Gerard Shelley


George Frankham Shell known as George Gerard Shelley was a British linguist, author and translator who travelled in Imperial Russia before and during the Russian Revolution. He was not related to the poet Percy Bysshe Shelley. He became a priest and lived in a community of the Oblates of St. Joseph. He was ordained in March 1950 as a bishop in the Old Roman Catholic Church in Great Britain. In 1952 he became the third archbishop.

Life

Brought up as a Roman Catholic, Shelley attended an Italian college near Lake Garda in 1907. Near Venice he was invited by a Russian aristocrat, Countess Bobrinsky, to visit her. He was a graduate of the University of Heidelberg as well as the Major Seminary and Collège Saint-Sulpice in Paris. In 1913, influenced by Stephen Graham, he travelled by train from Warsaw to Kursk, Kharkov, Belgorod and Shebekino where he stayed for a year with his host and learned Russian at Kharkov University. After World War I broke out he worked as an interpreter for various groups of prisoners of war. In April 1915 he stayed on the family estate in Bogoroditsk; he visited Moscow and met with Grigori Rasputin in the atelier of a sculptor, probably Naoum Aronson. On 26 March, Rasputin is said, while inebriated, to have opened his trousers and waved his "reproductive organ" in front of a group of female gypsy singers in the Yar restaurant. A few days later a waiter assessed the story to Shelley as bunkum.
In St. Peterburg, Shelley met with Count Vladimir Frederiks, and again with Rasputin and the Empress, accompanied by her daughter Grand Duchess Tatiana, drinking tea in his apartment. Rasputin visited him also, when Shelley was camping at Lake Ladoga in 1916.
In December of the same year Shelley went back to the UK for Christmas and defended Rasputin. In his book "The speckled domes" he describes Rasputin as an ascetic, an old testament prophet, or as a medieval figure from the pages of Chaucer. "Although a peasant he had clear ideas on a host of matters." Most stories known about Rasputin, being filthy, smelly, or drunk, were invented by the Russian aristocracy, because they hated peasants, already for centuries. According to Shelley, Russia was a caste society and "perhaps no man in history has been so furiously calumniated."
In January, Shelley went back to the Russian Republic. Shelley gives an account of the mood after the February Revolution and gives his view on the Russian Provisional Government, Lenin and the October Revolution. Back in Moscow he wrote about free love and the changing attitude to marriage in the early years of communist Russia; the murdering of Tsar Nicholas II ; the socialists, the anarchists, the Jews in the Bolshevik party ; the famine, the ruble, the escape of Alexander Krivoshein, his meetings with the wife of Mikhail Pokrovsky and Sinn Féin. Shelley was accused of being a counter-revolutionary and unable to leave the country as a hostage. He escaped, dressed as a woman, stuck under the seats in a train from Moscow to Finland surrounded by a group of French women, who together bribed the chief Red Guard. He arrived in Sweden where he had his first decent meal since months.
Back in London he describes a pro-Russia meeting at Speakers Corner in Hyde Park. Shelley defended free labour unions. He worked as an interpreter at the Paris Peace Conference. In 1921 he was contracted by the International Federation of Trade Unions in Switzerland.

After WWII

In 1943 founded in New York a Society of Our Lady of Port Royal, which propagated the traditions of Jansenism.
During World War II, Shelley translated poems by Aleksandr Pushkin, Mikhail Lermontov, Boris Pasternak and Alexander Blok.
After 1952 he spent some time in America, where the Old Catholic influence was much stronger than in the UK. He corresponded with the Catholic Australian authors Martin Boyd and Desmond O'Grady; when he became the Archbishop of Caer-Glow, the Primate of the Old Catholic Church in England and America. In 1959 Shelley's ORCC opposed the Dogma of Papal Infallibility. In 1960 he consecrated Paget King, but in the year after he regretted this. Shelley became resident in Rome from 1962 till 1965? During and after the time of Vatican II, Archbishop Shelley began to see a continued purpose in resisting the runaway changes of Catholic liberalism. Under the guidance of Shelley the OSJ produced a brochure entitled "An Account of the Old Roman Catholic Church" in 1964. In 1964 five independent sects which derived their apostolic succession through Arnold Mathew. Except for the Liberal Catholic Church, the "sects hardly counted numerically at all." Shelley was excommunicated on 7 April 1965.
It seems he functioned as Chairman of the OSJ Ecclesiastical Committee at least as late as April 1969. After 1977 Archbishop Shelley was largely inactive due to advanced age. It is not known if he ever married, although the Old Catholic church allows it to priests.

Works