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REQUIEM MASS

LATE FATHER GILBERT

LARGE ATTENDANCE AT

BASILICA

Requiem Mass for the repose of the soul of the late Father T. Gilbert, rector of St. Bede's College, Christchurch, and formerly' rector of St. Patrick's College, Wellington, was celebrated at the Basilica, Hill street, to-day. His Grace Archbishop Redwood, and his Grace . Archbishop O'Shea were present in the sanctuary. The celebrant was the Rev. Father P. Kane, S.M.; deacon, Rev. Father T. Cleary, S.M., of St. Bede's College; sub-deacon," Rev. Father P. J. Smyth, S.M.; master of ceremonies, Rev. Father J. A. Higgins, S.M.; and there were also present the following members of the clergy:—Rev. Father £>. Kennedy, S.M., Provincial of the Society of Mary; Rev. Father J. Gilbert, of Sydney, brother of the deceased; Rev. Father Cahill, C.S.S.R.; Rev. Father Garden, C.S.S.R., Rev. Fathers M'Crae, Dillon, Power, Fitzgibbon, Finnerty,,. J. Kelly, V. Kelly, L. Daly, Fisher, Griffin, Evans; and the following clergy of the Society of Mary: Very Rev. Dean Holly, Rev. Father Timmins, Rev. Father Dowling, Rev. Father F. J. Kennedy, Rev. Father S. Mahony, Rev. Father M'Hardy, Rev. Father Stewart, Rev. Father J. Bell, Rev. Father Lysaght, Rev. Father Geaney, Rev. Father Moore. Amongst those also present were: — Professor Rankine Brown, New Zealand I University and Victoria College; I Messrs. W. A. Armour, Wellington College; Brother Fergus, Sacred Heart College; representatives of St. Bede's College, Dr. P. F. M'Evedy, president St. Patrick's Old Boys' Association, and others. HIS LIFE'S WORK. The Rev. Father F. S. Bartley, S.M., M.A., said they were not met to mourn Father Gilbert, nor yet with barren words to praise him, but in friendship and gratitude' they remembered him where remembrance was best —before the altar of God, and to pray that his soul might' be vouchsafed' the peacethat, "passeth all understanding." It was a coincidence passing strange that on the day that brought the news of his death he read in the daily paper the verse:— I hold it truth with him who sings To .one clear harp in divers tones,. That men may rise on stepping-stones Of their dead selves to higher things. Almost thirty years ago on a Hawkes Bay hillside, his dear friend Father Gilbert unlocked, his heart to him with ihose lines. - Tho "In Memoriam" murmured in his mind and heart, as the song of the sea dwelt ever in tho shell from the shore. The ; quotation was the late Father Gilbert's* favourite, and "to higher things" marked him in the beginning, as it-stayed with him to the end. As boy and man, as student^ schoolmaster, and priest, his aim was the best that material and circumstances could' allow. The very good never contented him, as long as he felt that it 'was not his very best, All his life was a pilgrimage to perfection. That was the secret of all his success. He was a great headmaster because he threw heart and soul into his work; because he was a man of vision, and explored every avenue of possible betterment. The history of education in New Zealand would know few brighter pages than, those that told of tho life work of Thomas Andrew Gilbert. The music- was supplied by the choir of "St. Patrick's College, and amongst, the congregation were the students of St. Patrick's College. The service was concluded by the playing of the "Dead March in Saul." ~

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/EP19301201.2.125

Bibliographic details

Evening Post, Volume CX, Issue 131, 1 December 1930, Page 11

Word Count
561

REQUIEM MASS Evening Post, Volume CX, Issue 131, 1 December 1930, Page 11

REQUIEM MASS Evening Post, Volume CX, Issue 131, 1 December 1930, Page 11