<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_18" id="Page_18">{18}</SPAN></span>
<h2><i>Chapter II</i><br/> <small><i>The World St. Francis Found</i></small></h2></div>
<p><span class="smc">The</span> modern innovation which has substituted
journalism for history, or for that tradition that
is the gossip of history, has had at least one definite
effect. It has insured that everybody should
only hear the end of every story. Journalists are
in the habit of printing above the very last
chapters of their serial stories (when the hero
and heroine are just about to embrace in the last
chapter, as only an unfathomable perversity
prevented them from doing in the first) the rather
misleading words, "You can begin this story
here." But even this is not a complete parallel;
for the journals do give some sort of a summary
of the story, while they never give anything
remotely resembling a summary of the history.
Newspapers not only deal with news, but they
deal with everything as if it were entirely new.
Tutankamen, for instance, was entirely new. It
is exactly in the same fashion that we read that
Admiral Bangs has been shot, which is the first
intimation we have that he has ever been born.
There is something singularly significant in the
use which journalism makes of its stores of
biography. It never thinks of publishing the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_19" id="Page_19">{19}</SPAN></span>
life until it is publishing the death. As it deals
with individuals it deals with institutions and
ideas. After the Great War our public began
to be told of all sorts of nations being emancipated.
It had never been told a word about their being
enslaved. We were called upon to judge of the
justice of the settlements, when we had never
been allowed to hear of the very existence of
the quarrels. People would think it pedantic
to talk about the Serbian epics and they prefer
to speak in plain every-day modern language
about the Yugo-Slavonic international new diplomacy;
and they are quite excited about something
they call Czecho-Slovakia without apparently
having ever heard of Bohemia. Things
that are as old as Europe are regarded as more
recent than the very latest claims pegged out on
the prairies of America. It is very exciting; like
the last act of a play to people who have only
come into the theatre just before the curtain falls.
But it does not conduce exactly to knowing what
it is all about. To those content with the
mere fact of a pistol-shot or a passionate embrace,
such a leisurely manner of patronising the drama
may be recommended. To those tormented by
a merely intellectual curiosity about who is kissing
or killing whom, and why, it is unsatisfactory.</p>
<p>Most modern history, especially in England,
suffers from the same imperfection as journalism.
At best it only tells half of the history of Christendom;
and that the second half without the first
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_20" id="Page_20">{20}</SPAN></span>
half. Men for whom reason begins with the
Revival of Learning, men for whom religion
begins with the Reformation, can never give a
complete account of anything, for they have to
start with institutions whose origin they cannot
explain, or generally even imagine. Just as we
hear of the admiral being shot but have never
heard of his being born, so we all heard a great
deal about the dissolution of the monasteries,
but we heard next to nothing about the creation
of the monasteries. Now this sort of history
would be hopelessly insufficient, even for an
intelligent man who hated the monasteries.
It is hopelessly insufficient in connection with
institutions that many intelligent men do in a
quite healthy spirit hate. For instance, it is
possible that some of us have occasionally seen
some mention, by our learned leader-writers, of
an obscure institution called the Spanish Inquisition.
Well, it really is an obscure institution,
according to them and the histories they read.
It is obscure because its origin is obscure. Protestant
history simply begins with the horrible
thing in possession, as the pantomime begins
with the demon king in the goblin kitchen. It
is likely enough that it was, especially towards
the end, a horrible thing that might be haunted
by demons; but if we say this was so, we have
no notion why it was so. To understand the
Spanish Inquisition it would be necessary to
discover two things that we have never dreamed
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_21" id="Page_21">{21}</SPAN></span>
of bothering about; what Spain was and what an
Inquisition was. The former would bring in the
whole great question about the Crusade against
the Moors; and by what heroic chivalry a
European nation freed itself of an alien domination
from Africa. The latter would bring in the whole
business of the other Crusade against the Albigensians,
and why men loved and hated that nihilistic
vision from Asia. Unless we understand that there
was in these things originally the rush and romance
of a Crusade, we cannot understand how they
came to deceive men or drag them on towards
evil. The Crusaders doubtless abused their
victory, but there was a victory to abuse. And
where there is victory there is valour in the field
and popularity in the forum. There is some sort
of enthusiasm that encourages excesses or covers
faults. For instance, I for one have maintained
from very early days the responsibility of the
English for their atrocious treatment of the
Irish. But it would be quite unfair to the English
to describe even the devilry of '98 and leave out
altogether all mention of the war with Napoleon.
It would be unjust to suggest that the English
mind was bent on nothing but the death of
Emmett, when it was more probably full of the
glory of the death of Nelson. Unfortunately
'98 was very far from being the last date of such
dirty work; and only a few years ago our politicians
started trying to rule by random robbing
and killing, while gently remonstrating with the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_22" id="Page_22">{22}</SPAN></span>
Irish for their memory of old unhappy far-off
things and battles long ago. But however badly
we may think of the Black-and-Tan business,
it would be unjust to forget that most of us were
not thinking of Black-and-Tan but of khaki; and
that khaki had just then a noble and national
connotation covering many things. To write
of the war in Ireland and leave out the war
against Prussia, and the English sincerity about
it, would be unjust to the English. So to talk
about the torture-engine as if it had been a
hideous toy is unjust to the Spanish. It does not
tell sensibly from the start the story of what the
Spaniard did, and why. We may concede to
our contemporaries that in any case it is not a
story that ends well. We do not insist that
in their version it should begin well. What we
complain of is that in their version it does not
begin at all. They are only in at the death;
or even, like Lord Tom Noddy, too late for the
hanging. It is quite true that it was sometimes
more horrible than any hanging; but they only
gather, so to speak, the very ashes of the ashes;
the fag-end of the faggot.</p>
<p>The case of the Inquisition is here taken at
random, for it is one among any number illustrating
the same thing; and not because it is
especially connected with St. Francis, in whatever
sense it may have been connected with St. Dominic. It may well be suggested later indeed
that St. Francis is unintelligible, just as St. Dominic
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_23" id="Page_23">{23}</SPAN></span>
is unintelligible, unless we do understand
something of what the thirteenth century meant
by heresy and a crusade. But for the moment
I use it as a lesser example for a much larger
purpose. It is to point out that to begin the story
of St. Francis with the birth of St. Francis would
be to miss the whole point of the story, or rather
not to tell the story at all. And it is to suggest
that the modern tail-foremost type of journalistic
history perpetually fails us. We learn about
reformers without knowing what they had to
reform, about rebels without a notion of what
they rebelled against, of memorials that are
not connected with any memory and restorations
of things that had apparently never existed
before. Even at the expense of this chapter
appearing disproportionate, it is necessary to say
something about the great movements that led
up to the entrance of the founder of the Franciscans.
It may seem to mean describing a world,
or even a universe, in order to describe a man.
It will inevitably mean that the world or the
universe will be described with a few desperate
generalisations in a few abrupt sentences. But
so far from its meaning that we see a very small
figure under so large a sky, it will mean that we
must measure the sky before we can begin to
measure the towering stature of the man.</p>
<p>And this phrase alone brings me to the preliminary
suggestions that seem necessary before even
a slight sketch of the life of St. Francis. It is
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_24" id="Page_24">{24}</SPAN></span>
necessary to realise, in however rude and elementary
a fashion, into what sort of a world St. Francis
entered and what has been the history
of that world, at least in so far as it affected him.
It is necessary to have, if only in a few sentences,
a sort of preface in the form of an Outline of
History, if we may borrow the phrase of Mr.
Wells. In the case of Mr. Wells himself, it is
evident that the distinguished novelist suffered
the same disadvantage as if he had been obliged
to write a novel of which he hated the hero. To
write history and hate Rome, both pagan and
papal, is practically to hate nearly everything
that has happened. It comes very near to hating
humanity on purely humanitarian grounds. To
dislike both the priest and the soldier, both the
laurels of the warrior and the lilies of the saint,
is to suffer a division from the mass of mankind
for which not all the dexterities of the finest
and most flexible of modern intelligences can
compensate. A much wider sympathy is needed
for the historical setting of St. Francis, himself
both a soldier and a saint. I will therefore
conclude this chapter with a few generalisations
about the world that St. Francis found.</p>
<p>Men will not believe because they will not
broaden their minds. As a matter of individual
belief, I should of course express it by saying
that they are not sufficiently catholic to be
Catholic. But I am not going to discuss here
the doctrinal truths of Christianity, but simply
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_25" id="Page_25">{25}</SPAN></span>
the broad historical fact of Christianity, as it
might appear to a really enlightened and imaginative
person even if he were not a Christian.
What I mean at the moment is that the majority
of doubts are made out of details. In the course
of random reading a man comes across a pagan
custom that strikes him as picturesque or a
Christian action that strikes him as cruel; but
he does not enlarge his mind sufficiently to see
the main truth about pagan custom or the
Christian reaction against it. Until we understand,
not necessarily in detail, but in their big
bulk and proportion that pagan progress and that
Christian reaction, we cannot really understand
the point of history at which St. Francis appears
or what his great popular mission was all about.</p>
<p>Now everybody knows, I imagine, that the
twelfth and thirteenth centuries were an awakening
of the world. They were a fresh flowering
of culture and the creative arts after a long spell
of much sterner and even more sterile experience
which we call the Dark Ages. They may be called
an emancipation; they were certainly an end;
an end of what may at least seem a harsher and
more inhuman time. But what was it that was
ended? From what was it that men were
emancipated? That is where there is a real
collision and point at issue between the different
philosophies of history. On the merely external
and secular side, it has been truly said that men
awoke from a sleep; but there had been dreams
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_26" id="Page_26">{26}</SPAN></span>
in that sleep of a mystical and sometimes of a
monstrous kind. In that rationalistic routine
into which most modern historians have fallen,
it is considered enough to say that they were
emancipated from mere savage superstition and
advanced towards mere civilised enlightenment.
Now this is the big blunder that stands as a
stumbling-block at the very beginning of our
story. Anybody who supposes that the Dark
Ages were plain darkness and nothing else, and
that the dawn of the thirteenth century was
plain daylight and nothing else, will not be able
to make head or tail of the human story of St. Francis
of Assisi. The truth is that the joy of
St. Francis and his Jongleurs de Dieu was not
merely an awakening. It was something which
cannot be understood without understanding
their own mystical creed. The end of the Dark
Ages was not merely the end of a sleep. It was
certainly not merely the end of a superstitious
enslavement. It was the end of something
belonging to a quite definite but quite different
order of ideas.</p>
<p>It was the end of a penance; or, if it be preferred,
a purgation. It marked the moment when a
certain spiritual expiation had been finally worked
out and certain spiritual diseases had been finally
expelled from the system. They had been
expelled by an era of asceticism, which was the
only thing that could have expelled them.
Christianity had entered the world to cure the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_27" id="Page_27">{27}</SPAN></span>
world; and she had cured it in the only way in
which it could be cured.</p>
<p>Viewed merely in an external and experimental
fashion, the whole of the high civilisation of
antiquity had ended in the learning of a certain
lesson; that is, in its conversion to Christianity.
But that lesson was a psychological fact as well
as a theological faith. That pagan civilisation
had indeed been a very high civilisation. It
would not weaken our thesis, it might even
strengthen it, to say that it was the highest that
humanity ever reached. It had discovered its
still unrivalled arts of poetry and plastic representation;
it had discovered its own permanent
political ideals; it had discovered its own clear
system of logic and of language. But above
all, it had discovered its own mistake.</p>
<p>That mistake was too deep to be ideally
defined; the short-hand of it is to call it the
mistake of nature-worship. It might almost as
truly be called the mistake of being natural;
and it was a very natural mistake. The Greeks,
the great guides and pioneers of pagan antiquity,
started out with the idea of something splendidly
obvious and direct; the idea that if man walked
straight ahead on the high road of reason and
nature, he could come to no harm; especially
if he was, as the Greek was, eminently enlightened
and intelligent. We might be so flippant as to
say that man was simply to follow his nose, so
long as it was a Greek nose. And the case of
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_28" id="Page_28">{28}</SPAN></span>
the Greeks themselves is alone enough to illustrate
the strange but certain fatality that attends upon
this fallacy. No sooner did the Greeks themselves
begin to follow their own noses and their
own notion of being natural, than the queerest
thing in history seems to have happened to them.
It was much too queer to be an easy matter to
discuss. It may be remarked that our more
repulsive realists never give us the benefit of
their realism. Their studies of unsavoury subjects
never take note of the testimony which they bear
to the truths of a traditional morality. But if
we had the taste for such things, we could cite
thousands of such things as part of the case for
Christian morals. And an instance of this is
found in the fact that nobody has written, in
this sense, a real moral history of the Greeks.
Nobody has seen the scale or the strangeness of
the story. The wisest men in the world set out
to be natural; and the most unnatural thing in
the world was the very first thing they did. The
immediate effect of saluting the sun and the
sunny sanity of nature was a perversion spreading
like a pestilence. The greatest and even the
purest philosophers could not apparently avoid
this low sort of lunacy. Why? It would seem
simple enough for the people whose poets had
conceived Helen of Troy, whose sculptors had
carved the Venus of Milo, to remain healthy on
the point. The truth is that people who worship
health cannot remain healthy. When Man goes
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_29" id="Page_29">{29}</SPAN></span>
straight he goes crooked. When he follows his
nose he manages somehow to put his nose out of
joint, or even to cut off his nose to spite his face;
and that in accordance with something much
deeper in human nature than nature-worshippers
could ever understand. It was the discovery
of that deeper thing, humanly speaking, that
constituted the conversion to Christianity. There
is a bias in man like the bias in the bowl; and
Christianity was the discovery of how to correct
the bias and therefore hit the mark. There are
many who will smile at the saying; but it is
profoundly true to say that the glad good news
brought by the Gospel was the news of original sin.</p>
<p>Rome rose at the expense of her Greek teachers
largely because she did not entirely consent to
be taught these tricks. She had a much more
decent domestic tradition; but she ultimately
suffered from the same fallacy in her religious
tradition; which was necessarily in no small
degree the heathen tradition of nature-worship.
What was the matter with the whole heathen
civilisation was that there was nothing for the
mass of men in the way of mysticism, except
that concerned with the mystery of the nameless
forces of nature, such as sex and growth and
death. In the Roman Empire also, long before
the end, we find nature-worship inevitably producing
things that are against nature. Cases
like that of Nero have passed into a proverb,
when Sadism sat on a throne brazen in the broad
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_30" id="Page_30">{30}</SPAN></span>
daylight. But the truth I mean is something
much more subtle and universal than a conventional
catalogue of atrocities. What had
happened to the human imagination, as a whole,
was that the whole world was coloured by dangerous
and rapidly deteriorating passions; by
natural passions becoming unnatural passions.
Thus the effect of treating sex as only one innocent
natural thing was that every other innocent
natural thing became soaked and sodden with
sex. For sex cannot be admitted to a mere
equality among elementary emotions or experiences
like eating and sleeping. The moment
sex ceases to be a servant it becomes a tyrant.
There is something dangerous and disproportionate
in its place in human nature, for whatever
reason; and it does really need a special purification
and dedication. The modern talk about
sex being free like any other sense, about the
body being beautiful like any tree or flower,
is either a description of the Garden of Eden
or a piece of thoroughly bad psychology, of which
the world grew weary two thousand years ago.</p>
<p>This is not to be confused with mere self-righteous
sensationalism about the wickedness
of the pagan world. It was not so much that
the pagan world was wicked as that it was good
enough to realise that its paganism was becoming
wicked, or rather was on the logical high road
to wickedness. I mean that there was no future
for "natural magic"; to deepen it was only to
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_31" id="Page_31">{31}</SPAN></span>
darken it into black magic. There was no
future for it; because in the past it had only
been innocent because it was young. We might
say it had only been innocent because it was
shallow. Pagans were wiser than paganism;
that is why the pagans became Christians.
Thousands of them had philosophy and family
virtues and military honour to hold them up;
but by this time the purely popular thing called
religion was certainly dragging them down.
When this reaction against the evil is allowed
for, it is true to repeat that it was an evil that
was everywhere. In another and more literal
sense its name was Pan.</p>
<p>It was no metaphor to say that these people
needed a new heaven and a new earth; for they
had really defiled their own earth and even
their own heaven. How could their case be
met by looking at the sky, when erotic legends
were scrawled in stars across it; how could they
learn anything from the love of birds and flowers
after the sort of love stories that were told of
them? It is impossible here to multiply
evidences, and one small example may stand for
the rest. We know what sort of sentimental
associations are called up to us by the phrase
"a garden"; and how we think mostly of the
memory of melancholy and innocent romances,
or quite as often of some gracious maiden lady
or kindly old parson pottering under a yew hedge,
perhaps in sight of a village spire. Then, let
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_32" id="Page_32">{32}</SPAN></span>
anyone who knows a little Latin poetry recall
suddenly what would once have stood in place
of the sun-dial or the fountain, obscene and
monstrous in the sun; and of what sort was
the god of their gardens.</p>
<p>Nothing could purge this obsession but a
religion that was literally unearthly. It was
no good telling such people to have a natural
religion full of stars and flowers; there was not
a flower or even a star that had not been stained.
They had to go into the desert where they
could find no flowers or even into the cavern
where they could see no stars. Into that desert
and that cavern the highest human intellect
entered for some four centuries; and it was
the very wisest thing it could do. Nothing but
the stark supernatural stood up for its salvation;
if God could not save it, certainly the gods
could not. The Early Church called the gods
of paganism devils; and the Early Church was
perfectly right. Whatever natural religion may
have had to do with their beginnings, nothing
but fiends now inhabited those hollow shrines.
Pan was nothing but panic. Venus was nothing
but venereal vice. I do not mean for a moment,
of course, that all the individual pagans were
of this character even to the end; but it was as
individuals that they differed from it. Nothing
distinguishes paganism from Christianity so
clearly as the fact that the individual thing
called philosophy had little or nothing to do with
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_33" id="Page_33">{33}</SPAN></span>
the social thing called religion. Anyhow it
was no good to preach natural religion to people
to whom nature had grown as unnatural as any
religion. They knew much better than we do
what was the matter with them and what sort
of demons at once tempted and tormented them;
and they wrote across that great space of history
the text: "This sort goeth not out but by
prayer and fasting."</p>
<p>Now the historic importance of St. Francis and
the transition from the twelfth to the thirteenth
century, lies in the fact that they marked the
end of this expiation. Men at the close of the
Dark Ages may have been rude and unlettered
and unlearned in everything but wars with
heathen tribes, more barbarous than themselves,
but they were clean. They were like children;
the first beginnings of their rude arts have all
the clean pleasure of children. We have to
conceive them in Europe as a whole living under
little local governments, feudal in so far as they
were a survival of fierce wars with the barbarians,
often monastic and carrying a more friendly
and fatherly character, still faintly imperial
in so far as Rome still ruled as a great legend.
But in Italy something had survived more typical
of the finer spirit of antiquity: the republic.
Italy was dotted with little states, largely democratic
in their ideals, and often filled with
real citizens. But the city no longer lay open
as under the Roman peace, but was pent in
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_34" id="Page_34">{34}</SPAN></span>
high walls for defence against feudal war and all
the citizens had to be soldiers. One of these
stood in a steep and striking position on the
wooded hills of Umbria; and its name was
Assisi. Out of its deep gate under its high
turrets was to come the message that was the
gospel of the hour, "Your warfare is accomplished,
your iniquity is pardoned." But it was out of
all these fragmentary things of feudalism and
freedom and remains of Roman Law that there
was to rise, at the beginning of the thirteenth
century, vast and almost universal, the mighty
civilisation of the Middle Ages.</p>
<p>It is an exaggeration to attribute it entirely
to the inspiration of any one man, even the most
original genius of the thirteenth century. Its
elementary ethics of fraternity and fair play
had never been entirely extinct and Christendom
had never been anything less than Christian.
The great truisms about justice and pity can
be found in the rudest monastic records of the
barbaric transition or the stiffest maxims of the
Byzantine decline. And early in the eleventh
and twelfth centuries a larger moral movement
had clearly begun. But what may fairly be
said of it is this, that over all those first movements
there was still something of that ancient
austerity that came from the long penitential
period. It was the twilight of morning; but
it was still a grey twilight. This may be illustrated
by the mere mention of two or three of
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_35" id="Page_35">{35}</SPAN></span>
these reforms before the Franciscan reform.
The monastic institution itself, of course, was
far older than all these things; indeed it was
undoubtedly almost as old as Christianity.
Its counsels of perfection had always taken
the form of vows of chastity and poverty and
obedience. With these unworldly aims it had
long ago civilised a great part of the world.
The monks had taught people to plough and
sow as well as to read and write; indeed they
had taught the people nearly everything that
the people knew. But it may truly be said
that the monks were severely practical, in the
sense that they were not only practical but
also severe; though they were generally severe
with themselves and practical for other people.
All this early monastic movement had long ago
settled down and doubtless often deteriorated;
but when we come to the first medieval movements
this sterner character is still apparent.
Three examples may be taken to illustrate the
point.</p>
<p>First, the ancient social mould of slavery
was already beginning to melt. Not only was
the slave turning into the serf, who was practically
free as regards his own farm and family life,
but many lords were freeing slaves and serfs
altogether. This was done under the pressure
of the priests; but especially it was done in the
spirit of a penance. In one sense, of course,
any Catholic society must have an atmosphere
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_36" id="Page_36">{36}</SPAN></span>
of penance; but I am speaking of that rather
sterner spirit of penance which had expiated
the excesses of paganism. There was about such
restitutions the atmosphere of the death-bed;
as many of them doubtless were examples of
death-bed repentance. A very honest atheist
with whom I once debated made use of the
expression, "Men have only been kept in slavery
by the fear of hell." As I pointed out to him,
if he had said that men had only been freed
from slavery by the fear of hell, he would at
least have been referring to an unquestionable
historical fact.</p>
<p>Another example was the sweeping reform of
Church discipline by Pope Gregory the Seventh.
It really was a reform, undertaken from the
highest motives and having the healthiest results;
it conducted a searching inquisition against
simony or the financial corruptions of the clergy;
it insisted on a more serious and self-sacrificing
ideal for the life of a parish priest. But the
very fact that this largely took the form of
making universal the obligation of celibacy
will strike the note of something which, however
noble, would seem to many to be vaguely negative.
The third example is in one sense the strongest
of all. For the third example was a war; a
heroic war and for many of us a holy war; but
still something having all the stark and terrible
responsibilities of war. There is no space here
to say all that should be said about the true
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_37" id="Page_37">{37}</SPAN></span>
nature of the Crusades. Everybody knows that
in the very darkest hour of the Dark Ages a
sort of heresy had sprung up in Arabia and
become a new religion of a military but nomadic
sort, invoking the name of Mahomet. Intrinsically
it had a character found in many heresies
from the Moslem to the Monist. It seemed
to the heretic a sane simplification of religion;
while it seems to the Catholic an insane simplification
of religion, because it simplifies all to a
single idea and so loses the breadth and balance
of Catholicism. Anyhow its objective character
was that of a military danger to Christendom
and Christendom had struck at the very heart
of it, in seeking to reconquer the Holy Places.
The great Duke Godfrey and the first Christians
who stormed Jerusalem were heroes if there
were ever any in the world; but they were
the heroes of a tragedy.</p>
<p>Now I have taken these two or three examples
of the earlier medieval movements in order to
note about them one general character, which
refers back to the penance that followed paganism.
There is something in all these movements
that is bracing even while it is still bleak, like
a wind blowing between the clefts of the mountains.
That wind, austere and pure, of which
the poet speaks, is really the spirit of the time,
for it is the wind of a world that has at last
been purified. To anyone who can appreciate
atmospheres there is something clear and clean
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_38" id="Page_38">{38}</SPAN></span>
about the atmosphere of this crude and often
harsh society. Its very lusts are clean; for
they have no longer any smell of perversion.
Its very cruelties are clean; they are not the
luxurious cruelties of the amphitheatre. They
come either of a very simple horror at blasphemy
or a very simple fury at insult. Gradually
against this grey background beauty begins
to appear, as something really fresh and delicate
and above all surprising. Love returning is
no longer what was once called platonic but
what is still called chivalric love. The flowers
and stars have recovered their first innocence.
Fire and water are felt to be worthy to be the
brother and sister of a saint. The purge of
paganism is complete at last.</p>
<p>For water itself has been washed. Fire itself
has been purified as by fire. Water is no longer
that water into which slaves were flung to feed
the fishes. Fire is no longer that fire through
which children were passed to Moloch. Flowers
smell no more of the forgotten garlands gathered
in the garden of Priapus; stars stand no more
as signs of the far frigidity of gods as cold as
those cold fires. They are all like things newly
made and awaiting new names, from one who
shall come to name them. Neither the universe
nor the earth have now any longer the old sinister
significance of the world. They await a new
reconciliation with man, but they are already
capable of being reconciled. Man has stripped
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_39" id="Page_39">{39}</SPAN></span>
from his soul the last rag of nature-worship,
and can return to nature.</p>
<p>While it was yet twilight a figure appeared
silently and suddenly on a little hill above the
city, dark against the fading darkness. For
it was the end of a long and stern night, a night
of vigil, not unvisited by stars. He stood with
his hands lifted, as in so many statues and
pictures, and about him was a burst of birds
singing; and behind him was the break of day.</p>
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