I
Lent, of the year 1429, presented
a strange marvel of the Calendar, a conjunction that
moved the admiration not only of the common crowd
of the Faithful, but eke of Clerks, well learned in
Arithmetic. For Astronomy, mother of the Calendar,
was Christian in those days. In 1429 Good Friday
fell on the Feast of the Annunciation, so that one
and the same day combined the commemoration of the
two several mysteries which did commence and consummate
the redemption of mankind, and in wondrous wise superimposed
one on top of the other, Jesus conceived in the Virgin’s
womb and Jesus dying on the Cross. This Friday,
whereon the mystery of joy came so to coincide exactly
with the mystery of sorrow, was named the “Grand
Friday,” and was kept holy with solemn Feasts
on Mount Anis, in the Church of the Annunciation.
For many years, by gift of the Popes of Rome, the
sanctuary of Mount Anis had possessed the privilege
of the plenary indulgences of a great jubilee, and
the late-deceased Bishop of Le Puy, Elie de Le-strange,
had gotten Pope Martin to restore this pardon.
It was a favour of the sort the Popes scarce ever
refused, when asked in due and proper form.
The pardon of the Grand Friday
drew a great crowd of pilgrims and traders to Le Puy-en-Velay.
As early as mid February folk from distant lands set
out thither in cold and wind and rain. For the
most part they fared on foot, staff in hand.
Whenever they could, these pilgrims travelled in companies,
to the end they might not be robbed and held to ransom
by the armed bands that infested the country parts,
and by the barons who exacted toll on the confines
of their lands. Inasmuch as the mountain districts
were especially dangerous, they tarried in the neighbouring
towns, Clermont, Issoire, Brioude, Lyons, Issingeaux,
Alais, till they were gathered in a great host, and
then went forth on their road in the snow. During
Holy Week a strange multitude thronged the hilly streets
of Le Puy, pedlars from Languedoc and Provence
and Catalonia, leading their mules laded with leather
goods, oil, wool, webs of cloth, or wines of Spain
in goat-skins; lords a-horseback and ladies in wains,
artisans and traders pacing on their mules, with wife
or daughter perched behind, Then came the poor pilgrim
folk, limping along, halting and hobbling, stick in
hand and bag on back, panting up the stiff climb.
Last were the flocks of oxen and sheep being driven
to the slaughterhouses.
Now, leant against the wall of the
Bishop’s palace, stood Florent Guillaume, looking
as long and dry and black as an espalier vine in winter,
and devoured pilgrims and cattle with his eyes.
“Look,” he called to Marguerite
the lace-maker, “look at yonder fine heads of
bestial.”
And Marguerite, squatted beside her bobbins, called
back:
“Yea, fine beasts, and fat withal!”
Both the twain were very bare and
scant of the goods of this world, and even then were
feeling bitterly the pinch of hunger. And folk
said it came of their own fault. At that very
moment Pierre Grandmange the tripe-seller was saying
as much, where he stood in his tripe-shop, pointing
a finger at them. “’T would be sinful,”
he was crying, “to give an alms to such good-for-nothing
varlets.” The tripe-seller would fain
have been very charitable, but he feared to lose his
soul by giving to evil-livers, and all the fat citizens
of Le Puy had the selfsame scruples.
To say truth, we must needs allow
that, in the heyday of her hot youth, Marguerite the
lace-maker had not matched St. Lucy in purity, St.
Agatha in constancy, and St. Catherine in staidness.
As for Florent Guillaume, he had been the best scrivener
in the city. For years he had not had his equal
for engrossing the Hours of Our Lady of Le Puy.
But he had been over fond of merrymakings and junketings.
Now his hand had lost its cunning, and his eye its
clearness; he could no more trace the letters on the
parchment with the needful steadiness of touch.
Even so, he might have won his livelihood by teaching
apprentices in his shop at the sign of the Image of
Our Lady, under the choir buttresses of The Annunciation,
for he was a fellow of good counsel and experience.
But having had the ill fortune to borrow of Maitre
Jacquet Coquedouille the sum of six livres ten sous,
and having paid him back at divers terms eighty livres
two sous, he had found himself at the last to
owe yet six livres two sous to the account of
his creditor, which account was approved correct by
the judges, for Jacquet Coquedouille was a sound arithmetician.
This was the reason why the scrivenry of Florent Guillaume,
under the choir buttresses of The Annunciation,
was sold, on Saturday the fifth day of March, being
the Feast of St. Theophilus, to the profit of Maitre
Jacquet Coquedouille. Since that time the poor
penman had never a place to call his own. But
by the good help of Jean Magne the bell-ringer
and with the protection of Our Lady, whose Hours he
had aforetime written, Florent Guillaume found a perch
o’ nights in the steeple of the Cathedral.
The scrivener and the lace-maker had
much ado to live. Marguerite only kept body and
soul together by chance and charity, for she had long
lost her good looks and she hated the lace-making.
They helped each other. Folks said so by way
of reproach; they had been better advised to account
it to them for righteousness. Florent Guillaume
was a learned clerk. Well knowing every word
of the history of the beautiful Black Virgin of Le
Puy and the ordering of the ceremonies of the great
pardon, he had conceived the notion he might
serve as guide to the pilgrims, deeming he would surely
light on someone compassionate enough to pay him a
supper in guerdon of his fine stories. But the
first folk he had offered his services to had bidden
him begone because his ragged coat bespoke neither
good guidance nor clerkly wit; so he had come back,
downhearted and crestfallen, to the Bishop’s
wall, where he had his bit of sunshine and his kind
gossip Marguerite. “They reckon,”
he said bitterly, “I am not learned enough to
number them the relics and recount the miracles of
Our Lady. Do they think my wits have escaped away
through the holes in my gaberdine?”
“’Tis not the wits,”
replied Marguerite, “escape by the holes in a
body’s clothes, but the good natural heat.
I am sore a-cold. And it is but too true that,
man and woman, they judge us by our dress. The
gallants would find me comely enough yet if I was accoutred
like my Lady the Comtesse de Clermont.”
Meanwhile, all the length of the street
in front of them the pilgrims were elbowing and fighting
their way to the Sanctuary, where they were to win
pardon for their sins.
“They will surely suffocate
anon,” said Marguerite. “Twenty-two
years agone, on the Grand Friday, two hundred persons
died stifled under the porch of The Annunciation.
God have their souls in keeping! Ay, those were
the good times, when I was young!”
“’Tis very true indeed,
that year you tell of, two hundred pilgrims crushed
each other to death and departed from this world to
the other. And next day was never a sign to be
seen of aught untoward.”
As he so spake, Florent Guillaume
noted a pilgrim, a very fat man, who was not hurrying
to get him assoiled with the same hot haste as the
rest, but kept rolling his wide eyes to right and left
with a look of distress and fear. Florent Guillaume
stepped up to him and louted low.
“Messire,” he accosted
him, “one may see at a glance you are a sensible
man and an experienced; you do not rush blindly to
the pardon like a sheep to the slaughter.
The rest of the folk go helter-skelter thither, the
nose of one under the tail of the other; but you follow
a wiser fashion. Grant me the boon to be your
guide, and you will not repent your bargain.”
The pilgrim, who proved to be a gentleman
of Limoges, answered in the patois of his countryside,
that he had no use for a scurvy beggarman and could
very well find his own way to The Annunciation
for to receive pardon for his faults. And therewith
he set his face resolutely to the hill. But Florent
Guillaume cast himself at his feet, and tearing at
his hair:
“Stop! stop! messire,”
he cried; “i’ God’s name and by all
the Saints, I warn you go no farther! ’T
will be your death, and you are not the man we could
see perish without grief and dolour. A few steps
more and you are a dead man! They are suffocating
up yonder. Already full six hundred pilgrims
have given up the ghost. And this is but a small
beginning! Do you not know, messire, that
twenty-two years agone, in the year of grace one thousand
four hundred and seven, on the selfsame day and at
the selfsame hour, under yonder porch, nine thousand
six hundred and thirty-eight persons, without reckoning
women and children, trampled each other underfoot
and perished miserably? An you met the same fate,
I should never smile again. To see you is to love
you, messire; to know you is to conceive a sudden
and overmastering desire to serve you.”
The Limousin gentleman had halted
in no small surprise and turned pale to hear such
discourse and see the fellow tearing out his hair in
fistfuls. In his terror he was for turning back
the way he had come. But Florent Guillaume, on
his knees in the mud, held him back by the skirt of
his jacket.
“Never go that way, messire!
not that way. You might meet Jacquet Coquedouille,
and you would be all in an instant turned into stone.
Better encounter the basilisk than Jacquet Coquedouille.
I will tell you what you must do if, like the wise
and prudent man your face proclaims you to be, you
would live long and make your peace with God.
Hearken to me; I am a scholar, a Bachelor. To-day
the holy relics will be borne through the streets
and crossways of the city. You will find great
solace in touching the carven shrines which enclose
the cornelian cup wherefrom the child Jesus drank,
one of the wine-jars of the Marriage at Cana, the
cloth of the Last Supper, and the holy foreskin.
If you take my advice, we will go wait for them, under
cover, at a cookshop I wot of, before which they will
pass without fail.”
Then, in a wheedling voice, without
loosing his hold of the pilgrim’s jacket, he
pointed to the lace-maker and said:
“Messire, you must give six
sous to yonder worthy woman, that she may go
buy us wine, for she knows where good liquor is to
be gotten.”
The Limousin gentleman, who was a
simple soul after all, went where he was led, and
Florent Guillaume supped on the leg and wing of a goose,
the bones whereof he put in his pocket as a present
for Madame Ysabeau, his fellow lodger in the timbers
of the steeple, to wit, Jean Magne
the bell-ringer’s magpie.
He found her that night perched on
the beam where she was used to roost, beside the hole
in the wall which was her storeroom wherein she hoarded
walnuts and hazel-nuts, almonds and beech-nuts.
She had awoke at the noise of his coming and flapped
her wings; so he greeted her very courteously, addressing
her in these obliging terms:
“Magpie most pious, lady recluse,
bird of the cloister, Margot of the Nunnery, sable-frocked
Abbess, Church fowl of the lustrous coat, all hail!”
Then offering her the goose bones
nicely folded in a cabbage leaf:
“Lady,” he said, “I
bring you here the scraps remaining of a good dinner
a gentleman from Limoges gave me. His countrymen
are radish eaters; but I have taught this one to prefer
an Anis goose to all the radishes in the Limousin.”
Next day and the rest of the week
Florent Guillaume, for he could never light
on his fat friend again nor yet any other good pilgrim
with a well-lined travelling wallet, fasted
a solis ortu usque ad occasum, from rising
sun to dewy eve. Marguerite the lace-maker did
likewise. This was very meet and right, seeing
the time was Holy Week.
II.
Now on Holy Easter Day, Maitre Jacquet
Coquedouille, a notable citizen of the place, was
peeping through a hole in a shutter of his house and
watching the countless throng of pilgrims passing down
the steep street. They were wending homewards,
happy to have won their pardon; and the sight of them
greatly magnified his veneration for the Black Virgin.
For he deemed a lady so much sought after must needs
be a puissant dame. He was old, and his only
hope lay in God’s mercy. Yet was he but
ill-assured of his eternal salvation, for he remembered
how many a time he had ruthlessly fleeced the widow
and the orphan. Moreover, he had robbed Florent
Guillaume of his scrivenry at the sign of Our Lady.
He was used to lend at high interest on sound security.
Yet could no man infer he was a usurer, forasmuch
as he was a Christian, and it was only the Jews practised
usury, the Jews, and, if you will, the Lombards
and the men of Cahors.
Now Jacquet Coquedouille went about
the matter quite otherwise than the Jews. He
never said, like Jacob, Ephraim, and Manasses,
“I am lending you money.” What he
did say was, “I am putting money into your business
to help your trafficking,” a different thing
altogether. For usury and lending upon interest
were forbidden by the Church, but trafficking was
lawful and permitted.
And yet at the thought how he had
brought many Christian folk to poverty and despair,
Jacquet Coquedouille felt the pangs of remorse, as
he pictured the sword of Divine Justice hanging over
his head. So on this holy Easter Day he was fain
to secure him against the Last Judgment by winning
the protection of Our Lady. He thought to himself
she would plead for him at the judgment seat of her
divine Son, if only he gave her a handsome fee.
So he went to the great chest where he kept his gold,
and, after making sure the chamber door was shut fast,
he opened the chest, which was full of angels,
flor-ins, esterlings, nobles, gold crowns, gold
ducats, and golden sous, and all the
coins ever struck by Christian or Saracen. He
extracted with a sigh of regret twelve deniers
of fine gold and laid them on the table, which was
crowded with balances, files, scissors, gold-scales,
and account books. After shutting his chest again
and triple-locking it, he numbered the deniers,
renumbered them, gazed long at them with looks of affection,
and addressed them in words so soft and sweet, so
affable and ingratiating, so gentle and courteous,
it seemed rather the music of the spheres than human
speech.
“Oh, little angels!” sighed
the good old man. “Oh, my dear little angels!
Oh, my pretty gold sheep, with the fine, precious fleece!”
And taking the pieces between his
fingers with as much reverence as it had been the
body of Our Lord, he put them in the balance and made
sure they were of the full weight, or very
near, albeit a trifle clipped already by the Lombards
and the Jews, through whose hands they had passed.
After which he spoke to them yet more graciously than
before:
“Oh, my pretty sheep, my sweet,
pretty lambs, there, let me shear you! ’T
will do you no hurt at all.”
Then, seizing his great scissors,
he clipped off shreds of gold here and there, as he
was used to clip every piece of money before parting
with it. And he gathered the clippings carefully
in a wooden bowl that was already half full of bits
of gold. He was ready to give twelve angels to
the Holy Virgin; but he felt no way bound to depart
from his use and wont. This done, he went to
the aumry where his pledges lay, and drew out a little
blue purse, broidered with silver, which a dame of
the petty trading sort had left with him in her distress.
He remembered that blue and white are Our Lady’s
colours.
That day and the next he did nothing
further. But in the night, betwixt Monday and
Tuesday, he had cramps, and dreamt the devils were
pulling him by the feet. This he took for a warning
of God and our Blessed Lady, tarried within doors
pondering the matter all the day, and then toward
evening went to lay his offering at the feet of the
Black Virgin.
III
THAT same day, as night was closing
in, Florent Guillaume thought ruefully of returning
to his airy bedchamber. He had fasted the livelong
day, sore against the grain, holding that a good Christian
ought not to fast in the glorious Resurrection week.
Before mounting to his bed in the steeple, he went
to offer a pious prayer to the Lady of Le Puy.
She was still there in the midst of the Church at
the spot where she had offered herself on the Grand
Friday to the veneration of the Faithful. Small
and black, crowned with jewels, in a mantle blazing
with gold and precious stones and pearls, she held
on her knees the Child Jesus, who was as black as
his mother and passed his head through a slit in her
cloak. It was the miraculous image which St. Louis
had received as a gift from the Soldan of Egypt and
had carried with his own hands to the Church of Anis.
All the pilgrims were gone now, and
the Church was dark and empty. The last offerings
of the Faithful were spread at the feet of the beautiful
Black Virgin, displayed on a table lit with wax tapers.
You could see amongst the rest a head, hearts, hands,
feet, a woman’s breasts of silver, a little
boat of gold, eggs, loaves, Aurillac cheeses, and in
a bowl full of deniers, sous, and groats,
a little blue purse broidered with silver. Over
against the table, in a huge chair, dozed the priest
who guarded the offerings.
Florent Guillaume dropped on his knees
before the holy image, and said over to himself this
pious prayer:
“Lady, an it be true that the
holy prophet Jeremías, having beheld thee with
the eyes of faith ere ever thou wast conceived, carved
with his hands out of cedar-wood in thy likeness the
holy image before which I am at this present kneeling;
an it be true that afterward King Ptolemy, instructed
of the miracles wrought by this same holy image, took
it from the Jewish priests, bare it to Egypt and set
it up, covered with precious stones, in the temple
of the idols; an it be true that Nebuchadnezzar, conqueror
of the Egyptians, seized it in his turn and had it
laid amongst his treasure, where the Saracens found
it when they captured Babylon; an it be true that
the Soldan loved it in his heart above all things,
and was used to adore it at the least once every day;
an it be true that the said Soldan had never given
it to our saintly King Louis, but that his wife, who
was a Saracen dame, yet prized chivalry and knightly
prowess, resolved to make it a gift to the best knight
and worthiest champion of all Christendom; in a word,
an this image be miraculous, as I do firmly credit,
have it do a miracle, Lady, in favour of the poor
clerk who hath many a time writ thy praises on the
vellum of the service books. He hath sanctified
his sinful hands by engrossing in a fair writing,
with great red capitals at the beginning of each clause,
‘the fifteen joys of Our Lady,’ in the
vulgar tongue and in rhyme, for the comforting of
the afflicted. ’Tis pious work this.
Think of it, Lady, and heed not his sins. Give
him somewhat to eat. ’Twill both do me
much profit, and bring thee great honour, for the
miracle will appear no mean one to all them that know
the world. Thou hast this day gotten gold, eggs,
cheeses, and a little blue purse broidered with silver.
Lady, I grudge thee none of the gifts that have been
made thee. Thou dost well deserve them, yea, and
more than they. I do not so much as ask thee
to make them give me back what a thief hath robbed
me of, a thief by name Jacquet Coque-douille,
one of the most honoured citizens of this thy town
of Le Puy. No, all I ask of thee is not to let
me die of hunger. And if thou grant me this boon,
I will indite a full and fair history of thine holy
image here present.”
So prayed Florent Guillaume.
The soft murmur of his petition was answered only
by the deep-chested, placid snore of the sleeping priest.
The poor scrivener rose from his knees, stepped noiselessly
adown the nave, for he was grown so light his footfall
could scarce be heard, and, fasting as he was, climbed
the tower stairs that had as many steps as there are
days in the year.
Meanwhile Madame Ysabeau, slipping
under the cloister gate, entered her Church.
The pilgrims had driven her away, for she loved peace
and solitude. The bird came forward cautiously,
putting one foot slowly in front of the other, then
stopped and craned her neck, casting a suspicious
look to right and left. Then giving a graceful
little jump and shaking out her tail feathers, she
hopped up to the Black Madonna. Then she stood
stock still a few moments, scrutinising the sleeping
watchman and questioning the darkness and silence with
eyes and ears alert. At last with a mighty flutter
of wings she alighted on the table of offerings.
IV
MEANWHILE Florent Guillaume had settled
himself for the night in the steeple. It was
bitter cold. The wind came blowing in through
the luffer-boards and fluted and organed among the
bells to rejoice the heart of the cats and owls.
And this was not the only objection to the lodging.
Since the earthquake of 1427, which had shaken the
whole church, the spire was dropping to pieces stone
by stone and threatened to collapse altogether in
the first storm. Our Lady suffered this dilapidation
because of the people’s sins.
Presently Florent Guillaume fell asleep,
which is a token of his innocency of heart. What
dreams he dreamt is clean forgot, except that he had
a vision in his sleep of a lady of consummate beauty
who came and kissed him on the mouth. But when
his lips opened to return her salute, he swallowed
two or three woodlice that were walking over his face
and by their tickling had deluded his sleeping senses
into the agreeable fancy. He awoke, and hearing
a noise of wings beating above his head, he thought
it was a devil, as was very natural for him to opine,
seeing how the evil spirits flock in countless swarms
to torment mankind, and above all at night time.
But the moon just then breaking through the clouds,
he recognised Madame Ysabeau and saw she was busy with
her beak pushing into a crack in the wall that served
her for storehouse a blue purse broidered with silver.
He let her do as she list; but when she had left her
hoard, he clambered onto a beam, took the purse, opened
it, and saw it contained twelve good gold deniers,
which he clapped in his belt, giving thanks to the
incomparable Black Virgin of Le Puy. For he was
a clerk and versed in the Scriptures, and he remembered
how the Lord fed his prophet Elias by a raven; whence
he inferred that the Holy Mother of God had sent by
a magpie twelve deniers to her poor penman, Florent
Guillaume.
On the morrow Florent and Marguerite
the lace-maker ate a dish of tripe, a treat
they had craved for many a long year.
So ends the Miracle of the Magpie.
May he who tells the tale live, as he would fain live,
in good and gentle peace, and all good hap befall such
folk as shall read the same.