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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 January 2025
English public men very seldom make any public allusion to the activities of the Holy See. Very few of them give much attention either to its influence or to its policies. Sir Rennell Rodd, however, as British Ambassador to Rome from 1908 until 1919, had ample opportunities for becoming aware of the Pope’s existence as an international force. And in his latest volume of reminiscences, which cover the whole period of the war, he discreetly reveals here and there his own observations and suspicions concerning the Vatican. Indeed, he does not disguise the fact that the information which reached him in his official capacity from various sources caused him constant apprehension during the war. And after the death, in August, 1914, of Pope Pius X (whom he credits with sufficiently ‘humane’ motives to have been likely to develop pro-Ally tendencies had he lived), Sir Rennell quite plainly regards the Holy See as being engaged in constant intrigues to bring the war to an end prematurely upon conditions advantageous to the Central Powers.
The attitude of this ex-Ambassador towards the peace policy of the Holy See is not only characteristic of what most Englishmen of his orthodox and official type of mind felt throughout the war and still feel. It is worth examining more closely because Sir Rennell Rodd, who enjoyed unique advantages for ascertaining and understanding the pacific efforts of the Vatican throughout the war, failed completely to understand what Pope Benedict XV was striving to accomplish.
* Social and Diplomatic Memories (1902–1919). By Sir Rennell Rodd. (Edwin Arnold. 21/- net.).