and huts of the Barbarians: poverty, hardships, and dangers, were the lot of the first missionaries; their
courage was active and patient; their motive pure and meritorious; their present reward consisted in the
testimony of their conscience and the respect of a grateful people; but the fruitful harvest of their toils
was inherited and enjoyed by the proud and wealthy prelates of succeeding times. The first conversions
were free and spontaneous: a holy life and an eloquent tongue were the only arms of the missionaries; but
the domestic fables of the Pagans were silenced by the miracles and visions of the strangers; and the
favorable temper of the chiefs was accelerated by the dictates of vanity and interest. The leaders of
nations, who were saluted with the titles of kings and saints, held it lawful and pious to impose the Catholic
faith on their subjects and neighbors; the coast of the Baltic, from Holstein to the Gulf of Finland, was
invaded under the standard of the cross; and the reign of idolatry was closed by the conversion of Lithuania
in the fourteenth century. Yet truth and candor must acknowledge, that the conversion of the North imparted
many temporal benefits both to the old and the new Christians. The rage of war, inherent to the human
species, could not be healed by the evangelic precepts of charity and peace; and the ambition of Catholic
princes has renewed in every age the calamities of hostile contention. But the admission of the Barbarians
into the pale of civil and ecclesiastical society delivered Europe from the depredations, by sea and land,
of the Normans, the Hungarians, and the Russians, who learned to spare their brethren and cultivate
their possessions. The establishment of law and order was promoted by the influence of the clergy; and
the rudiments of art and science were introduced into the savage countries of the globe. The liberal
piety of the Russian princes engaged in their service the most skilful of the Greeks, to decorate the
cities and instruct the inhabitants: the dome and the paintings of St. Sophia were rudely copied in the
churches of Kiow and Novogorod: the writings of the fathers were translated into the Sclavonic idiom; and
three hundred noble youths were invited or compelled to attend the lessons of the college of Jaroslaus.
It should appear that Russia might have derived an early and rapid improvement from her peculiar connection
with the church and state of Constantinople, which at that age so justly despised the ignorance of the
Latins. But the Byzantine nation was servile, solitary, and verging to a hasty decline: after the fall of Kiow,
the navigation of the Borysthenes was forgotten; the great princes of Wolodomir and Moscow were separated
from the sea and Christendom; and the divided monarchy was oppressed by the ignominy and blindness
of Tartar servitude. The Sclavonic and Scandinavian kingdoms, which had been converted by the Latin
missionaries, were exposed, it is true, to the spiritual jurisdiction and temporal claims of the popes; but
they were united in language and religious worship, with each other, and with Rome; they imbibed the
free and generous spirit of the European republic, and gradually shared the light of knowledge which
arose on the western world.