Temporal Power: A Study in Supremacy
CONTENTS
“In the beginning,” so we are told, “God made the heavens and the earth.”
The statement is simple and terse; it is evidently intended to be wholly comprehensive. Its decisive, almost abrupt tone would seem to forbid either question or argument. The old-world narrator of the sublime event thus briefly chronicled was a poet of no mean quality, though moved by the natural conceit of man to give undue importance to the earth as his own particular habitation. The perfect confidence with which he explains ‘God’ as making ‘two great lights, the greater light to rule the day, the lesser light to rule the night,’ is touching to the verge of pathos; and the additional remark which he throws in, as it were casually,—‘He made the stars also,’ cannot but move us to admiration. How childlike the simplicity of the soul which could so venture to deal with the inexplicable and tremendous problem of the Universe! How self-centred and sure the faith which could so arrange the work of Infinite and Eternal forces to suit its own limited intelligence! It is easy and natural to believe that ‘God,’ or an everlasting Power of Goodness and Beauty called by that name, ‘created the heavens and the earth,’ but one is often tempted to think that an altogether different and rival element must have been concerned in the making of Man. For the heavens and the earth are harmonious; man is a discord. And not only is he a discord in himself, but he takes pleasure in producing and multiplying discords. Often, with the least possible amount of education, and on the slightest provocation, he mentally sets Himself, and his trivial personal opinion on religion, morals, and government, in direct opposition to the immutable laws of the Universe, and the attitude he assumes towards the mysterious Cause and Original Source of Life is nearly always one of three things; contradiction, negation, or defiance. From the first to the last he torments himself with inventions to outwit or subdue Nature, and in the end dies, utterly defeated. His civilizations, his dynasties, his laws, his manners, his customs, are all doomed to destruction and oblivion as completely as an ant-hill which exists one night and is trodden down the next. Forever and forever he works and plans in vain; forever and forever Nature, the visible and active Spirit of God, rises up and crushes her puny rebel.
Marie Corelli
TEMPORAL POWER
A STUDY IN SUPREMACY
CHAPTER I. — THE KING’S PLEASAUNCE
CHAPTER II. — MAJESTY CONSIDERS AND RESOLVES
CHAPTER III. — A NATION OR A CHURCH?
CHAPTER IV. — SEALED ORDERS
CHAPTER V. — “IF I LOVED YOU!”
CHAPTER VI. — SERGIUS THORD
CHAPTER VII. — THE IDEALISTS
CHAPTER VIII. — THE KING’S DOUBLE
CHAPTER IX. — THE PREMIER’S SIGNET
CHAPTER X. — THE ISLANDS
CHAPTER XI. — “GLORIA—IN EXCELSIS!”
CHAPTER XII. — A SEA PRINCESS
CHAPTER XIII. — SECRET SERVICE
CHAPTER XIV. — THE KING’S VETO
CHAPTER XV. — “MORGANATIC” OR—?
CHAPTER XVI. — THE PROFESSOR ADVISES
CHAPTER XVII. — AN “HONOURABLE” STATESMAN
CHAPTER XVIII. — ROYAL LOVERS
CHAPTER XIX. — OF THE CORRUPTION OF THE STATE
CHAPTER XX. — THE SCORN OF KINGS
CHAPTER XXI. — AN INVITATION TO COURT
CHAPTER XXII. — A FAIR DÉBUTANTE
CHAPTER XXIII. — THE KING’S DEFENDER
THE JESUIT SETTLEMENT STATEMENT BY HIS MAJESTY THE KING.
CHAPTER XXIV. — A WOMAN’S REASON
CHAPTER XXV. — “I SAY—‘ROME’!”
CHAPTER XXVI. — “ONE WAY,—ONE WOMAN!”
CHAPTER XXVII. — THE SONG OF FREEDOM
CHAPTER XXVIII. — “FATE GIVES—THE KING!”
CHAPTER XXIX. — THE COMRADE OF HIS FOES
CHAPTER XXX. — KING AND SOCIALIST
CHAPTER XXXI. — A VOTE FOR LOVE
CHAPTER XXXII. — BETWEEN TWO PASSIONS
CHAPTER XXXIII. — SAILING TO THE INFINITE
CHAPTER XXXIV. — ABDICATION
THE END