So the Dirks of Holland get a deed from Charles the
Simple, and, although the grace of God does not prevent
the royal grantor himself from dying a miserable,
discrowned captive, the conveyance to Dirk is none
the less hallowed by almighty fiat. So the Roberts
and Guys, the Johns and Baldwins, become sovereigns
in Hainault, Brabant, Flanders and other little districts,
affecting supernatural sanction for the authority
which their good swords have won and are ever ready
to maintain. Thus organized, the force of iron
asserts and exerts itself. Duke, count, seignor
and vassal, knight and squire, master and man swarm
and struggle amain. A wild, chaotic, sanguinary
scene. Here, bishop and baron contend, centuries
long, murdering human creatures by ten thousands for
an acre or two of swampy pasture; there, doughty families,
hugging old musty quarrels to their heart, buffet each
other from generation to generation; thus they go
on, raging and wrestling among themselves, with all
the world, shrieking insane war-cries which no human
soul ever understood—red caps and black,
white hoods and grey, Hooks and Kabbeljaws, dealing
destruction, building castles and burning them, tilting
at tourneys, stealing bullocks, roasting Jews, robbing
the highways, crusading—now upon Syrian
sands against Paynim dogs, now in Frisian quagmires
against Albigenses, Stedingers, and other heretics—plunging
about in blood and fire, repenting, at idle times,
and paying their passage through, purgatory with large
slices of ill-gotten gains placed in the ever-extended
dead-hand of the Church; acting, on the whole, according
to their kind, and so getting themselves civilized
or exterminated, it matters little which. Thus
they play their part, those energetic men-at-arms;
and thus one great force, the force of iron, spins
and expands itself, century after century, helping
on, as it whirls, the great progress of society towards
its goal, wherever that may be.
Another force—the force clerical—the
power of clerks, arises; the might of educated mind
measuring itself against brute violence; a force embodied,
as often before, as priestcraft—the strength
of priests: craft meaning, simply, strength,
in our old mother-tongue. This great force, too,
develops itself variously, being sometimes beneficent,
sometimes malignant. Priesthood works out its
task, age after age: now smoothing penitent death-beds,
consecrating graves! feeding the hungry, clothing
the naked, incarnating the Christian precepts, in an,
age of rapine and homicide, doing a thousand deeds
of love and charity among the obscure and forsaken—deeds
of which there shall never be human chronicle, but
a leaf or two, perhaps, in the recording angel’s
book; hiving precious honey from the few flowers of
gentle, art which bloom upon a howling wilderness;
holding up the light of science over a stormy sea;
treasuring in convents and crypts the few fossils
of antique learning which become visible, as the extinct
Megatherium of an elder world reappears after the