<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_40" id="Page_40">{40}</SPAN></span>
<h2><i>Chapter III</i><br/> <small><i>Francis the Fighter</i></small></h2></div>
<p><span class="smc">According</span> to one tale, which if not true would
be none the less typical, the very name of St. Francis
was not so much a name as a nickname.
There would be something akin to his familiar
and popular instinct in the notion that he was
nicknamed very much as an ordinary schoolboy
might be called "Frenchy" at school. According
to this version, his name was not Francis at all
but John; and his companions called him "Francesco"
or "The little Frenchman" because of
his passion for the French poetry of the Troubadours.
The more probable story is that his
mother had named him John when he was born
in the absence of his father, who shortly returned
from a visit to France, where his commercial
success had filled him with so much enthusiasm
for French taste and social usage that he gave his
son the new name signifying the Frank or Frenchman.
In either case the name has a certain
significance, as connecting Francis from the first
with what he himself regarded as the romantic
fairyland of the Troubadours.</p>
<p>The name of the father was Pietro Bernardone
and he was a substantial citizen of the guild
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_41" id="Page_41">{41}</SPAN></span>
of the cloth merchants in the town of Assisi.
It is hard to describe the position of such a man
without some appreciation of the position of such
a guild and even of such a town. It did not
exactly correspond to anything that is meant
in modern times either by a merchant or a man of
business or a tradesman, or anything that exists
under the conditions of capitalism. Bernardone
may have employed people but he was not an
employer; that is, he did not belong to an employing
class as distinct from an employed class.
The person we definitely hear of his employing
is his son Francis; who, one is tempted to guess,
was about the last person that any man of business
would employ if it were convenient to employ
anybody else. He was rich, as a peasant may
be rich by the work of his own family; but he
evidently expected his own family to work in a
way almost as plain as a peasant's. He was a
prominent citizen, but he belonged to a social
order which existed to prevent him being too
prominent to be a citizen. It kept all such people
on their own simple level, and no prosperity
connoted that escape from drudgery by which
in modern times the lad might have seemed
to be a lord or a fine gentleman or something
other than the cloth merchant's son. This is
a rule that is proved even in the exception.
Francis was one of those people who are popular
with everybody in any case; and his guileless
swagger as a Troubadour and leader of French
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_42" id="Page_42">{42}</SPAN></span>
fashions made him a sort of romantic ringleader
among the young men of the town. He threw
money about both in extravagance and benevolence,
in a way native to a man who never,
all his life, exactly understood what money was.
This moved his mother to mingled exultation
and exasperation and she said, as any tradesman's
wife might say anywhere: "He is more like a
prince than our son." But one of the earliest
glimpses we have of him shows him as simply
selling bales of cloth from a booth in the market;
which his mother may or may not have believed
to be one of the habits of princes. This first
glimpse of the young man in the market is symbolic
in more ways than one. An incident
occurred which is perhaps the shortest and sharpest
summary that could be given of certain curious
things which were a part of his character, long
before it was transfigured by transcendental
faith. While he was selling velvet and fine
embroideries to some solid merchant of the town,
a beggar came imploring alms; evidently in a
somewhat tactless manner. It was a rude and
simple society and there were no laws to punish
a starving man for expressing his need for food,
such as have been established in a more humanitarian
age; and the lack of any organised police
permitted such persons to pester the wealthy
without any great danger. But there was, I
believe, in many places a local custom of the guild
forbidding outsiders to interrupt a fair bargain;
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_43" id="Page_43">{43}</SPAN></span>
and it is possible that some such thing put the
mendicant more than normally in the wrong.
Francis had all his life a great liking for people
who had been put hopelessly in the wrong. On
this occasion he seems to have dealt with the
double interview with rather a divided mind;
certainly with distraction, possibly with irritation.
Perhaps he was all the more uneasy because of
the almost fastidious standard of manners that
came to him quite naturally. All are agreed
that politeness flowed from him from the first,
like one of the public fountains in such a sunny
Italian market place. He might have written
among his own poems as his own motto that verse
of Mr. Belloc's poem—</p>
<div class="poetry-container">
<div class="poetry">
<div class="verse quote1">'Of Courtesy, it is much less</div>
<div class="verse">Than courage of heart or holiness,</div>
<div class="verse">Yet in my walks it seems to me</div>
<div class="verse">That the grace of God is in Courtesy.'</div>
</div></div>
<p class="nodent">Nobody ever doubted that Francis Bernardone
had courage of heart, even of the most ordinary
manly and military sort; and a time was to come
when there was quite as little doubt about the
holiness and the grace of God. But I think that
if there was one thing about which he was punctilious,
it was punctiliousness. If there was one
thing of which so humble a man could be said
to be proud, he was proud of good manners.
Only behind his perfectly natural urbanity were
wider and even wilder possibilities, of which we
get the first flash in this trivial incident. Anyhow
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_44" id="Page_44">{44}</SPAN></span>
Francis was evidently torn two ways with the
botheration of two talkers, but finished his business
with the merchant somehow; and when he had
finished it, found the beggar was gone. Francis
leapt from his booth, left all the bales of velvet
and embroidery behind him apparently unprotected,
and went racing across the market place
like an arrow from the bow. Still running, he
threaded the labyrinth of the narrow and crooked
streets of the little town, looking for his beggar,
whom he eventually discovered; and loaded
that astonished mendicant with money. Then
he straightened himself, so to speak, and swore
before God that he would never all his life refuse
help to a poor man. The sweeping simplicity
of this undertaking is extremely characteristic.
Never was any man so little afraid of his own
promises. His life was one riot of rash vows;
of rash vows that turned out right.</p>
<p>The first biographers of Francis, naturally
alive with the great religious revolution that he
wrought, equally naturally looked back to his
first years chiefly for omens and signs of such
a spiritual earthquake. But writing at a greater
distance, we shall not decrease that dramatic
effect, but rather increase it, if we realise that
there was not at this time any external sign of
anything particularly mystical about the young
man. He had not anything of that early sense
of his vocation that has belonged to some of the
saints. Over and above his main ambition to
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_45" id="Page_45">{45}</SPAN></span>
win fame as a French poet, he would seem to
have most often thought of winning fame as a
soldier. He was born kind; he was brave in
the normal boyish fashion; but he drew the
line both in kindness and bravery pretty well
where most boys would have drawn it; for instance,
he had the human horror of leprosy of which few
normal people felt any need to be ashamed. He
had the love of gay and bright apparel which
was inherent in the heraldic taste of medieval
times and seems altogether to have been rather
a festive figure. If he did not paint the town red,
he would probably have preferred to paint it
all the colours of the rainbow, as in a medieval
picture. But in this story of the young man in
gay garments scampering after the vanishing
beggar in rags there are certain notes of his natural
individuality that must be assumed from first
to last.</p>
<p>For instance, there is the spirit of swiftness.
In a sense he continued running for the rest of
his life, as he ran after the beggar. Because
nearly all the errands he ran on were errands of
mercy, there appeared in his portraiture a mere
element of mildness which was true in the truest
sense, but is easily misunderstood. A certain
precipitancy was the very poise of his soul.
This saint should be represented among the other
saints as angels were sometimes represented in
pictures of angels; with flying feet or even with
feathers; in the spirit of the text that makes
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_46" id="Page_46">{46}</SPAN></span>
angels winds and messengers a flaming fire. It
is a curiosity of language that courage actually
means running; and some of our sceptics will no
doubt demonstrate that courage really means
running away. But his courage was running,
in the sense of rushing. With all his gentleness,
there was originally something of impatience in
his impetuosity. The psychological truth about
it illustrates very well the modern muddle
about the word "practical." If we mean by
what is practical what is most immediately
practicable, we mean merely what is easiest. In
that sense St. Francis was very unpractical,
and his ultimate aims were very unworldly. But
if we mean by practicality a preference for prompt
effort and energy over doubt or delay, he was very
practical indeed. Some might call him a madman,
but he was the very reverse of a dreamer. Nobody
would be likely to call him a man of business;
but he was very emphatically a man of action.
In some of his early experiments he was rather
too much of a man of action; he acted too soon
and was too practical to be prudent. But at every
turn of his extraordinary career we shall find him
flinging himself round corners in the most unexpected
fashion, as when he flew through the
crooked streets after the beggar.</p>
<p>Another element implied in the story, which
was already partially a natural instinct, before
it became a supernatural ideal, was something
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_47" id="Page_47">{47}</SPAN></span>
that had never perhaps been wholly lost in those
little republics of medieval Italy. It was something
very puzzling to some people; something
clearer as a rule to Southerners than to Northerners,
and I think to Catholics than to Protestants;
the quite natural assumption of the equality of
men. It has nothing necessarily to do with the
Franciscan love for men; on the contrary one
of its merely practical tests is the equality of the
duel. Perhaps a gentleman will never be fully
an egalitarian until he can really quarrel with
his servant. But it was an antecedent condition
of the Franciscan brotherhood; and we feel it
in this early and secular incident. Francis, I
fancy, felt a real doubt about which he must
attend to, the beggar or the merchant; and
having attended to the merchant, he turned to
attend to the beggar; he thought of them as two
men. This is a thing much more difficult to
describe, in a society from which it is absent, but
it was the original basis of the whole business;
it was why the popular movement arose in that
sort of place and that sort of man. His imaginative
magnanimity afterwards rose like a tower
to starry heights that might well seem dizzy and
even crazy; but it was founded on this high
table-land of human equality.</p>
<p>I have taken this the first among a hundred
tales of the youth of St. Francis, and dwelt on
its significance a little, because until we have
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_48" id="Page_48">{48}</SPAN></span>
learned to look for the significance there will
often seem to be little but a sort of light sentiment
in telling the story. St. Francis is not a proper
person to be patronised with merely "pretty"
stories. There are any number of them; but
they are too often used so as to be a sort of sentimental
sediment of the medieval world, instead
of being, as the saint emphatically is, a challenge
to the modern world. We must take his real
human development somewhat more seriously;
and the next story in which we get a real glimpse
of it is in a very different setting. But in exactly
the same way it opens, as if by accident, certain
abysses of the mind and perhaps of the unconscious
mind. Francis still looks more or less
like an ordinary young man; and it is only when
we look at him as an ordinary young man, that
we realise what an extraordinary young man he
must be.</p>
<p>War had broken out between Assisi and Perugia.
It is now fashionable to say in a satirical spirit
that such wars did not so much break out as
go on indefinitely between the city-states of
medieval Italy. It will be enough to say here
that if one of these medieval wars had really gone
on without stopping for a century, it might
possibly have come within a remote distance
of killing as many people as we kill in a year,
in one of our great modern scientific wars between
our great modern industrial empires. But the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_49" id="Page_49">{49}</SPAN></span>
citizens of the medieval republic were certainly
under the limitation of only being asked to die
for the things with which they had always lived,
the houses they inhabited, the shrines they
venerated and the rulers and representatives
they knew; and had not the larger vision calling
them to die for the latest rumours about remote
colonies as reported in anonymous newspapers.
And if we infer from our own experience that war
paralysed civilisation, we must at least admit
that these warring towns turned out a number of
paralytics who go by the names of Dante and
Michael Angelo, Ariosto and Titian, Leonardo
and Columbus, not to mention Catherine of Siena
and the subject of this story. While we lament
all this local patriotism as a hubbub of the Dark
Ages, it must seem a rather curious fact that
about three quarters of the greatest men who
ever lived came out of these little towns and were
often engaged in these little wars. It remains
to be seen what will ultimately come out of our
large towns; but there has been no sign of anything
of this sort since they became large; and
I have sometimes been haunted by a fancy of
my youth, that these things will not come till
there is a city wall round Clapham and the tocsin
is rung at night to arm the citizens of Wimbledon.</p>
<p>Anyhow, the tocsin was rung in Assisi and the
citizens armed, and among them Francis the son
of the cloth merchant. He went out to fight
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_50" id="Page_50">{50}</SPAN></span>
with some company of lancers and in some fight
or foray or other he and his little band were taken
prisoners. To me it seems most probable that
there had been some tale of treason or cowardice
about the disaster; for we are told that there
was one of the captives with whom his fellow-prisoners
flatly refused to associate even in prison;
and when this happens in such circumstances, it
is generally because the military blame for the
surrender is thrown on some individual. Anyhow,
somebody noted a small but curious thing,
though it might seem rather negative than positive.
Francis, we are told, moved among his
captive companions with all his characteristic
courtesy and even conviviality, "liberal and
hilarious" as somebody said of him, resolved to
keep up their spirits and his own. And when
he came across the mysterious outcast, traitor
or coward or whatever he was called, he simply
treated him exactly like all the rest, neither with
coldness nor compassion, but with the same
unaffected gaiety and good fellowship. But if
there had been present in that prison someone
with a sort of second sight about the truth and
trend of spiritual things, he might have known
he was in the presence of something new and seemingly
almost anarchic; a deep tide driving
out to uncharted seas of charity. For in this
sense there was really something wanting in
Francis of Assisi, something to which he was
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_51" id="Page_51">{51}</SPAN></span>
blind that he might see better and more beautiful
things. All those limits in good fellowship and
good form, all those landmarks of social life that
divide the tolerable and the intolerable, all those
social scruples and conventional conditions that
are normal and even noble in ordinary men, all
those things that hold many decent societies
together, could never hold this man at all. He
liked as he liked; he seems to have liked everybody,
but especially those whom everybody
disliked him for liking. Something very vast
and universal was already present in that narrow
dungeon; and such a seer might have seen in
its darkness that red halo of <i>caritas caritatum</i>
which marks one saint among saints as well as
among men. He might have heard the first
whisper of that wild blessing that afterwards
took the form of a blasphemy; "He listens to
those to whom God himself will not listen."</p>
<p>But though such a seer might have seen such
a truth, it is exceedingly doubtful if Francis
himself saw it. He had acted out of an unconscious
largeness, or in the fine medieval phrase largesse,
within himself, something that might almost
have been lawless if it had not been reaching out
to a more divine law; but it is doubtful whether
he yet knew that the law was divine. It is
evident that he had not at this time any notion
of abandoning the military, still less of adopting
the monastic life. It is true that there is not,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_52" id="Page_52">{52}</SPAN></span>
as pacifists and prigs imagine, the least inconsistency
between loving men and fighting them, if
we fight them fairly and for a good cause. But
it seems to me that there was more than this
involved; that the mind of the young man was
really running towards a military morality in
any case. About this time the first calamity
crossed his path in the form of a malady which
was to revisit him many times and hamper his
headlong career. Sickness made him more serious;
but one fancies it would only have made him
a more serious soldier, or even more serious about
soldiering. And while he was recovering, something
rather larger than the little feuds and raids
of the Italian towns opened an avenue of adventure
and ambition. The crown of Sicily, a considerable
centre of controversy at the time, was apparently
claimed by a certain Gauthier de Brienne,
and the Papal cause to aid which Gauthier was
called in aroused enthusiasm among a number
of young Assisians, including Francis, who proposed
to march into Apulia on the count's behalf;
perhaps his French name had something to do
with it. For it must never be forgotten that
though that world was in one sense a world of
little things, it was a world of little things concerned
about great things. There was more
internationalism in the lands dotted with tiny
republics than in the huge homogeneous impenetrable
national divisions of to-day. The legal
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_53" id="Page_53">{53}</SPAN></span>
authority of the Assisian magistrates might
hardly reach further than a bow-shot from their
high embattled city walls. But their sympathies
might be with the ride of the Normans through
Sicily or the palace of the Troubadours at Toulouse;
with the Emperor throned in the German forests or
the great Pope dying in the exile of Salerno. Above
all, it must be remembered that when the interests
of an age are mainly religious they must be universal.
Nothing can be more universal than the
universe. And there are several things about
the religious position at that particular moment
which modern people not unnaturally fail to
realise. For one thing, modern people naturally
think of people so remote as ancient people, and
even early people. We feel vaguely that these
things happened in the first ages of the Church.
The Church was already a good deal more than
a thousand years old. That is, the Church was
then rather older than France is now, a great
deal older than England is now. And she looked
old then; almost as old as she does now; possibly
older than she does now. The Church looked
like great Charlemagne with the long white
beard, who had already fought a hundred wars
with the heathen, and in the legend was bidden
by an angel to go forth and fight once more though
he was two hundred years old. The Church had
topped her thousand years and turned the corner
of the second thousand; she had come through
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_54" id="Page_54">{54}</SPAN></span>
the Dark Ages in which nothing could be done
except desperate fighting against the barbarians
and the stubborn repetition of the creed. The
creed was still being repeated after the victory
or escape; but it is not unnatural to suppose
that there was something a little monotonous
about the repetition. The Church looked old
then as now; and there were some who thought
her dying then as now. In truth orthodoxy
was not dead but it may have been dull; it is
certain that some people began to think it dull.
The Troubadours of the Provençal movement
had already begun to take that turn or twist
towards Oriental fancies and the paradox of
pessimism, which always come to Europeans as
something fresh when their own sanity seems to
be something stale. It is likely enough that after
all those centuries of hopeless war without and
ruthless asceticism within, the official orthodoxy
seemed to be something stale. The freshness
and freedom of the first Christians seemed then
as much as now a lost and almost prehistoric age
of gold. Rome was still more rational than
anything else; the Church was really wiser but
it may well have seemed wearier than the world.
There was something more adventurous and
alluring, perhaps, about the mad metaphysics
that had been blown across out of Asia. Dreams
were gathering like dark clouds over the Midi
to break in a thunder of anathema and civil war.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_55" id="Page_55">{55}</SPAN></span>
Only the light lay on the great plain round Rome;
but the light was blank and the plain was flat;
and there was no stir in the still air and the immemorial
silence about the sacred town.</p>
<p>High in the dark house of Assisi Francesco
Bernardone slept and dreamed of arms. There
came to him in the darkness a vision splendid
with swords, patterned after the cross in the
Crusading fashion, of spears and shields and helmets
hung in a high armoury, all bearing the sacred
sign. When he awoke he accepted the dream
as a trumpet bidding him to the battlefield, and
rushed out to take horse and arms. He delighted
in all the exercises of chivalry; and was evidently
an accomplished cavalier and fighting man by
the tests of the tournament and the camp. He
would doubtless at any time have preferred a
Christian sort of chivalry; but it seems clear
that he was also in a mood which thirsted for
glory, though in him that glory would always
have been identical with honour. He was not
without some vision of that wreath of laurel
which Cæsar has left for all the Latins. As he
rode out to war the great gate in the deep wall
of Assisi resounded with his last boast, "I shall
come back a great prince."</p>
<p>A little way along his road his sickness rose
again and threw him. It seems highly probable,
in the light of his impetuous temper, that he had
ridden away long before he was fit to move. And
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_56" id="Page_56">{56}</SPAN></span>
in the darkness of this second and far more
desolating interruption, he seems to have had
another dream in which a voice said to him,
"You have mistaken the meaning of the vision.
Return to your own town." And Francis trailed
back in his sickness to Assisi, a very dismal and
disappointed and perhaps even derided figure,
with nothing to do but to wait for what should
happen next. It was his first descent into a dark
ravine that is called the valley of humiliation,
which seemed to him very rocky and desolate,
but in which he was afterwards to find many
flowers.</p>
<p>But he was not only disappointed and humiliated;
he was also very much puzzled and bewildered.
He still firmly believed that his two dreams
must have meant something; and he could not
imagine what they could possibly mean. It was
while he was drifting, one may even say mooning,
about the streets of Assisi and the fields outside
the city wall, that an incident occurred to him
which has not always been immediately connected
with the business of the dreams, but which seems
to me the obvious culmination of them. He
was riding listlessly in some wayside place, apparently
in the open country, when he saw a figure
coming along the road towards him and halted;
for he saw it was a leper. And he knew instantly
that his courage was challenged, not as the world
challenges, but as one would challenge who knew
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_57" id="Page_57">{57}</SPAN></span>
the secrets of the heart of a man. What he saw
advancing was not the banner and spears of
Perugia, from which it never occurred to him
to shrink; not the armies that fought for the
crown of Sicily, of which he had always thought
as a courageous man thinks of mere vulgar
danger. Francis Bernardone saw his fear coming
up the road towards him; the fear that comes from
within and not without; though it stood white
and horrible in the sunlight. For once in the
long rush of his life his soul must have stood still.
Then he sprang from his horse, knowing nothing
between stillness and swiftness, and rushed on
the leper and threw his arms round him. It was
the beginning of a long vocation of ministry among
many lepers, for whom he did many services;
to this man he gave what money he could and
mounted and rode on. We do not know how far
he rode, or with what sense of the things around
him; but it is said that when he looked back,
he could see no figure on the road.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />