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<h2> CHAPTER XIV—WHAT HE THOUGHT </h2>
<p>One last word.</p>
<p>Since this sort of details might, particularly at the present moment, and
to use an expression now in fashion, give to the Bishop of D——
a certain "pantheistical" physiognomy, and induce the belief, either to
his credit or discredit, that he entertained one of those personal
philosophies which are peculiar to our century, which sometimes spring up
in solitary spirits, and there take on a form and grow until they usurp
the place of religion, we insist upon it, that not one of those persons
who knew Monseigneur Welcome would have thought himself authorized to
think anything of the sort. That which enlightened this man was his heart.
His wisdom was made of the light which comes from there.</p>
<p>No systems; many works. Abstruse speculations contain vertigo; no, there
is nothing to indicate that he risked his mind in apocalypses. The apostle
may be daring, but the bishop must be timid. He would probably have felt a
scruple at sounding too far in advance certain problems which are, in a
manner, reserved for terrible great minds. There is a sacred horror
beneath the porches of the enigma; those gloomy openings stand yawning
there, but something tells you, you, a passer-by in life, that you must
not enter. Woe to him who penetrates thither!</p>
<p>Geniuses in the impenetrable depths of abstraction and pure speculation,
situated, so to speak, above all dogmas, propose their ideas to God. Their
prayer audaciously offers discussion. Their adoration interrogates. This
is direct religion, which is full of anxiety and responsibility for him
who attempts its steep cliffs.</p>
<p>Human meditation has no limits. At his own risk and peril, it analyzes and
digs deep into its own bedazzlement. One might almost say, that by a sort
of splendid reaction, it with it dazzles nature; the mysterious world
which surrounds us renders back what it has received; it is probable that
the contemplators are contemplated. However that may be, there are on
earth men who—are they men?—perceive distinctly at the verge
of the horizons of revery the heights of the absolute, and who have the
terrible vision of the infinite mountain. Monseigneur Welcome was one of
these men; Monseigneur Welcome was not a genius. He would have feared
those sublimities whence some very great men even, like Swedenborg and
Pascal, have slipped into insanity. Certainly, these powerful reveries
have their moral utility, and by these arduous paths one approaches to
ideal perfection. As for him, he took the path which shortens,—the
Gospel's.</p>
<p>He did not attempt to impart to his chasuble the folds of Elijah's mantle;
he projected no ray of future upon the dark groundswell of events; he did
not see to condense in flame the light of things; he had nothing of the
prophet and nothing of the magician about him. This humble soul loved, and
that was all.</p>
<p>That he carried prayer to the pitch of a superhuman aspiration is
probable: but one can no more pray too much than one can love too much;
and if it is a heresy to pray beyond the texts, Saint Theresa and Saint
Jerome would be heretics.</p>
<p>He inclined towards all that groans and all that expiates. The universe
appeared to him like an immense malady; everywhere he felt fever,
everywhere he heard the sound of suffering, and, without seeking to solve
the enigma, he strove to dress the wound. The terrible spectacle of
created things developed tenderness in him; he was occupied only in
finding for himself, and in inspiring others with the best way to
compassionate and relieve. That which exists was for this good and rare
priest a permanent subject of sadness which sought consolation.</p>
<p>There are men who toil at extracting gold; he toiled at the extraction of
pity. Universal misery was his mine. The sadness which reigned everywhere
was but an excuse for unfailing kindness. Love each other; he declared
this to be complete, desired nothing further, and that was the whole of
his doctrine. One day, that man who believed himself to be a
"philosopher," the senator who has already been alluded to, said to the
Bishop: "Just survey the spectacle of the world: all war against all; the
strongest has the most wit. Your love each other is nonsense."—"Well,"
replied Monseigneur Welcome, without contesting the point, "if it is
nonsense, the soul should shut itself up in it, as the pearl in the
oyster." Thus he shut himself up, he lived there, he was absolutely
satisfied with it, leaving on one side the prodigious questions which
attract and terrify, the fathomless perspectives of abstraction, the
precipices of metaphysics—all those profundities which converge, for
the apostle in God, for the atheist in nothingness; destiny, good and
evil, the way of being against being, the conscience of man, the
thoughtful somnambulism of the animal, the transformation in death, the
recapitulation of existences which the tomb contains, the incomprehensible
grafting of successive loves on the persistent <i>I</i>, the essence, the
substance, the Nile, and the Ens, the soul, nature, liberty, necessity;
perpendicular problems, sinister obscurities, where lean the gigantic
archangels of the human mind; formidable abysses, which Lucretius, Manou,
Saint Paul, Dante, contemplate with eyes flashing lightning, which seems
by its steady gaze on the infinite to cause stars to blaze forth there.</p>
<p>Monseigneur Bienvenu was simply a man who took note of the exterior of
mysterious questions without scrutinizing them, and without troubling his
own mind with them, and who cherished in his own soul a grave respect for
darkness.</p>
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