Sec. I. Seven miles to the north
of Venice, the banks of sand, which near the city
rise little above low-water mark, attain by degrees
a higher level, and knit themselves at last into fields
of salt morass, raised here and there into shapeless
mounds, and intercepted by narrow creeks of sea.
One of the feeblest of these inlets, after winding
for some time among buried fragments of masonry, and
knots of sunburnt weeds whitened with webs of fucus,
stays itself in an utterly stagnant pool beside a
plot of greener grass covered with ground ivy and violets.
On this mound is built a rude brick campanile, of
the commonest Lombardic type, which if we ascend towards
evening (and there are none to hinder us, the door
of its ruinous staircase swinging idly on its hinges),
we may command from it one of the most notable scenes
in this wide world of ours. Far as the eye can
reach, a waste of wild sea moor, of a lurid ashen grey;
not like our northern moors with their jet-black pools
and purple heath, but lifeless, the color of sackcloth,
with the corrupted sea-water soaking through the roots
of its acrid weeds, and gleaming hither and thither
through its snaky channels. No gathering of fantastic
mists, nor coursing of clouds across it; but melancholy
clearness of space in the warm sunset, oppressive,
reaching to the horizon of its level gloom. To
the very horizon, on the north-east; but, to the north
and west, there is a blue line of higher land along
the border of it, and above this, but farther back,
a misty band of mountains, touched with snow.
To the east, the paleness and roar of the Adriatic,
louder at momentary intervals as the surf breaks on
the bars of sand; to the south, the widening branches
of the calm lagoon, alternately purple and pale green,
as they reflect the evening clouds or twilight sky;
and almost beneath our feet, on the same field which
sustains the tower we gaze from, a group of four buildings,
two of them little larger than cottages (though built
of stone, and one adorned by a quaint belfry), the
third an octagonal chapel, of which we can see but
little more than the flat red roof with its rayed
tiling, the fourth, a considerable church with nave
and aisles, but of which, in like manner, we can see
little but the long central ridge and lateral slopes
of roof, which the sunlight separates in one glowing
mass from the green field beneath and grey moor beyond.
There are no living creatures near the buildings, nor
any vestige of village or city round about them.
They lie like a little company of ships becalmed on
a far-away sea.
Sec. II. Then look farther
to the south. Beyond the widening branches of
the lagoon, and rising out of the bright lake into
which they gather, there are a multitude of towers,
dark, and scattered among square-set shapes of clustered
palaces, a long and irregular line fretting the southern
sky.
Mother and daughter, you behold them
both in their widowhood, Torcello
and Venice.
Thirteen hundred years ago, the grey
moorland looked as it does this day, and the purple
mountains stood as radiantly in the deep distances
of evening; but on the line of the horizon, there were
strange fires mixed with the light of sunset, and
the lament of many human voices mixed with the fretting
of the waves on their ridges of sand. The flames
rose from the ruins of Altinum; the lament from the
multitude of its people, seeking, like Israel of old,
a refuge from the sword in the paths of the sea.
The cattle are feeding and resting
upon the site of the city that they left; the mower’s
scythe swept this day at dawn over the chief street
of the city that they built, and the swathes of soft
grass are now sending up their scent into the night
air, the only incense that fills the temple of their
ancient worship. Let us go down into that little
space of meadow land.
Sec. III. The inlet which
runs nearest to the base of the campanile is not that
by which Torcello is commonly approached. Another,
somewhat broader, and overhung by alder copse, winds
out of the main channel of the lagoon up to the very
edge of the little meadow which was once the Piazza
of the city, and there, stayed by a few grey stones
which present some semblance of a quay, forms its
boundary at one extremity. Hardly larger than
an ordinary English farmyard, and roughly enclosed
on each side by broken palings and hedges of honeysuckle
and briar, the narrow field retires from the water’s
edge, traversed by a scarcely traceable footpath,
for some forty or fifty paces, and then expanding into
the form of a small square, with buildings on three
sides of it, the fourth being that which opens to
the water. Two of these, that on our left and
that in front of us as we approach from the canal,
are so small that they might well be taken for the
out-houses of the farm, though the first is a conventual
building, and the other aspires to the title of the
“Palazzo publico,” both dating as
far back as the beginning of the fourteenth century;
the third, the octagonal church of Santa Fosca,
is far more ancient than either, yet hardly on a larger
scale. Though the pillars of the portico which
surrounds it are of pure Greek marble, and their capitals
are enriched with delicate sculpture, they, and the
arches they sustain, together only raise the roof to
the height of a cattle-shed; and the first strong
impression which the spectator receives from the whole
scene is, that whatever sin it may have been which
has on this spot been visited with so utter a desolation,
it could not at least have been ambition. Nor
will this impression be diminished as we approach,
or enter, the larger church to which the whole group
of building is subordinate. It has evidently
been built by men in flight and distress, who sought
in the hurried erection of their island church such
a shelter for their earnest and sorrowful worship as,
on the one hand, could not attract the eyes of their
enemies by its splendor, and yet, on the other, might
not awaken too bitter feelings by its contrast with
the churches which they had seen destroyed. There
is visible everywhere a simple and tender effort to
recover some of the form of the temples which they
had loved, and to do honor to God by that which they
were erecting, while distress and humiliation prevented
the desire, and prudence precluded the admission,
either of luxury of ornament or magnificence of plan.
The exterior is absolutely devoid of decoration, with
the exception only of the western entrance and the
lateral door, of which the former has carved sideposts
and architrave, and the latter, crosses of rich sculpture;
while the massy stone shutters of the windows, turning
on huge rings of stone, which answer the double purpose
of stanchions and brackets, cause the whole building
rather to resemble a refuge from Alpine storm than
the cathedral of a populous city; and, internally,
the two solemn mosaics of the eastern and western
extremities, one representing the Last Judgment,
the other the Madonna, her tears falling as her hands
are raised to bless, and the noble range
of pillars which enclose the space between, terminated
by the high throne for the pastor and the semicircular
raised seats for the superior clergy, are expressive
at once of the deep sorrow and the sacred courage
of men who had no home left them upon earth, but who
looked for one to come, of men “persecuted but
not forsaken, cast down but not destroyed.”
Sec. IV. I am not aware
of any other early church in Italy which has this
peculiar expression in so marked a degree; and it is
so consistent with all that Christian architecture
ought to express in every age (for the actual condition
of the exiles who built the cathedral of Torcello is
exactly typical of the spiritual condition which every
Christian ought to recognize in himself, a state of
homelessness on earth, except so far as he can make
the Most High his habitation), that I would rather
fix the mind of the reader on this general character
than on the separate details, however interesting,
of the architecture itself. I shall therefore
examine these only so far as is necessary to give a
clear idea of the means by which the peculiar expression
of the building is attained.
Sec. V. On the opposite page,
the uppermost figure, 1, is a rude plan of the church.
I do not answer for the thickness and external disposition
of the walls, which are not to our present purpose,
and which I have not carefully examined; but the interior
arrangement is given with sufficient accuracy.
The church is built on the usual plan of the Basilica
that is to say, its body divided into a nave and aisles
by two rows of massive shafts, the roof of the nave
being raised high above the aisles by walls sustained
on two ranks of pillars, and pierced with small arched
windows. At Torcello the aisles are also lighted
in the same manner, and the nave is nearly twice their
breadth.
The capitals of all the great shafts
are of white marble, and are among the best I have
ever seen, as examples of perfectly calculated effect
from every touch of the chisel. Mr. Hope calls
them “indifferently imitated from the Corinthian:"
but the expression is as inaccurate as it is unjust;
every one of them is different in design, and their
variations are as graceful as they are fanciful.
I could not, except by an elaborate drawing, give
any idea of the sharp, dark, deep penetrations of
the chisel into their snowy marble, but a single example
is given in the opposite plate, fi, of the nature
of the changes effected in them from the Corinthian
type. In this capital, although a kind of acanthus
(only with rounded lobes) is indeed used for the upper
range of leaves, the lower range is not acanthus at
all, but a kind of vine, or at least that species
of plant which stands for vine in all early Lombardic
and Byzantine work (vide Vol. I. Appendix 8);
the leaves are trefoiled, and the stalks cut clear
so that they might be grasped with the hand, and cast
sharp dark shadows, perpetually changing, across the
bell of the capital behind them. I have drawn
one of these vine plants larger in fi, that the
reader may see how little imitation of the Corinthian
there is in them, and how boldly the stems of the
leaves are detached from the ground. But there
is another circumstance in this ornament still more
noticeable. The band which encircles the shaft
beneath the spring of the leaves is copied from the
common classical wreathed or braided fillet, of which
the reader may see examples on almost every building
of any pretensions in modern London. But the
mediaeval builders could not be content with the dead
and meaningless scroll: the Gothic energy and
love of life, mingled with the early Christian religious
symbolism, were struggling daily into more vigorous
expression, and they turned the wreathed band into
a serpent of three times the length necessary to undulate
round the shaft, which, knotting itself into a triple
chain, shows at one side of the shaft its tail and
head, as if perpetually gliding round it beneath the
stalks of the vines. The vine, as is well known,
was one of the early symbols of Christ, and the serpent
is here typical either of the eternity of his dominion,
or of the Satanic power subdued.
Sec. Vi. Nor even when
the builder confines himself to the acanthus leaf
(or to that representation of it, hereafter to be more
particularly examined, constant in Romanesque work)
can his imagination allow him to rest content with
its accustomed position. In a common Corinthian
capital the leaves nod forward only, thrown out on
every side from the bell which they surround:
but at the base of one of the capitals on the opposite
side of the nave from this of the vines, two leaves
are introduced set with their sides outwards, forming
spirals by curling back, half-closed, in the position
shown in fi in Plate ii., there represented
as in a real acanthus leaf; for it will assist our
future inquiries into the ornamentation of capitals
that the reader should be acquainted with the form
of the acanthus leaf itself. I have drawn it,
therefore, in the two positions, fig and 4 in Plate
ii.; while fi is the translation of the latter
form into marble by the sculptor of Torcello.
It is not very like the acanthus, but much liker than
any Greek work; though still entirely conventional
in its cinquefoiled lobes. But these are disposed
with the most graceful freedom of line, separated
at the roots by deep drill holes, which tell upon the
eye far away like beads of jet; and changed, before
they become too crowded to be effective, into a vigorous
and simple zigzagged edge, which saves the designer
some embarrassment in the perspective of the terminating
spiral. But his feeling of nature was greater
than his knowledge of perspective; and it is delightful
to see how he has rooted the whole leaf in the strong
rounded under-stem, the indication of its closing
with its face inwards, and has thus given organization
and elasticity to the lovely group of spiral lines;
a group of which, even in the lifeless sea-shell,
we are never weary, but which becomes yet more delightful
when the ideas of elasticity and growth are joined
to the sweet succession of its involution.
Sec. VII. It is not, however,
to be expected that either the mute language of early
Christianity (however important a part of the expression
of the building at the time of its erection), or the
delicate fancies of the Gothic leafage springing into
new life, should be read, or perceived, by the passing
traveller who has never been taught to expect anything
in architecture except five orders: yet he can
hardly fail to be struck by the simplicity and dignity
of the great shafts themselves; by the frank diffusion
of light, which prevents their severity from becoming
oppressive; by the delicate forms and lovely carving
of the pulpit and chancel screen; and, above all,
by the peculiar aspect of the eastern extremity of
the church, which, instead of being withdrawn, as in
later cathedrals, into a chapel dedicated to the Virgin,
or contributing by the brilliancy of its windows to
the splendor of the altar, and theatrical effect of
the ceremonies performed there, is a simple and stern
semicircular recess, filled beneath by three ranks
of seats, raised one above the other, for the bishop
and presbyters, that they might watch as well as guide
the devotions of the people, and discharge literally
in the daily service the functions of bishops or overseers
of the flock of God.
Sec. VIII. Let us consider
a little each of these characters in succession; and
first (for of the shafts enough has been said already),
what is very peculiar to this church, its luminousness.
This perhaps strikes the traveller more from its contrast
with the excessive gloom of the Church of St. Mark’s;
but it is remarkable when we compare the Cathedral
of Torcello with any of the contemporary basílicas
in South Italy or Lombardic churches in the North.
St. Ambrogio at Milan, St. Michele at Pavia,
St. Zeno at Verona, St. Frediano at Lucca, St. Miniato
at Florence, are all like sepulchral caverns compared
with Torcello, where the slightest details of the
sculptures and mosaics are visible, even when twilight
is deepening. And there is something especially
touching in our finding the sunshine thus freely admitted
into a church built by men in sorrow. They did
not need the darkness; they could not perhaps bear
it. There was fear and depression upon them enough,
without a material gloom. They sought for comfort
in their religion, for tangible hopes and promises,
not for threatenings or mysteries; and though the
subjects chosen for the mosaics on the walls are of
the most solemn character, there are no artificial
shadows cast upon them, nor dark colors used in them:
all is fair and bright, and intended evidently to
be regarded in hopefulness, and not with terror.
Sec. IX. For observe this
choice of subjects. It is indeed possible that
the walls of the nave and aisles, which are now whitewashed,
may have been covered with fresco or mosaic, and thus
have supplied a series of subjects, on the choice
of which we cannot speculate. I do not, however,
find record of the destruction of any such works; and
I am rather inclined to believe that at any rate the
central division of the building was originally decorated,
as it is now, simply by mosaics representing Christ,
the Virgin, and the apostles, at one extremity, and
Christ coming to judgment at the other. And if
so, I repeat, observe the significance of this choice.
Most other early churches are covered with imagery
sufficiently suggestive of the vivid interest of the
builders in the history and occupations of the world.
Symbols or representations of political events, portraits
of living persons, and sculptures of satirical, grotesque,
or trivial subjects are of constant occurrence, mingled
with the more strictly appointed representations of
scriptural or ecclesiastical history; but at Torcello
even these usual, and one should have thought almost
necessary, successions of Bible events do not appear.
The mind of the worshipper was fixed entirely upon
two great facts, to him the most precious of all facts, the
present mercy of Christ to His Church, and His future
coming to judge the world. That Christ’s
mercy was, at this period, supposed chiefly to be attainable
through the pleading of the Virgin, and that therefore
beneath the figure of the Redeemer is seen that of
the weeping Madonna in the act of intercession, may
indeed be matter of sorrow to the Protestant beholder,
but ought not to blind him to the earnestness and singleness
of the faith with which these men sought their sea-solitudes;
not in hope of founding new dynasties, or entering
upon new epochs of prosperity, but only to humble
themselves before God, and to pray that in His infinite
mercy He would hasten the time when the sea should
give up the dead which were in it, and Death and Hell
give up the dead which were in them, and when they
might enter into the better kingdom, “where the
wicked cease from troubling and the weary are at rest.”
Sec. X. Nor were the strength
and elasticity of their minds, even in the least matters,
diminished by thus looking forward to the close of
all things. On the contrary, nothing is more
remarkable than the finish and beauty of all the portions
of the building, which seem to have been actually
executed for the place they occupy in the present structure.
The rudest are those which they brought with them from
the mainland; the best and most beautiful, those which
appear to have been carved for their island church:
of these, the new capitals already noticed, and the
exquisite panel ornaments of the chancel screen, are
the most conspicuous; the latter form a low wall across
the church between the six small shafts whose places
are seen in the plan, and serve to enclose a space
raised two steps above the level of the nave, destined
for the singers, and indicated also in the plan by
an open line a b c d. The bas-reliefs
on this low screen are groups of peacocks and lions,
two face to face on each panel, rich and fantastic
beyond description, though not expressive of very
accurate knowledge either of leonine or pavonine forms.
And it is not until we pass to the back of the stair
of the pulpit, which is connected with the northern
extremity of this screen, that we find evidence of
the haste with which the church was constructed.
Sec. XI. The pulpit, however,
is not among the least noticeable of its features.
It is sustained on the four small detached shafts marked
at p in the plan, between the two pillars at
the north side of the screen; both pillars and pulpit
studiously plain, while the staircase which ascends
to it is a compact mass of masonry (shaded in the plan),
faced by carved slabs of marble; the parapet of the
staircase being also formed of solid blocks like paving-stones,
lightened by rich, but not deep, exterior carving.
Now these blocks, or at least those which adorn the
staircase towards the aisle, have been brought from
the mainland; and, being of size and shape not easily
to be adjusted to the proportions of the stair, the
architect has cut out of them pieces of the size he
needed, utterly regardless of the subject or symmetry
of the original design. The pulpit is not the
only place where this rough procedure has been permitted:
at the lateral door of the church are two crosses,
cut out of slabs of marble, formerly covered with rich
sculpture over their whole surfaces, of which portions
are left on the surface of the crosses; the lines
of the original design being, of course, just as arbitrarily
cut by the incisions between the arms, as the patterns
upon a piece of silk which has been shaped anew.
The fact is, that in all early Romanesque work, large
surfaces are covered with sculpture for the sake of
enrichment only; sculpture which indeed had always
meaning, because it was easier for the sculptor to
work with some chain of thought to guide his chisel,
than without any; but it was not always intended,
or at least not always hoped, that this chain of thought
might be traced by the spectator. All that was
proposed appears to have been the enrichment of surface,
so as to make it delightful to the eye; and this being
once understood, a decorated piece of marble became
to the architect just what a piece of lace or embroidery
is to a dressmaker, who takes of it such portions
as she may require, with little regard to the places
where the patterns are divided. And though it
may appear, at first sight, that the procedure is indicative
of bluntness and rudeness of feeling, we may perceive,
upon reflection, that it may also indicate the redundance
of power which sets little price upon its own exertion.
When a barbarous nation builds its fortress-walls
out of fragments of the refined architecture it has
overthrown, we can read nothing but its savageness
in the vestiges of art which may thus chance to have
been preserved; but when the new work is equal, if
not superior, in execution, to the pieces of the older
art which are associated with it, we may justly conclude
that the rough treatment to which the latter have
been subjected is rather a sign of the hope of doing
better things, than of want of feeling for those already
accomplished. And, in general, this careless fitting
of ornament is, in very truth, an evidence of life
in the school of builders, and of their making a due
distinction between work which is to be used for architectural
effect, and work which is to possess an abstract perfection;
and it commonly shows also that the exertion of design
is so easy to them, and their fertility so inexhaustible,
that they feel no remorse in using somewhat injuriously
what they can replace with so slight an effort.
Sec. XII. It appears however
questionable in the present instance, whether, if
the marbles had not been carved to his hand, the architect
would have taken the trouble to enrich them. For
the execution of the rest of the pulpit is studiously
simple, and it is in this respect that its design
possesses, it seems to me, an interest to the religious
spectator greater than he will take in any other portion
of the building. It is supported, as I said,
on a group of four slender shafts; itself of a slightly
oval form, extending nearly from one pillar of the
nave to the next, so as to give the preacher free
room for the action of the entire person, which always
gives an unaffected impressiveness to the eloquence
of the southern nations. In the centre of its
curved front, a small bracket and detached shaft sustain
the projection of a narrow marble desk (occupying
the place of a cushion in a modern pulpit), which
is hollowed out into a shallow curve on the upper surface,
leaving a ledge at the bottom of the slab, so that
a book laid upon it, or rather into it, settles itself
there, opening as if by instinct, but without the
least chance of slipping to the side, or in any way
moving beneath the preacher’s hands. Six
balls, or rather almonds, of purple marble veined
with white are set round the edge of the pulpit, and
form its only decoration. Perfectly graceful,
but severe and almost cold in its simplicity, built
for permanence and service, so that no single member,
no stone of it, could be spared, and yet all are firm
and uninjured as when they were first set together,
it stands in venerable contrast both with the fantastic
pulpits of mediaeval cathedrals and with the rich
furniture of those of our modern churches. It
is worth while pausing for a moment to consider how
far the manner of decorating a pulpit may have influence
on the efficiency of its service, and whether our modern
treatment of this, to us all-important, feature of
a church be the best possible.
Sec. XIII. When the sermon
is good we need not much concern ourselves about the
form of the pulpit. But sermons cannot always
be good; and I believe that the temper in which the
congregation set themselves to listen may be in some
degree modified by their perception of fitness or
unfitness, impressiveness or vulgarity, in the disposition
of the place appointed for the speaker, not
to the same degree, but somewhat in the same way,
that they may be influenced by his own gestures or
expression, irrespective of the sense of what he says.
I believe, therefore, in the first place, that pulpits
ought never to be highly decorated; the speaker is
apt to look mean or diminutive if the pulpit is either
on a very large scale or covered with splendid ornament,
and if the interest of the sermon should flag the
mind is instantly tempted to wander. I have observed
that in almost all cathedrals, when the pulpits are
peculiarly magnificent, sermons are not often preached
from them; but rather, and especially if for any important
purpose, from some temporary erection in other parts
of the building: and though this may often be
done because the architect has consulted the effect
upon the eye more than the convenience of the ear
in the placing of his larger pulpit, I think it also
proceeds in some measure from a natural dislike in
the preacher to match himself with the magnificence
of the rostrum, lest the sermon should not be thought
worthy of the place. Yet this will rather hold
of the colossal sculptures, and pyramids of fantastic
tracery which encumber the pulpits of Flemish and
German churches, than of the delicate mosaics and
ivory-like carving of the Romanesque basílicas,
for when the form is kept simple, much loveliness
of color and costliness of work may be introduced,
and yet the speaker not be thrown into the shade by
them.
Sec. XIV. But, in the second
place, whatever ornaments we admit ought clearly to
be of a chaste, grave, and noble kind; and what furniture
we employ, evidently more for the honoring of God’s
word than for the ease of the preacher. For there
are two ways of regarding a sermon, either as a human
composition, or a Divine message. If we look upon
it entirely as the first, and require our clergymen
to finish it with their utmost care and learning,
for our better delight whether of ear or intellect,
we shall necessarily be led to expect much formality
and stateliness in its delivery, and to think that
all is not well if the pulpit have not a golden fringe
round it, and a goodly cushion in front of it, and
if the sermon be not fairly written in a black book,
to be smoothed upon the cushion in a majestic manner
before beginning; all this we shall duly come to expect:
but we shall at the same time consider the treatise
thus prepared as something to which it is our duty
to listen without restlessness for half an hour or
three quarters, but which, when that duty has been
decorously performed, we may dismiss from our minds
in happy confidence of being provided with another
when next it shall be necessary. But if once
we begin to regard the preacher, whatever his faults,
as a man sent with a message to us, which it is a matter
of life or death whether we hear or refuse; if we
look upon him as set in charge over many spirits in
danger of ruin, and having allowed to him but an hour
or two in the seven days to speak to them; if we make
some endeavor to conceive how precious these hours
ought to be to him, a small vantage on the side of
God after his flock have been exposed for six days
together to the full weight of the world’s temptation,
and he has been forced to watch the thorn and the
thistle springing in their hearts, and to see what
wheat had been scattered there snatched from the wayside
by this wild bird and the other, and at last, when
breathless and weary with the week’s labor they
give him this interval of imperfect and languid hearing,
he has but thirty minutes to get at the separate hearts
of a thousand men, to convince them of all their weaknesses,
to shame them for all their sins, to warn them of
all their dangers, to try by this way and that to
stir the hard fastenings of those doors where the
Master himself has stood and knocked yet none opened,
and to call at the openings of those dark streets
where Wisdom herself hath stretched forth her hands
and no man regarded, thirty minutes to raise
the dead in, let us but once understand
and feel this, and we shall look with changed eyes
upon that frippery of gay furniture about the place
from which the message of judgment must be delivered,
which either breathes upon the dry bones that they
may live, or, if ineffectual, remains recorded in
condemnation, perhaps against the utterer and listener
alike, but assuredly against one of them. We shall
not so easily bear with the silk and gold upon the
seat of judgment, nor with ornament of oratory in
the mouth of the messenger: we shall wish that
his words may be simple, even when they are sweetest,
and the place from which he speaks like a marble rock
in the desert, about which the people have gathered
in their thirst.
Sec. XV. But the severity
which is so marked in the pulpit at Torcello is still
more striking in the raised seats and episcopal throne
which occupy the curve of the apse. The arrangement
at first somewhat recalls to the mind that of the
Roman amphitheatres; the flight of steps which lead
up to the central throne divides the curve of the continuous
steps or seats (it appears in the first three ranges
questionable which were intended, for they seem too
high for the one, and too low and close for the other),
exactly as in an amphitheatre the stairs for access
intersect the sweeping ranges of seats. But in
the very rudeness of this arrangement, and especially
in the want of all appliances of comfort (for the
whole is of marble, and the arms of the central throne
are not for convenience, but for distinction, and
to separate it more conspicuously from the undivided
seats), there is a dignity which no furniture of stalls
nor carving of canopies ever could attain, and well
worth the contemplation of the Protestant, both as
sternly significative of an episcopal authority which
in the early days of the Church was never disputed,
and as dependent for all its impressiveness on the
utter absence of any expression either of pride or
self-indulgence.
Sec. XVI. But there is one
more circumstance which we ought to remember as giving
peculiar significance to the position which the episcopal
throne occupies in this island church, namely, that
in the minds of all early Christians the Church itself
was most frequently symbolized under the image of
a ship, of which the bishop was the pilot. Consider
the force which this symbol would assume in the imaginations
of men to whom the spiritual Church had become an
ark of refuge in the midst of a destruction hardly
less terrible than that from which the eight souls
were saved of old, a destruction in which the wrath
of man had become as broad as the earth and as merciless
as the sea, and who saw the actual and literal edifice
of the Church raised up, itself like an ark in the
midst of the waters. No marvel if with the surf
of the Adriatic rolling between them and the shores
of their birth, from which they were separated for
ever, they should have looked upon each other as the
disciples did when the storm came down on the Tiberias
Lake, and have yielded ready and loving obedience
to those who ruled them in His name, who had there
rebuked the winds and commanded stillness to the sea.
And if the stranger would yet learn in what spirit
it was that the dominion of Venice was begun, and
in what strength she went forth conquering and to
conquer, let him not seek to estimate the wealth of
her arsenals or number of her armies, nor look upon
the pageantry of her palaces, nor enter into the secrets
of her councils; but let him ascend the highest tier
of the stern ledges that sweep round the altar of Torcello,
and then, looking as the pilot did of old along the
marble ribs of the goodly temple ship, let him repeople
its veined deck with the shadows of its dead mariners,
and strive to feel in himself the strength of heart
that was kindled within them, when first, after the
pillars of it had settled in the sand, and the roof
of it had been closed against the angry sky that was
still reddened by the fires of their homesteads, first,
within the shelter of its knitted walls, amidst the
murmur of the waste of waves and the beating of the
wings of the sea-birds round the rock that was strange
to them, rose that ancient hymn, in the
power of their gathered voices:
The sea is his, and
he made it:
And his hands prepared
the dry land.