I
Percy Franklin, the new Cardinal-Protector
of England, came slowly along the passage leading
from the Pope’s apartments, with Hans Steinmann,
Cardinal-Protector of Germany, blowing at his side.
They entered the lift, still in silence, and passed
out, two splendid vivid figures, one erect and virile,
the other bent, fat, and very German from spectacles
to flat buckled feet.
At the door of Percy’s suite,
the Englishman paused, made a little gesture of reverence,
and went in without a word.
A secretary, young Mr. Brent, lately
from England, stood up as his patron came in.
“Eminence,” he said, “the English
papers are come.”
Percy put out a hand, took a paper,
passed on into his inner room, and sat down.
There it all was gigantic
headlines, and four columns of print broken by startling
title phrases in capital letters, after the fashion
set by America a hundred years ago. No better
way even yet had been found of misinforming the unintelligent.
He looked at the top. It was
the English edition of the Era. Then he
read the headlines. They ran as follows:
“THE NATIONAL WORSHIP.
BEWILDERING SPLENDOUR. RELIGIOUS ENTHUSIASM.
THE ABBEY AND GOD. CATHOLIC FANATIC. EX-PRIESTS
AS FUNCTIONARIES.”
He ran his eyes down the page, reading
the vivid little phrases, and drawing from the whole
a kind of impressionist view of the scenes in the
Abbey on the previous day, of which he had already
been informed by the telegraph, and the discussion
of which had been the purpose of his interview just
now with the Holy Father.
There plainly was no additional news;
and he was laying the paper down when his eye caught
a name.
“It is understood that Mr. Francis,
the ceremoniarius (to whom the thanks of all
are due for his reverent zeal and skill), will proceed
shortly to the northern towns to lecture on the Ritual.
It is interesting to reflect that this gentleman only
a few months ago was officiating at a Catholic altar.
He was assisted in his labours by twenty-four confreres
with the same experience behind them.”
“Good God!” said Percy
aloud. Then he laid the paper down.
But his thoughts had soon left this
renegade behind, and once more he was running over
in his mind the significance of the whole affair, and
the advice that he had thought it his duty to give
just now upstairs.
Briefly, there was no use in disputing
the fact that the inauguration of Pantheistic worship
had been as stupendous a success in England as in
Germany. France, by the way, was still too busy
with the cult of human individuals, to develop larger
ideas.
But England was deeper; and, somehow,
in spite of prophecy, the affair had taken place without
even a touch of bathos or grotesqueness. It had
been said that England was too solid and too humorous.
Yet there had been extraordinary scenes the day before.
A great murmur of enthusiasm had rolled round the
Abbey from end to end as the gorgeous curtains ran
back, and the huge masculine figure, majestic and overwhelming,
coloured with exquisite art, had stood out above the
blaze of candles against the tall screen that shrouded
the shrine. Markenheim had done his work well;
and Mr. Brand’s passionate discourse had well
prepared the popular mind for the revelation.
He had quoted in his peroration passage after passage
from the Jewish prophets, telling of the City of Peace
whose walls rose now before their eyes.
“Arise, shine, for thy light
is come, and the glory of the Lord is risen upon thee....
For behold I create new heavens and a new earth; and
the former shall not be remembered nor come into mind....
Violence shall no more be heard in thy land, wasting
nor destruction within thy borders. O thou so
long afflicted, tossed with tempest and not comforted;
behold I will lay thy stones with fair colours, and
thy foundations with sapphires.... I will make
thy windows of agates and thy gates of carbuncles,
and all thy borders of pleasant stones. Arise,
shine, for thy light is come.”
As the chink of the censer-chains
had sounded in the stillness, with one consent the
enormous crowd had fallen on its knees, and so remained,
as the smoke curled up from the hands of the rebel
figure who held the thurible. Then the organ
had begun to blow, and from the huge massed chorus
in the transepts had rolled out the anthem, broken
by one passionate cry, from some mad Catholic.
But it had been silenced in an instant....
It was incredible utterly
incredible, Percy had told himself. Yet the incredible
had happened; and England had found its worship once
more the necessary culmination of unimpeded
subjectivity. From the provinces had come the
like news. In cathedral after cathedral had been
the same scenes. Markenheim’s masterpiece,
executed in four days after the passing of the bill,
had been reproduced by the ordinary machinery, and
four thousand replicas had been despatched to every
important centre. Telegraphic reports had streamed
into the London papers that everywhere the new movement
had been received with acclamation, and that human
instincts had found adequate expression at last.
If there had not been a God, mused Percy reminiscently,
it would have been necessary to invent one. He
was astonished, too, at the skill with which the new
cult had been framed. It moved round no disputable
points; there was no possibility of divergent political
tendencies to mar its success, no over-insistence
on citizenship, labour and the rest, for those who
were secretly individualistic and idle. Life
was the one fount and centre of it all, clad in the
gorgeous robes of ancient worship. Of course the
thought had been Felsenburgh’s, though a German
name had been mentioned. It was Positivism of
a kind, Catholicism without Christianity, Humanity
worship without its inadequacy. It was not man
that was worshipped but the Idea of man, deprived
of his supernatural principle. Sacrifice, too,
was recognised the instinct of oblation
without the demand made by transcendent Holiness upon
the blood-guiltiness of man.... In fact, in
fact, said Percy, it was exactly as clever as the devil,
and as old as Cain.
The advice he had given to the Holy
Father just now was a counsel of despair, or of hope;
he really did not know which. He had urged that
a stringent decree should be issued, forbidding any
acts of violence on the part of Catholics. The
faithful were to be encouraged to be patient, to hold
utterly aloof from the worship, to say nothing unless
they were questioned, to suffer bonds gladly.
He had suggested, in company with the German Cardinal,
that they two should return to their respective countries
at the close of the year, to encourage the waverers;
but the answer had been that their vocation was to
remain in Rome, unless something unforeseen happened.
As for Felsenburgh, there was little
news. It was said that he was in the East; but
further details were secret. Percy understood
quite well why he had not been present at the worship
as had been expected. First, it would have been
difficult to decide between the two countries that
had established it; and, secondly, he was too brilliant
a politician to risk the possible association of failure
with his own person; thirdly, there was something
the matter with the East.
This last point was difficult to understand;
it had not yet become explicit, but it seemed as if
the movement of last year had not yet run its course.
It was undoubtedly difficult to explain the new President’s
constant absences from his adopted continent, unless
there was something that demanded his presence elsewhere;
but the extreme discretion of the East and the stringent
precautions taken by the Empire made it impossible
to know any details. It was apparently connected
with religion; there were rumours, portents, prophets,
ecstatics there.
Upon Percy himself had fallen a subtle
change which he himself was recognising. He no
longer soared to confidence or sank to despair.
He said his mass, read his enormous correspondence,
meditated strictly; and, though he felt nothing he
knew everything. There was not a tinge of doubt
upon his faith, but neither was there emotion in it.
He was as one who laboured in the depths of the earth,
crushed even in imagination, yet conscious that somewhere
birds sang, and the sun shone, and water ran.
He understood his own state well enough, and perceived
that he had come to a reality of faith that was new
to him, for it was sheer faith sheer apprehension
of the Spiritual without either the dangers
or the joys of imaginative vision. He expressed
it to himself by saying that there were three processes
through which God led the soul: the first was
that of external faith, which assents to all things
presented by the accustomed authority, practises religion,
and is neither interested nor doubtful; the second
follows the quickening of the emotional and perceptive
powers of the soul, and is set about with consolations,
desires, mystical visions and perils; it is in this
plane that resolutions are taken and vocations found
and shipwrecks experienced; and the third, mysterious
and inexpressible, consists in the re-enactment in
the purely spiritual sphere of all that has preceded
(as a play follows a rehearsal), in which God is grasped
but not experienced, grace is absorbed unconsciously
and even distastefully, and little by little the inner
spirit is conformed in the depths of its being, far
within the spheres of emotion and intellectual perception,
to the image and mind of Christ.
So he lay back now, thinking, a long,
stately, scarlet figure, in his deep chair, staring
out over Holy Rome seen through the misty September
haze. How long, he wondered, would there be peace?
To his eyes even already the air was black with doom.
He struck his hand-bell at last.
“Bring me Father Blackmore’s
Last report,” he said, as his secretary appeared.
II
Percy’s intuitive faculties
were keen by nature and had been vastly increased
by cultivation. He had never forgotten Father
Blackmore’s shrewd remarks of a year ago; and
one of his first acts as Cardinal-Protector had been
to appoint that priest on the list of English correspondents.
Hitherto he had received some dozen letters, and not
one of them had been without its grain of gold.
Especially he had noticed that one warning ran through
them all, namely, that sooner or later there would
be some overt act of provocation on the part of English
Catholics; and it was the memory of this that had inspired
his vehement entreaties to the Pope this morning.
As in the Roman and African persécutions of the
first three centuries, so now, the greatest danger
to the Catholic community lay not in the unjust measures
of the Government but in the indiscreet zeal of the
faithful themselves. The world desired nothing
better than a handle to its blade. The scabbard
was already cast away.
When the young man had brought the
four closely written sheets, dated from Westminster,
the previous evening, Percy turned at once to the last
paragraph before the usual Recommendations.
“Mr. Brand’s late secretary,
Mr. Phillips, whom your Eminence commended to me,
has been to see me two or three times. He is in
a curious state. He has no faith; yet, intellectually,
he sees no hope anywhere but in the Catholic Church.
He has even begged for admission to the Order of Christ
Crucified, which of course is impossible. But
there is no doubt he is sincere; otherwise he would
have professed Catholicism. I have introduced
him to many Catholics in the hope that they may help
him. I should much wish your Eminence to see
him.”
Before leaving England, Percy had
followed up the acquaintance he had made so strangely
over Mrs. Brand’s reconciliation to God, and,
scarcely knowing why, had commended him to the priest.
He had not been particularly impressed by Mr. Phillips;
he had thought him a timid, undecided creature, yet
he had been struck by the extremely unselfish action
by which the man had forfeited his position. There
must surely be a good deal behind.
And now the impulse had come to send
for him. Perhaps the spiritual atmosphere of
Rome would precipitate faith. In any case, the
conversation of Mr. Brand’s late secretary might
be instructive.
He struck the bell again.
“Mr. Brent,” he said,
“in your next letter to Father Blackmore, tell
him that I wish to see the man whom he proposed to
send Mr. Phillips.”
“Yes, Eminence.”
“There is no hurry. He can send him at
his leisure.”
“Yes, Eminence.”
“But he must not come till January.
That will be time enough, unless there is urgent reason.”
“Yes, Eminence.”
The development of the Order of Christ
Crucified had gone forward with almost miraculous
success. The appeal issued by the Holy Father
throughout Christendom had been as fire among stubble.
It seemed as if the Christian world had reached exactly
that point of tension at which a new organisation
of this nature was needed, and the response had startled
even the most sanguine. Practically the whole
of Rome with its suburbs three millions
in all had run to the enrolling stations
in St. Peter’s as starving men run to food,
and desperate to the storming of a breach. For
day after day the Pope himself had sat enthroned below
the altar of the Chair, a glorious, radiant figure,
growing ever white and weary towards evening, imparting
his Blessing with a silent sign to each individual
of the vast crowd that swarmed up between the barriers,
fresh from fast and Communion, to kneel before his
new Superior and kiss the Pontifical ring. The
requirements had been as stringent as circumstances
allowed. Each postulant was obliged to go to confession
to a specially authorised priest, who examined sharply
into motives and sincerity, and only one-third of
the applicants had been accepted. This, the authorities
pointed out to the scornful, was not an excessive
proportion; for it was to be remembered that most of
those who had presented themselves had already undergone
a sifting fierce as fire. Of the three millions
in Rome, two millions at least were exiles for their
faith, preferring to live obscure and despised in the
shadow of God rather than in the desolate glare of
their own infidel countries.
On the fifth evening of the enrolment
of novices an astonishing incident had taken place.
The old King of Spain (Queen Victoria’s second
son), already on the edge of the grave, had just risen
and tottered before his Ruler; it seemed for an instant
as if he would fall, when the Pope himself, by a sudden
movement, had risen, caught him in his arms and kissed
him; and then, still standing, had spread his arms
abroad and delivered a fervorino such as never
had been heard before in the history of the basilica.
“Benedictus Dominus!”
he cried, with upraised face and shining eyes.
“Blessed be the Lord God of Israel, for He hath
visited and redeemed His people. I, John, Vicar
of Christ, Servant of Servants, and sinner among sinners,
bid you be of good courage in the Name of God.
By Him Who hung on the Cross, I promise eternal life
to all who persevere in His Order. He Himself
has said it. To him that overcometh I will give
a crown of life.
“Little children; fear not him
that killeth the body. There is no more that
he can do. God and His Mother are amongst us....”
So his voice had poured on, telling
the enormous awe-stricken crowd of the blood that
already had been shed on the place where they stood,
of the body of the Apostle that lay scarcely fifty
yards away, urging, encouraging, inspiring. They
had vowed themselves to death, if that were God’s
Will; and if not, the intention would be taken for
the deed. They were under obedience now; their
wills were no longer theirs but God’s; under
chastity for their bodies were bought with
a price; under poverty, and theirs was the kingdom
of heaven.
He had ended by a great silent Benediction
of the City and the World: and there were not
wanting a half-dozen of the faithful who had seen,
they thought, a white shape in the form of a bird that
hung in the air while he spoke white as a mist, translucent
as water....
The consequent scenes in the city
and suburbs had been unparalleled, for thousands of
families had with one consent dissolved human ties.
Husbands had found their way to the huge houses on
the Quirinal set apart for them; wives to the Aventine;
while the children, as confident as their parents,
had swarmed over to the Sisters of St. Vincent who
had received at the Pope’s orders the gift of
three streets to shelter them in. Everywhere
the smoke of burning went up in the squares where
household property, rendered useless by the vows of
poverty, were consumed by their late owners; and daily
long trains moved out from the station outside the
walls carrying jubilant loads of those who were despatched
by the Pope’s delegates to be the salt of men,
consumed in their function, and leaven plunged in
the vast measures of the infidel world. And that
infidel world welcomed their coming with bitter laughter.
From the rest of Christendom had poured
in news of success. The same precautions had
been observed as in Rome, for the directions issued
were precise and searching; and day after day came
in the long rolls of the new Religious drawn up by
the diocesan superiors.
Within the last few days, too, other
lists had arrived, more glorious than all. Not
only did reports stream in that already the Order was
beginning its work and that already broken communications
were being re-established, that devoted missioners
were in process of organising themselves, and that
hope was once more rising in the most desperate hearts;
but better than all this was the tidings of victory
in another sphere. In Paris forty of the new-born
Order had been burned alive in one day in the Latin
quarter, before the Government intervened. From
Spain, Holland, Russia had come in other names.
In Dusseldorf eighteen men and boys, surprised at
their singing of Prime in the church of Saint Laurence,
had been cast down one by one into the city-sewer,
each chanting as he vanished:
“Christi Fili Dei vivi miséréré nobis,”
and from the darkness had come up
the same broken song till it was silenced with stones.
Meanwhile, the German prisons were thronged with the
first batches of recusants. The world shrugged
its shoulders, and declared that they had brought
it on themselves, while yet it deprecated mob-violence,
and requested the attention of the authorities and
the decisive repression of this new conspiracy of
superstition. And within St. Peter’s Church
the workmen were busy at the long rows of new altars,
affixing to the stone diptychs the brass-forged names
of those who had already fulfilled their vows and
gained their crowns.
It was the first word of God’s
reply to the world’s challenge.
As Christmas drew on it was announced
that the Sovereign pontiff would sing mass on the
last day of the year, at the papal altar of Saint
Peter’s, on behalf of the Order; and preparations
began to be made.
It was to be a kind of public inauguration
of the new enterprise; and, to the astonishment of
all, a special summons was issued to all members of
the Sacred College throughout the world to be present,
unless hindered by sickness. It seemed as if
the Pope were determined that the world should understand
that war was declared; for, although the command would
not involve the absence of any Cardinal from his province
for more than five days, yet many inconveniences must
surely result. However, it had been said, and
it was to be done.
It was a strange Christmas.
Percy was ordered to attend the Pope
at his second mass, and himself said his three at
midnight in his own private oratory. For the first
time in his life he saw that of which he had heard
so often, the wonderful old-world Pontifical procession,
lit by torches, going through the streets from the
Lateran to St. Anastasia, where the Pope for the last
few years had restored the ancient custom discontinued
for nearly a century-and-a-half. The little basilica
was reserved, of course, in every corner for the peculiarly
privileged; but the streets outside along the whole
route from the Cathedral to the church and,
indeed, the other two sides of the triangle as well,
were one dense mass of silent heads and flaming torches.
The Holy Father was attended at the altar by the usual
sovereigns; and Percy from his place watched the heavenly
drama of Christ’s Passion enacted through the
veil of His nativity at the hands of His old Angelic
Vicar. It was hard to perceive Calvary here;
it was surely the air of Bethlehem, the celestial light,
not the supernatural darkness, that beamed round the
simple altar. It was the Child called Wonderful
that lay there beneath the old hands, rather than
the stricken Man of Sorrows.
Adeste fidèles sang the choir
from the tribune. Come, let us adore, rather
than weep; let us exult, be content, be ourselves like
little children. As He for us became a child,
let us become childlike for Him. Let us put on
the garments of infancy and the shoes of peace. For
the Lord hath reigned; He is clothed with beauty:
the Lord is clothed with strength and hath girded
Himself. He hath established the world which
shall not be moved: His throne is prepared from
of old. He is from everlasting. Rejoice
greatly then, O daughter of Zion, shout for joy, O
daughter of Jerusalem; behold thy King cometh, to thee,
the Holy One, the Saviour of the world. It will
be time, then, to suffer by and bye, when the Prince
of this world cometh upon the Prince of Heaven.
So Percy mused, standing apart in
his gorgeousness, striving to make himself little
and simple. Surely nothing was too hard for God!
Might not this mystic Birth once more do what it had
done before bring into subjection through
the might of its weakness every proud thing that exalts
itself above all that is called God? It had drawn
wise Kings once across the desert, as well as shepherds
from their flocks. It had kings about it now,
kneeling with the poor and foolish, kings who had laid
down their crowns, who brought the gold of loyal hearts,
the myrrh of desired martyrdom, and the incense of
a pure faith. Could not republics, too, lay aside
their splendour, mobs be tamed, selfishness deny itself,
and wisdom confess its ignorance?...
Then he remembered Felsenburgh; and
his heart sickened within him.
III
Six days later, Percy rose as usual,
said his mass, breakfasted, and sat down to say office
until his servant should summon him to vest for the
Pontifical mass.
He had learned to expect bad news
now so constantly of apostasies, deaths,
losses that the lull of the previous week
had come to him with extraordinary refreshment.
It appeared to him as if his musings in St. Anastasia
had been truer than he thought, and that the sweetness
of the old feast had not yet wholly lost its power
even over a world that denied its substance.
For nothing at all had happened of importance.
A few more martyrdoms had been chronicled, but they
had been isolated cases; and of Felsenburgh there
had been no tidings at all. Europe confessed
its ignorance of his business.
On the other hand, to-morrow, Percy
knew very well, would be a day of extraordinary moment
in England and Germany at any rate; for in England
it was appointed as the first occasion of compulsory
worship throughout the country, while it was the second
in Germany. Men and women would have to declare
themselves now.
He had seen on the previous evening
a photograph of the image that was to be worshipped
next day in the Abbey; and, in a fit of loathing, had
torn it to shreds. It represented a nude woman,
huge and majestic, entrancingly lovely, with head
and shoulders thrown back, as one who sees a strange
and heavenly vision, arms downstretched and hands a
little raised, with wide fingers, as in astonishment the
whole attitude, with feet and knees pressed together,
suggestive of expectation, hope and wonder; in devilish
mockery her long hair was crowned with twelve stars.
This, then, was the spouse of the other, the embodiment
of man’s ideal maternity, still waiting for her
child....
When the white scraps lay like poisonous
snow at his feet, he had sprung across the room to
his prie-dieu, and fallen there in an agony
of reparation.
“Oh! Mother, Mother!”
he cried to the stately Queen of Heaven who, with
Her true Son long ago in Her arms, looked down on him
from Her bracket no more than that.
But he was still again this morning,
and celebrated Saint Silvester, Pope and Martyr, the
last saint in the procession of the Christian year,
with tolerable equanimity. The sights of last
night, the throng of officials, the stately, scarlet,
unfamiliar figures of the Cardinals who had come in
from north, south, east and west these helped
to reassure him again unreasonably, as
he knew, yet effectually. The very air was electric
with expectation. All night the piazza had been
crowded by a huge, silent mob waiting till the opening
of the doors at seven o’clock. Now the
church itself was full, and the piazza full again.
Far down the street to the river, so far as he could
see as he had leaned from his window just now, lay
that solemn motionless pavement of heads. The
roof of the colonnade showed a fringe of them, the
house-tops were black and this in the bitter
cold of a clear, frosty morning, for it was announced
that after mass and the proceeding of the members of
the Order past the Pontifical Throne, the Pope would
give Apostolic Benediction to the City and the World.
Percy finished Terce, closed his book
and lay back; his servant would be here in a minute
now.
His mind began to run over the function,
and he reflected that the entire Sacred College (with
the exception of the Cardinal-Protector of Jerusalem,
detained by sickness), numbering sixty-four members,
would take part. This would mean an unique sight
by and bye. Eight years before, he remembered,
after the freedom of Rome, there had been a similar
assembly; but the Cardinals at that time amounted to
no more than fifty-three all told, and four had been
absent.
Then he heard voices in his ante-room,
a quick step, and a loud English expostulation.
That was curious, and he sat up.
Then he heard a sentence.
“His Eminence must go to vest; it is useless.”
There was a sharp answer, a faint
scuffle, and a snatch at the handle. This was
indecent; so Percy stood up, made three strides of
it to the door, and tore it open.
A man stood there, whom at first he
did not recognise, pale and disordered.
“Why ” began Percy,
and recoiled.
“Mr. Phillips!” he said.
The other threw out his hands.
“It is I, sir your
Eminence this moment arrived. It is
life and death. Your servant tells me ”
“Who sent you?”
“Father Blackmore.”
“Good news or bad?”
The man rolled his eyes towards the
servant, who still stood erect and offended a yard
away; and Percy understood.
He put his hand on the other’s arm, drawing
him through the doorway.
“Tap upon this door in two minutes, James,”
he said.
They passed across the polished floor
together; Percy went to his usual place in the window,
leaned against the shutter, and spoke.
“Tell me in one sentence, sir,” he said
to the breathless man.
“There is a plot among the Catholics.
They intend destroying the Abbey to-morrow with explosives.
I knew that the Pope ”
Percy cut him short with a gesture.