登陆注册
37838100000100

第100章 XVIII(4)

"But, Alessandro," continued Ramona, "were there really bad men at the other Missions? Surely not the Franciscan Fathers?"

"Perhaps not the Fathers themselves, but the men under them. It was too much power, Majella. When my father has told me how it was, it has seemed to me I should not have liked to be as he was. It is not right that one man should have so much power. There was one at the San Gabriel Mission; he was an Indian. He had been set over the rest; and when a whole band of them ran away one time, and went back into the mountains, he went after them; and he brought back a piece of each man's ear; the pieces were strung on a string; and he laughed, and said that was to know them by again,--by their clipped ears. An old woman, a Gabrieleno, who came over to Temecula, told me she saw that. She lived at the Mission herself. The Indians did not all want to come to the Missions; some of them preferred to stay in the woods, and live as they always had lived; and I think they had a right to do that if they preferred, Majella. It was stupid of them to stay and be like beasts, and not know anything; but do you not think they had the right?"

"It is the command to preach the gospel to every creature," replied the pious Ramona. "That is what Father Salvierderra said was the reason the Franciscans came here. I think they ought to have made the Indians listen. But that was dreadful about the ears, Alessandro. Do you believe it?"

"The old woman laughed when she told it," he answered. "She said it was a joke; so I think it was true. I know I would have killed the man who tried to crop my ears that way."

"Did you ever tell that to Father Salvierderra?" asked Ramona.

"No, Majella. It would not be polite," said Alessandro.

"Well, I don't believe it," replied Ramona, in a relieved tone. "I don't believe any Franciscan ever could have permitted such things."

The great red light in the light-house tower had again blazed out, and had been some time burning before Alessandro thought it prudent to resume their journey. The road on which they must go into old San Diego, where Father Gaspara lived, was the public road from San Diego to San Luis Rey, and they were almost sure to meet travellers on it.

But their fleet horses bore them so well, that it was not late when they reached the town. Father Gaspara's house was at the end of a long, low adobe building, which had served no mean purpose in the old Presidio days, but was now fallen into decay; and all its rooms except those occupied by the Father, had been long uninhabited. On the opposite side of the way, in a neglected, weedy open, stood his chapel,-- a poverty-stricken little place, its walls imperfectly whitewashed, decorated by a few coarse pictures and by broken sconces of looking-glass, rescued in their dilapidated condition from the Mission buildings, now gone utterly to ruin. In these had been put handle-holders of common tin, in which a few cheap candles dimly lighted the room. Everything about it was in unison with the atmosphere of the place,-- the most profoundly melancholy in all Southern California. Here was the spot where that grand old Franciscan, Padre Junipero Serra, began his work, full of the devout and ardent purpose to reclaim the wilderness and its peoples to his country and his Church; on this very beach he went up and down for those first terrible weeks, nursing the sick, praying with the dying, and burying the dead, from the pestilence-stricken Mexican ships lying in the harbor.

Here he baptized his first Indian converts, and founded his first Mission. And the only traces now remaining of his heroic labors and hard-won successes were a pile of crumbling ruins, a few old olive-trees and palms; in less than another century even these would be gone; returned into the keeping of that mother, the earth, who puts no head-stones at the sacredest of her graves.

Father Gaspara had been for many years at San Diego. Although not a Franciscan, having, indeed, no especial love for the order, he had been from the first deeply impressed by the holy associations of the place. He had a nature at once fiery and poetic; there were but three things he could have been,-- a soldier, a poet, or a priest.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 内身观章句经

    内身观章句经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 开着战机闯异界

    开着战机闯异界

    开个战斗机还会穿越。不过不怕,他可是开挂的。什么天才,妖孽,不过是哥的垫脚石。美女,财富,他不缺………想知道他是怎么征服宇宙的么?那就和我一起见证他的崛起之路吧
  • 姚无期姚玖酒

    姚无期姚玖酒

    后来安生再也没有见过乔伊,她就像一阵风带给他无数的惊喜然后在某个大雨的夜晚迅速的消失。到最后他还是没有抓住她,那些说过的情话也仿佛是上个世纪的事情。
  • 江东才俊

    江东才俊

    东吴的百姓和群臣都觉得建安十三年的春天是十分值得纪念的,因为那一年他们的皇上,当时还只有个大将军头衔的孙权做了一笔极为划算的大买卖——他用一个江夏郡换了个十七八岁的少年将军。------------------古今分界线-------------------------------建安十三年夏,吴主权伐江夏,列阵夏口,太守黄祖使别部司马王岘对阵,岘忿祖久矣,阵前倒戈,取祖首级以投吴,权与祖有父仇,大悦,遂以岘为将……——《荆襄古事记》
  • 好想向你靠近

    好想向你靠近

    我向你走了九十九步,最后一步我想让你主动向我靠近,可是你却毫不犹豫转身就走主动久了也会累,我可以慢慢的靠近,但前提是你不会躲避
  • 重生于康熙同年

    重生于康熙同年

    张磊穿越回到了清初,当他不由己身地来到了京城时,玄烨不久后当上了皇帝,他抓住机会,摆脱了悲惨的命运,一步步地走上了时代的最高峰。
  • 快穿之幻想实现

    快穿之幻想实现

    中二少女遇见万能系统,会擦出怎样的火花呢?“我要空间。”找个介质,开了个洞。【自己玩去。】“呜呜,没有男朋友。”【呵呵。】“统统,你变了,你以前很爱我的。”【近墨者黑。】。。。原以为是个青铜,结果是个王者。 到头来,究竟是自己的幻想……还是真正发生过的? 就算重来一次,她依然是王者,屹立在孤独的高峰。
  • 我的修仙非日常

    我的修仙非日常

    【搞笑修仙流小说】我,萧何,16岁,很帅,是个好人;身为一名光荣的接班人,要做一个为社会造福的好人;在这个灵气复苏的时代,成为一个为社会造福的修仙者;在这个人心冷漠的社会,只有功德无量的我,才能够带给大家温暖……“警察叔叔,我真的是个好人!”
  • 影翼少年的篮球

    影翼少年的篮球

    一位右臂失去知觉的失忆少年,从十二岁那年开始,一次被哥哥带到球场上,看到哥哥被人欺负之后,为帮哥哥出头,展示出了优秀的运动天赋,从那只后就与哥哥立下誓言。之后,在训练时经一位退役运动员的指导,自己的天赋逐渐被发觉。
  • 想诱你入怀

    想诱你入怀

    第一眼惊艳第二眼沦陷第三眼不负遇见“放开”“我要追你”“那你试试”