The
lieutenant who had given the priest money at the prison arrests
him. There are a dozen armed men surrounding the hut. The priest
is told he will be taken back to the prison and charged with
treason. The priest and the lieutenant men sit together in the
hut while the rain falls outside. The priest shows the lieutenant
some card tricks, although the policeman shows no interest.
But the lieutenant becomes angry about the injustices committed
by the church, which he remembers from his childhood. That is
why priests must be killed, he says, although he adds that he
has nothing against the priest personally. He explains his own
ideas about social reform. The priest does not feel that such
reforms are an answer to the deeper questions posed by human
existence. He insists that even though he is a coward, he still
has the power, as a priest, to give God’s pardon. The
lieutenant wonders why the priest stayed, rather than running
away like the others. The priest tells his story, explaining
that at first he did not think there was much danger, then he
got caught up in a feeling of pride that he had stayed, even
though he was neglecting his duties and had begun to drink.
The rain stops and
they prepare to leave. The mestizo asks for the priest’s
blessing. The priest wearily says he will pray for him.
The lieutenant and
the priest journey until midnight, then stop at a hut. Neither
of them is able to sleep. They exchange ideas about religion
and society, but neither man understands the point of view of
the other. As they arrive in the town, the lieutenant agrees
to get Padre José to hear the priest’s confession.
Analysis
This is an important chapter because it presents the central
ideas of the two main characters in dialogue form. The fact
that the lieutenant does not consider the gringo who murdered
people and robbed banks to have done much harm illustrates the
differences between him and the priest. For the lieutenant,
priests cause more harm because they are a corrupting influence
on society as a whole, whereas the crimes of an individual are
of only local significance.
For the priest, of
course, it is different, since he believes in the importance
of every individual soul. He showed in the previous chapter
that he regarded the fate of the gringo’s soul to be just
as important as that of anyone else.
The lieutenant’s
philosophy is that the end justifies the means. He is idealistic.
But the priest again has a different view. In order to bring
about good, the individual must himself be good. He predicts
that in spite of all efforts at social reform, human life will
be much the same in a hundred years.
Although the reader
is unlikely to sympathize with those who kill and persecute
priests, the lieutenant’s comments in this chapter at
least show that there may be two sides to the story. According
to him, when the Catholic church had power, it despised Socialists
and showed no concern for their welfare. The church was interested
in accumulating money while claiming to be poor. It was not
an agent for the betterment of society; it did not help ordinary
people improve the conditions of their lives. This is a materialist
view, quite opposed to the spiritual view of the priest, which
sees the condition of the soul as being more important than
that of the body. |