[The Shadow of the Cathedral by Vicente Blasco Ibanez]@TWC D-Link book
The Shadow of the Cathedral

CHAPTER VII
14/53

The Inquisition listening to every word, and endeavouring to guess every thought.

The conquest of heaven the sole ideal of life! And that conquest becoming daily more difficult! Money must be paid to the Church to save one's self, and poverty was the most perfect state; and again, besides the sacrifice of all comfort, prayers at all hours, the daily visits to the church, the life of confraternities, the disciplines in the vaults of the parish church, the voice of the brother of Mortal Sin interrupting sleep to remind one of the approach of Death; and added to this fanatical and weary life the uncertainty of salvation, the threat of falling into hell for the slightest fault, and the impossibility of ever thoroughly appeasing a sullen and revengeful God.

And then again, the more tangible menace, the terror of the bonfire, engendering cowardice and debasing suspected men." "In this way we can understand," said Gabriel, "the cynical confession of the Canon Llorente explaining why he became secretary to the Holy Office: 'They began to roast, and in order not to be roasted I took on me the part of roaster.' For intelligent men there was nothing else to be done.

How could they resist and rebel?
The king, master of all lives and property, was only the servant of bishops, friars, and familiars.

The kings of Spain, except the first Bourbons, were nothing but servants of the Church; in no country has been seen as palpably as in this one the solidarity between Church and State.


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