<h2><SPAN name="chap36"></SPAN>CHAPTER XXXVI.<br/> THE APPLE OF DISCORD.</h2>
<p>Besides Fifine Beck’s mother, another power had a word to say to M. Paul
and me, before that covenant of friendship could be ratified. We were under the
surveillance of a sleepless eye: Rome watched jealously her son through that
mystic lattice at which I had knelt once, and to which M. Emanuel drew nigh
month by month—the sliding panel of the confessional.</p>
<p>“Why were you so glad to be friends with M. Paul?” asks the reader.
“Had he not long been a friend to you? Had he not given proof on proof of
a certain partiality in his feelings?”</p>
<p>Yes, he had; but still I liked to hear him say so earnestly—that he was
my close, true friend; I liked his modest doubts, his tender
deference—that trust which longed to rest, and was grateful when taught
how. He had called me “sister.” It was well. Yes; he might call me
what he pleased, so long as he confided in me. I was willing to be his sister,
on condition that he did not invite me to fill that relation to some future
wife of his; and tacitly vowed as he was to celibacy, of this dilemma there
seemed little danger.</p>
<p>Through most of the succeeding night I pondered that evening’s interview.
I wanted much the morning to break, and then listened for the bell to ring;
and, after rising and dressing, I deemed prayers and breakfast slow, and all
the hours lingering, till that arrived at last which brought me the lesson of
literature. My wish was to get a more thorough comprehension of this fraternal
alliance: to note with how much of the brother he would demean himself when we
met again; to prove how much of the sister was in my own feelings; to discover
whether I could summon a sister’s courage, and he a brother’s
frankness.</p>
<p>He came. Life is so constructed, that the event does not, cannot, will not,
match the expectation. That whole day he never accosted me. His lesson was
given rather more quietly than usual, more mildly, and also more gravely. He
was fatherly to his pupils, but he was not brotherly to me. Ere he left the
classe, I expected a smile, if not a word; I got neither: to my portion fell
one nod—hurried, shy.</p>
<p>This distance, I argued, is accidental—it is involuntary; patience, and
it will vanish. It vanished not; it continued for days; it increased. I
suppressed my surprise, and swallowed whatever other feelings began to surge.</p>
<p>Well might I ask when he offered fraternity—“Dare I rely on
you?” Well might he, doubtless knowing himself, withhold all pledge.
True, he had bid me make my own experiments—tease and try him. Vain
injunction! Privilege nominal and unavailable! Some women might use it! Nothing
in my powers or instinct placed me amongst this brave band. Left alone, I was
passive; repulsed, I withdrew; forgotten—my lips would not utter, nor my
eyes dart a reminder. It seemed there had been an error somewhere in my
calculations, and I wanted for time to disclose it.</p>
<p>But the day came when, as usual, he was to give me a lesson. One evening in
seven he had long generously bestowed on me, devoting it to the examination of
what had been done in various studies during the past week, and to the
preparation of work for the week in prospect. On these occasions my schoolroom
was anywhere, wherever the pupils and the other teachers happened to be, or in
their close vicinage, very often in the large second division, where it was
easy to choose a quiet nook when the crowding day pupils were absent, and the
few boarders gathered in a knot about the surveillante’s estrade.</p>
<p>On the customary evening, hearing the customary hour strike, I collected my
books and papers, my pen and ink, and sought the large division.</p>
<p>In classe there was no one, and it lay all in cool deep shadow; but through the
open double doors was seen the carré, filled with pupils and with light; over
hall and figures blushed the westering sun. It blushed so ruddily and vividly,
that the hues of the walls and the variegated tints of the dresses seemed all
fused in one warm glow. The girls were seated, working or studying; in the
midst of their circle stood M. Emanuel, speaking good-humouredly to a teacher.
His dark paletôt, his jetty hair, were tinged with many a reflex of crimson;
his Spanish face, when he turned it momentarily, answered the sun’s
animated kiss with an animated smile. I took my place at a desk.</p>
<p>The orange-trees, and several plants, full and bright with bloom, basked also
in the sun’s laughing bounty; they had partaken it the whole day, and now
asked water. M. Emanuel had a taste for gardening; he liked to tend and foster
plants. I used to think that working amongst shrubs with a spade or a
watering-pot soothed his nerves; it was a recreation to which he often had
recourse; and now he looked to the orange-trees, the geraniums, the gorgeous
cactuses, and revived them all with the refreshment their drought needed. His
lips meantime sustained his precious cigar, that (for him) first necessary and
prime luxury of life; its blue wreaths curled prettily enough amongst the
flowers, and in the evening light. He spoke no more to the pupils, nor to the
mistresses, but gave many an endearing word to a small spanieless (if one may
coin a word), that nominally belonged to the house, but virtually owned him as
master, being fonder of him than any inmate. A delicate, silky, loving, and
lovable little doggie she was, trotting at his side, looking with expressive,
attached eyes into his face; and whenever he dropped his bonnet-grec or his
handkerchief, which he occasionally did in play, crouching beside it with the
air of a miniature lion guarding a kingdom’s flag.</p>
<p>There were many plants, and as the amateur gardener fetched all the water from
the well in the court, with his own active hands, his work spun on to some
length. The great school-clock ticked on. Another hour struck. The carré and
the youthful group lost the illusion of sunset. Day was drooping. My lesson, I
perceived, must to-night be very short; but the orange-trees, the cacti, the
camelias were all served now. Was it my turn?</p>
<p>Alas! in the garden were more plants to be looked after,—favourite
rose-bushes, certain choice flowers; little Sylvie’s glad bark and whine
followed the receding paletôt down the alleys. I put up some of my books; I
should not want them all; I sat and thought; and waited, involuntarily
deprecating the creeping invasion of twilight.</p>
<p>Sylvie, gaily frisking, emerged into view once more, heralding the returning
paletôt; the watering-pot was deposited beside the well; it had fulfilled its
office; how glad I was! Monsieur washed his hands in a little stone bowl. There
was no longer time for a lesson now; ere long the prayer-bell must ring; but
still we should meet; he would speak; a chance would be offered of reading in
his eyes the riddle of his shyness. His ablutions over, he stood, slowly
re-arranging his cuffs, looking at the horn of a young moon, set pale in the
opal sky, and glimmering faint on the oriel of Jean Baptiste. Sylvie watched
the mood contemplative; its stillness irked her; she whined and jumped to break
it. He looked down.</p>
<p>“Petite exigeante,” said he; “you must not be forgotten one
moment, it seems.”</p>
<p>He stopped, lifted her in his arms, sauntered across the court, within a yard
of the line of windows near one of which I sat: he sauntered lingeringly,
fondling the spaniel in his bosom, calling her tender names in a tender voice.
On the front-door steps he turned; once again he looked at the moon, at the
grey cathedral, over the remoter spires and house-roofs fading into a blue sea
of night-mist; he tasted the sweet breath of dusk, and noted the folded bloom
of the garden; he suddenly looked round; a keen beam out of his eye rased the
white façade of the classes, swept the long line of croisées. I think he bowed;
if he did, I had no time to return the courtesy. In a moment he was gone; the
moonlit threshold lay pale and shadowless before the closed front door.</p>
<p>Gathering in my arms all that was spread on the desk before me, I carried back
the unused heap to its place in the third classe. The prayer-bell rang; I
obeyed its summons.</p>
<p>The morrow would not restore him to the Rue Fossette, that day being devoted
entirely to his college. I got through my teaching; I got over the intermediate
hours; I saw evening approaching, and armed myself for its heavy ennuis.
Whether it was worse to stay with my co-inmates, or to sit alone, I had not
considered; I naturally took up the latter alternative; if there was a hope of
comfort for any moment, the heart or head of no human being in this house could
yield it; only under the lid of my desk could it harbour, nestling between the
leaves of some book, gilding a pencil-point, the nib of a pen, or tinging the
black fluid in that ink-glass. With a heavy heart I opened my desk-lid; with a
weary hand I turned up its contents.</p>
<p>One by one, well-accustomed books, volumes sewn in familiar covers, were taken
out and put back hopeless: they had no charm; they could not comfort. Is this
something new, this pamphlet in lilac? I had not seen it before, and I
re-arranged my desk this very day—this very afternoon; the tract must
have been introduced within the last hour, while we were at dinner.</p>
<p>I opened it. What was it? What would it say to me?</p>
<p>It was neither tale nor poem, neither essay nor history; it neither sung, nor
related, not discussed. It was a theological work; it preached and it
persuaded.</p>
<p>I lent to it my ear very willingly, for, small as it was, it possessed its own
spell, and bound my attention at once. It preached Romanism; it persuaded to
conversion. The voice of that sly little book was a honeyed voice; its accents
were all unction and balm. Here roared no utterance of Rome’s thunders,
no blasting of the breath of her displeasure. The Protestant was to turn
Papist, not so much in fear of the heretic’s hell, as on account of the
comfort, the indulgence, the tenderness Holy Church offered: far be it from her
to threaten or to coerce; her wish was to guide and win. <i>She</i> persecute?
Oh dear no! not on any account!</p>
<p>This meek volume was not addressed to the hardened and worldly; it was not even
strong meat for the strong: it was milk for babes: the mild effluence of a
mother’s love towards her tenderest and her youngest; intended wholly and
solely for those whose head is to be reached through the heart. Its appeal was
not to intellect; it sought to win the affectionate through their affections,
the sympathizing through their sympathies: St. Vincent de Paul, gathering his
orphans about him, never spoke more sweetly.</p>
<p>I remember one capital inducement to apostacy was held out in the fact that the
Catholic who had lost dear friends by death could enjoy the unspeakable solace
of praying them out of purgatory. The writer did not touch on the firmer peace
of those whose belief dispenses with purgatory altogether: but I thought of
this; and, on the whole, preferred the latter doctrine as the most consolatory.
The little book amused, and did not painfully displease me. It was a canting,
sentimental, shallow little book, yet something about it cheered my gloom and
made me smile; I was amused with the gambols of this unlicked wolf-cub muffled
in the fleece, and mimicking the bleat of a guileless lamb. Portions of it
reminded me of certain Wesleyan Methodist tracts I had once read when a child;
they were flavoured with about the same seasoning of excitation to fanaticism.
He that had written it was no bad man, and while perpetually betraying the
trained cunning—the cloven hoof of his system—I should pause before
accusing himself of insincerity. His judgment, however, wanted surgical props;
it was rickety.</p>
<p>I smiled then over this dose of maternal tenderness, coming from the ruddy old
lady of the Seven Hills; smiled, too, at my own disinclination, not to say
disability, to meet these melting favours. Glancing at the title-page, I found
the name of “Père Silas.” A fly-leaf bore in small, but clear and
well-known pencil characters: “From P. C. D. E. to L—y.” And
when I saw this I laughed: but not in my former spirit. I was revived.</p>
<p>A mortal bewilderment cleared suddenly from my head and vision; the solution of
the Sphinx-riddle was won; the conjunction of those two names, Père Silas and
Paul Emanuel, gave the key to all. The penitent had been with his director;
permitted to withhold nothing; suffered to keep no corner of his heart sacred
to God and to himself; the whole narrative of our late interview had been drawn
from him; he had avowed the covenant of fraternity, and spoken of his adopted
sister. How could such a covenant, such adoption, be sanctioned by the Church?
Fraternal communion with a heretic! I seemed to hear Père Silas annulling the
unholy pact; warning his penitent of its perils; entreating, enjoining reserve,
nay, by the authority of his office, and in the name, and by the memory of all
M. Emanuel held most dear and sacred, commanding the enforcement of that new
system whose frost had pierced to the marrow of my bones.</p>
<p>These may not seem pleasant hypotheses; yet, by comparison, they were welcome.
The vision of a ghostly troubler hovering in the background, was as nothing,
matched with the fear of spontaneous change arising in M. Paul himself.</p>
<p>At this distance of time, I cannot be sure how far the above conjectures were
self-suggested: or in what measure they owed their origin and confirmation to
another quarter. Help was not wanting.</p>
<p>This evening there was no bright sunset: west and east were one cloud; no
summer night-mist, blue, yet rose-tinged, softened the distance; a clammy fog
from the marshes crept grey round Villette. To-night the watering-pot might
rest in its niche by the well: a small rain had been drizzling all the
afternoon, and still it fell fast and quietly. This was no weather for rambling
in the wet alleys, under the dripping trees; and I started to hear
Sylvie’s sudden bark in the garden—her bark of welcome. Surely she
was not accompanied and yet this glad, quick bark was never uttered, save in
homage to one presence.</p>
<p>Through the glass door and the arching berceau, I commanded the deep vista of
the allée défendue: thither rushed Sylvie, glistening through its gloom like a
white guelder-rose. She ran to and fro, whining, springing, harassing little
birds amongst the bushes. I watched five minutes; no fulfilment followed the
omen. I returned to my books; Sylvie’s sharp bark suddenly ceased. Again
I looked up. She was standing not many yards distant, wagging her white
feathery tail as fast as the muscle would work, and intently watching the
operations of a spade, plied fast by an indefatigable hand. There was M.
Emanuel, bent over the soil, digging in the wet mould amongst the rain-laden
and streaming shrubs, working as hard as if his day’s pittance were yet
to earn by the literal sweat of his brow.</p>
<p>In this sign I read a ruffled mood. He would dig thus in frozen snow on the
coldest winter day, when urged inwardly by painful emotion, whether of nervous
excitation, or, sad thoughts of self-reproach. He would dig by the hour, with
knit brow and set teeth, nor once lift his head, or open his lips.</p>
<p>Sylvie watched till she was tired. Again scampering devious, bounding here,
rushing there, snuffing and sniffing everywhere; she at last discovered me in
classe. Instantly she flew barking at the panes, as if to urge me forth to
share her pleasure or her master’s toil; she had seen me occasionally
walking in that alley with M. Paul; and I doubt not, considered it my duty to
join him now, wet as it was.</p>
<p>She made such a bustle that M. Paul at last looked up, and of course perceived
why, and at whom she barked. He whistled to call her off; she only barked the
louder. She seemed quite bent upon having the glass door opened. Tired, I
suppose, with her importunity, he threw down his spade, approached, and pushed
the door ajar. Sylvie burst in all impetuous, sprang to my lap, and with her
paws at my neck, and her little nose and tongue somewhat overpoweringly busy
about my face, mouth, and eyes, flourished her bushy tail over the desk, and
scattered books and papers far and wide.</p>
<p>M. Emanuel advanced to still the clamour and repair the disarrangement. Having
gathered up the books, he captured Sylvie, and stowed her away under his
paletôt, where she nestled as quiet as a mouse, her head just peeping forth.
She was very tiny, and had the prettiest little innocent face, the silkiest
long ears, the finest dark eyes in the world. I never saw her, but I thought of
Paulina de Bassompierre: forgive the association, reader, it <i>would</i>
occur.</p>
<p>M. Paul petted and patted her; the endearments she received were not to be
wondered at; she invited affection by her beauty and her vivacious life.</p>
<p>While caressing the spaniel, his eye roved over the papers and books just
replaced; it settled on the religious tract. His lips moved; he half checked
the impulse to speak. What! had he promised never to address me more? If so,
his better nature pronounced the vow “more honoured in the breach than in
the observance,” for with a second effort, he spoke.—“You
have not yet read the brochure, I presume? It is not sufficiently
inviting?”</p>
<p>I replied that I had read it.</p>
<p>He waited, as if wishing me to give an opinion upon it unasked. Unasked,
however, I was in no mood to do or say anything. If any concessions were to be
made—if any advances were demanded—that was the affair of the very
docile pupil of Père Silas, not mine. His eye settled upon me gently: there was
mildness at the moment in its blue ray—there was solicitude—a shade
of pathos; there were meanings composite and contrasted—reproach melting
into remorse. At the moment probably, he would have been glad to see something
emotional in me. I could not show it. In another minute, however, I should have
betrayed confusion, had I not bethought myself to take some quill-pens from my
desk, and begin soberly to mend them.</p>
<p>I knew that action would give a turn to his mood. He never liked to see me mend
pens; my knife was always dull-edged—my hand, too, was unskilful; I
hacked and chipped. On this occasion I cut my own finger—half on purpose.
I wanted to restore him to his natural state, to set him at his ease, to get
him to chide.</p>
<p>“Maladroit!” he cried at last, “she will make mincemeat of
her hands.”</p>
<p>He put Sylvie down, making her lie quiet beside his bonnet-grec, and, depriving
me of the pens and penknife, proceeded to slice, nib, and point with the
accuracy and celerity of a machine.</p>
<p>“Did I like the little book?” he now inquired.</p>
<p>Suppressing a yawn, I said I hardly knew.</p>
<p>“Had it moved me?”</p>
<p>“I thought it had made me a little sleepy.”</p>
<p>(After a pause:) “Allons donc! It was of no use taking that tone with
him. Bad as I was—and he should be sorry to have to name all my faults at
a breath—God and nature had given me ‘trop de sensibilité et de
sympathie’ not to be profoundly affected by an appeal so touching.”</p>
<p>“Indeed!” I responded, rousing myself quickly, “I was not
affected at all—not a whit.”</p>
<p>And in proof, I drew from my pocket a perfectly dry handkerchief, still clean
and in its folds.</p>
<p>Hereupon I was made the object of a string of strictures rather piquant than
polite. I listened with zest. After those two days of unnatural silence, it was
better than music to hear M. Paul haranguing again just in his old fashion. I
listened, and meantime solaced myself and Sylvie with the contents of a
bonbonnière, which M. Emanuel’s gifts kept well supplied with chocolate
comfits: It pleased him to see even a small matter from his hand duly
appreciated. He looked at me and the spaniel while we shared the spoil; he put
up his penknife. Touching my hand with the bundle of new-cut quills, he
said:—“Dites donc, petite soeur—speak frankly—what have
you thought of me during the last two days?”</p>
<p>But of this question I would take no manner of notice; its purport made my eyes
fill. I caressed Sylvie assiduously. M. Paul, leaning—over the desk, bent
towards me:—“I called myself your brother,” he said: “I
hardly know what I am—brother—friend—I cannot tell. I know I
think of you—I feel I wish, you well—but I must check myself; you
are to be feared. My best friends point out danger, and whisper caution.”</p>
<p>“You do right to listen to your friends. By all means be cautious.”</p>
<p>“It is your religion—your strange, self-reliant, invulnerable
creed, whose influence seems to clothe you in, I know not what, unblessed
panoply. You are good—Père Silas calls you good, and loves you—but
your terrible, proud, earnest Protestantism, there is the danger. It expresses
itself by your eye at times; and again, it gives you certain tones and certain
gestures that make my flesh creep. You are not demonstrative, and yet, just
now—when you handled that tract—my God! I thought Lucifer
smiled.”</p>
<p>“Certainly I don’t respect that tract—what then?”</p>
<p>“Not respect that tract? But it is the pure essence of faith, love,
charity! I thought it would touch you: in its gentleness, I trusted that it
could not fail. I laid it in your desk with a prayer: I must indeed be a
sinner: Heaven will not hear the petitions that come warmest from my heart. You
scorn my little offering. Oh, cela me fait mal!”</p>
<p>“Monsieur, I don’t scorn it—at least, not as your gift.
Monsieur, sit down; listen to me. I am not a heathen, I am not hard-hearted, I
am not unchristian, I am not dangerous, as they tell you; I would not trouble
your faith; you believe in God and Christ and the Bible, and so do I.”</p>
<p>“But <i>do</i> you believe in the Bible? Do you receive Revelation? What
limits are there to the wild, careless daring of your country and sect. Père
Silas dropped dark hints.”</p>
<p>By dint of persuasion, I made him half-define these hints; they amounted to
crafty Jesuit-slanders. That night M. Paul and I talked seriously and closely.
He pleaded, he argued. <i>I</i> could not argue—a fortunate incapacity;
it needed but triumphant, logical opposition to effect all the director wished
to be effected; but I could talk in my own way—the way M. Paul was used
to—and of which he could follow the meanderings and fill the hiatus, and
pardon the strange stammerings, strange to him no longer. At ease with him, I
could defend my creed and faith in my own fashion; in some degree I could lull
his prejudices. He was not satisfied when he went away, hardly was he appeased;
but he was made thoroughly to feel that Protestants were not necessarily the
irreverent Pagans his director had insinuated; he was made to comprehend
something of their mode of honouring the Light, the Life, the Word; he was
enabled partly to perceive that, while their veneration for things venerable
was not quite like that cultivated in his Church, it had its own, perhaps,
deeper power—its own more solemn awe.</p>
<p>I found that Père Silas (himself, I must repeat, not a bad man, though the
advocate of a bad cause) had darkly stigmatized Protestants in general, and
myself by inference, with strange names, had ascribed to us strange
“isms;” Monsieur Emanuel revealed all this in his frank fashion,
which knew not secretiveness, looking at me as he spoke with a kind, earnest
fear, almost trembling lest there should be truth in the charges. Père Silas,
it seems, had closely watched me, had ascertained that I went by turns, and
indiscriminately, to the three Protestant Chapels of Villette—the French,
German, and English—<i>id est</i>, the Presbyterian, Lutheran,
Episcopalian. Such liberality argued in the father’s eyes profound
indifference—who tolerates all, he reasoned, can be attached to none.
Now, it happened that I had often secretly wondered at the minute and
unimportant character of the differences between these three sects—at the
unity and identity of their vital doctrines: I saw nothing to hinder them from
being one day fused into one grand Holy Alliance, and I respected them all,
though I thought that in each there were faults of form, incumbrances, and
trivialities. Just what I thought, that did I tell M. Emanuel, and explained to
him that my own last appeal, the guide to which I looked, and the teacher which
I owned, must always be the Bible itself, rather than any sect, of whatever
name or nation.</p>
<p>He left me soothed, yet full of solicitude, breathing a wish, as strong as a
prayer, that if I were wrong, Heaven would lead me right. I heard, poured forth
on the threshold, some fervid murmurings to “Marie, Reine du Ciel,”
some deep aspiration that <i>his</i> hope might yet be <i>mine</i>.</p>
<p>Strange! I had no such feverish wish to turn him from the faith of his fathers.
I thought Romanism wrong, a great mixed image of gold and clay; but it seemed
to me that <i>this</i> Romanist held the purer elements of his creed with an
innocency of heart which God must love.</p>
<p>The preceding conversation passed between eight and nine o’clock of the
evening, in a schoolroom of the quiet Rue Fossette, opening on a sequestered
garden. Probably about the same, or a somewhat later hour of the succeeding
evening, its echoes, collected by holy obedience, were breathed verbatim in an
attent ear, at the panel of a confessional, in the hoary church of the Magi. It
ensued that Père Silas paid a visit to Madame Beck, and stirred by I know not
what mixture of motives, persuaded her to let him undertake for a time the
Englishwoman’s spiritual direction.</p>
<p>Hereupon I was put through a course of reading—that is, I just glanced at
the books lent me; they were too little in my way to be thoroughly read,
marked, learned, or inwardly digested. And besides, I had a book up-stairs,
under my pillow, whereof certain chapters satisfied my needs in the article of
spiritual lore, furnishing such precept and example as, to my heart’s
core, I was convinced could not be improved on.</p>
<p>Then Père Silas showed me the fair side of Rome, her good works; and bade me
judge the tree by its fruits.</p>
<p>In answer, I felt and I avowed that these works were <i>not</i> the fruits of
Rome; they were but her abundant blossoming, but the fair promise she showed
the world, that bloom when set, savoured not of charity; the apple full formed
was ignorance, abasement, and bigotry. Out of men’s afflictions and
affections were forged the rivets of their servitude. Poverty was fed and
clothed, and sheltered, to bind it by obligation to “the Church;”
orphanage was reared and educated that it might grow up in the fold of
“the Church;” sickness was tended that it might die after the
formula and in the ordinance of “the Church;” and men were
overwrought, and women most murderously sacrificed, and all laid down a world
God made pleasant for his creatures’ good, and took up a cross, monstrous
in its galling weight, that they might serve Rome, prove her sanctity, confirm
her power, and spread the reign of her tyrant “Church.”</p>
<p>For man’s good was little done; for God’s glory, less. A thousand
ways were opened with pain, with blood-sweats, with lavishing of life;
mountains were cloven through their breasts, and rocks were split to their
base; and all for what? That a Priesthood might march straight on and straight
upward to an all-dominating eminence, whence they might at last stretch the
sceptre of their Moloch “Church.”</p>
<p>It will not be. God is not with Rome, and, were human sorrows still for the Son
of God, would he not mourn over her cruelties and ambitions, as once he mourned
over the crimes and woes of doomed Jerusalem!</p>
<p>Oh, lovers of power! Oh, mitred aspirants for this world’s kingdoms! an
hour will come, even to you, when it will be well for your hearts—pausing
faint at each broken beat—that there is a Mercy beyond human compassions,
a Love, stronger than this strong death which even you must face, and before
it, fall; a Charity more potent than any sin, even yours; a Pity which redeems
worlds—nay, absolves Priests.</p>
<p class="p2">
My third temptation was held out in the pomp of Rome—the glory of her
kingdom. I was taken to the churches on solemn occasions—days of fête and
state; I was shown the Papal ritual and ceremonial. I looked at it.</p>
<p>Many people—men and women—no doubt far my superiors in a thousand
ways, have felt this display impressive, have declared that though their Reason
protested, their Imagination was subjugated. I cannot say the same. Neither
full procession, nor high mass, nor swarming tapers, nor swinging censers, nor
ecclesiastical millinery, nor celestial jewellery, touched my imagination a
whit. What I saw struck me as tawdry, not grand; as grossly material, not
poetically spiritual.</p>
<p>This I did not tell Père Silas; he was old, he looked venerable: through every
abortive experiment, under every repeated disappointment, he remained
personally kind to me, and I felt tender of hurting his feelings. But on the
evening of a certain day when, from the balcony of a great house, I had been
made to witness a huge mingled procession of the church and the
army—priests with relics, and soldiers with weapons, an obese and aged
archbishop, habited in cambric and lace, looking strangely like a grey daw in
bird-of-paradise plumage, and a band of young girls fantastically robed and
garlanded—<i>then</i> I spoke my mind to M. Paul.</p>
<p>“I did not like it,” I told him; “I did not respect such
ceremonies; I wished to see no more.”</p>
<p>And having relieved my conscience by this declaration, I was able to go on,
and, speaking more currently and clearly than my wont, to show him that I had a
mind to keep to my reformed creed; the more I saw of Popery the closer I clung
to Protestantism; doubtless there were errors in every church, but I now
perceived by contrast how severely pure was my own, compared with her whose
painted and meretricious face had been unveiled for my admiration. I told him
how we kept fewer forms between us and God; retaining, indeed, no more than,
perhaps, the nature of mankind in the mass rendered necessary for due
observance. I told him I could not look on flowers and tinsel, on wax-lights
and embroidery, at such times and under such circumstances as should be devoted
to lifting the secret vision to Him whose home is Infinity, and His
being—Eternity. That when I thought of sin and sorrow, of earthly
corruption, mortal depravity, weighty temporal woe—I could not care for
chanting priests or mumming officials; that when the pains of existence and the
terrors of dissolution pressed before me—when the mighty hope and
measureless doubt of the future arose in view—<i>then</i>, even the
scientific strain, or the prayer in a language learned and dead, harassed: with
hindrance a heart which only longed to cry—“God be merciful to me,
a sinner!”</p>
<p>When I had so spoken, so declared my faith, and so widely severed myself, from
him I addressed—then, at last, came a tone accordant, an echo responsive,
one sweet chord of harmony in two conflicting spirits.</p>
<p>“Whatever say priests or controversialists,” murmured M. Emanuel,
“God is good, and loves all the sincere. Believe, then, what you can;
believe it as you can; one prayer, at least, we have in common; I also
cry—‘O Dieu, sois appaisé envers moi qui suis
pécheur!’”</p>
<p>He leaned on the back of my chair. After some thought he again spoke:</p>
<p>“How seem in the eyes of that God who made all firmaments, from whose
nostrils issued whatever of life is here, or in the stars shining
yonder—how seem the differences of man? But as Time is not for God, nor
Space, so neither is Measure, nor Comparison. We abase ourselves in our
littleness, and we do right; yet it may be that the constancy of one heart, the
truth and faith of one mind according to the light He has appointed, import as
much to Him as the just motion of satellites about their planets, of planets
about their suns, of suns around that mighty unseen centre incomprehensible,
irrealizable, with strange mental effort only divined.</p>
<p>“God guide us all! God bless you, Lucy!”</p>
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