down,
shapeless in a black corner of his mind--from which their
eyes shone out, so to speak--whenever his doubt whether he
ought to set up as a
prophet at all was under consideration.
(6)
Then very suddenly on this October afternoon the situation had
come to a crisis.
He had gone to Lady Sunderbund's flat to see the plans and
drawings for the new church in which he was to give his message
to the world. They had brought home to him the complete
realization of Lady Sunderbund's
possibility" target="_blank" title="n.不可能办到的事">
impossibility. He had attempted
upon the spur of the moment an
explanation of just how much they
differed, and he had precipitated a storm of
extravagantly
perplexing emotions....
She kept him
waiting for perhaps ten minutes before she brought
the plans to him. He waited in the little room with the Wyndham
Lewis picture that opened upon the
balcony painted with crazy
squares of livid pink. On a golden table by the window a number
of recently bought books were lying, and he went and stood over
these,
taking them up one after another. The first was "The
Countess of Huntingdon and Her Circle," that bearder of
lightminded archbishops, that
formidable harbourer of Wesleyan
chaplains. For some minutes he
studied the grim
portrait of this
inspired lady
standing with one foot ostentatiously on her
coronet and then turned to the next
volume. This was a life of
Saint Teresa, that
energetic organizer of Spanish nunneries. The
third dealt with Madame Guyon. It was difficult not to feel that
Lady Sunderbund was
reading for a part.
She entered.
She was wearing a long simple dress of spangled white with a
very high waist; she had a
bracelet of green jade, a waistband of
green silk, and her hair was held by a
wreath of artificial
laurel, very stiff and green. Her arms were full of big rolls of
cartridge paper and tracing paper. "I'm so pleased," she said.
"It's 'eady at last and I can show you."
She banged the whole armful down upon a vivid little table of
inlaid black and white wood. He rescued one or two rolls and a
sheet of tracing paper from the floor.
"It's the Temple," she panted in a
significantwhisper. "It's
the Temple of the One T'ue God!"
She scrabbled among the papers, and held up the
elevation of a
strange square building to his startled eyes. "Iszi't it just
pe'fect?" she demanded.
He took the
drawing from her. It represented a building,
manifestly an
enormous building, consisting largely of two great,
deeply fluted towers flanking a vast archway approached by a long
flight of steps. Between the towers appeared a dome. It was as if
the Mosque of Saint Sophia had produced this offspring in a
mesalliance with the
cathedral of Wells. Its enormity was made
manifest by the minuteness of the large automobiles that were
driving away in the foreground after "setting down." "Here is the
plan," she said,
thrusting another sheet upon him before he could
fully take in the quality of the design. "The g'eat Hall is to be
pe'fectly 'ound, no aisle, no altar, and in lettas of sapphiah,
'God is ev'ywhe'.'"
She added with a note of
solemnity" target="_blank" title="n.庄严;(隆重的)仪式">
solemnity, "It will hold th'ee
thousand people sitting down."
"But--!" said Scrope.
"The'e's a sort of g'andeur," she said. "It's young Venable's
wo'k. It's his fl'st g'ate oppo'tunity."
"But--is this to go on that little site in Aldwych?"
"He says the' isn't 'oom the'!" she explained. "He wants to put
it out at Golda's G'een."
"But--if it is to be this little simple
chapel we proposed,
then wasn't our idea to be central?"
"But if the' isn't 'oem! "she said--conclusively. "And isn't
this--isn't it rather a
costly under
taking, rather more
costly--"
"That docsn't matta. I'm making heaps and heaps of money. Half
my p'ope'ty is in
shipping and a lot of the 'eat in munitions.
I'm 'icher than eva. Isn't the' a sort of g'andeur?" she pressed.
He put the
elevation down. He took the plan from her hands and
seemed to study it. But he was really staring blankly at the
whole situation.
"Lady Sunderbund," he said at last, with an effort, "I am
afraid all this won't do."
"Won't do!"
"No. It isn't in the spirit of my
intention. It isn't in a
great building of this sort--so--so ornate and
imposing, that
the simple
gospel of God's Universal Kingdom can be preached."
"But oughtn't so gate a message to have as g'ate a pulpit?"
And then as if she would seize him before he could go on to
further repudiations, she sought
hastily among the
drawings
again.
"But look," she said. "It has ev'ything! It's not only a
p'eaching place; it's a
headquarters for ev'ything."
With the rapid
movements of an excited child she began to
thrust the
remarkable features and merits of the great project
upon him. The
preaching dome was only the heart of it. There were
to be a library, "'efecto'ies,"
consultation rooms, classrooms, a
publication department, a big
underground printing establishment.
"Nowadays," she said, "ev'y gate
movement must p'int." There was
to be music, she said, "a gate
invisible o'gan,"
hidden amidst
the
architectural details, and pouring out its sounds into the
dome, and then she glanced in passing at possible "p'ocessions"
round the
preaching dome. This
preaching dome was not a mere
shut-in drum for
spiritual reverberations, around it ran great
open corridors, and in these corridors there were to be
"
chapels."
"But what for?" he asked, stemming the
torrent. "What need is
there for
chapels? There are to be no altars, no masses, no
sacraments?"
"No," she said, "but they are to be
chapels for special
int'ests; a
chapel for science, a
chapel for healing, a
chapelfor gov'ment. Places for peoples to sit and think about those
things--with paintings and symbols."
"I see your
intention," he admitted. "I see your
intention."
"The' is to be a gate da'k blue 'ound
chapel for sta's and
atoms and the myst'ry of matta." Her voice grew
solemn. "All
still and deep and high. Like a k'ystal in a da'k place. You will
go down steps to it. Th'ough a da'k 'ounded a'ch ma'ked with
mathematical symbols and balances and
scientific app'atus.... And
the ve'y next to it, the ve'y next, is to be a little b'ight
chapel for bi'ds and flowas!"
"Yes," he said, "it is all very fine and
expressive. It is, I
see, a symbolical building, a great
artisticpossibility. But is
it the place for me? What I have to say is something very simple,
that God is the king of the whole world, king of the ha'penny
newspaper and the omnibus and the
vulgareveryday things, and
that they have to
worship him and serve him as their leader in
every moment of their lives. This isn't that. This is the old
religions over again. This is
taking God apart. This is putting
him into a fresh
casket instead of the old one. And.... I don't
like it."
"Don't like it," she cried, and stood apart from him with her
chin in the air, a tall
astonishment and dismay.
"I can't do the work I want to do with this."
"But--Isn't it you' idea?"
"No. It is not in the least my idea. I want to tell the whole
world of the one God that can alone unite it and save it--and