Mother Mary Potter
Mother Mary Potter
Mother Mary Potter
This is the story of a remarkable woman of our age Mother Mary Potter, the Foundress of the Little Company of Mary, familiarly called
the Blue Nuns because of their distinctive veils of Our Ladys blue. She died in Rome in the odour of sanctity in 1913. Her cause of
canonisation is just now being investigated.
Now that devotion to Our Lady seems to be undergoing a renewal, particularly through the teaching of Blessed Grignion de Mont fort, the
life of Mary Potter is most opportune. She lived de Montforts teaching on the Holy Slavery of Mary.
It should be of particular interest to that vast modern army of apostles, founded on de Montforts spiritual teachingthe Legion of Mary.
GODFREY KING was a happy man. Little twenty-year old Mary Potter had said yes. It is true that at times he
thought her a little too happy and too worldly, but perhaps, he himself, was just a little too serious now and then.
He had tried his vocation to the austere life, and perpetual silence, of a Trappist monk, and now had accepted the
guidance of Gods Providence to a life in the world. Actually, he was a mathematical coach for the Indian and Army
examinations. He hoped in time that the example of his own life, supplemented by some good reading, would make
Mary just a little more serious and devout. Alas for his earthly happiness. In this ideal he succeeded only too well.
It all happened like this.
One of the books he gave her was that now famous treatise of Blessed Grignion de Montfort on True Devotion to
the Blessed Virgin Mary. It had then been translated into English by Father Faber. The theme of the book is the
Holy Slavery of Mary.
Writing of the book, Father Faber had this to sayI cannot think of a higher work or a broader vocation for
anyone than the simple spreading of this devotion. Let a man but try it for himself and his surprise at the graces it
brings with it and the transformation it causes in his soul will soon convince him of its almost incredible efficacy.
Years later, a great and holy Pope, Pius X., was able to proclaim that he would give the apostolic blessing to anyone
who would even read the book. Now, in our Own time, we have the established fact that the late Holy Father, Pope
Pius XI., had from his childhood practised True Devotion to Mary as outlined by Blessed Grignion de Montfort. When
the late Cardinal Mercier, a short time before his death, presented to the Holy Father a copy of De Montforts treatise,
he asked: Does your Holiness know this book? Yes, replied the Holy Father, this is a devotion which I have
known and practised from my childhood. (Queen and Mother, July-August, 1940.)
A SLAVE OF MARY.
It is impossible to give any account of the life of Mary Potter without some explanation of what is meant by the
devotion known as The Slavery of Mary. On it her life and work are hinged. It is the spiritual legacy she bequeathed
to her Order. They were to become slaves of Mary.
Not, indeed, that this Slavery of Mary is confined to the members of any religious Order. Every day experience
proves that it is a secret of grace to souls of all ranks and conditions in the world. Here we can touch on the matter
only briefly. The interested reader will be well repaid by making a profound study of it in Blessed Grignion de
Montforts celebrated Treatise on True Devotion to the Blessed Virgin.
Blessed Grignion begins his treatise by laying down the unique position held by Mary in the scheme of redemption
and in the distribution of graces. In all this he simply follows the traditional teaching of the Church. To Jesus through
Mary was a principle of the golden age of the Church. De Montforts thesis is thisto find Jesus perfectly we must
find Mary perfectly. To find Mary perfectly we must become her slaves. He admits that there are several true ways of
honouring Mary.
The first devotion, he says, consists in performing our duties as Christians, avoiding mortal sin, acting more
from love than fear, praying to the Blessed Virgin from time to time and honouring her as the Mother of God, without
having any special devotion to her.
The second consists in having for the Blessed Virgin a more complete feeling of reverence, love, trust and venera-
tion. It causes us to join confraternities of the Holy Rosary, of the scapular, to say part or the whole of the Holy
Rosary, to honour the statues and altars of Mary, to publish her praise, to join her communities.
All these devotions, he tells us, if we abstain from sin are good, holy and praiseworthy. However, they are not so
capable of withdrawing the soul from creatures and detaching them from themselves in order to unite them with Jesus
Christ.
Finally, the true and perfect devotion to Mary, he declares, is known to and practised by very few. What, then, is
this wonderful devotion, this Secret of Mary, as he calls it?
It consists in abandoning oneself utterly and in the capacity of a slave to Mary and through her to Jesus, so that
everything we do, we do through Mary, with Mary, in Mary, and for Mary.
It is, therefore, something more than just a consecration of oneself to Marymore, even, than an offering to her of
all ones thoughts, words or actions. It is a giving over of the freedom of ones mind and heart, of the liberty to use
ones talents, spiritual and material, to the dominion of Mary.
The implications of this are far more than appear on the surface. Indeed, the full meaning and beauty of all it en-
tails will only gradually dawn upon the soul. Its noonday splendour is reserved for the faithful soul that has persevered
over the years in its practice.
Some not too deeply instructed souls are apt to take exception to the use of the word slave rather than child of
Mary. De Montfort describes three kinds of slavery The first, the slavery of natureall men, good and bad, are the
slaves of God in this sense.
The second, the slavery of constraintin this way the devils and the rejected are slaves of God.
The third, is the slavery of love and willand it is by this slavery, as being the most perfect, in which a creature
can give himself to his Creator, that we should consecrate ourselves to God through Mary.
For the restfor the actual practice of this surrender of ones life to Maryit is essential to read, and re-read,
Blessed Grignion de Montforts own treatise.
EARLY YEARS.
She was born In London on November 22. 1847the youngest of five children.
Her father, William Potter, was a nominal member of the Church of England, but had practised no religion. Owing
to a dispute over a will he deserted the family while Mary was still too young to remember him, and settled in Aus-
tralia. They did not hear from him again.
Her mother, Mary Anne Martin, was Irish and a convert to the Faith.
There is nothing worth recording of these years except the fact that she had a natural manner, a very affectionate
nature and appeared always carefree and full of fun. From childhood her instinct was to give, and this became a
marked characteristic throughout her life.
If she had any one aversion, it was to the very thought of being a nun! Nor must we suppose that a lively, affec-
tionate nature like hers took easily to the idea of breaking off her engagement and her love for Godfrey King. We have
her own simple words to assure us that the break with the man whom she loved came only at the end of a tremendous
and heart-breaking struggle.
We get an intimate glimpse of her soul from these words she wrote for her confessor about this time: I did not
fully value the state of virginity. I did not know the difference between one state and another, though I knew both were
good. I likewise felt the thought pressing upon me that it was Gods will that I should be a nun, though I still did not
wish it. In fact, upon telling my thoughts to my mother, and when she told me she had solemnly, years ago, offered me
to Our Lady as a nun, I felt I wished she had not..Finally, after a severe struggle, I gave up all earthly love, and, in
doing so, gave up my very nature; so much so that when I went to the convent they wondered that things came so
easily to me, that nothing seemed difficult (except speaking about myself); but the fact was that I had already made the
great sacrifice before entering, by giving up my engagement.
This period of her life is thus summed up by her biographer: From this moment she began to lead a life of prayer
and self-sacrifice, still outwardly the same happy, irresponsible person as before, but acting as one blind; she groped
helplessly for some indication of what God required of her. She exasperated her friends, and particularly her family,
by trying to accomplish whatever mad scheme she thought might be Gods plan.
He tells us that this darkness guides more surely than the noonday sun; and the consummation is, he assures us,
Love providing Union with the Infinite God:
O guiding night
O night more lovely than the dawn,
O night that hast united
The Lover with His Beloved
And changed her into her Love.
He uses a very simple example to express what happens before the chosen soul is fit to burn within the sanctuary
of its heart the pure flame of Divine Love. He compares the action of the Holy Spirit to the action of fire on wood. The
first effect of fire is not to set the wood alight. Rather, it begins by blackening and disfiguring the wood, from which it
then purges out the moist sap. Only gradually does it penetrate to the very centre. Finally, the wood is completely
purged of all contrary elements. Then it bursts into flame and is transformed into fire.
Such is the action of the Holy Spirit. He begins by the often long-drawn-out purification of the senses, by acts of
self-discipline, or, by providential happenings that detach from all that could hinder His full, untrammelled control
Later on, will come the still more terrible Night of the Spiritwhen the soul is tested in its inmost being, when faith
seems dead, hope seems vanished, and love seems cold. St John of the Cross speaks of this night as terrible in the
extreme, and adds that but few souls are chosen to endure it in all its dread reality. But the end and aim of all these is
to make that soul a living flame of Love Divine. Just as no words can describe the agony of these blessed souls so,
nothing can describe the wonders of grace which God places therein after the night of trial is over. It is all very fine to
say the saints were human, and many of them exteriorly like anybody else. We must never forget that, interiorly, they
were crucified with Christ. To use the strong expression of St. Paul, they can say with him: With Christ I am nailed
to the Cross, and I live now not I, but Christ liveth in me.
All this was expressed by Francis Thompson in the well-known lines of his Hound of Heaven:
Ah! must
Designer Infinite
Ah! must Thou char the wood, ere Thou canst limn with it?
Later on, he, too, sees it is but the loving hand of a God of infinite love and tender care when he cries out:
It is necessary to keep these long-established principles of mystic theology well in mind when studying the life of
any saint, or other chosen soul, else, we shall miss the real story of their lives, and see only the externals thereof. It
may be no harm to add that, while hagiographers of our day have certainly done well in giving greater prominence to
the human element in the lives of saints, stressing their every human weakness, as well as the strong traits of character
that surely contributed to their success, at the same time there is the danger of running to the other extreme, forgetting
that, after all, the Holy Spirit is ever the principal agent in the work of sanctification. He alone has the first and last
word. The souls work is that of faithful co-operation.
In the case of eager, enthusiastic souls, it preserves them from that insidious danger to holiness, that of being
carried away by too much external activity, which ends by sapping the very foundation of the spiritual life.
Someone has spoken of this over-eager, ill-balanced activity as the twentieth century heresy of good works. It is
surprising how many would-be apostolic workers are every day deceived by its speciousness. Such souls want to share
the public life of Christ without first having learned to go down to His hidden life at Nazareth. They are mere channels
of grace, not giving themselves the opportunity of benefiting by it. They foolishly hope to sanctify others without
having sanctified themselves. They have not learned the secret of waiting on God. Their works, built on the shifting
sands of human endeavour, are not blessed by God, and so, are doomed to failure, no matter how brilliant the natural
talent or the organisation that has been its unstable support
God now took Mary Potters surrendered soul into His safe keeping. Two long years of painful illness followed her
return from the convent. During those two years she was a complete invalid, confined to her room. However, kind
Providence has placed an oasis in the desert for the parched and weary traveller. Mary found a spiritual oasis in her
little room. This was a tiny oratory erected in a corner thereof, with its altar to Our Blessed Lady. It was a well-spring
of grace to a sorely tried soul. There, many and many an hour of light and shade, of deep, abiding, peaceful joy and
bitterest, darkest gloom passed over her soul as she fought her way against the world, the flesh, and the powers of
darkness into the Maternal Heart itself of the Immaculate Mother.
Here is one paragraph from her biography that tells its own story of these days Her prayers brought her no
consolation. In her heart she found no responding chord and no one realised the spiritual darkness had misery which
was now her portion.
There were many lonely hours of enforced inaction and solitude in which her physical and spiritual sufferings were
intense. Even God seemed to have deserted her, and only sufferers can realise the agony of being left alone by God
it is desolation. From her Creator she begged only to know His will; to her Saviour she offered her aching body to
suffer with Him on Calvary; to the Holy Ghost she cried in anguish for light and strength.
To my mind, this picture of misery as recorded by her biographer is somewhat overdrawn. Exponents of Mystic
Theology assure us that the spiritual night is never so dark that God does not leave some star to send a ray of hope in
the all-pervading darkness. There usually come peaceful, joy-giving, soul-expanding movements of grace when God
renews His love and the poor, anguished soul is refreshed, invigorated and renewed to continue the struggle.
A BEGINNING.
In the beginning of 1876, Mary was twenty-eight years of age. Those who remember her then describe her as
charming in appearance, gracious in manner, and endowed with an irresistible sense of humour. Her personality
seemed to radiate joy and serenity which surrounded her exterior life with an atmosphere of repose and tranquillity.
Thus no one suspected the interior strugglethe dark night of the soulfrom which she had just emerged. Thus
does her biographer describe Mary Potter at the moment when, at long last, she was able to make a beginning of her
lifes work for the sick and the dying.
Meanwhile, a few friends had gathered round. Plans were drawn up. The Bishop, Dr. Danell, was approached for
his approbation. This he readily and graciously gave, to enrol members, to hold meetings, visit the sick and teach in
the school. He suggested prayers to be said by members of the society. With characteristic energy, Mary threw herself
into the work. But here, let us never forget, was a soul tried and prepared, a soul who had learned to lean on God
alone, learned to keep tryst with Him hourly in the tabernacle of her heart. Such a soul would never make the tragic
mistake of the unenlightened would-be apostle, of allowing even the most absorbing work to dissipate the spiritual
life, the building up of which had been so costlyits further development being the only guarantee that heaven would
continue to bless her endeavours.
In the official life of Mary Potter there are several very interesting letters of this period. They make delightful
reading, and are of deep, spiritual content. One would love to quote from them more extensively. However, the fol-
lowing letter to her new-found director, Father Selley, a Marist, gives an intimate glimpse of her soul, with its hopes
and fears:
33 Norfolk Street, Southsea.
Reverend and dear Father in Jesus and Mary, In hopes of obtaining a friend for a work of God now in its
infancy, I write to tell you as briefly as I can what it is. It is years since the thought occurred to me that there should be
an Order devoted to the dying. I sent it away as nonsense. Again, the year before last, I believe it was shown me that it
was a work which I had to do. All I could tell my director about it was that its spirit and its model would be Calvary.
On the Feast of the Immaculate Conception, after Holy Communion, Our Lord seemed to inspire me to honour the
Heart of His Mother. It was a new devotion to me, and the peace and thanksgiving that it brought me I cannot
describe. God knows how I had been pouring myself out in prayer to aid the dying, and now it seemed that God willed
we should set before Him the Mother-Heart of Our Lady pleading for her children, especially those in the greatest
needthe dying. I began to pray in union with that Heart that had suffered so grievously on Calvary.
I must not delay to tell you how the work was, so to speak, completely put to death. I was bidden to put it all away
as imagination. However, I saw the Bishop, who was very kind to me, and said that I might influence any others to
join me in devotion for the dying, that we might hold meetings and visit cases that were recommended to us; he told
me the prayers we might use, mentioned one that he himself said every day, and he said that we might see him again.
One thing he distinctly said was that the word Order was not to be mentioned amongst us. He gave his blessing to
the school. He first refused to allow me to have Mass, and then said that the demand must come from Father Horan. I
trust and pray that Our Lord, by the love He bears the Heart of His Mother, will draw together those who are united in
honouring it. Mary was present in person on Calvary. Do you not believe that this is a work that she is most anxious
should be done? Will she not bless all those who join in it, and, as it were, take her place at the deathbed of her
children who work, pray, and suffer for the dying?
The little group lived in their own homes, attended Mass and prayers in common whenever possible; they devoted
any free time to good works generally. The pivot of mutual attraction. however, was the nursing of the sick and dying,
and all other work moved around the centre.
THE DEVILS FIRE BRIGADE.
It has been remarked, cynically perhaps, that the person who begins any good work, especially of a spiritual nature,
need never insure it against fire, because the devils fire brigade will see to it that there will be ever at hand an
unlimited supply of cold water. This water will be poured forth from every angle, by good-meaning people, who take
upon themselves the duty of protecting the rest of us from the fires of an enthusiasm that their lifeless hearts can never
understand. Of course, there is a loving Providence watching the work of this fire brigade. After all, the evil spirits
themselves have to co-operate for the perfection of the just, to whom all things work together unto good. Naturally,
this does not refer to that watchful prudence by which Holy Mother the Church protects herself and her children from
the aberrations of misguided souls and unbalanced minds.
Mary got her share of attention from those who would protect her from herself. Even her own mother misunder-
stood her, and I suppose it must be admitted that, all things considered, it was hard to blame her. She, like others,
could only see the surface. She could know nothing of the glowing fire within. Perhaps the hardest cross to sensitive
natures is to be misunderstood by dear friends, or, worse still, to have ones motives impugned, or ones integrity
challenged. The Divine Master Himself knew that form of spiritual crucifixion. His saints have shared it with Him.
Imagine, then, Mary Potters feelings when she read the following letter from the mother she loved, as only one of
her ardent, sensitive nature could love. At the time, Mary had gone to London to see after the publication of her book:
Looking back now, calmly, it must be admitted that the Bishop had no other course. Letters of accusation kept
coming in to him, including one from Marys own brother, Thomas.
We get a good insight of her worries from another letter, this time from a Protestant unclea Mr. George Saul:
14/8/1876
My dear Mary,
Of course I do not suppose I am infallible, but 1 believe I am quite right in distrusting your judgment and
businesslike habits when they are directly the reverse of those of your family, to say nothing of bishops, priests, etc. I
am quite sure that did the views of your mother and brothers correspond with your own, they would readily find
means to assist you in your plans, and the fact of their opposition shows that you are altogether mistaken. Your
apology for secrecy and reticence is very illogical, and it is much better to have a safety valve to your engine than to
force it to collapse or explode, as is the case likely to occur in some of your wild-goose schemes. I have some
difficulty in crediting you with a good, loving heart when I see the anxieties with which you trouble all those who
love you, but I suppose persistency in your case is a refined species of obstinacy. Your note has only reached me here,
and I hasten to reply that I will be no party in assisting you in this matter, We are enjoying the country, which is quite
new to us, but wish it was cooler.
With best wishes for your reformation,
A MANNEQUIN PARADE!
Well at least that is what it looked like. It concerned the question of an appropriate dress. This is how it is
described in the biography:
The discussion regarding the appropriate dress afforded amusement. Mary Eleanor Smith was frequently called on
to play the part of Mannequin. She dressed up and was paraded before the Bishop and Community to demonstrate
each idea as it was discussed. Mary proposed a plain habit of coarse sackcloth or canvas, with a pale blue veil; some
wanted a brown habit, and others voted for a black one.
The Bishop, who was strongly opposed to the sackcloth, approved a black tunic and scapular, a black leather cinc-
ture, a rosary of fifteen decades, a white linen headdress and a pale blue veil. Except for a few modifications, by which
the chaplet of five decades was substituted for the large rosary, and the leather belt replaced by a red woolen cord, the
habit was identical with that worn today.
The first clothing ceremony took place on July 2. In that year, 1877, this day was a double festivalthe Feast of
the Most Precious Blood, and the Feast of the Visitation. Bishop Bagshawe arrived in the afternoon, preached the
sermon, and gave the habit to Mary and her five companions. Mary took the name of Mary Angela; Mrs. Bryan
became Mary Elizabethlater changed to Magdalen, by which name she was known throughout her life; Mary Bray
chose the name of Agnes; Mary Eleanor Smith, Cecilia; Edith Coleridge, Philip; and another postulant who, however,
did not persevere, became Sister Joseph.
Once again the chapel was crowded and outside in the streets crowds of villagers stood waiting to have a look at
the new Sisters with the blue veils.
ROMAN DAYS
There was the usual round of visits, official and otherwise, that every person in Marys position is expected to
carry out. All the work of having the Constitutions approved had to be gone through. At one period she was advised to
return to England, as it would take many months to have everything arranged.
Mary was not going back. The Holy Father himself had invited her to stay, and she was not the type to miss an
opportunity or an inspiration to do good.
She discovered that there was much need for a convent and hospital for the English community in Rome. Some
Sisters were sent from England and Mary set to work.
They had considerable difficulty in procuring a suitable house. They had been going from one convent to another.
Now that there were more Sisters actually on their way, something had to be done.
Just then, Providence provided a good and lifelong friend in the person of Father Luke Carey, O.F.M. (he died only
in 1924), who was then attached to the Irish Franciscan College of St. Isidore. It is thus described in the biography:
Hearing of their predicament, Father Luke Carey, O.F.M., came to their assistance. He secured for them an
apartment near the church of the Irish Franciscans, Sant Isidoro. Here, for the first time since coming to Rome, they
were able to live a regular community life. They had their own little oratory, with the Blessed Sacrament reserved.
Once more Mother Marys prophecy was fulfilled:
When we begin to work Our Lord will begin with us. They went out regularly to do private nursing; soon their
work began to be appreciated, and they were brought into contact with many friends and benefactors. Father Luke
Carey remained one of their staunchest supporters all his life.
They stayed in this apartment for about two years. It was a hard struggle financially. Two Sisters went out every
day to beg. Often the cupboard was bare. At the end of two years of this precarious existence, Count Plunkett, an Irish-
man (his son Joseph was executed after the 1916 rebellion), obtained better accommodation and secured the rent Here
they were able to establish a novitiate, as well as take a few patients. Ten years later, in 1894, a larger house was
rented near Porta Pia.
CALVARY
In 1907 came her masterpiecethe Calvary Hospital, near the church of San Stephano Rotondo, on the Coelian
Hill. As usual, everybody opposed her. They disagreed with the site and these included eminent Cardinals They
disagreed with the plans, and these included eminent architects. They disagreed with the title chosen for her chapel,
and these included a Papal Master of Ceremonies! They said the title, Maternal Heart of Mary was not in use, and
suggested the Immaculate Heart of Mary. Mary held on. In the end, Pope Pius X ordered that Marys choice prevail,
and so the chapel was consecrated on October 11, 1908to the Maternal Heart of Mary. The architects told her the
plan was impossible. Mother Marys plan was in the shape of a Latin cross with a heart-shaped chapel in the centre.
The right arm of the cross was reserved for her community; the left arm, hospice for visitors; the head of the cross was
to be for ecclesiastical patients; and the main body of the cross for the general public.
Of course, she got her way. What could eminent Cardinals, eminent architects and Papal Masters of Ceremonies do
against the prayers of a soul that prays and lives in the Maternal Heart of Mary? Generations of priests scattered
throughout the world, especially the English-speaking world, have lived to bless Mother Mary Potter and her Blue
Veiled Nuns for the skilful nursing that brought them through the severe strain of student days in Rome. For them
Calvary was, and is, a hospital and a home.
AUSTRALIA!
While all this was going on, and while many other pressing problems were calling for attention, such as the final
approval of the Constitutionsin 1884came an insistent call from a far-off southern land, dedicated long before to
the Holy Spirit of Love. The insistent voice was that of Cardinal Moran. The land was our own Australia. Nottingham,
Rome, Lewishamthat was the order of her first trinity of houses. It took no small courage to send her nuns so far
away, when, as yet, it might be reasonably feared that the spirit of her Order was not yet sufficiently developed.
However, all obstacles were brushed aside and six members of the Little Company of Maryfive from England and
one from Romeaccompanied the Cardinal when he returned in 1885. Though very ill, Mary made the journey to
Naples to farewell and bless the pioneers. Mother Raphael was chosen as Superior. The following account of their
arrival is taken from a journal kept by one of the Sisters:
While we were going up the Harbour we heard on all sides from the boats and steam launches that had come out
to meet the Liguria, Welcome to Australia. Three cheers for the good old nuns! Good luck and prosperity attend
you.
Our kind friend, Mr. Fleming, whom Dr. OHaran had asked to look after us, pointed out Rose Bay and the
Convent of the Sacred Heart, such a beautiful place, with gardens running down to the waters edge. The Sisters were
all out in the grounds waving to us in welcome. We arrived at Circular Quay, where Mr. Fleming had a carriage and
pair waiting for us. After some time, we all landed and were very pleased to find ourselves safe as land again.
As we drove along, the people in the streets called out as we passed, Welcome to Australia! Good luck to you
and God bless you. Some of the old women went down on their knees in the street, invoking all kinds of blessings on
us. People were out on balconies waving to us, and there were such crowds on all sides, until we turned into
Darlinghurst, the suburb where our little cottage is.
We were driven to the Convent of the Irish Sisters of Charity, which is quite close to our little house. We received
a most hearty welcome from the dear Sisters. The Rev. Mother Rectress and Mother Francis were at the door to greet
us and to welcome us to Sydney.
We paid a visit to the Blessed Sacrament in thanksgiving for our safe journey and to ask our dear Lord to bless
and prosper Our Ladys Little Company in Sydney. The dear Sisters had a nice dinner prepared for us, and after we
had rested we went over the grounds and they all joined us and we had recreation together.
In the evening we were taken to our little cottage, where we were received by Mother Gertrude and Sister
Bonaventure, who welcomed us. They had prepared a nice little altar of Our Lady, with a statue and four lighted
candles. We all knelt down and said the Memorare, and some Hail Marys to ask Our Lady to bless her children.
Then the kind Sisters showed us over the house, where they had prepared everything for us, even to stocking the
larder and having the kettle boiling on the kitchen fire.
We shall never forget their kindness.
Today the word Lewisham in Australia stands for the perfection of the nursing Sister. Other foundations
followed in due course at Ryde, Wagga and Lake Macquarie, in N.S.W.; as well as in Adelaide, Melbourne and
Hobart. In New Zealand, they are established at Christchurch and Wellington.
EVENTIDE
It has been said that good characters, like good wine, sweeten with age. God does not have to wait for Eternity to
punish or reward. The advancing day may bring, usually does bring, a certain amount of necessary disillusionment to
the bright dreams of early morning. The man of Faith knows all that and awaits the calm evening of life with Faith
undimmed, heart undismayed. Some astronomer wrote these words for his tombstone:
I have spent my life among the stars and I do not fear the night.
Mary Potter had spent her life close to the Maternal Heart of the Immaculate Virgin. It sheltered her in the early
morning, it protected her in the blaze of noonday, and became, more than ever, her resting place as the evening
shadows deepened into night. The useless regrets, the disappointed bitterness of soul, that mar the peace of the self-
seeking had no place in her life. Life could take nothing from her who had the fulness of God.
During the last few years she became a complete invalid.
She could not lie down, and was obliged to retain, even when sleeping, an upright position. Periodically she had
severe attacks of fever, which left her thoroughly exhausted, and for several years she was unable to digest or retain
solid food. To these torments was added the distress caused by a tumour in the shoulder-joint of her left arm, which
pulsated like the sharp pangs of a discipline administered unceasingly.
Mother Marys cell, now the private oratory of the Mother House, was accessible to all who needed her advice.
The door was always open, and neither her physical sufferings nor her weakness were permitted to interfere with the
duties of her office. She received all who came to her with a welcoming smile and affectionate words. Her sweetness
of manner, and the keen interest she showed in all their affairs, belied the seriousness of her condition, and often
visitors, as well as many of her own Sisters, failed to realise how really ill she was.
Numberless are the anecdotes of her wonderful charity, of extraordinary answers to her prayers; of her boundless
trust in the Maternal Heart of Mary. She had, in particular, a most extraordinary devotion to the priesthood. Priests
were the object of her special love and solicitude:
Just as she had reserved the head of the cross in her material design especially for those sufferers dedicated to God
so she gave to priests in general the chief place in her prayers, her sufferings and her actions. She offered herself a
victim daily for them, particularly those who had become outcasts from the Mystical Body of Christ
There was, of course, besides, her unceasing solicitude for the dying. Withal there was the same happy, almost
irrepressible, spirit that, in her early days, so alarmed the serious Godfrey King. Like all people gifted with a keen
appreciation of the weakness of poor human nature, she ever preserved a saving sense of humour.
HER WRITINGS
One last legacy she left to her Sisters, and. for that matter, to all souls treading the Path of Mary, and this was a
series of spiritual writingsentirely devoted to the practice of De Montforts True Devotion. These were the fruit of
long hour of prayerful meditation, penetrating study and mature deliberation, strengthened by a long experience of the
needs of souls striving after the perfect service of God through Mary. They have received unstinted approval from
both the clergy and the laity. The list comprises: The Spiritual Exercises of Mary.
The Human Life of Jesus.
Gods Human Family.
Man Mirroring His Maker (for students to the priesthood).
Marys Conferences.
Marys Call.
Our Ladys Retreat
Brides of Christ.
May Papers.
Loves in the Heart of Mary.
Saturday.
Spiritual Maternity (for Superiors).
All these can be procured at Lewisham Hospital, Sydney, or from any other Convent of the Little Company of
Mary.
Of these, The Spiritual Exercises of Mary is of exceptional value as an immediate preparation for undertaking
the Holy Slavery of Mary.
Nihil obstat:
F. MOYNIHAN,
Censor Deputatus.
Imprirnatur:
DANIEL MANNIX,
Archiepiscopus Melbournensis.
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