[La Vende by Anthony Trollope]@TWC D-Link bookLa Vende CHAPTER VII 4/20
Through the aperture the imaginative artist had made a spirit to be passing--his head and shoulders were in paradise; these were also gilt and glorious, and on his shoulders two little seraphims were fixing wings; his nether parts below the aperture, were still brown and dingy, as were the four recumbent spirits who rested on their gridirons till the time should come that they also should be passed through. Above the aperture was to be seen paradise in all its blazon of glory, numberless little golden-headen cherubims encircled a throne, on which was seated the beneficent majesty of Heaven.
From the towers and roofs projected numerous brazen-mouthed instruments, which welcomed into everlasting joy the purified spirit which was ascending from purgatory. Thus were paradise, purgatory and pandemonium represented at St.Laud's, and abominable as such representations now appear to be, they had, to a certain extent, a salutary effect with the people who were in the habit of looking at them.
That they were absolute accurate representations of the places represented, they never for a moment presumed to doubt; and if the joys of heaven, as displayed there, were not of much avail in adding to the zeal of the faithful, the horrors of hell were certainly most efficacious in frightening the people into compliance with the rules laid down for them, and in preventing them from neglecting their priests and religious duties. The people were crowded round the church; some were kneeling with the wooden monk at the foot of the cross, and some round the bars of purgatory.
Others were prostrated before the six condemned demons, and some sat by the road-side, on the roots of the trees, telling their beads.
Many men were talking of the state of the times, and of the wars to come; some were foretelling misery and desolation, and others were speaking of the happy days about to return, when their King and their priests should have their own, and La Vendee should be the most honoured province in France. They made a pretty scene, waiting there beneath the shade till their priest should come to lead them to some rural chapel.
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