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St Catherine of Siena
The Dialogue of the Seraphic Virgin
It would be hard to say
whether the Age of the Saints, le moyen âge énorme et
délicat, has suffered more at the hands of friends
or foes.
It is at least certain that
the medieval period affects those who approach it in the
manner of a powerful personality who may awaken love or
hatred, but cannot be passed over with indifference.
When the contempt of the eighteenth century for the
subject, the result of that century's lack of historic
imagination, was thawed by the somewhat rhetorical
enthusiasm of Chateaubriand and of the Romanticists
beyond the Rhine, hostility gave place to an
undiscriminating admiration. The shadows fell out of the
picture; the medieval time became a golden age when
heaven and earth visibly mingled, when Christian society
reached the zenith of perfection which constituted it a
model for all succeeding ages. Then came the German
professors with all the paraphernalia of scientific
history, and, looking through their instruments, we, who
are not Germans, have come to take a more critical and,
perhaps, a juster view of the matter. The Germans, too,
have had disciples of other nations, and though
conclusions on special points may differ, in every
country now at a certain level of education, the same
views prevail as to the principles on which historical
investigation should be conducted. And yet, while no one
with a reputation to lose would venture on any personal
heresy as to the standards of legitimate evidence, the
same facts still seem to lead different minds to
differing appreciations. For history, written solely
ad narrandum, is not history; the historian's task
is not over when he has disinterred facts and
established dates: it is then that the most delicate
part of his work begins. History, to be worthy of the
name, must produce the illusion of living men and women,
and, in order to do this successfully, must be based,
not only upon insight into human nature in general, but
also upon personal appreciation of the particular men
and women engaged in the episodes with which it deals.
With facts as such, there can indeed be no tampering;
but for the determination of their significance, of
their value, as illustrative of a course of policy or of
the character of those who were responsible for their
occurrence, we have to depend in great measure on the
personality of the historian. It is evident that a man
who lacks the sympathetic power to enter into the
character that he attempts to delineate, will hardly be
able to make that character live for us. For in Art as
well as Life, sympathy is power.
Now, while this is true of
all history whatever, it is perhaps truer of the history
of the middle ages than of that of any more recent
period, nor is the reason of this far to seek. The
middle ages were a period fruitful in great individuals
who molded society, to an extent that perhaps no
succeeding period has been. In modern times the formula,
an abstraction such as "Capital" or the "Rights of Man"
has largely taken the place of the individual as a
plastic force. The one great Tyrant of the nineteenth
century found his opportunity in the anarchy which
followed the French Revolution. The spoil was then
necessarily to the strong. But even Napoleon was
conquered at last rather by a conspiracy of the slowly
developing anonymous forces of his time than by the
superior skill or strength of an individual rival. The
lion could hardly have been caught in such meshes in the
trecento. Then, the fate of populations was bound up
with the animosities of princes, and, in order to
understand the state of Europe at any particular moment
of that period, it is necessary to understand the state
of soul of the individuals who happened, at the time, to
be the political stakeholders.
It must not be thought,
however, that the personality of the prince was the only
power in the medieval state, for the prince himself was
held to be ultimately amenable to an idea, which so
infinitely transcended earthly distinctions as to level
them all in relation to itself. Religion was in those
days a mental and social force which we, in spite of the
petulant acerbity of modern theological controversies,
have difficulty in realizing. Prince and serf would one
day appear as suppliants before the Judgment-seat of
Christ, and the theory of medieval Christianity was
considerably in favor of the serf. The Father of
Christendom, at once Priest and King, anointed and
consecrated as the social exponent of the Divine
Justice, could not, in his own person, escape its
rigors, but must, one day, render an account of his
stewardship. Nor did the medieval mind, distinguishing
between the office and the individual, by any means
shrink from contemplating the fate of the faithless
steward. In a "Last Judgment" by Angelico at Florence,
the ministers of justice seem to have a special joy in
hurrying off to the pit popes and cardinals and other
ecclesiastics.
For it is an insufficient
criticism that has led some to suppose that the medieval
Church weighed on the conscience of Christendom solely,
or even primarily, as an arbitrary fact: that the
priesthood, aided by the ignorance of the people,
succeeded in establishing a monstrous claim to control
the destinies of the soul by quasi-magical agencies and
the powers of excommunication. Nothing can be further
from the truth. Probably at no period has the Christian
conscience realized more profoundly that the whole
external fabric of Catholicism, its sacraments, its
priesthood, its discipline, was but the phenomenal
expression, necessary and sacred in its place, of the
Idea of Christianity, that the vitality of that Idea was
the life by which the Church lived, and that by that
Idea all Christians, priests as well as laymen, rulers
as well as subjects, would at the last be judged. When
Savonarola replied to the Papal Legate, who, in his
confusion, committed the blunder of adding to the
formula of excommunication from the Church Militant, a
sentence of exclusion from the Church Triumphant, "You
cannot do it," he was in the tradition of medieval
orthodoxy. Moreover, even though the strict logic of her
theory might have required it, the hierarchical Church
was not considered as the sole manifestation of the
Divine Will to Christendom. The unanimity with which the
Christian idea was accepted in those times made the
saint a well-known type of human character just as
nowadays we have the millionaire or the philanthropist.
Now the saint, although under the same ecclesiastical
dispensation as other Christians, was conceived to have
his own special relations with God, which amounted
almost to a personal revelation. In particular he was
held to be exempt from many of the limitations of fallen
humanity. His prayers were of certain efficacy; the
customary uniformities of experience were thought to be
constantly transcended by the power that dwelt within
him; he was often accepted by the people as the bearer
to Christendom of a Divine message over and above the
revelation of which the hierarchy was the legitimate
guardian. Not infrequently indeed that message was one
of warning or correction to the hierarchy. Sabatier
points out truly that the medieval saints occupied much
the same relation to the ecclesiastical system as the
Prophets of Israel had done, under the older
dispensation, to the Jewish Priesthood. They came out of
their hermitages or cloisters, and with lips touched by
coal from the altar denounced iniquity wherever they
found it, even in the highest places. It is needless to
say that they were not revolutionaries -- had they been
so indeed the state of Europe might have been very
different today; for them, as for other Christians, the
organization of the Church was Divine; it was by the
sacred responsibilities of his office that they judged
the unworthy pastor.
An apt illustration of this
attitude occurs in the life of the Blessed Colomba of
Rieti. Colomba, who was a simple peasant, was called to
the unusual vocation of preaching. The local
representatives of the Holy Office, alarmed at the
novelty, imprisoned her and took the opportunity of a
visit of Alexander VI. to the neighboring town of
Perugia to bring her before his Holiness for
examination. When the saint was brought into the Pope's
presence, she reverently kissed the hem of his garment,
and, being overcome with devotion at the sight of the
Vicar of Christ, fell into an ecstasy, during which she
invoked the Divine judgment on the sins of Rodrigo
Borgia. It was useless to attempt to stop her; she was
beyond the control of inquisitor or guards; the Pope had
to hear her out. He did so; proclaimed her complete
orthodoxy, and set her free with every mark of
reverence. In this highly characteristic episode
scholastic logic appears, for once, to have been
justified, at perilous odds, of her children. . . .
* * *
Midway between sky and
earth hangs a City Beautiful: Siena, Vetus Civitas
Virginis. The town seems to have descended as a
bride from airy regions, and lightly settled on the
summits of three hills which it crowns with domes and
clustering towers. As seen from the vineyards which
clothe the slopes of the hills or with its crenellated
wall and slender-necked Campanile silhouetted against
the evening sky from the neighboring heights of Belcaro,
the city is familiar to students of the early Italian
painters. It forms the fantastic and solemn background
of many a masterpiece of the trecentisti, and
seems the only possible home, if home they can have on
earth, of the glorified persons who occupy the
foreground. It would create no surprise to come, while
walking round the ancient walls, suddenly, at a turn in
the road, on one of the sacred groups so familiarly
recurrent to the memory in such an environment: often
indeed one experiences a curious illusion when a passing
friar happens for a moment to "compose" with cypress and
crumbling archway.
Siena, once the successful
rival of Florence in commerce, war, and politics, has,
fortunately for the more vital interests which it
represents, long desisted from such minor matters. Its
worldly ruin has been complete for more than five
hundred years; in truth the town has never recovered
from the plague which, in the far-off days of 1348,
carried off 80,000 of its population. Grassy mounds
within the city walls mark the shrinking of the town
since the date of their erection, and Mr. Murray gives
its present population at less than 23,000. The free
Ghibelline Republic which, on that memorable 4th of
September 1260, defeated, with the help of Pisa, at
Monte Aperto, the combined forces of the Guelf party in
Tuscany, has now, after centuries of servitude to
Spaniard and Austrian, to be content with the somewhat
pinchbeck dignity of an Italian Prefettura. At least the
architectural degradation which has overtaken Florence
at the hands of her modern rulers has been as yet, in
great measure, spared to Siena. Even the railway has had
the grace to conceal its presence in the folds of olive
which enwrap the base of the hill on which the city is
set.
Once inside the
rose-colored walls, as we pass up the narrow, roughly
paved streets between lines of palaces, some grim and
massive like Casa Tolomei, built in 1205, others
delicate specimens of Italian Gothic like the Palazzo
Saracini, others again illustrating the combination of
grace and strength which marked the domestic
architecture of the Renaissance at its prime, like the
Palazzo Piccolomini, we find ourselves in a world very
remote indeed from anything with which the experience of
our own utilitarian century makes us familiar. And yet,
as we rub our eyes, unmistakably a world of facts,
though of facts, as it were, visibly interpreted by the
deeper truth of an art whose insistent presence is on
all sides of us. Here is Casa Tolomei, a huge cube of
rough-hewn stone stained to the color of tarnished
silver with age, once the home of that Madonna Pia whose
story lives forever in the verse of Dante. Who shall
distinguish between her actual tale of days and the
immortal life given her by the poet? In her moment of
suffering at least she has been made eternal. And not
far from that ancient fortress-home, in a winding alley
that can hardly be called a street, is another house of
medieval Siena -- no palace this time, but a small
tradesman's dwelling. In the fourteenth century it
belonged to Set Giacomo Benincasa, a dyer. Part of it
has now been converted into a chapel, over the door of
which are inscribed the words: Sponsae Xti Katerinae
Domus. Here, on March 5, 1347, being Palm Sunday,
was born Giacomo's daughter Caterina, who still lives
one of the purest glories of the Christian Church under
the name of St. Catherine of Siena. More than 500 years
have passed since the daughter of the Siennese dyer
entered into the rest of that sublime and touching
symbolism under which the Church half veils and half
reveals her teaching as to the destiny of man. Another
case, but how profoundly more significant than that of
poor Madonna Pia, of the intertwining of the world of
fact with the deeper truth of art.
St. Catherine was born at
the same time as a twin-sister, who did not survive. Her
parents, Giacomo and Lapa Benincasa, were simple
townspeople, prosperous, and apparently deserving their
reputation for piety. Lapa, the daughter of one Mucio
Piagenti, a now wholly forgotten poet, bore twenty-five
children to her husband, of whom thirteen only appear to
have grown up. This large family lived together in the
manner still obtaining in Italy, in the little house,
till the death of Giacomo in 1368.
There are stirring pages
enough in Christian hagiology. Who can read unmoved of
the struggles towards his ideal of an Augustine or a
Loyola, or of the heroic courage of a Theresa, affirming
against all human odds the divinity of her mission, and
justifying, after years of labor, her incredible
assertions by the steadfastness of her will? There are
other pages in the lives of the saints, less dramatic,
it may be, but breathing, nevertheless, a naïve grace
and poetry all their own: the childhood of those
servants of Christ who have borne His yoke from the dawn
of their days forms their charming theme. Here the
blasting illuminations of the Revelation are toned down
to a soft and tender glow, in which the curves and lines
of natural humanity do but seem more pathetically human.
The hymn at Lauds for the Feast of the Holy Innocents
represents those unconscious martyrs as playing with
their palms and crowns under the very altar of Heaven:
--
"Vos prima Christi
victima Grex immolatorum tener Aram sub ipsam
simplices Palma et coronis luditis!"
And so these other saintly
babies play at hermits or monasteries instead of the
soldiers and housekeeping beloved of more secular-minded
infants. Heaven condescends to their pious revels: we
are told of the Blessed Hermann Joseph, the
Premonstratensian, that his infantile sports were
joyously shared by the Divine Child Himself. He would be
a morose pedant indeed who should wish to rationalize
this white mythology. The tiny Catherine was no
exception to the rest of her canonized brothers and
sisters. At the age of five it was her custom on the
staircase to kneel and repeat a "Hail Mary" at each
step, a devotion so pleasing to the angels, that they
would frequently carry her up or down without letting
her feet touch the ground, much to the alarm of her
mother, who confided to Father Raymond of Capua, the
Dominican confessor of the family, her fears of an
accident. Nor were these phenomena the only reward of
her infant piety. From the day that she could walk she
became very popular among her numerous relatives and her
parents' friends, who gave her the pet name of
Euphrosyne, to signify the grief-dispelling effect of
her conversation, and who were constantly inviting her
to their houses on some pretext or other. Sent one
morning on an errand to the house of her married sister
Bonaventura, she was favored with a beautiful vision
which, as it has an important symbolical bearing on the
great task of her after-life, I will relate in Father
Raymond's words, slightly abridging their prolixity.
"So it happened that
Catherine, being arrived at the age of six, went one day
with her brother Stephen, who was a little older than
herself, to the house of their sister Bonaventura, who
was married to one Niccolò, as has been mentioned above,
in order to carry something or give some message from
their mother Lapa. Their mother's errand accomplished,
while they were on the way back from their sister's
house to their own and were passing along a certain
valley, called by the people Valle Piatta, the holy
child, lifting her eyes, saw on the opposite side above
the Church of the Preaching Friars a most beautiful
room, adorned with regal magnificence, in which was
seated, on an imperial throne, Jesus Christ, the Savior
of the world, clothed in pontifical vestments, and
wearing on His head a papal tiara; with Him were the
princes of the Apostles, Peter and Paul, and the holy
evangelist John. Astounded at such a sight, Catherine
stood still, and with fixed and immovable look, gazed,
full of love, on her Savior, who, appearing in so
marvelous a manner, in order sweetly to gain her love to
Himself, fixed on her the eyes of His Majesty, and, with
a tender smile, lifted over her His right hand, and,
making the sign of the Holy Cross in the manner of a
bishop, left with her the gift of His eternal
benediction. The grace of this gift was so efficacious,
that Catherine, beside herself, and transformed into Him
upon whom she gazed with such love, forgetting not only
the road she was on, but also herself, although
naturally a timid child, stood still for a space with
lifted and immovable eyes in the public road, where men
and beasts were continually passing, and would certainly
have continued to stand there as long as the vision
lasted, had she not been violently diverted by others.
But while the Lord was working these marvels, the child
Stephen, leaving her standing still, continued his way
down hill, thinking that she was following, but, seeing
her immovable in the distance and paying no heed to his
calls, he returned and pulled her with his hands,
saying: 'What are you doing here? why do you not come?'
Then Catherine, as if waking from a heavy sleep, lowered
her eyes and said: 'Oh, if you had seen what I see, you
would not distract me from so sweet a vision!' and
lifted her eyes again on high; but the vision had
entirely disappeared, according to the will of Him who
had granted it, and she, not being able to endure this
without pain, began with tears to reproach herself for
having turned her eyes to earth." Such was the "call" of
St. Catherine of Siena, and, to a mind intent on
mystical significance, the appearance of Christ, in the
semblance of His Vicar, may fitly appear to symbolize
the great mission of her after-life to the Holy See.
* * *
Much might be said of the
action of Catherine on her generation. Few individuals
perhaps have ever led so active a life or have succeeded
in leaving so remarkable an imprint of their personality
on the events of their time. Catherine the Peacemaker
reconciles warring factions of her native city and heals
an international feud between Florence and the Holy See.
Catherine the Consoler pours the balm of her gentle
spirit into the lacerated souls of the suffering
wherever she finds them, in the condemned cell or in the
hospital ward. She is one of the most voluminous of
letter-writers, keeping up a constant correspondence
with a band of disciples, male and female, all over
Italy, and last, but not least, with the distant Pope at
Avignon.
Her lot was cast on evil
days for the Church and the Peninsula. The trecento, the
apogee of the middle ages was over. Francis and Dominic
had come and gone, and though Franciscans and Dominicans
remained and numbered saints among their ranks, still
the first fervor of the original inspiration was a
brightness that had fled. The moral state of the secular
clergy was, according to Catherine herself, too often
one of the deepest degradation, while, in the absence of
the Pontiff, the States of the Church were governed by
papal legates, mostly men of blood and lust, who ground
the starving people under their heel. Assuredly it was
not from Christian bishops who would have disgraced
Islam that their subjects could learn the path of peace.
The Pope's residence at Avignon, the Babylonish
Captivity, as it was called, may have seemed, at the
time when his departure from Rome was resolved upon, a
wise measure of temporary retreat before the anarchy
which was raging round the city of St. Peter. But not
many years passed before it became evident that Philip
the Fair, the astute adviser to whose counsel -- and
possibly more than counsel -- Clement had submitted in
leaving Rome, was the only one who profited by the exile
of the Pope. Whatever the truth may be about the details
of Clement's election, so far as his subservience to the
French king went, he might have remained Archbishop of
Bordeaux to the end of his days. He accepted for his
relations costly presents from Philip; he placed the
papal authority at his service in the gravely suspicious
matter of the suppression of the Templars. Gradually the
Holy See in exile lost its ecumenical character and
became more and more the vassal of the French crown.
Such a decline in its position could not fail to affect
even its doctrinal prestige. It was well enough in
theory to apply to the situation such maxims as Ubi
Petrus ibi Ecclesia, or, as the Avignonese doctors
paraphrased it, Ubi Papa ibi Roma; but, in
practice, Christendom grew shy of a French Pope, living
under the eye and power of the French king. The Romans,
who had always treated the Pope badly, were furious when
at last they had driven him away, and gratified their
spite by insulting their exiled rulers. Nothing could
exceed their contempt for the Popes of Avignon, who, as
a matter of fact, though weak and compliant, were in
their personal characters worthy ecclesiastics. They
gave no credit to John XXII. for his genuine zeal in the
cause of learning, or the energy with which he restored
ecclesiastical studies in the Western Schools. For
Benedict XII., a retiring and abstemious student, they
invented the phrase: bibere papaliter -- to drink
like the Pope. Clement VI. they called poco religioso,
forgetting his noble charity at the time of the plague,
and also the fact that Rome herself had produced not a
few popes whose lives furnished a singular commentary on
the ethics of the Gospel.
The real danger ahead to
Christendom was the possibility of an Italian anti-Pope
who should fortify his position by recourse to the
heretical elements scattered through the peninsula.
Those elements were grave and numerous. The Fraticelli
or Spiritual Franciscans, although crushed for the time
by the iron hand of Pope Boniface, rather flourished
than otherwise under persecution. These dangerous
heretics had inherited a garbled version of the
mysticism of Joachim of Flora, which constituted a
doctrine perhaps more radically revolutionary than that
of any heretics before or since. It amounted to belief
in a new revelation of the Spirit, which was to
supersede the dispensation of the Son as that had taken
the place of the dispensation of the Father. According
to the Eternal Gospel of Gerard of San Domino, who had
derived it, not without much adroit manipulation, from
the writings of Abbot Joachim, the Roman Church was on
the eve of destruction, and it was the duty of the
Spirituali, the saints who had received the new
dispensation, to fly from the contamination of her
communion. An anti-Pope who should have rallied to his
allegiance these elements of schism would have been a
dangerous rival to a French Pope residing in distant
Avignon, however legitimate his title. Nor was there
wanting outside Italy matter for grave anxiety. Germs of
heresy were fermenting north of the Alps; the preaching
of Wycliffe, the semi-Islamism of the Hungarian Beghards,
the Theism of the Patarini of Dalmatia, the erotic
mysticism of the Adamites of Paris, indicated a
widespread anarchy in the minds of Christians. Moreover,
the spiritual difficulties of the Pope were complicated
by his temporal preoccupations. For good or ill, it had
come to be essential to the action of the Holy See that
the successor of the penniless fisherman should have his
place among the princes of the earth.
The papal monarchy had come
about, as most things come about in this world, by what
seems to have been the inevitable force of
circumstances. The decay of the Imperial power in Italy
due to the practical abandonment of the Western Empire
-- for the ruler of Constantinople lived at too great a
distance to be an effective Emperor of the West -- had
resulted in a natural increase of secular importance to
the See of Rome. To the genius of Pope Gregory I., one
of the few men whom their fellows have named both Saint
and Great, was due the development of the political
situation thus created in Italy.
Chief and greatest of
bishops in his day was St. Gregory the Great. Seldom, if
ever, has the papal dignity been sustained with such
lofty enthusiasm, such sagacious political insight.
Himself a Roman of Rome, Romano di Roma, as those
who possess that privilege still call themselves today,
the instinct of government was his by hereditary right.
He had the defects as well as the qualities of the
statesman. His theological writings, which are
voluminous and verbose, are marked rather by a sort of
canonized common sense than by exalted flights of
spirituality. His missionary enterprise was
characterized by a shrewd and gracious condescension to
the limitations of human nature. Thus he counsels St.
Augustine, who had consulted him as to the best means of
extirpating the pagan customs of our English
forefathers, to deal gently with these ancient
survivals. He ruled that the celebration of the
Festivals of the Sabots should if possible be held at
the times and places at which the people had been in the
habit of meeting together to worship the gods. They
would thus come to associate the new religion with their
traditional merry-makings, and their conversion would be
gradually, and as it were unconsciously, effected. It
was a kindly and statesmanlike thought. In this way
Gregory may truly be looked upon as the founder of
popular Catholicism, that "pensive use and wont
religion," not assuredly in the entirety of its details
Christian, but at least profoundly Catholic, as weaving
together in the web of its own secular experience of man
so large a proportion of the many-colored threads that
have at any time attached his hopes and fears to the
mysterious unknown which surrounds him. No miracle is
needed to explain the political ascendancy which such a
man inevitably came to acquire in an Italy deserted by
the Empire, and, but for him and the organization which
depended on him, at the mercy of the invading Lombard.
More and more, people came to look on the Pope as their
temporal ruler no less than as their spiritual father.
In many cases, indeed, his was the only government they
knew. Kings and nobles had conferred much property on
the Roman Church. By the end of the sixth century the
Bishop of Rome held, by the right of such donations to
his See, large tracts of country, not only in Italy, but
also in Sicily, Corsica, Gaul, and even Asia and Africa.
Gregory successfully defended his Italian property
against the invaders, and came to the relief of the
starving population with corn from Sicily and Africa,
thus laying deep in the hearts of the people the
foundations of the secular power of the Papacy.
It would be an unnecessary
digression from our subject to work out in detail the
stages by which the Pope came to take his place first as
the Italian vicar of a distant emperor, and at length,
as the result of astute statecraft and the necessities
of the case, among the princes of Europe, as their chief
and arbiter. So much as has been said was, however,
necessary for the comprehension of the task with which
Catherine measured, for the time, successfully her
strength. It was given to the Popolana of Siena, by the
effect of her eloquence in persuading the wavering will
of the Pope to return to his See, to bring about what
was, for the moment, the only possible solution of that
Roman question, which, hanging perpetually round the
skirts of the Bride of Christ, seems at every step to
impede her victorious advance.
* * *
Nevertheless, it is neither
the intrinsic importance nor the social consequences of
her actions that constitute the true greatness of St.
Catherine. Great ends may be pursued by essentially
small means, in an aridity and narrowness of temper that
goes far to discount their actual achievement. History,
and in particular the history of the Church, is not
wanting in such instances. Savonarola set great ends
before himself -- the freedom of his country and the
regeneration of the state; but the spirit in which he
pursued them excludes him from that Pantheon of gracious
souls in which humanity enshrines its true benefactors.
"Soul, as a quality of style, is a fact," and the soul
of St. Catherine's gesta expressed itself in a
"style" so winning, so sweetly reasonable, as to make
her the dearest of friends to all who had the privilege
of intimate association with her, and a permanent source
of refreshment to the human spirit. She intuitively
perceived life under the highest possible forms, the
forms of Beauty and Love. Truth and Goodness were, she
thought, means for the achievement of those two supreme
ends. The sheer beauty of the soul "in a state of Grace"
is a point on which she constantly dwells, hanging it as
a bait before those whom she would induce to turn from
evil. Similarly the ugliness of sin, as much as its
wickedness, should warn us of its true nature. Love,
that love of man for man which, in deepest truth, is,
in the words of the writer of the First Epistle of St.
John, God Himself, is, at once, the highest achievement
of man and his supreme and satisfying beatitude. The
Symbols of Catholic theology were to her the necessary
and fitting means of transit, so to speak. See, in the
following pages, the fine allegory of the Bridge of the
Sacred Humanity, of the soul in viâ on its dusty
pilgrimage towards those gleaming heights of vision.
"Truth" was to her the handmaid of the spiritualized
imagination, not, as too often in these days of the
twilight of the soul, its tyrant and its gaoler. Many of
those who pass lives of unremitting preoccupation with
the problems of truth and goodness are wearied and
cumbered with much serving. We honor them, and rightly;
but if they have nothing but this to offer us, our
hearts do not run to meet them, as they fly to the
embrace of those rare souls who inhabit a serener, more
pellucid atmosphere. Among these spirits of the air, St.
Catherine has taken a permanent and foremost place. She
is among the few guides of humanity who have the perfect
manner, the irresistible attractiveness, of that
positive purity of heart, which not only sees God, but
diffuses Him, as by some natural law of refraction, over
the hearts of men. The Divine nuptials, about which the
mystics tell us so much, have been accomplished in her,
Nature and Grace have lain down together, and the
mysteries of her religion seem but the natural
expression of a perfectly balanced character, an
unquenchable love and a deathless will.
* * *
The Dialogue of St.
Catherine of Siena was dictated to her secretaries by
the Saint in ecstasy. Apart from the extraordinary
circumstances of its production, this work has a special
interest.
The composition of the
Siennese dyer's daughter, whose will, purified and
sublimated by prayer, imposed itself on popes and
princes, is an almost unique specimen of what may be
called "ecclesiastical" mysticism; for its special value
lies in the fact that from first to last it is nothing
more than a mystical exposition of the creeds taught to
every child in the Catholic poor-schools. Her insight is
sometimes very wonderful. How subtle, for instance, is
the analysis of the state of the "worldly man" who loves
God for his own pleasure or profit! The special snares
of the devout are cut through by the keen logic of one
who has experienced and triumphed over them. Terrible,
again, is the retribution prophesied to the "unworthy
ministers of the Blood."
And so every well-known
form of Christian life, healthy or parasitic, is treated
of, detailed, analyzed incisively, remorselessly, and
then subsumed under the general conception of God's
infinite loving-kindness and mercy.
The great mystics have
usually taken as their starting-point what, to most, is
the goal hardly to be reached; their own treatment of
the preliminary stages of spirituality is frequently
conventional and jejune. Compare, for instance,
the first book with the two succeeding ones, of
Ruysbrock's Ornement des Noces spirituelles, that
unique breviary of the Christian Platonician. Another
result of their having done so is that, with certain
noble exceptions, the literature of this subject has
fallen into the hands of a class of writers, or rather
purveyors, well-intentioned no doubt, but not endowed
with the higher spiritual and mental faculties, whom it
is not unfair to describe as the feuilletonistes
of piety. Such works, brightly bound, are appropriately
exposed for sale in the Roman shop-windows, among the
gaudy objets de religion they so much resemble.
To keep healthy and raise the tone of devotional
literature is surely an eighth spiritual work of mercy.
St. Philip Neri's advice in the matter was to prefer
those writers whose names were preceded by the title of
Saint. In the Dialogo we have a great saint, one
of the most extraordinary women who ever lived,
treating, in a manner so simple and familiar as at times
to become almost colloquial, of the elements of
practical Christianity. Passages occur frequently of
lofty eloquence, and also of such literary perfection
that this book is held by critics to be one of the
classics of the age and land which produced Boccaccio
and Petrarch. To-day, in the streets of Siena, the same
Tuscan idiom can be heard, hardly altered since the days
of St. Catherine.
One word as to the
translation. I have almost always followed the text of
Gigli, a learned Siennese ecclesiastic, who edited the
complete works of St. Catherine in the last century. His
is the latest edition printed of the Dialogo.
Once or twice I have preferred the cinquecento
Venetian editor. My aim has been to translate as
literally as possible, and at the same time to preserve
the characteristic rhythm of the sentences, so
suggestive in its way of the sing-song articulation of
the Siennese of today. St. Catherine has no style as
such; she introduces a metaphor and forgets it; the sea,
a vine, and a plough will often appear in the same
sentence, sometimes in the same phrase. In such cases I
have occasionally taken the liberty of adhering to the
first simile when the confusion of metaphor in the
original involves hopeless obscurity of expression.
VIAREGGIO, September 1906.
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