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Precisely at ten minutes before the hour they came, walking in pairs, headed by John Hanc.o.c.k, the President of the Continental Congress, and His Excellency M. Gerard, the French Amba.s.sador. Immediately after the Congress, marched the Supreme Executive Council of Philadelphia with Joseph Reed at its head. Then came the French Emba.s.sy, resplendent in its dress of blue and gold. Prominent civilians, military officers, men of repute in city and nation, followed slowly along the crowded thoroughfare and as slowly made their way into the small edifice.
General Was.h.i.+ngton was not present, having been prevented by duty in the field.
Within, the little church murmured with low talking. Ordinarily, the congregation would have been absorbed in silent contemplation before the Presence of the Divine One, but the impressiveness of the occasion made the people depart from their usual fervor. The little church was only partly filled when the great procession arrived and every head instinctively turned in the direction of the entrance at the sound of their many footsteps. As they marched down the aisle every breath was held; then as they began to file into the pews reserved for them, the subdued murmur began again.
Marjorie and her father sat to the rear of the church in the company of the early arrivals. In fact the entire Allison family occupied the same pew, pressed, indeed, for room on account of the mult.i.tude which crowded its way into the church and into the small aisles. Round about them on every side sat the congregation, some of whom were already familiar to them, the majority of whom, however, were total strangers. From their appearance and demeanor it was not difficult to conclude, Marjorie thought, that more than one-half of them were non-Catholic.
The inside of the church was adorned in splendid array with the emblems of France and the United States. In the sanctuary, on each side of the altar, stood two large flags of the allied nations, while across the choir gallery in the rear of the church, there stretched in festoons, the colors of the infant republic superimposed in the middle by a s.h.i.+eld bearing the likeness of Louis XVI. On the altar bloomed a variety of cut flowers, arranged in an artistic and fanciful manner on the steps of the reredos amidst a great profusion of white unlighted candles. The three highest candlesticks on each side had been lighted, and the little tongues of living flame were leaping from them joyfully. Over the tabernacle a large crucifix raised aloft, while just before the door of the tabernacle rested the chalice with its white veil, arranged in the form of a truncated triangle, s.h.i.+elding it from view.
For several minutes after the honorable body had been seated there was a confusion of feet and forms as the members of the congregation surged into the church. The pews filled quickly, and the more tardy and less fortunate individuals sought places along the aisles and along the rear.
Overhead the small organ gasped and panted the strains of a martial air, the uneven throbbing of its bellows emphasizing the fatigue and exhaustion of its faithful operator.
"Is that the French Amba.s.sador?" whispered Marjorie to her father.
"With the brocade and lace. Yes. Next to him is Mr. Hanc.o.c.k, President of the Congress."
She looked and saw the n.o.ble head and dignified bearing of the statesman. He sat very erect and majestic, presenting an appearance of taste and refinement in his suit of silken black.
"There is Mr. Adams, John Adams, with the great powdered periwig. The tall thin man seated at his right is Thomas Jefferson, who wrote the Declaration. He is, without doubt, the scholar of the Congress."
Marjorie followed his whispering with evident interest. Never had she been in the company of such notable men.
"Who is that? See! He is turning sideways."
"Livingston. Robert Livingston. Then the great Robert Morris, whose financial aid made possible the continuance of the war. His personal sacrifice for the cause of independence will never be computed. He is Was.h.i.+ngton's best friend."
She peered through the crowd to catch a glimpse of the famous financier.
"Do not overlook our staunch Catholic member of the Congress, Charles Carroll. Lest he might be mistaken for any other man of the same name he made bold to affix after his name on the Declaration of Independence, 'of Carrollton.' A representative Catholic and a true patriot!"
She recalled this, having seen the name of "Charles Carroll of Carrollton" on the printed copy of the Declaration.
Mr. Allison again nudged his daughter with his elbow to attract her attention.
"Can you see that elderly man with the sharp-pointed features over across?" he asked.
She looked in the direction indicated but did not seem to be able to locate him.
"The second pew, third man from the aisle."
"Yes! Yes!" she exclaimed.
"That is Richard Henry Lee of Virginia, the author of the resolution 'That these United Colonies are, and of right ought to be, free and independent States.' That paved the way for the drawing up of the Declaration."
The makers of history were before her, and her eyes danced at their sober and grave demeanor. Here sat the Congress, not all of it, but a goodly portion of it, which had voted unanimously in favor of complete separation from the mother country. Here were those very men who had risked their all, their fortunes, their homes, their lives for their country's cause. Here they now a.s.sembled, visibly burdened with the cares and the apprehensions of the past few years, still uncertain of the future, but steadfastly determined to endure to the bitter end, either to hang together or to rise to glorious triumphs together. And here they sat or knelt in the temple of G.o.d to rededicate their fortunes to Him, to accept from His hands the effects of His judgments, but at the same time to implore Him to look with favor upon their efforts and to render possible of realization those desires which were uppermost in their hearts. Marjorie thought that they could not, they must not fail, they, who were animated by such sincere devotion and by such sentiments of genuine piety.
"Mr. Franklin isn't here?" she whispered.
"No," he softly answered. "I think he has not returned from France. He was there, you know, when the Alliance was concluded. Lafayette only joined Was.h.i.+ngton last month. Did you know that he brought with him a commission from the French King to General Was.h.i.+ngton, appointing him Lieutenant-General in the French army and Vice-Admiral of its navy?"
"No. I did not hear of it."
"I suppose Franklin is still over there. He would be here, although he himself is an atheist. He believes in no form of religious wors.h.i.+p. I should not say that he is an atheist for he does believe in One G.o.d, but that is about all."
The murmur about the little church began to die away. Still the surging at the door continued until it seemed as if the small building would burst its sides with its great burden.
The tinkle of a little bell sounding from the door leading from the sanctuary announced that the Ma.s.s was about to begin. On the instant the congregation rose and remained standing until Father Bandol, preceded by the altar boys, had reached the foot of the altar and made the genuflection.
II
High up in the gallery the choir broke into the strains of the "Kyrie"
of the Ma.s.s, while the priest in a profound bow before the altar made his confession of sins. Marjorie took out her prayer-book and began to follow the Ma.s.s, meditating upon the mysteries of Our Lord's life as commemorated in the Holy Sacrifice.
Ascending the altar, the priest pa.s.sed at once to the right hand side where lay the Ma.s.s-Book, from which he read the Introit. He returned to the center and chanted in soft clear tones the "Gloria in Excelsis," the hymn of praise which the angels sang for the first time on Christmas night when Christ, the Lord, was born. This was taken up immediately by the choir. Meanwhile the congregation were seated during the singing of this hymn of praise to the Most High.
The prayers of the Ma.s.s, prayers for our rulers, prayers for peace were sung by the celebrant, the people kneeling in an att.i.tude of prayer while their priest interceded to G.o.d in their behalf. Having finished the prayers for the people a Lesson from one of St. Paul's Epistles was read, after which the priest pa.s.sed to the left side of the altar to sing a pa.s.sage from the Gospel. The people now stood to profess their belief in the faith and teachings of Jesus Christ.
Marjorie and her father and mother recollected themselves quite during these solemn moments and no syllable of communication pa.s.sed between them, all a.s.sisting at the service with prayer-books or beads, following every movement of the priest intelligently and with devotion.
The congregation were permitted to sit while the celebrant of the Ma.s.s offered the materials for the sacrifice, unleavened bread and the pure juice of the grape, to Almighty G.o.d, to adore Him above all other things, to thank Him for all the graces and blessings bestowed by Him on mankind, to satisfy His justice for the sins of man and to implore Him for whatever favors He might deign to bestow.
Soon the voice of Father Bandol resounded through the church with the opening tones of the Preface of the Ma.s.s, the responses to which were made by the members of the choir. Slowly and solemnly he chanted the notes of praise, ending with the "Holy, Holy, Holy, Lord G.o.d of Hosts."
A sound from the bell gave the warning that the awful moment was about to arrive, the moment when the amba.s.sador of Christ would exercise the power communicated to him from Jesus Himself through the Twelve and their successors, the power of changing the substance of bread and wine into the substance of the Body and Blood of Jesus Christ.
The people bent forward in an att.i.tude of humble adoration. Marjorie buried her face in her hands on the top of the forward pew, pouring out her heart in praise and thanksgiving to her G.o.d and Master. In profound reverence she remained while the priest p.r.o.nounced the mystical words "Hoc est enim corpus meum" over the species and effected the mystery of mysteries, the translation of Christ's Mystical Body to the elements of the earth, in the transubstantiation of the Ma.s.s. Now Her Lord was present before her; now the Divinity of His Person was but a few feet away, clothed, not in flesh and blood, but under the appearances of bread and wine; now Her Creator was with her, lying on the white corporal of the altar and she poured forth her soul to Him in accents of adoration and supplication.
"O my G.o.d!" she breathed. "I adore Thee through Jesus; I beg pardon through Jesus; I thank Thee through Jesus; I humbly ask every blessing and grace through Jesus. May I lead a holy life and die a good death. My Jesus! mercy! My Jesus! mercy! My Jesus! mercy!"
The prayers for the dead were read and the Pater Noster was chanted. A signal from the bell announced that the priest's communion was about to take place and that the distribution of the Sacred Body would be made to as many as desired to partake of it. It was Sunday and the majority of the Catholics present had been in attendance at an earlier Ma.s.s, on which account there were no communicants at this later one. The closing ceremonies were concluded with the reading of the Gospel of St. John, when Father Bandol turned towards the congregation to begin his address.
Every member present sat upright in his seat and awaited the message which was about to fall from the lips of the priest.
III
"My dear brethren," he said, "we are a.s.sembled to celebrate the anniversary of that day which Providence had marked, in His eternal decrees, to become the epoch of liberty and independence to the thirteen United States of America."
There was a silence throughout the church which was breathless. Every eye was focused on the vested form before the altar.
"That Being whose almighty hand holds all existence beneath its dominion undoubtedly produces in the depths of His wisdom those great events which astonish the world and of which the most presumptuous, though instrumental in accomplis.h.i.+ng them, dare not attribute to themselves the merit. But the finger of G.o.d is still more peculiarly evidenced in that happy, that glorious revolution which calls forth this day's festivity.
He hath struck the oppressors of a free people--free and peaceful, with the spirit of delusion which renders the wicked artificers of their own proper misfortunes.
"Permit me, my dear brethren, citizens of the United States, to address you on this occasion. It is that G.o.d, that all powerful G.o.d, who hath directed your steps; who, when you were without arms fought for you the sword of justice; who, when you were in adversity, poured into your hearts the spirit of courage, of wisdom, and fort.i.tude, and who hath, at length, raised up for your support a youthful sovereign whose virtues bless and adorn a sensible, a fruitful and a generous nation."
The French Amba.s.sador bowed his head in profound acquiescence.
"This nation hath blended her interest with your interest and her sentiments with yours. She partic.i.p.ates in all your joys, and this day unites her voice to yours at the foot of the altars of the eternal G.o.d to celebrate that glorious revolution which has placed the sons of America among the free and independent nations of the earth.
"We have nothing now to apprehend but the anger of Heaven, or that the measure of our guilt should exceed His mercy. Let us then prostrate ourselves at the feet of the immortal G.o.d, who holds the fate of empires in His hands, and raises them up at His pleasure, or breaks them down to dust. Let us conjure Him to enlighten our enemies, and to dispose their hearts to enjoy that tranquillity and happiness which the Revolution we now celebrate has established for a great part of the human race. Let us implore Him to conduct us by that way which His Providence has marked out for arriving at so desirable an end. Let us offer unto Him hearts imbued with sentiments of respect, consecrated by religion, humanity and patriotism. Never is the august ministry of His altars more acceptable to His Divine Majesty than when it lays at His feet homages, offerings and vows, so pure, so worthy the common offerings of mankind.