The Eternal City - Page 19/385

"Some affair of the heart, dear Baron," said the little Princess, with a

melting look.

"No, there was no talk of that kind, Princess, and not a whisper of

scandal. Some said the young soldier had married in England, and lost

his wife there, but nobody knew for certain. There was less doubt about

his religious vocation, and when by help of his princely inheritance he

turned his mind to the difficult task of reforming vice and ministering

to the lowest aspects of misery in the slums of Rome, society said he

had turned Socialist. His popularity with the people was unbounded, but

in the midst of it all he begged to be removed to London. There he set

up the same enterprises, and tramped the streets in search of his waifs

and outcasts, night and day, year in, year out, as if driven on by a

consuming passion of pity for the lost and fallen. In the interests of

his health he was called back to Rome--and returned here a white-haired

man of forty."

"Ah! what did I say, dear Baron? The apple falls near the tree, you

know!"

"By this time he had given away millions, and the Pope wished to make

him President of his Academy of Noble Ecclesiastics, but he begged to be

excused. Then Apostolic Delegate to the United States, and he prayed

off. Then Nuncio to Spain, and he went on his knees to remain in the

Campagna Romana, and do the work of a simple priest among a simple

people. At last, without consulting him they made him Bishop, and

afterwards Cardinal, and, on the death of the Pope, he was Scrutator to

the Conclave, and fainted when he read out his own name as that of

Sovereign Pontiff of the Church."

The little Princess was wiping her eyes.

"Then--all the world was changed. The priest of the future disappeared

in a Pope who was the incarnation of the past. Authority was now his

watchword. What was the highest authority on earth? The Holy See!

Therefore, the greatest thing for the world was the domination of the

Pope. If anybody should say that the power conferred by Christ on his

Vicar was only spiritual, let him be accursed! In Christ's name the Pope

was sovereign--supreme sovereign over the bodies and souls of

men--acknowledging no superior, holding the right to make and depose

kings, and claiming to be supreme judge over the consciences and crimes

of all--the peasant that tills the soil, and the prince that sits on the

throne!"

"Tre-men-jous!" said the American.