the care which wastes life more than sorrow,--care such as no man knew since the apostle Paul, which only faith such as St. Paul's enabled him to sustain so long.
This morning his widow, his orphan sons and daughter, and many of the students and citizens went out to the Eastern Gate of the city to meet the funeral procession. Slowly it pa.s.sed through the streets, so crowded, yet so silent, to the city church where he used to preach.
Fritz came with the procession from Eisleben, and Eva, with Heinz and Agnes, are also with us, for it seemed a necessity to us all once more to feel and see our beloved around us, now that death has shown us the impotence of a nation's love to retain the life dearest and most needed of all.
Fritz has been telling us of that mournful funeral journey from Eisleben.
The Counts of Mansfeld, with more than fifty hors.e.m.e.n, and many princes, counts, and barons, accompanied the coffin. In every village through which they pa.s.sed the church-bells tolled as if for the prince of the land; at every city gate magistrates, clergy, young and old, matrons, maidens, and little children, thronged to meet the procession, clothed in mourning, and chanting funeral hymns?--German evangelical hymns of hope and trust, such as he had taught them to sing. In the last church in which it lay before reaching its final resting-place at Wittemberg, the people gathered around it, and sang one of his own hymns, "I journey hence in peace," with voices broken by sobs and floods of tears.
Thus day and night the silent body was borne slowly through the Thuringian land. The peasants once more remembered his faithful affection for them, and everywhere, from village and hamlet, and from every little group of cottages, weeping men and women pressed forward to do honour to the poor remains of him they had so often misunderstood in life.
After Pastor Bugenhagen's funeral sermon from Luther's pulpit, Melancthon spoke a few words beside the coffin in the city church. They loved each other well. When Melancthon heard of his death he was most deeply affected, and said in the lecture-room,--
"The doctrine of the forgiveness of sins and of faith in the Son of G.o.d, has not been discovered by any human understanding, but has been revealed unto us by G.o.d _through this man_ whom he has raised up."
In the city church, beside the coffin, before the body was lowered into its last resting-place near the pulpit where he preached, Dr. Melancthon p.r.o.nounced these words in Latin, which Caspar Creutziger immediately translated into German,--
"Every one who truly knew him, must bear witness that he was a benevolent, charitable man, gracious in all his discourse, kindly and most worthy of love, and neither rash, pa.s.sionate, self-willed, or ready to take offence. And, nevertheless, there were also in him an earnestness and courage in his words and bearing such as become a man like him. His heart was true and faithful, and without falsehood. The severity which he used against the foes of the doctrine in his writings did not proceed from a quarrelsome or angry disposition, but from great earnestness and zeal for the truth. He always showed a high courage and manhood, and it was no little roar of the enemy which could appall him.
Chronicles of the Schonberg-Cotta Family Part 72
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