The conversation flagged; Bateman was again busy with his memory;
and he was getting impatient too; time was slipping away, and no blow
struck; moreover, Willis was beginning to gape, and Charles seemed
impatient to be released. “These Romanists put things so plausibly,” he
said to himself, “but very unfairly, most unfairly; one ought to be up
to their dodges. I dare say, if the truth were known, Willis has had
lessons; he looks so demure; I dare say he is keeping back a great
deal, and playing upon my ignorance. Who knows? perhaps he's a
concealed Jesuit.” It was an awful thought, and suspended the course of
his reflections some seconds. “I wonder what he does really think; it's
so difficult to get at the bottom of them; they won't tell tales, and
they are under obedience; one never knows when to believe them. I
suspect he has been wofully disappointed with Romanism; he looks so
thin; but of course he won't say so; it hurts a man's pride, and he
likes to be consistent; he doesn't like to be laughed at, and so he
makes the best of things. I wish I knew how to treat him; I was wrong
in having Reding here; of course Willis would not be confidential
before a third person. He's like the fox that lost his tail. It was bad
tact in me; I see it now; what a thing it is to have tact! it requires
very delicate tact. There are so many things I wished to say, about
Indulgences, about their so seldom communicating; I think I must ask
him about the Mass.” So, after fidgeting a good deal within, while he
was ostensibly employed in making tea, he commenced his last assault.
“Well, we shall have you back again among us by next Christmas,
Willis,” he said; “I can't give you greater law; I am certain of it; it
takes time, but slow and sure. What a joyful time it will be! I can't
tell what keeps you; you are doing nothing; you are flung into a
corner; you are wasting life. What keeps you?”
Willis looked odd; then he simply answered, “Grace.”
Bateman was startled, but recovered himself; “Heaven forbid,” he
said, “that I should treat these things lightly, or interfere with you
unduly. I know, my dear friend, what a serious fellow you are; but do
tell me, just tell me, how can you justify the Mass, as it is performed
abroad; how can it be called a 'reasonable service,' when all parties
conspire to gabble it over as if it mattered not a jot who attended to
it, or even understood it? Speak, man, speak,” he added, gently shaking
him by the shoulder.
“These are such difficult questions,” answered Willis; “must I
speak? Such difficult questions,” he continued, rising into a more
animated manner, and kindling as he went on; “I mean, people view them
so differently: it is so difficult to convey to one person the idea of
another. The idea of worship is different in the Catholic Church from
the idea of it in your Church; for, in truth, the religions are
different. Don't deceive yourself, my dear Bateman,” he said tenderly,
“it is not that ours is your religion carried a little farther,—a
little too far, as you would say. No, they differ in kind, not in
degree; ours is one religion, yours another. And when the time comes,
and come it will, for you, alien as you are now, to submit yourself to
the gracious yoke of Christ, then, my dearest Bateman, it will be
faith which will enable you to bear the ways and usages of
Catholics, which else might perhaps startle you. Else, the habits of
years, the associations in your mind of a certain outward behaviour
with real inward acts of devotion, might embarrass you, when you had to
conform yourself to other habits, and to create for yourself other
associations. But this faith, of which I speak, the great gift of God,
will enable you in that day to overcome yourself, and to submit, as
your judgment, your will, your reason, your affections, so your tastes
and likings, to the rule and usage of the Church. Ah, that faith should
be necessary in such a matter, and that what is so natural and becoming
under the circumstances, should have need of an explanation! I declare,
to me,” he said, and he clasped his hands on his knees, and looked
forward as if soliloquizing, “to me nothing is so consoling, so
piercing, so thrilling, so overcoming, as the Mass, said as it is among
us. I could attend Masses for ever, and not be tired. It is not a mere
form of words,—it is a great action, the greatest action that can be
on earth. It is, not the invocation merely, but, if I dare use the
word, the evocation of the Eternal. He becomes present on the altar in
flesh and blood, before whom angels bow and devils tremble. This is
that awful event which is the scope, and is the interpretation, of
every part of the solemnity. Words are necessary, but as means, not as
ends; they are not mere addresses to the throne of grace, they are
instruments of what is far higher, of consecration, of sacrifice. They
hurry on as if impatient to fulfil their mission. Quickly they go, the
whole is quick; for they are all parts of one integral action. Quickly
they go; for they are awful words of sacrifice, they are a work too
great to delay upon; as when it was said in the beginning, 'What thou
doest, do quickly.' Quickly they pass; for the Lord Jesus goes with
them, as He passed along the lake in the days of His flesh, quickly
calling first one and then another. Quickly they pass; because as the
lightning which shineth from one part of the heaven unto the other, so
is the coming of the Son of Man. Quickly they pass; for they are as the
words of Moses, when the Lord came down in the cloud, calling on the
Name of the Lord as He passed by, 'The Lord, the Lord God, merciful and
gracious, long-suffering, and abundant in goodness and truth.' And as
Moses on the mountain, so we too 'make haste and bow our heads to the
earth, and adore.' So we, all around, each in his place, look out for
the great Advent, 'waiting for the moving of the water.' Each in his
place, with his own heart, with his own wants, with his own thoughts,
with his own intention, with his own prayers, separate but concordant,
watching what is going on, watching its progress, uniting in its
consummation;—not painfully and hopelessly following a hard form of
prayer from beginning to end, but, like a concert of musical
instruments, each different, but concurring in a sweet harmony, we take
our part with God's priest, supporting him, yet guided by him. There
are little children there, and old men, and simple labourers, and
students in seminaries, priests preparing for Mass, priests making
their thanksgiving; there are innocent maidens, and there are penitent
sinners; but out of these many minds rises one eucharistic hymn, and
the great Action is the measure and the scope of it. And oh, my dear
Bateman,” he added, turning to him, “you ask me whether this is not a
formal, unreasonable service—it is wonderful!” he cried, rising up,
“quite wonderful. When will these dear, good people be enlightened?
O Sapientia, fortiter suaviterque disponens omnia, O Adonai, O Clavis
David et Exspectatio gentium, veni ad salvandum nos, Domine Deus
noster.”
Now, at least, there was no mistaking Willis. Bateman stared, and
was almost frightened at a burst of enthusiasm which he had been far
from expecting. “Why, Willis,” he said, “it is not true, then, after
all, what we heard, that you were somewhat dubious, shaky, in your
adherence to Romanism? I'm sure I beg your pardon; I would not for the
world have annoyed you, had I known the truth.”
Willis's face still glowed, and he looked as youthful and radiant as
he had been two years before. There was nothing ungentle in his
impetuosity; a smile, almost a laugh, was on his face, as if he was
half ashamed of his own warmth; but this took nothing from its evident
sincerity. He seized Bateman's two hands, before the latter knew where
he was, lifted him up out of his seat, and, raising his own mouth close
to his ear, said, in a low voice, “I would to God, that not only thou,
but also all who hear me this day, were both in little and in much such
as I am, except these chains.” Then, reminding him it had grown late,
and bidding him good-night, he left the room with Charles.
Bateman remained a while with his back to the fire after the door
had closed; presently he began to give expression to his thoughts.
“Well,” he said, “he's a brick, a regular brick; he has almost affected
me myself. What a way those fellows have with them! I declare his touch
has made my heart beat; how catching enthusiasm is! Any one but I might
really have been unsettled. He is a real good fellow; what a
pity we have not got him! he's just the sort of man we want. He'd make
a splendid Anglican; he'd convert half the Dissenters in the country.
Well, we shall have them in time; we must not be impatient. But the
idea of his talking of converting me! 'in little and in much,'
as he worded it! By-the-bye, what did he mean by 'except these
chains'?” He sat ruminating on the difficulty; at first he was inclined
to think that, after all, he might have some misgiving about his
position; then he thought that perhaps he had a hair-shirt or a
catenella on him; and lastly, he came to the conclusion that he had
just meant nothing at all, and did but finish the quotation he had
begun.
After passing some little time in this state, he looked towards the
tea-tray; poured himself out another cup of tea; ate a bit of toast;
took the coals off the fire; blew out one of the candles, and, taking
up the other, left the parlour and wound like an omnibus up the steep
twisting staircase to his bedroom.
Meanwhile Willis and Charles were proceeding to their respective
homes. For a while they had to pursue the same path, which they did in
silence. Charles had been moved far more than Bateman, or rather
touched, by the enthusiasm of his Catholic friend, though, from a
difficulty in finding language to express himself, and a fear of being
carried off his legs, he had kept his feelings to himself. When they
were about to part, Willis said to him, in a subdued tone, “You are
soon going to Oxford, dearest Reding; oh, that you were one with us!
You have it in you. I have thought of you at Mass many times. Our
priest has said Mass for you. Oh, my dear friend, quench not God's
grace; listen to His call; you have had what others have not. What you
want is faith. I suspect you have quite proof enough; enough to be
converted on. But faith is a gift; pray for that great gift, without
which you cannot come to the Church; without which,” and he paused,
“you cannot walk aright when you are in the Church. And now farewell!
alas, our path divides; all is easy to him that believeth. May God give
you that gift of faith, as He has given me! Farewell again; who knows
when I may see you next, and where? may it be in the courts of the true
Jerusalem, the Queen of Saints, the Holy Roman Church, the Mother of us
all!” He drew Charles to him and kissed his cheek, and was gone before
Charles had time to say a word.
Yet Charles could not have spoken had he had ever so much
opportunity. He set off at a brisk pace, cutting down with his stick
the twigs and brambles which the pale twilight discovered in his path.
It seemed as if the kiss of his friend had conveyed into his own soul
the enthusiasm which his words had betokened. He felt himself
possessed, he knew not how, by a high superhuman power, which seemed
able to push through mountains, and to walk the sea. With winter around
him, he felt within like the spring-tide, when all is new and bright.
He perceived that he had found, what indeed he had never sought,
because he had never known what it was, but what he had ever wanted,—a
soul sympathetic with his own. He felt he was no longer alone in the
world, though he was losing that true congenial mind the very moment he
had found him. Was this, he asked himself, the communion of Saints?
Alas! how could it be, when he was in one communion and Willis in
another? “O mighty Mother!” burst from his lips; he quickened his pace
almost to a trot, scaling the steep ascents and diving into the hollows
which lay between him and Boughton. “O mighty Mother!” he still said,
half unconsciously; “O mighty Mother! I come, O mighty Mother! I come;
but I am far from home. Spare me a little; I come with what speed I
may, but I am slow of foot, and not as others, O mighty Mother!”
By the time he had walked two miles in this excitement, bodily and
mental, he felt himself, as was not wonderful, considerably exhausted.
He slackened his pace, and gradually came to himself, but still he went
on, as if mechanically, “O mighty Mother!” Suddenly he cried, “Hallo!
where did I get these words? Willis did not use them. Well, I must be
on my guard against these wild ways. Any one can be an enthusiast;
enthusiasm is not truth ... O mighty Mother!... Alas, I know where my
heart is! but I must go by reason ... O mighty Mother!”