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St. Catherine of Siena
The Dialogue of Saint Catherine
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INTRODUCTION
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INTRODUCTION
It
would
be
hard
to
say
whether
the
Age
of
the
Saints
,
le
moyen
age
enorme
et
delicat
,
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
na
•
ve
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
vi‰
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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