that marks the existence of life except the few pious
devotees, who wander from station to station in the
arena below, kneeling before the cross, and demonstrating
the triumph of a religion, which received in this very
spot in the early period of its existence one of its
most severe persecutions, and which, nevertheless,
has preserved what remains of that building, where
attempts were made to stifle it almost at its birth;
for, without the influence of Christianity, these
majestic ruins would have been dispersed or levelled
to the dust. Plundered of their lead and iron
by the barbarians, Goths, and Vandals, and robbed
even of their stones by Roman princes, the Barberini,
they owe what remains of their relics to the sanctifying
influence of that faith which has preserved for the
world all that was worth preserving, not merely arts
and literature but likewise that which constitutes
the progressive nature of intellect and the institutions
which afford to us happiness in this world and hopes
of a blessed immortality in the next. And, being
of the faith of Rome, I may say, that the preservation
of this pile by the sanctifying effect of a few crosses
planted round it, is almost a miraculous event.
And what a contrast the present application of this
building, connected with holy feelings and exalted
hopes, is to that of the ancient one, when it was
used for exhibiting to the Roman people the destruction
of men by wild beasts, or of men, more savage than
wild beasts, by each other, to gratify a horrible
appetite for cruelty, founded upon a still more detestable
lust, that of universal domination! And who would
have supposed, in the time of Titus, that a faith,
despised in its insignificant origin, and persecuted
from the supposed obscurity of its founder and its
principles, should have reared a dome to the memory
of one of its humblest teachers, more glorious than
was ever framed for Jupiter or Apollo in the ancient
world, and have preserved even the ruins of the temples
of the pagan deities, and have burst forth in splendour
and majesty, consecrating truth amidst the shrines
of error, employing the idols of the Roman superstition
for the most holy purposes and rising a bright and
constant light amidst the dark and starless night which
followed the destruction of the Roman empire!”
Onuphrio now resumed the discourse. He said, “I have not the same exalted views on the subject which our friend Ambrosio has so eloquently expressed. Some little of the perfect state in which these ruins exist may have been owing to causes which he has described; but these causes have only lately begun to operate, and the mischief was done before Christianity was established at Rome. Feeling differently on these subjects, I admire this venerable ruin rather as a record of the destruction of the power of the greatest people that ever existed, than as a proof of the triumph of Christianity; and I am carried forward in melancholy anticipation to the period when even the magnificent