Loyola University Chicago - Loyolan Yearbook (Chicago, IL)

 - Class of 1925

Page 29 of 338

 

Loyola University Chicago - Loyolan Yearbook (Chicago, IL) online collection, 1925 Edition, Page 29 of 338
Page 29 of 338



Loyola University Chicago - Loyolan Yearbook (Chicago, IL) online collection, 1925 Edition, Page 28
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Page 29 text:

'I ln- Lr,mYUl.AN-iff! l lx X .R ll . A Y. l 1 X ,-. - Q xx ' , -f l l 'N' . X X5 F X' is 'x fin l'li.fln ttm1'f.'xy Lilrlrlmn Ifuily ,Yrtzxv KI,xI:QL'i1.'1 1'i2 LQABIN AT lix'rR.xNt'r: TU Lil'lIL.XlIO Riviau As reproiluceil liy Vliicago City Building lbepartinent at north end of l.inl-c Bridge for celeliratimi uf the 250th anniversary of lfqitlier M:irqnette's resnlence nn the site of Ciliiezigo. but in reality. girding and strengthening himself for his threefold enemy, the world, the tiesh and the devil. Finally his years of toil and struggle were at end and he received the accolade of his Heavenly Captain, a priest forever after the order of Melchisidechf' A period of teaching ensued. but not in the classroom was Marquettes spirit to he contented. ,-Xlways of a sickly and delicate constitution, more adapted to the life of the recluse and student than that of the vigorous men he Cllviefl. nevertheless, he yearned for the missionary held. He knew what awaited him: hardship, privation, a return to the primeval, almost1 he knew what he must be prepared to meet: the Iroquois. sxvorn enemies of France ever since their IPage 191

Page 28 text:

The LOYOLAN-1925 to justify the importance so apparent to all from Hugh Capet to Henry of Navarre. For on that day was born jacques Marquette. Of Marquette's ancestry not much is known. That they were of an old and noble family, gentlemen and with the right to bear arms, is certain, but that they were particularly distinguished among the multitudinous seignory of the day is not borne out by any easily ascertained evidence of the day. They were of a class most nearly corresponding to the present English gentry, neither noted for special ability or exalted position, nor notorious for the foibles and idiocies that consort with power and pelf. Marquette's father has left no impress upon history. All we know is that he was a judge, and, so, to depict him we must turn to his heroic son and by combined stress of imagination and invocation of the laws of heredity deter- mine for ourselves what manner of man he was. Thus, we may safely vouch for the goodness and probity of his life, not only because of his relationship to his son 3 but because history, Jade scandalmonger that she is, has left his bones in peace and his reputation in that.grateful obscurity to which she most frequently relegates the good. Again invoking the imagination, and not too romantically we hope, we can picture him as a good husband and father, a man not too lavishly endowed with wealth and a brilliance of intellectg in short, he may be considered as a prototype of the average man whose talents find their expression in the rearing of a family and in the means necessary to their upkeep, rather than in the phantom and elusive pages of fame. Of Marquette's mother there exists a paucity of material as great as any imaginative artist could w'ish. She was related to .lohn Baptist De la Salle, and like her husband it would appear she lavished her gifts upon her family and in contradistinction to what seems a strong feminine fashion in France, kept neither salon nor exotic animals. Rather were her energies bent upon the rearing of her children in the God-fearing fashion that once was the wont throughout the world. In Marquette, no doubt, exists the most perfect refiection of his mother's pure and devout character. That Marquette's later life was due to the influence of his childhood is sufficiently apparent to defy contradiction. Reared in such surroundings as he was, undoubtedly the boy's attention nlust have been early fastened upon religiong the example of such a father and the love of a mother like his could scarcely do less. It must have been in his childhood, too, that the loving presence of his earthly mother told him of another mother among whose champions he would soon enroll. The time of this enrollment was soon to come. Not alone father and mother reminded him of things other than those of this earth: Laon itself was a perpetual testimonial to God and religion. From here, in the fifth century, had gone St. Remigius to baptize Clovis: later, a constant succession of lay and clerical had extended the practice of religion so that churches and abbeys dotted the town, and it had become the second most important see in France, possessing a cathedral that even now ranks among the foremost in the glorious field of Gothic perfection. Small wonder it was, that on his seventeenth birthday Marquette left, not attired in hauberk or cuirass to fight an earthly fight, but to don the funereal robes denoting earthly abnegation and enlistment under the crucifix in the company of vlesus, then in its comparative youth. For twelve years Marquette remained in Europe. The first part of this period he spent in the novitiate, that soul-searching and soul-trying assay that determines the chosen of those called. Then strengthened and confirmed in his resolve, he spent many more years in study, markinff time as some might s s Y s 35'- lPage 181



Page 30 text:

CU. I. 'NO lnixlll-1912 U Y r P11010 Cnifrfusy fliifwlzuflinlzal .Yrfur RPN THE BIARQUETTE CRoss Observance of 250th anniversary of Father Marquette's residence on the site ot' Chicago, held at spot where his cabin was located, on December 14, 1924. Rev. Herbert C. Noonan, SJ., seen bestowing blessing. Near about the cross are, at left, M. Henri Dido, French Consul at Chicago, Miss Valentine Smith. Alphonse Campion, Mrs. Amos XV. XValker. Madame Henri Dido, Bettie XValker, and visitors, at right, Murray Blanchard. joseph 1. Thompson, Alderman John Johntry, Mrs. Henry Grien, Mrs. james Hutchinson, Mrs. Louis Hopkins, Mrs. Daniel VV. Earle, Regent Chicago Chapter D. A. R., and a ilelegfatiou of Daughters of the American Republic. first encounter with Frencthmeng possible martyrdom did not deter him, nor the thought of tiendish torture, even though he knew of -logues, so fearfully maimed and mangled that he was forced to return to Europe to gain a papal dispensation to use again his torn fingers in the Divine sacrifice, before he should go back and to die a martyr and a man of almost supernatural calm in the flames of an Iroquois building: Xavier, dying desolately on the bleak coast of Japan, served not to repel him but to attract him to the never-ceasing duel in which souls were the stake. Thus he strained every effort to be sent to New France and a grave from whence his spirit, contrary to the procedure of this life, would walk the paths of glory spurned by his eager feet, while he was alive and treading the paths pointed out by his Master. At last his wish to be a missionary was granted and Marquette obtained the permission of his superiors to take up the work he so ardently desired. Thus, lPage 201

Suggestions in the Loyola University Chicago - Loyolan Yearbook (Chicago, IL) collection:

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Loyola University Chicago - Loyolan Yearbook (Chicago, IL) online collection, 1926 Edition, Page 1

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Loyola University Chicago - Loyolan Yearbook (Chicago, IL) online collection, 1927 Edition, Page 1

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Loyola University Chicago - Loyolan Yearbook (Chicago, IL) online collection, 1928 Edition, Page 1

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Loyola University Chicago - Loyolan Yearbook (Chicago, IL) online collection, 1929 Edition, Page 1

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Loyola University Chicago - Loyolan Yearbook (Chicago, IL) online collection, 1930 Edition, Page 1

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