Part 3 (1/2)
”They are quarrelling! The Archbishop is angry!” said Henri with a grin.
”Perhaps Archbishops do not like saints,” suggested Babette.
”Tais-toi! Cardinal Bonpre is an archbishop himself, little silly,”
said Madame Patoux--”Therefore those great and distinguished Monseigneurs are like brothers.”
”That is why they are quarrelling!” declared Henri glibly,--”A boy told me in school that Cain and Abel were the first pair of brothers, and they quarrelled,--and all brothers have quarrelled ever since. It's in the blood, so that boy says,--and it is his excuse always for fighting HIS little brother. His little brother is six, and he is twelve;--and of course he always knocks his little brother down. He cannot help it, he says. And he gets books on physiology and heredity, and he learns in them that whatever is IN the blood has got to come out somehow. He says that it's because Cain killed Abel that there are wars between nations;--if Cain and Abel had never quarrelled, there would never have been any fighting in the world,--and now that it's in the blood of every body--”
But further sapient discourse on the part of Henri was summarily put an end to by his mother's ordering him to kneel down and say his prayers, and afterwards bundling him into bed,--where, being sleepy, he speedily forgot all that he had been trying to talk about. Babette took more time in retiring to rest. She had very pretty, curly, brown hair, and Madame Patoux took a pride in brus.h.i.+ng and plaiting it neatly.
”I may be like Diane de Poitiers after all,” she remarked, peering at herself in the small mirror when her thick locks were smoothed and tied back for the night--”Why should I not be?”
”Because Diane de Poitiers was a wicked woman,” said Madame Patoux energetically,--”and thou must learn to be a good girl.”
”But if Diane de Poitiers was bad, why do they talk so much about her even now, and put her in all the histories, and show her house, and say she was beautiful?” went on Babette.
”Because people are foolish,” said Madame, getting impatient--”Foolish people run after bad women, and bad women run after foolish people. Now say thy prayers.”
Obediently Babette knelt down, shut her eyes close, clasped her hands hard, and murmured the usual evening formula, heaving a small sigh after her ”act of contrition,” and looking almost saintly as she commended herself to her ”angel guardian.” Then her mother kissed her, saying--
”Good-night, little daughter! Think of Our Lady and the saints, and then ask them to keep us safe from evil. Good-night!”
”Good-night.” responded Babette sleepily,--but all the same she did not think of Our Lady and the saints half as much as of Diane de Poitiers.
There are few daughters of Eve to whom conquest does not seem a finer thing than humility; and the sovereignty of Diane de Poitiers over a king, seems to many a girl just conscious of her own charm, a more emphatic testimony to the supremacy of her s.e.x, than the Angel's greeting of ”Blessed art thou!” to the elected Virgin of the world.
III.
Meanwhile a somewhat embarra.s.sing interview had taken place between the Archbishop of Rouen and Cardinal Bonpre. The archbishop, seen by the light of the one small lamp which illumined the ”best room” of the Hotel Poitiers was certainly a handsome and imposing personage, broad-chested and muscular, with a ma.s.sive head, well set on strong square shoulders, admirably adapted for the wearing of the dark violet soutane which fitted them as gracefully as a royal vesture draping the figure of a king. One disproportionate point, however, about his attire was, that the heavy gold crucifix which depended by a chain from his neck, did not, with him, look so much a sacred symbol as a trivial ornament,--whereas the simple silver one that gleamed against the rusty black scarlet-edged ca.s.sock of Cardinal Bonpre, presented itself as the plain and significant sign of holiness without the aid of jewellers'
workmans.h.i.+p to emphasize its meaning. This was a trifle, no doubt;--still it was one of those slight things which often betray character. As the most brilliant diamond will look like common gla.s.s on the rough red hand of a cook, while common gla.s.s will simulate the richness of the real gem on the delicate white finger of a daintily-bred woman, so the emblem of salvation seemed a mere bauble and toy on the breast of the Archbishop, while it a.s.sumed its most reverent and sacred aspect as worn by Felix Bonpre. Yet judged by mere outward appearance, there could be no doubt as to which was the finer-looking man of the two. The Cardinal, thin and pale, with shadows of thought and pain in his eyes, and the many delicate wrinkles of advancing age marking his features, would never possess so much attractiveness for worldly and superficial persons as the handsome Archbishop, who carried his fifty-five years as though they were but thirty, and whose fresh, plump face, unmarred by any serious consideration, bespoke a thorough enjoyment of life, and the things which life,--if encouraged to demand them,--most strenuously seeks, such as good food, soft beds, rich clothing, and other countless luxuries which are not necessities by any means, but which make the hours move smoothly and softly, undisturbed by the clash of outside events among those who are busy with thoughts and actions, and who,--being absorbed in the thick of a soul-contest,--care little whether their bodies fare ill or well. The Archbishop certainly did not belong to this latter cla.s.s,--indeed he considered too much thought as mischievous in itself, and when thought appeared likely to break forth into action, he denounced it as pernicious and well-nigh criminal.
”Thinkers,” he said once to a young and ardent novice, studying for the priesthood, ”are generally socialists and revolutionists. They are an offence to the Church and a danger to the community.”
”Surely,” murmured the novice timidly,--”Our Lord Himself was a thinker? And a Socialist likewise?”
But at this the Archbishop rose up in wrath and flashed forth menace;--
”If you are a follower of Renan, sir, you had better admit it before proceeding further in your studies,” he said irately,--”The Church is too much troubled in these days by the members of a useless and degenerate apostasy!” Whereupon the young man had left his presence abashed, puzzled, and humiliated; but scarcely penitent, inasmuch as his New Testament taught him that he was right and that the Archbishop was wrong.
Truth to tell, the Archbishop was very often wrong. Wrapped up in himself and his own fixed notions as to how life should be lived, he seldom looked out upon the larger world, and obstinately refused to take any thoughtful notice of the general tendency of public opinion in all countries concerning religion and morality. All that he was unable to explain, he flatly denied,--and his prejudices were as violent as his hatred of contradiction was keen. The saintly life and n.o.ble deeds of Felix Bonpre had reached him from time to time through various rumours repeated by different priests and dignitaries of the Church, who had travelled as far as the distant little Cathedral-town embowered among towering pines and elm trees, where the Cardinal had his abiding seat of duty;--and he had been anxious to meet the man who in these days of fastidious feeding and luxurious living, had managed to gain such a holy reputation as to be almost canonized in some folks'
estimation before he was dead. Hearing that Bonpre intended to stay a couple of nights in Rouen, he cordially invited him to spend that time at his house,--but the invitation had been gratefully yet firmly refused, much to the Archbishop's amazement. This amazement increased considerably when he learned that the dingy, comfortless, little Hotel Poitiers had been selected by the Cardinal as his temporary lodging,--and it was not without a pious murmur concerning ”the pride which apes humility” that he betook himself to that ancient and despised hostelry, which had nothing whatever in the way of a modern advantage to recommend it,--neither electric light, nor electric bell, nor telephone. But he felt it inc.u.mbent upon him to pay a fraternal visit to the Cardinal, who had become in a manner famous without being at all aware of his fame,--and when finally in his presence, he was conscious not only of a singular disappointment, but an equally singular perplexity. Felix Bonpre was not at all the sort of personage he had expected to see. He had imagined that a Churchman who was able to obtain a character for saintliness in days like these, must needs be worldly-wise and crafty, with a keen perception and comprehension of the follies of mankind, and an ability to use these follies advantageously to further his own ends. Something of the cunning and foresight of an ancient Egyptian sorcerer was in the composition of the Archbishop himself, for he judged mankind alone by its general stupidity and credulity;--stupidity and credulity which formed excellent ground for the working of miracles, whether such miracles were wrought in the name of Osiris or Christ. Mokanna, the ”Veiled Prophet,” while corrupt to the core with unnameable vices, had managed in his time to delude the people into thinking him a holy man; and,--without any adequate reason for his a.s.sumption,--the Archbishop had certainly prepared himself to meet in Felix Bonpre, a shrewd, calculating, clever priest, absorbed in acting the part of an excessive holiness in order to secure such honour in his diocese as should attract the particular notice of the Vatican. ”Playing for Pope,” in fact, had been the idea with which the archbishop had invested the Cardinal's reputed sanct.i.ty, and he was astonished and in a manner irritated to find himself completely mistaken. He had opened the conversation by the usual cordial trivialities of ordinary greeting, to which Bonpre had responded with the suave courtesy and refined gentleness which always dignified his manner,--and then the Archbishop had ventured to offer a remonstrance on the unconventional--”Shall we call it eccentric?” he suggested, smiling amicably,--conduct of the Cardinal in choosing to abide in such a comfortless lodging as the Hotel Poitiers.
”It would have been a pleasure and an honour to me to welcome you at my house”--he said--”Really, it is quite a violation of custom and usage that you should be in this wretched place; the accommodation is not at all fitted for a prince of the Church.”
Cardinal Felix raised one hand in gentle yet pained protest.
”Pardon me!” he said, ”I do not like that term, 'prince of the Church.'
There are no princes in the Church--or if there are, there should be none.”