<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_74" id="Page_74">{74}</SPAN></span>
<h2><i>Chapter V</i><br/> <small><i>Le Jongleur de Dieu</i></small></h2></div>
<p><span class="smc">Many</span> signs and symbols might be used to
give a hint of what really happened in the mind
of the young poet of Assisi. Indeed they are at
once too numerous for selection and yet too
slight for satisfaction. But one of them may be
adumbrated in this small and apparently accidental
fact: that when he and his secular companions
carried their pageant of poetry through
the town, they called themselves Troubadours.
But when he and his spiritual companions came
out to do their spiritual work in the world, they
were called by their leader the Jongleurs de
Dieu.</p>
<p>Nothing has been said here at any length of
the great culture of the Troubadours as it appeared
in Provence or Languedoc, great as was their influence
in history and their influence on St. Francis.
Something more may be said of them when we
come to summarise his relation to history; it is
enough to note here in a few sentences the facts
about them that were relevant to him, and
especially the particular point now in question,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_75" id="Page_75">{75}</SPAN></span>
which was the most relevant of all. Everybody
knows who the Troubadours were; everybody
knows that very early in the Middle Ages, in the
twelfth and early thirteenth centuries, there arose
a civilisation in Southern France which threatened
to rival or eclipse the rising tradition of
Paris. Its chief product was a school of poetry,
or rather more especially a school of poets. They
were primarily love-poets, though they were often
also satirists and critics of things in general.
Their picturesque posture in history is largely
due to the fact that they sang their own poems
and often played their own accompaniments, on
the light musical instruments of the period; they
were minstrels as well as men of letters. Allied
to their love-poetry were other institutions of a
decorative and fanciful kind concerned with the
same theme. There was what was called the
"Gay Science," the attempt to reduce to a sort of
system the fine shades of flirtation and philandering.
There were the things called Courts of
Love, in which the same delicate subjects were
dealt with with legal pomp and pedantry. There
is one point in this part of the business that must
be remembered in relation to St. Francis. There
were manifest moral dangers in all this superb
sentimentalism; but it is a mistake to suppose
that its only danger of exaggeration was in the
direction of sensualism. There was a strain in
the southern romance that was actually an excess
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_76" id="Page_76">{76}</SPAN></span>
of spirituality; just as the pessimist heresy it
produced was in one sense an excess of spirituality.
The love was not always animal; sometimes it
was so airy as to be almost allegorical. The
reader realises that the lady is the most beautiful
being that can possibly exist, only he has occasional
doubts as to whether she does exist. Dante owed
something to the Troubadours; and the critical
debates about his ideal woman are an excellent
example of these doubts. We know that Beatrice
was not his wife, but we should in any case be
equally sure that she was not his mistress; and
some critics have even suggested that she was
nothing at all, so to speak, except his muse. This
idea of Beatrice as an allegorical figure is, I
believe, unsound; it would seem unsound to any
man who has read the <i>Vita Nuova</i> and has been in
love. But the very fact that it is possible to suggest
it illustrates something abstract and scholastic
in these medieval passions. But though they were
abstract passions they were very passionate
passions. These men could feel almost like lovers,
even about allegories and abstractions. It is
necessary to remember this in order to realise
that St. Francis was talking the true language of
a troubadour when he said that he also had a
most glorious and gracious lady and that her
name was Poverty.</p>
<p>But the particular point to be noted here is
not concerned so much with the word Troubadour
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_77" id="Page_77">{77}</SPAN></span>
as with the word Jongleur. It is especially concerned
with the transition from one to the other;
and for this it is necessary to grasp another detail
about the poets of the Gay Science. A jongleur
was not the same thing as a troubadour, even if
the same man were both a troubadour and a
jongleur. More often, I believe, they were separate
men as well as separate trades. In many cases
apparently the two men would walk the world
together like companions in arms, or rather
companions in arts. The jongleur was properly
a joculator or jester; sometimes he was what we
should call a juggler. This is the point, I imagine,
of the tale about Taillefer the Jongleur at the
battle of Hastings, who sang of the death of Roland
while he tossed up his sword and caught it, as a
juggler catches balls. Sometimes he may have
been even a tumbler; like that acrobat in the
beautiful legend who was called "The Tumbler of
Our Lady," because he turned head over heels and
stood on his head before the image of the Blessed
Virgin, for which he was nobly thanked and
comforted by her and the whole company of
heaven. In the ordinary way, we may imagine,
the troubadour would exalt the company with
earnest and solemn strains of love and then the
jongleur would do his turn as a sort of comic
relief. A glorious medieval romance remains to
be written about two such companions wandering
through the world. At any rate, if there is one
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_78" id="Page_78">{78}</SPAN></span>
place in which the true Franciscan spirit can be
found outside the true Franciscan story, it is in
that tale of the Tumbler of Our Lady. And when
St. Francis called his followers the Jongleurs de
Dieu, he meant something very like the Tumblers
of Our Lord.</p>
<p>Somewhere in that transition from the ambition
of the Troubadour to the antics of the Tumbler is
hidden, as under a parable, the truth of St. Francis.
Of the two minstrels or entertainers, the jester
was presumably the servant or at least the secondary
figure. St. Francis really meant what he
said when he said he had found the secret of life
in being the servant and the secondary figure.
There was to be found ultimately in such service
a freedom almost amounting to frivolity. It was
comparable to the condition of the jongleur
because it almost amounted to frivolity. The
jester could be free when the knight was rigid;
and it was possible to be a jester in the service
which is perfect freedom. This parallel of the two
poets or minstrels is perhaps the best preliminary
and external statement of the Franciscan change
of heart, being conceived under an image with
which the imagination of the modern world has a
certain sympathy. There was, of course, a great
deal more than this involved; and we must endeavour
however insufficiently to penetrate past the
image to the idea. It is so far like the tumblers
that it is really to many people a topsy-turvy idea.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_79" id="Page_79">{79}</SPAN></span>
Francis, at the time or somewhere about the
time when he disappeared into the prison or the
dark cavern, underwent a reversal of a certain
psychological kind; which was really like the
reversal of a complete somersault, in that by
coming full circle it came back, or apparently
came back, to the same normal posture. It is
necessary to use the grotesque simile of an
acrobatic antic, because there is hardly any other
figure that will make the fact clear. But in the
inward sense it was a profound spiritual revolution.
The man who went into the cave was not
the man who came out again; in that sense he
was almost as different as if he were dead, as if
he were a ghost or a blessed spirit. And the
effects of this on his attitude towards the actual
world were really as extravagant as any parallel
can make them. He looked at the world as
differently from other men as if he had come out
of that dark hole walking on his hands.</p>
<p>If we apply this parable of Our Lady's Tumbler
to the case, we shall come very near to the point
of it. Now it really is a fact that any scene such
as a landscape can sometimes be more clearly
and freshly seen if it is seen upside down. There
have been landscape-painters who adopted the
most startling and pantomimic postures in order
to look at it for a moment in that fashion. Thus
that inverted vision, so much more bright and
quaint and arresting, does bear a certain resemblance
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_80" id="Page_80">{80}</SPAN></span>
to the world which a mystic like St. Francis
sees every day. But herein is the essential part
of the parable. Our Lady's Tumbler did not
stand on his head <i>in order</i> to see flowers and trees
as a clearer or quainter vision. He did not do so;
and it would never have occurred to him to do so.
Our Lady's Tumbler stood on his head to please
Our Lady. If St. Francis had done the same
thing, as he was quite capable of doing, it would
originally have been from the same motive; a
motive of a purely supernatural thought. It
would be <i>after</i> this that his enthusiasm would
extend itself and give a sort of halo to the edges
of all earthly things. This is why it is not true
to represent St. Francis as a mere romantic forerunner
of the Renaissance and a revival of natural
pleasures for their own sake. The whole point
of him was that the secret of recovering the natural
pleasures lay in regarding them in the light of
a supernatural pleasure. In other words, he
repeated in his own person that historic process
noted in the introductory chapter; the vigil of
asceticism which ends in the vision of a natural
world made new. But in the personal case there
was even more than this; there were elements
that make the parallel of the Jongleur or Tumbler
even more appropriate than this.</p>
<p>It may be suspected that in that black cell or
cave Francis passed the blackest hours of his life.
By nature he was the sort of man who has that
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_81" id="Page_81">{81}</SPAN></span>
vanity which is the opposite of pride; that vanity
which is very near to humility. He never
despised his fellow creatures and therefore he
never despised the opinion of his fellow creatures;
including the admiration of his fellow creatures.
All that part of his human nature had suffered the
heaviest and most crushing blows. It is possible
that after his humiliating return from his frustrated
military campaign he was called a coward. It is
certain that after his quarrel with his father about
the bales of cloth he was called a thief. And even
those who had sympathised most with him, the
priest whose church he had restored, the bishop
whose blessing he had received, had evidently
treated him with an almost humorous amiability
which left only too clear the ultimate conclusion
of the matter. He had made a fool of himself.
Any man who has been young, who has ridden
horses or thought himself ready for a fight, who
has fancied himself as a troubadour and accepted
the conventions of comradeship, will appreciate
the ponderous and crushing weight of that simple
phrase. The conversion of St. Francis, like the
conversion of St. Paul, involved his being in
some sense flung suddenly from a horse; but in a
sense it was an even worse fall; for it was a war-horse.
Anyhow, there was not a rag of him left
that was not ridiculous. Everybody knew that
at the best he had made a fool of himself. It was
a solid objective fact, like the stones in the road,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_82" id="Page_82">{82}</SPAN></span>
that he had made a fool of himself. He saw himself
as an object, very small and distinct like a fly
walking on a clear window pane; and it was unmistakably
a fool. And as he stared at the word
"fool" written in luminous letters before him,
the word itself began to shine and change.</p>
<p>We used to be told in the nursery that if a man
were to bore a hole through the centre of the earth
and climb continually down and down, there
would come a moment at the centre when he
would seem to be climbing up and up. I do not
know whether this is true. The reason I do not
know whether it is true is that I never happened to
bore a hole through the centre of the earth, still
less to crawl through it. If I do not know what
this reversal or inversion feels like, it is because
I have never been there. And this also is an
allegory. It is certain that the writer, it is even
possible that the reader, is an ordinary person
who has never been there. We cannot follow
St. Francis to that final spiritual overturn in
which complete humiliation becomes complete
holiness or happiness, because we have never been
there. I for one do not profess to follow it any
further than that first breaking down of the
romantic barricades of boyish vanity, which I have
suggested in the last paragraph. And even that
paragraph, of course, is merely conjectural, an
individual guess at what he may have felt; but
he may have felt something quite different. But
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_83" id="Page_83">{83}</SPAN></span>
whatever else it was, it was so far analogous to
the story of the man making a tunnel through the
earth that it did mean a man going down and
down until at some mysterious moment he begins
to go up and up. We have never gone up like
that because we have never gone down like that;
we are obviously incapable of saying that it does
not happen; and the more candidly and calmly
we read human history, and especially the history
of the wisest men, the more we shall come to the
conclusion that it does happen. Of the intrinsic
internal essence of the experience I make no
pretence of writing at all. But the external effect
of it, for the purpose of this narrative, may be
expressed by saying that when Francis came forth
from his cave of vision, he was wearing the same
word "fool" as a feather in his cap; as a crest
or even a crown. He would go on being a fool;
he would become more and more of a fool; he
would be the court fool of the King of Paradise.</p>
<p>This state can only be represented in symbol;
but the symbol of inversion is true in another way.
If a man saw the world upside down, with all the
trees and towers hanging head downwards as in
a pool, one effect would be to emphasise the idea
of <i>dependence</i>. There is a Latin and literal connection;
for the very word dependence only means
hanging. It would make vivid the Scriptural
text which says that God has hanged the world
upon nothing. If St. Francis had seen, in one of
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_84" id="Page_84">{84}</SPAN></span>
his strange dreams, the town of Assisi upside down,
it need not have differed in a single detail from
itself except in being entirely the other way round.
But the point is this: that whereas to the normal
eye the large masonry of its walls or the massive
foundations of its watchtowers and its high citadel
would make it seem safer and more permanent,
the moment it was turned over the very same
weight would make it seem more helpless and
more in peril. It is but a symbol; but it happens
to fit the psychological fact. St. Francis might
love his little town as much as before, or more
than before; but the nature of the love would be
altered even in being increased. He might see
and love every tile on the steep roofs or every
bird on the battlements; but he would see them
all in a new and divine light of eternal danger and
dependence. Instead of being merely proud of
his strong city because it could not be moved, he
would be thankful to God Almighty that it had
not been dropped; he would be thankful to God
for not dropping the whole cosmos like a vast
crystal to be shattered into falling stars. Perhaps
St. Peter saw the world so, when he was crucified
head-downwards.</p>
<p>It is commonly in a somewhat cynical sense that
men have said, "Blessed is he that expecteth
nothing, for he shall not be disappointed." It
was in a wholly happy and enthusiastic sense that
St. Francis said, "Blessed is he who expecteth
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_85" id="Page_85">{85}</SPAN></span>
nothing, for he shall enjoy everything." It was
by this deliberate idea of starting from zero, from
the dark nothingness of his own deserts, that he
did come to enjoy even earthly things as few
people have enjoyed them; and they are in themselves
the best working example of the idea. For
there is no way in which a man can earn a star or
deserve a sunset. But there is more than this
involved, and more indeed than is easily to be
expressed in words. It is not only true that the
less a man thinks of himself, the more he thinks
of his good luck and of all the gifts of God. It is
also true that he sees more of the things themselves
when he sees more of their origin; for their origin
is a part of them and indeed the most important
part of them. Thus they become more extraordinary
by being explained. He has more wonder
at them but less fear of them; for a thing is
really wonderful when it is significant and not
when it is insignificant; and a monster, shapeless
or dumb or merely destructive, may be larger
than the mountains, but is still in a literal sense
insignificant. For a mystic like St. Francis the
monsters had a meaning; that is, they had
delivered their message. They spoke no longer
in an unknown tongue. That is the meaning
of all those stories, whether legendary or historical,
in which he appears as a magician
speaking the language of beasts and birds.
The mystic will have nothing to do with mere
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_86" id="Page_86">{86}</SPAN></span>
mystery; mere mystery is generally a mystery
of iniquity.</p>
<p>The transition from the good man to the saint
is a sort of revolution; by which one for whom all
things illustrate and illuminate God becomes one
for whom God illustrates and illuminates all
things. It is rather like the reversal whereby a
lover might say at first sight that a lady looked
like a flower, and say afterwards that all flowers
reminded him of his lady. A saint and a poet
standing by the same flower might seem to say
the same thing; but indeed though they would
both be telling the truth, they would be telling
different truths. For one the joy of life is a cause
of faith, for the other rather a result of faith.
But one effect of the difference is that the sense
of a divine dependence, which for the artist is
like the brilliant levin-blaze, for the saint is like
the broad daylight. Being in some mystical
sense on the other side of things, he sees things
go forth from the divine as children going forth
from a familiar and accepted home, instead of
meeting them as they come out, as most of us do,
upon the roads of the world. And it is the paradox
that by this privilege he is more familiar, more
free and fraternal, more carelessly hospitable than
we. For us the elements are like heralds who tell
us with trumpet and tabard that we are drawing
near the city of a great king; but he hails them
with an old familiarity that is almost an old
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_87" id="Page_87">{87}</SPAN></span>
frivolity. He calls them his Brother Fire and his
Sister Water.</p>
<p>So arises out of this almost nihilistic abyss
the noble thing that is called Praise; which no
one will ever understand while he identifies it
with nature-worship or pantheistic optimism.
When we say that a poet praises the whole creation,
we commonly mean only that he praises the whole
cosmos. But this sort of poet does really praise
creation, in the sense of the act of creation. He
praises the passage or transition from nonentity
to entity; there falls here also the shadow of that
archetypal image of the bridge, which has given
to the priest his archaic and mysterious name.
The mystic who passes through the moment when
there is nothing but God does in some sense
behold the beginningless beginnings in which
there was really nothing else. He not only
appreciates everything but the nothing of which
everything was made. In a fashion he endures
and answers even the earthquake irony of the
Book of Job; in some sense he is there when the
foundations of the world are laid, with the morning
stars singing together and the sons of God shouting
for joy. That is but a distant adumbration
of the reason why the Franciscan, ragged, penniless,
homeless and apparently hopeless, did indeed
come forth singing such songs as might come from
the stars of morning; and shouting, a son of God.</p>
<p>This sense of the great gratitude and the sublime
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_88" id="Page_88">{88}</SPAN></span>
dependence was not a phrase or even a sentiment;
it is the whole point that this was the very rock
of reality. It was not a fancy but a fact; rather
it is true that beside it all facts are fancies. That
we all depend in every detail, at every instant,
as a Christian would say upon God, as even an
agnostic would say upon existence and the nature
of things, is not an illusion of imagination; on
the contrary, it is the fundamental fact which we
cover up, as with curtains, with the illusion of
ordinary life. That ordinary life is an admirable
thing in itself, just as imagination is an
admirable thing in itself. But it is much more
the ordinary life that is made of imagination than
the contemplative life. He who has seen the whole
world hanging on a hair of the mercy of God has
seen the truth; we might almost say the cold
truth. He who has seen the vision of his city
upside down has seen it the right way up.</p>
<p>Rossetti makes the remark somewhere, bitterly
but with great truth, that the worst moment for
the atheist is when he is really thankful and has
nobody to thank. The converse of this proposition
is also true; and it is certain that this gratitude
produced, in such men as we are here considering,
the most purely joyful moments that
have been known to man. The great painter
boasted that he mixed all his colours with brains,
and the great saint may be said to mix all his
thoughts with thanks. All goods look better
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_89" id="Page_89">{89}</SPAN></span>
when they look like gifts. In this sense it is
certain that the mystical method establishes a
very healthy external relation to everything else.
But it must always be remembered that everything
else has for ever fallen into a second place,
in comparison with this simple fact of dependence
on the divine reality. In so far as ordinary social
relations have in them something that seems solid
and self-supporting, some sense of being at once
buttressed and cushioned; in so far as they establish
sanity in the sense of security and security in
the sense of self-sufficiency, the man who has
seen the world hanging on a hair does have some
difficulty in taking them so seriously as that.
In so far as even the secular authorities and
hierarchies, even the most natural superiorities
and the most necessary subordinations, tend at
once to put a man in his place, and to make him
sure of his position, the man who has seen the
human hierarchy upside down will always have
something of a smile for its superiorities. In this
sense the direct vision of divine reality does disturb
solemnities that are sane enough in themselves.
The mystic may have added a cubit to
his stature; but he generally loses something of
his status. He can no longer take himself for
granted, merely because he can verify his own
existence in a parish register or a family Bible.
Such a man may have something of the appearance
of the lunatic who has lost his name while preserving
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_90" id="Page_90">{90}</SPAN></span>
his nature; who straightway forgets what
manner of man he was. "Hitherto I have called
Pietro Bernardone father; but now I am the
servant of God."</p>
<p>All these profound matters must be suggested
in short and imperfect phrases; and the shortest
statement of one aspect of this illumination is to
say that it is the discovery of an infinite debt.
It may seem a paradox to say that a man may
be transported with joy to discover that he is in
debt. But this is only because in commercial
cases the creditor does not generally share the
transports of joy; especially when the debt is by
hypothesis infinite and therefore unrecoverable.
But here again the parallel of a natural love-story
of the nobler sort disposes of the difficulty in a
flash. There the infinite creditor does share the
joy of the infinite debtor; for indeed they are both
debtors and both creditors. In other words debt
and dependence do become pleasures in the
presence of unspoilt love; the word is used too
loosely and luxuriously in popular simplifications
like the present; but here the word is really the
key. It is the key of all the problems of Franciscan
morality which puzzle the merely modern mind;
but above all it is the key of asceticism. It is the
highest and holiest of the paradoxes that the man
who really knows he cannot pay his debt will be
for ever paying it. He will be for ever giving back
what he cannot give back, and cannot be expected
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_91" id="Page_91">{91}</SPAN></span>
to give back. He will be always throwing things
away into a bottomless pit of unfathomable
thanks. Men who think they are too modern to
understand this are in fact too mean to understand
it; we are most of us too mean to practise
it. We are not generous enough to be ascetics;
one might almost say not genial enough to be
ascetics. A man must have magnanimity of
surrender, of which he commonly only catches a
glimpse in first love, like a glimpse of our lost
Eden. But whether he sees it or not, the truth
is in that riddle; that the whole world has, or is,
only one good thing; and it is a bad debt.</p>
<p>If ever that rarer sort of romantic love, which
was the truth that sustained the Troubadours,
falls out of fashion and is treated as fiction, we
may see some such misunderstanding as that of
the modern world about asceticism. For it seems
conceivable that some barbarians might try to
destroy chivalry in love, as the barbarians ruling
in Berlin destroyed chivalry in war. If that were
ever so, we should have the same sort of unintelligent
sneers and unimaginative questions. Men
will ask what selfish sort of woman it must have
been who ruthlessly exacted tribute in the form
of flowers, or what an avaricious creature she can
have been to demand solid gold in the form of a
ring; just as they ask what cruel kind of God can
have demanded sacrifice and self-denial. They will
have lost the clue to all that lovers have meant
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_92" id="Page_92">{92}</SPAN></span>
by love; and will not understand that it was
because the thing was not demanded that it was
done. But whether or no any such lesser things
will throw a light on the greater, it is utterly
useless to study a great thing like the Franciscan
movement while remaining in the modern mood
that murmurs against gloomy asceticism. The
whole point about St. Francis of Assisi is that he
certainly was ascetical and he certainly was not
gloomy. As soon as ever he had been unhorsed
by the glorious humiliation of his vision of dependence
on the divine love, he flung himself
into fasting and vigil exactly as he had flung
himself furiously into battle. He had wheeled
his charger clean round, but there was no halt
or check in the thundering impetuosity of his
charge. There was nothing negative about it; it
was not a regimen or a stoical simplicity of life.
It was not self-denial merely in the sense of self-control.
It was as positive as a passion; it had
all the air of being as positive as a pleasure. He
devoured fasting as a man devours food. He
plunged after poverty as men have dug madly for
gold. And it is precisely the positive and passionate
quality of this part of his personality that is
a challenge to the modern mind in the whole problem
of the pursuit of pleasure. There undeniably
is the historical fact; and there attached to it is
another moral fact almost as undeniable. It is
certain that he held on this heroic or unnatural
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_93" id="Page_93">{93}</SPAN></span>
course from the moment when he went forth in his
hair-shirt into the winter woods to the moment
when he desired even in his death agony to lie bare
upon the bare ground, to prove that he had and
that he was nothing. And we can say, with
almost as deep a certainty, that the stars which
passed above that gaunt and wasted corpse stark
upon the rocky floor had for once, in all their
shining cycles round the world of labouring
humanity, looked down upon a happy man.</p>
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