<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_153" id="Page_153">{153}</SPAN></span>
<h2><i>Chapter IX</i><br/> <small><i>Miracles and Death</i></small></h2></div>
<p><span class="smc">The</span> tremendous story of the Stigmata of St. Francis, which was the end of the last chapter,
was in some sense the end of his life. In a logical
sense, it would have been the end even if it had
happened at the beginning. But truer traditions
refer it to a later date and suggest that his
remaining days on the earth had something
about them of the fingering of a shadow. Whether
St. Bonaventura was right in his hint that St. Francis
saw in that seraphic vision something
almost like a vast mirror of his own soul, that
could at least suffer like an angel though not
like a god, or whether it expressed under an
imagery more primitive and colossal than common
Christian art the primary paradox of the
death of God, it is evident from its traditional
consequences that it was meant for a crown and
for a seal. It seems to have been after seeing
this vision that he began to go blind.</p>
<p>But the incident has another and much less
important place in this rough and limited outline.
It is the natural occasion for considering
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_154" id="Page_154">{154}</SPAN></span>
briefly and collectively all the facts or fables of
another aspect of the life of St. Francis; an aspect
which is, I will not say more disputable, but
certainly more disputed. I mean all that mass
of testimony and tradition that concerns his
miraculous powers and supernatural experiences,
with which it would have been easy to stud and
bejewel every page of the story; only that
certain circumstances necessary to the conditions
of this narration make it better to gather, somewhat
hastily, all such jewels into a heap.</p>
<p>I have here adopted this course in order to
make allowance for a prejudice. It is indeed to
a great extent a prejudice of the past; a prejudice
that is plainly disappearing in days of greater
enlightenment, and especially of a greater range
of scientific experiment and knowledge. But it
is a prejudice that is still tenacious in many of
an older generation and still traditional in many
of the younger. I mean, of course, what used
to be called the belief "that miracles do not
happen," as I think Matthew Arnold expressed
it, in expressing the standpoint of so many of
our Victorian uncles and great-uncles. In other
words it was the remains of that sceptical simplification
by which some of the philosophers of the
early eighteenth century had popularised the
impression (for a very short time) that we had
discovered the regulations of the cosmos like the
works of a clock, of so very simple a clock that
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_155" id="Page_155">{155}</SPAN></span>
it was possible to distinguish almost at a glance
what could or could not have happened in human
experience. It should be remembered that these
real sceptics, of the golden age of scepticism,
were quite as scornful of the first fancies of science
as of the lingering legends of religion. Voltaire,
when he was told that a fossil fish had been
found on the peaks of the Alps, laughed openly
at the tale and said that some fasting monk or
hermit had dropped his fish-bones there; possibly
in order to effect another monkish fraud. Everybody
knows by this time that science has had its
revenge on scepticism. The border between the
credible and the incredible has not only become
once more as vague as in any barbaric twilight;
but the credible is obviously increasing and the
incredible shrinking. A man in Voltaire's time
did not know what miracle he would next have
to throw up. A man in our time does not know
what miracle he will next have to swallow.</p>
<p>But long before these things had happened, in
those days of my boyhood when I first saw the
figure of St. Francis far away in the distance
and drawing me even at that distance, in those
Victorian days which did seriously separate the
virtues from the miracles of the saints—even in
those days I could not help feeling vaguely
puzzled about how this method could be applied
to history. Even then I did not quite understand,
and even now I do not quite understand, on what
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_156" id="Page_156">{156}</SPAN></span>
principle one is to pick and choose in the
chronicles of the past which seem to be all of
a piece. All our knowledge of certain historical
periods, and notably of the whole medieval period,
rests on certain connected chronicles written by
people who are some of them nameless and all
of them dead, who cannot in any case be cross-examined
and cannot in some cases be corroborated.
I have never been quite clear about
the nature of the right by which historians
accepted masses of detail from them as definitely
true, and suddenly denied their truthfulness when
one detail was preternatural. I do not complain
of their being sceptics; I am puzzled about why
the sceptics are not more sceptical. I can understand
their saying that these details would never
have been included in a chronicle except by
lunatics or liars; but in that case the only inference
is that the chronicle was written by liars
or lunatics. They will write for instance:
"Monkish fanaticism found it easy to spread
the report that miracles were already being
worked at the tomb of Thomas Becket." Why
should they not say equally well, "Monkish
fanaticism found it easy to spread the slander
that four knights from King Henry's court had
assassinated Thomas Becket in the cathedral"?
They would write something like this: "The
credulity of the age readily believed that Joan
of Arc had been inspired to point out the Dauphin
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_157" id="Page_157">{157}</SPAN></span>
although he was in disguise." Why should they
not write on the same principle: "The credulity
of the age was such as to suppose that an obscure
peasant girl could get an audience at the court
of the Dauphin"? And so, in the present case,
when they tell us there is a wild story that St. Francis
flung himself into the fire and emerged
scathless, upon what precise principle are they
forbidden to tell us of a wild story that St. Francis
flung himself into the camp of the
ferocious Moslems and returned safe? I only
ask for information; for I do not see the rationale
of the thing myself. I will undertake to say
there was not a word written of St. Francis by
any contemporary who was himself incapable of
believing and telling a miraculous story. Perhaps
it is all monkish fables and there never was
any St. Francis or any St. Thomas Becket or
any Joan of Arc. This is undoubtedly a <i>reductio
ad absurdum</i>; but it is a <i>reductio ad absurdum</i>
of the view which thought all miracles absurd.</p>
<p>And in abstract logic this method of selection
would lead to the wildest absurdities. An
intrinsically incredible story could only mean
that the authority was unworthy of credit.
It could not mean that other parts of his story
must be received with complete credulity. If
somebody said he had met a man in yellow
trousers, who proceeded to jump down his own
throat, we should not exactly take our Bible oath
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_158" id="Page_158">{158}</SPAN></span>
or be burned at the stake for the statement that
he wore yellow trousers. If somebody claimed
to have gone up in a blue balloon and found that
the moon was made of green cheese, we should
not exactly take an affidavit that the balloon
was blue any more than that the moon was
green. And the really logical conclusion from
throwing doubts on all tales like the miracles of
St. Francis was to throw doubts on the existence
of men like St. Francis. And there really was a
modern moment, a sort of high-water mark of
insane scepticism, when this sort of thing was
really said or done. People used to go about
saying that there was no such person as St. Patrick; which is every bit as much of a human
and historical howler as saying there was no such
person as St. Francis. There was a time, for
instance, when the madness of mythological
explanation had dissolved a large part of solid
history under the universal and luxuriant warmth
and radiance of the Sun-Myth. I believe that
that particular sun has already set, but there
have been any number of moons and meteors
to take its place.</p>
<p>St. Francis, of course, would make a magnificent
Sun-Myth. How could anybody miss the
chance of being a Sun-Myth when he is actually
best known by a song called The Canticle of
the Sun? It is needless to point out that the
fire in Syria was the dawn in the East and the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_159" id="Page_159">{159}</SPAN></span>
bleeding wounds in Tuscany the sunset in the
West. I could expound this theory at considerable
length; only, as so often happens to
such fine theorists, another and more promising
theory occurs to me. I cannot think how everybody,
including myself, can have overlooked the
fact that the whole tale of St. Francis is of
Totemistic origin. It is unquestionably a tale
that simply swarms with totems. The Franciscan
woods are as full of them as any Red Indian
fable. Francis is made to call himself an ass,
because in the original mythos Francis was
merely the name given to the real four-footed
donkey, afterwards vaguely evolved into a half-human
god or hero. And that, no doubt, is why
I used to feel that the Brother Wolf and Sister
Bird of St. Francis were somehow like the Brer
Fox and Sis Cow of Uncle Remus. Some say
there is an innocent stage of infancy in which
we do really believe that a cow talked or a fox
made a tar baby. Anyhow there is an innocent
period of intellectual growth in which we do
sometimes really believe that St. Patrick was a
Sun-Myth or St. Francis a Totem. But for the
most of us both those phases of paradise are
past.</p>
<p>As I shall suggest in a moment, there is one
sense in which we can for practical purposes
distinguish between probable and improbable
things in such a story. It is not so much a
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_160" id="Page_160">{160}</SPAN></span>
question of cosmic criticism about the nature of
the event as of literary criticism about the nature
of the story. Some stories are told much more
seriously than others. But apart from this, I
shall not attempt here any definite differentiation
between them. I shall not do so for a practical
reason affecting the utility of the proceeding; I
mean the fact that in a practical sense the whole
of this matter is again in the melting pot, from
which many things may emerge moulded into
what rationalism would have called monsters.
The fixed points of faith and philosophy do
indeed remain always the same. Whether a man
believes that fire in one case could fail to burn,
depends on why he thinks it generally does burn.
If it burns nine sticks out of ten because it is
its nature or doom to do so, then it will burn
the tenth stick as well. If it burns nine sticks
because it is the will of God that it should, then
it might be the will of God that the tenth should
be unburned. Nobody can get behind that
fundamental difference about the reason of
things; and it is as rational for a theist to
believe in miracles as for an atheist to disbelieve
in them. In other words there is only one
intelligent reason why a man does not believe in
miracles and that is that he does believe in
materialism. But these fixed points of faith and
philosophy are things for a theoretical work and
have no particular place here. And in the matter
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_161" id="Page_161">{161}</SPAN></span>
of history and biography, which have their place
here, nothing is fixed at all. The world is in a
welter of the possible and impossible, and nobody
knows what will be the next scientific hypothesis
to support some ancient superstition. Three quarters
of the miracles attributed to St. Francis
would already be explained by psychologists,
not indeed as a Catholic explains them, but as
a materialist must necessarily refuse to explain
them. There is one whole department of the
miracles of St. Francis; the miracles of healing.
What is the good of a superior sceptic throwing
them away as unthinkable, at the moment when
faith-healing is already a big booming Yankee
business like Barnum's Show? There is another
whole department analogous to the tales of
Christ "perceiving men's thoughts." What is
the use of censoring them and blacking them out
because they are marked "miracles," when
thought-reading is already a parlour game like
musical chairs? There is another whole department,
to be studied separately if such scientific
study were possible, of the well-attested wonders
worked from his relics and fragmentary possessions.
What is the use of dismissing all that as inconceivable,
when even these common psychical
parlour tricks turn perpetually upon touching
some familiar object or holding in the hand
some personal possession? I do not believe, of
course, that these tricks are of the same type
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_162" id="Page_162">{162}</SPAN></span>
as the good works of the saint; save perhaps in
the sense of <i>Diabolus simius Dei</i>. But it is not
a question of what I believe and why, but of what
the sceptic disbelieves and why. And the moral
for the practical biographer and historian is that
he must wait till things settle down a little more,
before he claims to disbelieve anything.</p>
<p>This being so he can choose between two
courses; and not without some hesitation, I
have here chosen between them. The best and
boldest course would be to tell the whole story
in a straightforward way, miracles and all, as
the original historians told it. And to this sane
and simple course the new historians will probably
have to return. But it must be remembered
that this book is avowedly only an introduction
to St. Francis or the study of St. Francis. Those
who need an introduction are in their nature
strangers. With them the object is to get them
to listen to St. Francis at all; and in doing so
it is perfectly legitimate so to arrange the order
of the facts that the familiar come before the
unfamiliar and those they can at once understand
before those they have a difficulty in
understanding. I should only be too thankful if
this thin and scratchy sketch contains a line or
two that attracts men to study St. Francis for
themselves; and if they do study him for themselves,
they will soon find that the supernatural
part of the story seems quite as natural as the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_163" id="Page_163">{163}</SPAN></span>
rest. But it was necessary that my outline
should be a merely human one, since I was only
presenting his claim on all humanity, including
sceptical humanity. I therefore adopted the
alternative course, of showing first that nobody
but a born fool could fail to realise that Francis
of Assisi was a very real historical human being;
and then summarising briefly in this chapter the
superhuman powers that were certainly a part
of that history and humanity. It only remains
to say a few words about some distinctions that
may reasonably be observed in the matter by
any man of any views; that he may not confuse
the point and climax of the saint's life with the
fancies or rumours that were really only the
fringes of his reputation.</p>
<p>There is so immense a mass of legends and
anecdotes about St. Francis of Assisi, and there
are so many admirable compilations that cover
nearly all of them, that I have been compelled
within these narrow limits to pursue a somewhat
narrow policy; that of following one line of
explanation and only mentioning one anecdote
here or there because it illustrates that explanation.
If this is true about all the legends and
stories, it is especially true about the miraculous
legends and the supernatural stories. If we were
to take some stories as they stand, we should
receive a rather bewildered impression that the
biography contains more supernatural events than
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_164" id="Page_164">{164}</SPAN></span>
natural ones. Now it is clean against Catholic
tradition, co-incident in so many points with
common sense, to suppose that this is really the
proportion of these things in practical human
life. Moreover, even considered as supernatural
or preternatural stories, they obviously fall into
certain different classes, not so much by our
experience of miracles as by our experience of
stories. Some of them have the character of
fairy stories, in their form even more than their
incident. They are obviously tales told by the
fire to peasants or the children of peasants, under
conditions in which nobody thinks he is propounding
a religious doctrine to be received or rejected,
but only rounding off a story in the most symmetrical
way, according to that sort of decorative
scheme or pattern that runs through all fairy
stories. Others are obviously in their form most
emphatically evidence; that is they are testimony
that is truth or lies; and it will be very
hard for any judge of human nature to think
they are lies.</p>
<p>It is admitted that the story of the Stigmata
is not a legend but can only be a lie. I mean
that it is certainly not a late legendary accretion
added afterwards to the fame of St. Francis;
but is something that started almost immediately
with his earliest biographers. It is practically
necessary to suggest that it was a conspiracy;
indeed there has been some disposition to put
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_165" id="Page_165">{165}</SPAN></span>
the fraud upon the unfortunate Elias, whom so
many parties have been disposed to treat as a
useful universal villain. It has been said, indeed,
that these early biographers, St. Bonaventura
and Celano and the Three Companions, though
they declare that St. Francis received the mystical
wounds, do not say that they themselves saw
those wounds. I do not think this argument
conclusive; because it only arises out of the very
nature of the narrative. The Three Companions
are not in any case making an affidavit; and
therefore none of the admitted parts of their
story are in the form of an affidavit. They are
writing a chronicle of a comparatively impersonal
and very objective description. They do not say,
"I saw St. Francis's wounds"; they say, "St. Francis
received wounds." But neither do they
say, "I saw St. Francis go into the Portiuncula";
they say, "St. Francis went into the Portiuncula."
But I still cannot understand why they should be
trusted as eye-witnesses about the one fact and
not trusted as eye-witnesses about the other. It
is all of a piece; it would be a most abrupt and
abnormal interruption in their way of telling the
story if they suddenly began to curse and to
swear, and give their names and addresses, and
take their oath that they themselves saw and
verified the physical facts in question. It seems
to me, therefore, that this particular discussion
goes back to the general question I have already
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_166" id="Page_166">{166}</SPAN></span>
mentioned; the question of why these chronicles
should be credited at all, if they are credited
with abounding in the incredible. But that again
will probably be found to revert, in the last
resort, to the mere fact that some men cannot
believe in miracles because they are materialists.
That is logical enough; but they are bound to
deny the preternatural as much in the testimony
of a modern scientific professor as in that of a
medieval monkish chronicler. And there are
plenty of professors for them to contradict by
this time.</p>
<p>But whatever may be thought of such supernaturalism
in the comparatively material and
popular sense of supernatural acts, we shall miss
the whole point of St. Francis, especially of
St. Francis after Alverno, if we do not realise
that he was living a supernatural life. And
there is more and more of such supernaturalism
in his life as he approaches towards his death.
This element of the supernatural did not separate
him from the natural; for it was the whole point
of his position that it united him more perfectly
to the natural. It did not make him dismal or
dehumanised; for it was the whole meaning of
his message that such mysticism makes a man
cheerful and humane. But it was the whole
point of his position, and it was the whole meaning
of his message, that the power that did it
was a supernatural power. If this simple distinction
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_167" id="Page_167">{167}</SPAN></span>
were not apparent from the whole of
his life, it would be difficult for anyone to miss
it in reading the account of his death.</p>
<p>In a sense he may be said to have wandered
as a dying man, just as he had wandered as a
living one. As it became more and more apparent
that his health was failing, he seems to have
been carried from place to place like a pageant
of sickness or almost like a pageant of mortality.
He went to Rieti, to Nursia, perhaps to Naples,
certainly to Cortona by the lake of Perugia.
But there is something profoundly pathetic, and
full of great problems, in the fact that at last,
as it would seem, his flame of life leapt up and
his heart rejoiced when they saw afar off on the
Assisian hill the solemn pillars of the Portiuncula.
He who had become a vagabond for the sake of
a vision, he who had denied himself all sense of
place and possession, he whose whole gospel and
glory it was to be homeless, received like a
Parthian shot from nature, the sting of the sense
of home. He also had his <i>maladie du clocher</i>,
his sickness of the spire; though his spire was
higher than ours. "Never," he cried with the
sudden energy of strong spirits in death, "never
give up this place. If you would go anywhere
or make any pilgrimage, return always to your
home; for this is the holy house of God." And
the procession passed under the arches of his
home; and he laid down on his bed and his
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_168" id="Page_168">{168}</SPAN></span>
brethren gathered round him for the last long
vigil. It seems to me no moment for entering
into the subsequent disputes about which successors
he blessed or in what form and with
what significance. In that one mighty moment
he blessed us all.</p>
<p>After he had taken farewell of some of his
nearest and especially some of his oldest friends,
he was lifted at his own request off his own rude
bed and laid on the bare ground; as some say
clad only in a hair-shirt, as he had first gone
forth into the wintry woods from the presence of
his father. It was the final assertion of his great
fixed idea; of praise and thanks springing to
their most towering height out of nakedness and
nothing. As he lay there we may be certain
that his seared and blinded eyes saw nothing
but their object and their origin. We may be
sure that the soul, in its last inconceivable isolation,
was face to face with nothing less than
God Incarnate and Christ Crucified. But for the
men standing around him there must have been
other thoughts mingling with these; and many
memories must have gathered like ghosts in the
twilight, as that day wore on and that great
darkness descended in which we all lost a friend.</p>
<p>For what lay dying there was not Dominic of
the Dogs of God, a leader in logical and controversial
wars that could be reduced to a plan
and handed on like a plan; a master of a machine
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_169" id="Page_169">{169}</SPAN></span>
of democratic discipline by which others could
organise themselves. What was passing from
the world was a person; a poet; an outlook on
life like a light that was never after on sea or
land; a thing not to be replaced or repeated
while the earth endures. It has been said that
there was only one Christian, who died on the
cross; it is truer to say in this sense that there
was only one Franciscan, whose name was Francis.
Huge and happy as was the popular work he
left behind him, there was something that he
could not leave behind, any more than a landscape
painter can leave his eyes in his will. It
was an artist in life who was here called to be
an artist in death; and he had a better right
than Nero, his anti-type, to say <i>Qualis artifex
pereo</i>. For Nero's life was full of posing for the
occasion like that of an actor; while the Umbrian's
had a natural and continuous grace like that of
an athlete. But St. Francis had better things
to say and better things to think about, and
his thoughts were caught upwards where we
cannot follow them, in divine and dizzy heights
to which death alone can lift us up.</p>
<p>Round about him stood the brethren in their
brown habits, those that had loved him even if
they afterwards disputed with each other. There
was Bernard his first friend and Angelo who had
served as his secretary and Elias his successor,
whom tradition tried to turn into a sort of Judas,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_170" id="Page_170">{170}</SPAN></span>
but who seems to have been little worse than an
official in the wrong place. His tragedy was
that he had a Franciscan habit without a Franciscan
heart, or at any rate with a very un-Franciscan
head. But though he made a bad Franciscan,
he might have made a decent Dominican.
Anyhow, there is no reason to doubt that he
loved Francis, for ruffians and savages did that.
Anyhow he stood among the rest as the hours
passed and the shadows lengthened in the house
of the Portiuncula; and nobody need think so
ill of him as to suppose that his thoughts were
then in the tumultuous future, in the ambitions
and controversies of his later years.</p>
<p>A man might fancy that the birds must have
known when it happened; and made some
motion in the evening sky. As they had once,
according to the tale, scattered to the four
winds of heaven in the pattern of a cross at his
signal of dispersion, they might now have written
in such dotted lines a more awful augury across
the sky. Hidden in the woods perhaps were
little cowering creatures never again to be so
much noticed and understood; and it has been
said that animals are sometimes conscious of
things to which man their spiritual superior is
for the moment blind. We do not know whether
any shiver passed through all the thieves and the
outcasts and the outlaws, to tell them what had
happened to him who never knew the nature of
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_171" id="Page_171">{171}</SPAN></span>
scorn. But at least in the passages and porches
of the Portiuncula there was a sudden stillness,
where all the brown figures stood like bronze
statues; for the stopping of the great heart that
had not broken till it held the world.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />