Page:Jesuit Education.djvu/168

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148
JESUIT EDUCATION.

burnt, otherwise they can never be gotten rid of." Of the Hildesheim Jesuits it was said that they used some secret charms to hasten the progress of their pupils.[1]

A most remarkable testimony to the ability of the Jesuits as teachers was rendered by the words and actions of two non-Catholic rulers, at the time of the suppression of the Society in 1773, namely by King Frederick of Prussia and Empress Catharine of Russia; we shall revert to their testimony further on in this chapter.

In a history of the Jesuit colleges mention must be made of the literary and scientific works published by Jesuits. The colleges of the Society were as many colonies of writers. It is impossible to give here an adequate description of this work of the Society; the Bibliography of the Order comprises nine folio volumes, and contains the names of thirteen thousand Jesuit authors – many, if not most of them, professors – who published works on almost every branch of learning.[2] Even Dr. Huber admires the literary and scientific activity of the Order: "More than three hundred Jesuits have written grammars on living and dead languages, and more than ninety-five languages have been taught by members of the Order. In mathematics and natural sciences there are among them first class scientists. Many astronomical observatories were erected by them, and directed with great success."[3] Still more striking is the testimony of the

  1. Janssen, vol. VIII, p. 650.
  2. Bibliothèque de la Compagnie de Jésus, par Carlos Sommervogel. Brussels, 1890-1900. On the writers of the old Society see Crétineau-Joly, Histoire de la Compagnie de Jésus, vol. IV, ch. IV (3rd ed., pp. 214-296).
  3. Huber, Der Jesuiten-Orden, pp. 418-420.