SAINT PRISCA, THE CHILD MARTYR
[166]
AINT PRISCA'S name has always
been dearly loved, especially in England.
January eighteenth is the day
which is sacred to her, and she lived over
seventeen hundred years ago. She is one of
the few child-martyrs whose names have come
down to us from those early days, although
there were many other brave children who
suffered and were strong, and who, at last,
gave their lives to prove their faith.
Saint Prisca was a little Roman girl whose
parents were Christians of a noble family.
Claudius was the Emperor at that time, and
though during his reign the Christians were
not persecuted in such numbers as they had
been before that, still many cruel things were
done here and there, and it was a dangerous
thing to be a Christian.
It was in the evil times when one did not
always dare to say what he really thought,
nor publicly to worship as he believed was
right. Many of the Christians were not
ashamed to conceal their real belief from the
[167] heathen Romans, who were everywhere seeking
with hatred for the followers of Christ, to
torture and slay them.
Prisca's father and mother had managed to
keep their secret, and were not suspected of
being Christians. They probably went to
church in the secret chapels which the Christians
had dug deep in the ground under the
city. In these dark, gloomy catacombs, as
they were called, the Christians held services
directly under the feet of the cruel Romans,
who were passing overhead without suspecting
what was going on so near to them.
But Prisca scorned to use any precaution.
Small and defenseless though she was, she
did not fear to tell every one what she believed
and Whose Cross she followed. So
she soon became known as a firm little Christian
maiden. And there were people in the
city cruel enough and wicked enough to hate
even a little child-Christian and to wish her
evil.
These persons reported to the Emperor's
officers her brave words of faith, and told
them how she would not sacrifice to the
Roman gods as the other children did. So
[168] very soon she was seized by the guards and
brought before the Emperor.
Claudius looked at the little maid in surprise
to find her so young. And he thought:
"Ho! I shall easily make this small Christian
change her mind and obey me." And
he bade his men take her to the temple of
Apollo and make her offer incense to the
beautiful god of the silver bow. So they carried
her to the top of the Palatine, one of the
seven hills on which Rome was built.
They first passed under a great marble
arch and came into a fair courtyard surrounded
by fifty-two marble pillars. In the
centre of this space stood the temple of
Apollo, the most magnificent building in all
Rome. With its ivory gates and wonderful
groups of statues, its inlaid marble floors and
altars wreathed with flowers, its golden tripods
breathing incense, its lamps and beautiful
silver vases, it was a very different place
from the bare, dark caverns in which the
Christians worshiped. In front of the temple
was a group of four oxen made of bronze,
and in the centre of this group burned a fire
upon a golden tripod. This was the altar to
[169] Apollo, the sun-god, whose enormous golden
statue, in his four-horse chariot, stood over
the door of the temple just above. He was
the likeness of a beautiful youth with a
[170] wreath of bay about his head, carrying a bow
in his hand, with which Apollo was believed
to shoot the sunbeams down upon the earth.
SAINT PRISCA
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They thrust incense into Prisca's hand and
bade her throw a few grains into the fire in
honor of the beautiful god of the sun. It
seemed a very simple thing to do, to save
her life,—just to scatter a handful of dark
powder on the flames. Prisca loved the dear
sun as well as any one, but she knew it was
foolish to believe that he was a god, and
wicked to worship his statue in place of the
great God who made the sun and everything
else. So Prisca refused to burn the incense.
Then the Emperor was very angry, and
bade the soldiers whip her until she obeyed
his command. But they could not make her
yield by cruelty. Even the hard-hearted
Romans who had come to look on admired her
bravery and pitied her suffering. The women
wept to see her so cruelly treated, and the
men cried, "Shame! shame! to torture a
little child."
And then a beautiful thing happened; for
Prisca appeared dressed in a robe of yellow
sunshine. A wonderful light shone all about
[171] her, and she seemed herself a little star
giving out light, so brightly did her brave spirit
shine among those cruel men.
It seemed as if no child could bear all this
suffering without yielding, and the Emperor
hoped she would give in, for he did not want
to have her killed. But Prisca was firm, and
would not make the sacrifice. The Emperor
was surprised to find a child so brave. He
ordered them to drag her away to prison and
to keep her there for many days. Here she
was most unhappy,—lonely and cold and
hungry often, wondering what dreadful thing
was to happen next. But her heart was always brave,
and she was not afraid.
After a long time, one morning the guard
carne for little Prisca. They led her forth
into the dear sunshine, and glad she was to
see it and the blue sky once more. But it
was only for a short time that they let her
enjoy even this little pleasure; for they
brought her to the amphitheatre, a great open
place like the circus, with tiers upon tiers of
seats all about, and crowds of faces looking
down into the centre where she was.
Prisca knew what this meant, for she had
[172] often heard how the Christians were put into
the arena to be torn in pieces by wild beasts.
And kneeling down on the sand she made a
little prayer, not that she might be saved from
the fierce beasts, but that she might have
courage to show her Christian bravery and
teach a lesson to these fiercer men and women
who were looking on.
Then the keeper opened the grated door
of a den at the end of the arena, and out
stalked a great yellow lion. With a dreadful
roar he rushed into the centre of the circle,
and stood there lashing his tail and flashing
his big yellow eyes all about the place. Then
suddenly he spied the little girl standing
quietly at one side with her hands clasped in
front of her, looking at him without fear.
And the great beast strode gently up to her
on his padded paws. He bent his head and
licked her little bare feet, and then he
crouched down by her side, as a Saint Bernard
dog might place himself to guard his
little mistress. And this is why the old pictures
of Saint Prisca represent her with a lion
by her side.
There fell a great silence on the tented
[173] place. The Emperor and all the people sat
perfectly still, wondering at the strange sight
and admiring the courage of the child; for
she had reached out her hand and was stroking
the yellow head of the lion, playing with
his mane. She bent her head and no one
heard her whisper into his ear:—
"My good friend! you will not hurt me,
I know, for the Lord has closed your mouth,
just as he did the mouths of the lions into
whose den Daniel was thrown by wicked
men. These cruel men will put me to death,
but you are kinder than they."
And the lion looked up in her face as
though he understood, and growled softly.
He was quite gentle with her, but when the
keeper came towards them he roared and
bristled and showed his great teeth, so that
for a long time no one dared to come near.
But even the lion could not save her from
the death which she had no wish to shun.
At last they captured him and took him
away. The Emperor's heart was softened by
Prisca's bravery, and he wished to give her
one more chance to save her life. They shut
her up for many days in the heathen temple,
[174] and tried in every way to make her sacrifice
to the gods and give up Christianity. They
coaxed her and made her fine promises; they
threatened and punished her. But still Prisca
stood firm, although she was now very worn
and tired and ill because she had suffered so
much.
So when she had borne it all patiently and
bravely, and they saw it was impossible to
make a little Christian turn back again into
a little heathen, they led her away down the
road which leads south from the Palatine
hill, to the place of execution. This was just
outside the Ostian gate, an archway in the
great wall which surrounded Rome, through
which the road led to the town of Ostium
and to the sea. Just outside this gate, to
show that they were no longer worthy of
being Romans and living within its walls,
criminals were executed. And here many
Christian martyrs lost their lives. Prisca was
one of these, for here she was beheaded.
And till the very end she neither cried nor
screamed nor was in any way afraid. And so
she became Saint Prisca, a little martyr.
Then another strange thing befell. When
[175] she died a great eagle appeared in the sky,
hovering over Saint Prisca's body far up in
the air. And when any of the Romans ventured
near her the eagle swooped down upon
them with dreadful cries and flapping of his
wings. And his round gray eyes looked so
fierce and his claws so long and sharp, that no
one dared to touch her for fear of the bird.
Saint Prisca had found another protector in
cruel Rome. And this is why many of the
old pictures of Saint Prisca's martyrdom show
a great eagle hovering over her.
The creature guarded her body night and
day, driving every one away, until the Christians,
who had been waiting for the chance
to venture out, came secretly one night and
carried her away. They buried her where the
Romans could not find her, in their little
secret cemetery in the catacombs. This is
how Saint Prisca lived and died two hundred
and seventy years after Christ's birth. But I
wish we knew what became of the noble lion
and the devoted eagle.
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