The cautious reader will detect a
lack of authenticity in the following pages.
I am not a cautious reader myself, yet I confess with
some concern to the absence of much documentary evidence
in support of the singular incident I am about to
relate. Disjointed memoranda, the proceedings
of ayuntamientos and early departmental juntas,
with other records of a primitive and superstitious
people, have been my inadequate authorities.
It is but just to state, however, that though this
particular story lacks corroboration, in ransacking
the Spanish archives of Upper California I have met
with many more surprising and incredible stories,
attested and supported to a degree that would have
placed this legend beyond a cavil or doubt. I
have, also, never lost faith in the legend myself,
and in so doing have profited much from the examples
of divers grant-claimants, who have often jostled me
in their more practical researches, and who have my
sincere sympathy at the scepticism of a modern hard-headed
and practical world.
For many years after Father Junípero
Serro first rang his bell in the wilderness of Upper
California, the spirit which animated that adventurous
priest did not wane. The conversion of the heathen
went on rapidly in the establishment of Missions throughout
the land. So sedulously did the good Fathers
set about their work, that around their isolated chapels
there presently arose adobe huts, whose mud-plastered
and savage tenants partook regularly of the provisions,
and occasionally of the Sacrament, of their pious
hosts. Nay, so great was their progress, that
one zealous Padre is reported to have administered
the Lord’s Supper one Sabbath morning to “over
three hundred heathen Salvages.” It was
not to be wondered that the Enemy of Souls, being
greatly incensed thereat, and alarmed at his decreasing
popularity, should have grievously tempted and embarrassed
these Holy Fathers, as we shall presently see.
Yet they were happy, peaceful days
for California. The vagrant keels of prying Commerce
had not as yet ruffled the lordly gravity of her bays.
No torn and ragged gulch betrayed the suspicion of
golden treasure. The wild oats drooped idly in
the morning heat, or wrestled with the afternoon breezes.
Deer and antelope dotted the plain. The watercourses
brawled in their familiar channels, nor dreamed of
ever shifting their regular tide. The wonders
of the Yosemite and Calaveras were as yet unrecorded.
The Holy Fathers noted little of the landscape beyond
the barbaric prodigality with which the quick soil
repaid the sowing. A new conversion, the advent
of a Saint’s day, or the baptism of an Indian
baby, was at once the chronicle and marvel of their
day.
At this blissful epoch there lived
at the Mission of San Pablo Father Jose Antonio Haro,
a worthy brother of the Society of Jesus. He was
of tall and cadaverous aspect. A somewhat romantic
history had given a poetic interest to his lugubrious
visage. While a youth, pursuing his studies at
famous Salamanca, he had become enamored of the charms
of Dona Carmen de Torrencevara, as that lady passed
to her matutinal devotions. Untoward circumstances,
hastened, perhaps, by a wealthier suitor, brought
this amour to a disastrous issue; and Father Jose
entered a monastery, taking upon himself the vows of
celibacy. It was here that his natural fervor
and poetic enthusiasm conceived expression as a missionary.
A longing to convert the uncivilized heathen succeeded
his frivolous earthly passion, and a desire to explore
and develop unknown fastnesses continually possessed
him. In his flashing eye and sombre exterior
was detected a singular commingling of the discreet
Las Casas and the impetuous Balboa.
Fired by this pious zeal, Father Jose
went forward in the van of Christian pioneers.
On reaching Mexico, he obtained authority to establish
the Mission of San Pablo. Like the good Junípero,
accompanied only by an acolyte and muleteer, he unsaddled
his mules in a dusky canyon, and rang his bell in
the wilderness. The savages a peaceful,
inoffensive, and inferior race presently
flocked around him. The nearest military post
was far away, which contributed much to the security
of these pious pilgrims, who found their open trustfulness
and amiability better fitted to repress hostility
than the presence of an armed, suspicious, and brawling
soldiery. So the good Father Jose said matins
and prime, mass and vespers, in the heart of Sin and
Heathenism, taking no heed to himself, but looking
only to the welfare of the Holy Church. Conversions
soon followed, and, on the 7th of July, 1760, the
first Indian baby was baptized, an event
which, as Father Jose piously records, “exceeds
the richnesse of gold or precious jewels or the chancing
upon the Ophir of Solomon.” I quote this
incident as best suited to show the ingenious blending
of poetry and piety which distinguished Father Jose’s
record.
The Mission of San Pablo progressed
and prospered until the pious founder thereof, like
the infidel Alexander, might have wept that there
were no more heathen worlds to conquer. But his
ardent and enthusiastic spirit could not long brook
an idleness that seemed begotten of sin; and one pleasant
August morning, in the year of grace 1770, Father Jose
issued from the outer court of the Mission building,
equipped to explore the field for new missionary labors.
Nothing could exceed the quiet gravity
and unpretentiousness of the little cavalcade.
First rode a stout muleteer, leading a pack-mule laden
with the provisions of the party, together with a few
cheap crucifixes and hawks’ bells. After
him came the devout Padre Jose, bearing his breviary
and cross, with a black serapa thrown around his shoulders;
while on either side trotted a dusky convert, anxious
to show a proper sense of their regeneration by acting
as guides into the wilds of their heathen brethren.
Their new condition was agreeably shown by the absence
of the usual mud-plaster, which in their unconverted
state they assumed to keep away vermin and cold.
The morning was bright and propitious. Before
their departure, mass had been said in the chapel,
and the protection of St. Ignatius invoked against
all contingent evils, but especially against bears,
which, like the fiery dragons of old, seemed to cherish
unconquerable hostility to the Holy Church.
As they wound through the canyon,
charming birds disported upon boughs and sprays, and
sober quails piped from the alders; the willowy water-courses
gave a musical utterance, and the long grass whispered
on the hillside. On entering the deeper defiles,
above them towered dark green masses of pine, and
occasionally the madroño shook its bright scarlet
berries. As they toiled up many a steep ascent,
Father Jose sometimes picked up fragments of scoria,
which spake to his imagination of direful volcanoes
and impending earthquakes. To the less scientific
mind of the muleteer Ignacio they had even a more terrifying
significance; and he once or twice snuffed the air
suspiciously, and declared that it smelt of sulphur.
So the first day of their journey wore away, and at
night they encamped without having met a single heathen
face.
It was on this night that the Enemy
of Souls appeared to Ignacio in an appalling form.
He had retired to a secluded part of the camp and had
sunk upon his knees in prayerful meditation, when he
looked up and perceived the Arch-Fiend in the likeness
of a monstrous bear. The Evil One was seated
on his hind legs immediately before him, with his fore
paws joined together just below his black muzzle.
Wisely conceiving this remarkable attitude to be in
mockery and derision of his devotions, the worthy
muleteer was transported with fury. Seizing an
arquebuse, he instantly closed his eyes and fired.
When he had recovered from the effects of the terrific
discharge, the apparition had disappeared. Father
Jose, awakened by the report, reached the spot only
in time to chide the muleteer for wasting powder and
ball in a contest with one whom a single ave
would have been sufficient to utterly discomfit.
What further reliance he placed on Ignacio’s
story is not known; but, in commemoration of a worthy
Californian custom, the place was called La Canada
de la Tentación del Pio Muletero,
or “The Glen of the Temptation of the Pious
Muleteer,” a name which it retains to this day.
The next morning the party, issuing
from a narrow gorge, came upon a long valley, sear
and burnt with the shadeless heat. Its lower extremity
was lost in a fading line of low hills, which, gathering
might and volume toward the upper end of the valley,
upheaved a stupendous bulwark against the breezy North.
The peak of this awful spur was just touched by a
fleecy cloud that shifted to and fro like a banneret.
Father Jose gazed at it with mingled awe and admiration.
By a singular coincidence, the muleteer Ignacio uttered
the simple ejaculation “Diablo!”
As they penetrated the valley, they
soon began to miss the agreeable life and companionable
echoes of the canyon they had quitted. Huge fissures
in the parched soil seemed to gape as with thirsty
mouths. A few squirrels darted from the earth,
and disappeared as mysteriously before the jingling
mules. A gray wolf trotted leisurely along just
ahead. But whichever way Father Jose turned, the
mountain always asserted itself and arrested his wandering
eye. Out of the dry and arid valley, it seemed
to spring into cooler and bracing life. Deep cavernous
shadows dwelt along its base; rocky fastnesses appeared
midway of its elevation; and on either side huge black
hills diverged like massy roots from a central trunk.
His lively fancy pictured these hills peopled with
a majestic and intelligent race of savages; and looking
into futurity, he already saw a monstrous cross crowning
the dome-like summit. Far different were the
sensations of the muleteer, who saw in those awful
solitudes only fiery dragons, colossal bears and break-neck
trails. The converts, Concepcion and Incarnacion,
trotting modestly beside the Padre, recognized, perhaps,
some manifestation of their former weird mythology.
At nightfall they reached the base
of the mountain. Here Father Jose unpacked his
mules, said vespers, and, formally ringing his bell,
called upon the Gentiles within hearing to come and
accept the Holy Faith. The echoes of the black
frowning hills around him caught up the pious invitation,
and repeated it at intervals; but no Gentiles appeared
that night. Nor were the devotions of the muleteer
again disturbed, although he afterward asserted, that,
when the Father’s exhortation was ended, a mocking
peal of laughter came from the mountain. Nothing
daunted by these intimations of the near hostility
of the Evil One, Father Jose declared his intention
to ascend the mountain at early dawn; and before the
sun rose the next morning he was leading the way.
The ascent was in many places difficult
and dangerous. Huge fragments of rock often lay
across the trail, and after a few hours’ climbing
they were forced to leave their mules in a little
gully, and continue the ascent afoot. Unaccustomed
to such exertion, Father Jose often stopped to wipe
the perspiration from his thin cheeks. As the
day wore on, a strange silence oppressed them.
Except the occasional pattering of a squirrel, or
a rustling in the chimisal bushes, there were no signs
of life. The half-human print of a bear’s
foot sometimes appeared before them, at which Ignacio
always crossed himself piously. The eye was sometimes
cheated by a dripping from the rocks, which on closer
inspection proved to be a resinous oily liquid with
an abominable sulphurous smell. When they were
within a short distance of the summit, the discreet
Ignacio, selecting a sheltered nook for the camp, slipped
aside and busied himself in preparations for the evening,
leaving the Holy Father to continue the ascent alone.
Never was there a more thoughtless act of prudence,
never a more imprudent piece of caution. Without
noticing the desertion, buried in pious reflection,
Father Jose pushed mechanically on, and, reaching
the summit, cast himself down and gazed upon the prospect.
Below him lay a succession of valleys
opening into each other like gentle lakes, until they
were lost to the southward. Westerly the distant
range hid the bosky canada which sheltered the
mission of San Pablo. In the farther distance
the Pacific Ocean stretched away, bearing a cloud
of fog upon its bosom, which crept through the entrance
of the bay, and rolled thickly between him and the
northeastward; the same fog hid the base of mountain
and the view beyond. Still, from time to time
the fleecy veil parted, and timidly disclosed charming
glimpses of mighty rivers, mountain defiles, and rolling
plains, sear with ripened oats, and bathed in the
glow of the setting sun. As Father Jose gazed,
he was penetrated with a pious longing. Already
his imagination, filled with enthusiastic conceptions,
beheld all that vast expanse gathered under the mild
sway of the Holy Faith, and peopled with zealous converts.
Each little knoll in fancy became crowned with a chapel;
from each dark canyon gleamed the white walls of a
mission building. Growing bolder in his enthusiasm,
and looking farther into futurity, he beheld a new
Spain rising on these savage shores. He already
saw the spires of stately cathedrals, the domes of
palaces, vineyards, gardens, and groves. Convents,
half hid among the hills, peeping from plantations
of branching limes; and long processions of chanting
nuns wound through the defiles. So completely
was the good Father’s conception of the future
confounded with the past, that even in their choral
strain the well-remembered accents of Carmen struck
his ear. He was busied in these fanciful imaginings,
when suddenly over that extended prospect the faint,
distant tolling of a bell rang sadly out and died.
It was the Angelus. Father Jose listened with
superstitious exaltation. The mission of San
Pablo was far away, and the sound must have been some
miraculous omen. But never before, to his enthusiastic
sense, did the sweet seriousness of this angelic symbol
come with such strange significance. With the
last faint peal, his glowing fancy seemed to cool;
the fog closed in below him, and the good Father remembered
he had not had his supper. He had risen and was
wrapping his serapa around him, when he perceived
for the first time that he was not alone.
Nearly opposite, and where should
have been the faithless Ignacio, a grave and decorous
figure was seated. His appearance was that of
an elderly hidalgo, dressed in mourning, with mustaches
of iron-gray carefully waxed and twisted around a
pair of lantern-jaws. The monstrous hat and prodigious
feather, the enormous ruff and exaggerated trunk-hose,
contrasted with a frame shrivelled and wizened, all
belonged to a century previous. Yet Father Jose
was not astonished. His adventurous life and
poetic imagination, continually on the lookout for
the marvellous, gave him a certain advantage over the
practical and material minded. He instantly detected
the diabolical quality of his visitant, and was prepared.
With equal coolness and courtesy he met the cavalier’s
obeisance.
“I ask your pardon, Sir Priest,”
said the stranger, “for disturbing your meditations.
Pleasant they must have been, and right fanciful, I
imagine, when occasioned by so fair a prospect.”
“Worldly, perhaps, Sir Devil, for
such I take you to be,” said the Holy Father,
as the stranger bowed his black plumes to the ground;
“worldly, perhaps; for it hath pleased Heaven
to retain even in our regenerated state much that
pertaineth to the flesh, yet still, I trust, not without
some speculation for the welfare of the Holy Church.
In dwelling upon yon fair expanse, mine eyes have
been graciously opened with prophetic inspiration,
and the promise of the heathen as an inheritance hath
marvellously recurred to me. For there can be
none lack such diligence in the True Faith, but may
see that even the conversion of these pitiful salvages
hath a meaning. As the blessed St. Ignatius discreetly
observes,” continued Father Jose, clearing his
throat and slightly elevating his voice, “’the
heathen is given to the warriors of Christ, even as
the pearls of rare discovery which gladden the hearts
of shipmen.’ Nay, I might say ”
But here the stranger, who had been
wrinkling his brows and twisting his mustaches with
well-bred patience, took advantage of an oratorical
pause:
“It grieves me, Sir Priest,
to interrupt the current of your eloquence as discourteously
as I have already broken your meditations; but the
day already waneth to night. I have a matter
of serious import to make with you, could I entreat
your cautious consideration a few moments.”
Father Jose hesitated. The temptation
was great, and the prospect of acquiring some knowledge
of the Great Enemy’s plans not the least trifling
object. And if the truth must be told, there was
a certain decorum about the stranger that interested
the Padre. Though well aware of the Protean shapes
the Arch-Fiend could assume, and though free from
the weaknesses of the flesh, Father Jose was not above
the temptations of the spirit. Had the Devil
appeared, as in the case of the pious St. Anthony,
in the likeness of a comely damsel, the good Father,
with his certain experience of the deceitful sex,
would have whisked her away in the saying of a paternoster.
But there was, added to the security of age, a grave
sadness about the stranger, a thoughtful
consciousness as of being at a great moral disadvantage, which
at once decided him on a magnanimous course of conduct.
The stranger then proceeded to inform
him, that he had been diligently observing the Holy
Father’s triumphs in the valley. That, far
from being greatly exercised thereat, he had been
only grieved to see so enthusiastic and chivalrous
an antagonist wasting his zeal in a hopeless work.
For, he observed, the issue of the great battle of
Good and Evil had been otherwise settled, as he would
presently show him. “It wants but a few
moments of night,” he continued, “and over
this interval of twilight, as you know, I have been
given complete control. Look to the West.”
As the Padre turned, the stranger
took his enormous hat from his head, and waved it
three times before him. At each sweep of the prodigious
feather, the fog grew thinner, until it melted impalpably
away, and the former landscape returned, yet warm
with the glowing sun. As Father Jose gazed, a
strain of martial music arose from the valley, and
issuing from a deep canyon, the good Father beheld
a long cavalcade of gallant cavaliers, habited like
his companion. As they swept down the plain,
they were joined by like processions, that slowly defiled
from every ravine and canyon of the mysterious mountain.
From time to time the peal of a trumpet swelled fitfully
upon the breeze; the cross of Santiago glittered,
and the royal banners of Castile and Aragon waved over
the moving column. So they moved on solemnly
toward the sea, where, in the distance, Father Jose
saw stately caravels, bearing the same familiar banner,
awaiting them. The good Padre gazed with conflicting
emotions, and the serious voice of the stranger broke
the silence.
“Thou hast beheld, Sir Priest,
the fading footprints of adventurous Castile.
Thou hast seen the declining glory of old Spain, declining
as yonder brilliant sun. The sceptre she hath
wrested from the heathen is fast dropping from her
decrepit and fleshless grasp. The children she
hath fostered shall know her no longer. The soil
she hath acquired shall be lost to her as irrevocably
as she herself hath thrust the Moor from her own Granada.”
The stranger paused, and his voice
seemed broken by emotion; at the same time, Father
Jose, whose sympathizing heart yearned toward the departing
banners, cried in poignant accents,
“Farewell, ye gallant cavaliers
and Christian soldiers! Farewell, thou, Nunes
de Balboa! thou, Alonzo de Ojeda! and thou, most venerable
Las Casas! Farewell, and may Heaven prosper still
the seed ye left behind!”
Then turning to the stranger, Father
Jose beheld him gravely draw his pocket-handkerchief
from the basket-hilt of his rapier, and apply it decorously
to his eyes.
“Pardon this weakness, Sir Priest,”
said the cavalier, apologetically; “but these
worthy gentlemen were ancient friends of mine, and
have done me many a delicate service, much
more, perchance, than these poor sables may signify,”
he added, with a grim gesture toward the mourning
suit he wore.
Father Jose was too much preoccupied
in reflection to notice the equivocal nature of this
tribute, and, after a few moments’ silence,
said, as if continuing his thought,
“But the seed they have planted
shall thrive and prosper on this fruitful soil.”
As if answering the interrogatory,
the stranger turned to the opposite direction, and,
again waving his hat, said, in the same serious tone,
“Look to the East!”
The Father turned, and, as the fog
broke away before the waving plume, he saw that the
sun was rising. Issuing with its bright beams
through the passes of the snowy mountains beyond,
appeared a strange and motley crew. Instead of
the dark and romantic visages of his last phantom
train, the Father beheld with strange concern the blue
eyes and flaxen hair of a Saxon race. In place
of martial airs and musical utterance, there rose
upon the ear a strange din of harsh gutturals and singular
sibilation. Instead of the decorous tread and
stately mien of the cavaliers of the former vision,
they came pushing, bustling, panting, and swaggering.
And as they passed, the good Father noticed that giant
trees were prostrated as with the breath of a tornado,
and the bowels of the earth were torn and rent as
with a convulsion. And Father Jose looked in
vain for holy cross or Christian symbol; there was
but one that seemed an ensign, and he crossed himself
with holy horror as he perceived it bore the effigy
of a bear.
“Who are these swaggering Ishmaelites?”
he asked, with something of asperity in his tone.
The stranger was gravely silent.
“What do they here, with neither
cross nor holy symbol?” he again demanded.
“Have you the courage to see,
Sir Priest?” responded the stranger, quietly.
Father Jose felt his crucifix, as
a lonely traveller might his rapier, and assented.
“Step under the shadow of my plume,” said
the stranger.
Father Jose stepped beside him, and
they instantly sank through the earth.
When he opened his eyes, which had
remained closed in prayerful meditation during his
rapid descent, he found himself in a vast vault, bespangled
overhead with luminous points like the starred firmament.
It was also lighted by a yellow glow that seemed to
proceed from a mighty sea or lake that occupied the
centre of the chamber. Around this subterranean
sea dusky figures flitted, bearing ladles filled with
the yellow fluid, which they had replenished from
its depths. From this lake diverging streams
of the same mysterious flood penetrated like mighty
rivers the cavernous distance. As they walked
by the banks of this glittering Styx, Father Jose
perceived how the liquid stream at certain places
became solid. The ground was strewn with glittering
flakes. One of these the Padre picked up and
curiously examined. It was virgin gold.
An expression of discomfiture overcast
the good Father’s face at this discovery; but
there was trace neither of malice nor satisfaction
in the stranger’s air, which was still of serious
and fateful contemplation. When Father Jose recovered
his equanimity, he said, bitterly,
“This, then, Sir Devil, is your
work! This is your deceitful lure for the weak
souls of sinful nations! So would you replace
the Christian grace of holy Spain!”
“This is what must be,”
returned the stranger, gloomily. “But listen,
Sir Priest. It lies with you to avert the issue
for a time. Leave me here in peace. Go back
to Castile, and take with you your bells, your images,
and your missions. Continue here, and you only
precipitate results. Stay! promise me you will
do this, and you shall not lack that which will render
your old age an ornament and a blessing;” and
the stranger motioned significantly to the lake.
It was here, the legend discreetly
relates, that the Devil showed as he always
shows sooner or later his cloven hoof.
The worthy Padre, sorely perplexed by his threefold
vision, and, if the truth must be told, a little nettled
at this wresting away of the glory of holy Spanish
discovery, had shown some hesitation. But the
unlucky bribe of the Enemy of Souls touched his Castilian
spirit. Starting back in deep disgust, he brandished
his crucifix in the face of the unmasked Fiend, and
in a voice that made the dusky vault resound, cried,
“Avaunt thee, Sathanas!
Diabolus, I defy thee! What! wouldst thou
bribe me, me, a brother of the Sacred Society
of the Holy Jesus, Licentiate of Cordova and Inquisitor
of Guadalaxara? Thinkest thou to buy me with
thy sordid treasure? Avaunt!”
What might have been the issue of
this rupture, and how complete might have been the
triumph of the Holy Father over the Arch-Fiend, who
was recoiling aghast at these sacred titles and the
flourishing symbol, we can never know, for at that
moment the crucifix slipped through his fingers.
Scarcely had it touched the ground
before Devil and Holy Father simultaneously cast themselves
toward it. In the struggle they clinched, and
the pious Jose, who was as much the superior of his
antagonist in bodily as in spiritual strength, was
about to treat the Great Adversary to a back somersault,
when he suddenly felt the long nails of the stranger
piercing his flesh. A new fear seized his heart,
a numbing chillness crept through his body, and he
struggled to free himself, but in vain. A strange
roaring was in his ears; the lake and cavern danced
before his eyes and vanished; and with a loud cry he
sank senseless to the ground.
When he recovered his consciousness
he was aware of a gentle swaying motion of his body.
He opened his eyes, and saw it was high noon, and
that he was being carried in a litter through the valley.
He felt stiff, and, looking down, perceived that his
arm was tightly bandaged to his side.
He closed his eyes and after a few
words of thankful prayer, thought how miraculously
he had been preserved, and made a vow of candlesticks
to the blessed Saint Jose. He then called in
a faint voice, and presently the penitent Ignacio
stood beside him.
The joy the poor fellow felt at his
patron’s returning consciousness for some time
choked his utterance. He could only ejaculate,
“A miracle! Blessed Saint Jose, he lives!”
and kiss the Padre’s bandaged hand. Father
Jose, more intent on his last night’s experience,
waited for his emotion to subside, and asked where
he had been found.
“On the mountain, your Reverence,
but a few varas from where he attacked you.”
“How? you saw him
then?” asked the Padre, in unfeigned astonishment.
“Saw him, your Reverence!
Mother of God, I should think I did! And your
Reverence shall see him too, if he ever comes again
within range of Ignacio’s arquebuse.”
“What mean you, Ignacio?”
said the Padre, sitting bolt-upright in his litter.
“Why, the bear, your Reverence, the
bear, Holy Father, who attacked your worshipful person
while you were meditating on the top of yonder mountain.”
“Ah!” said the Holy Father,
lying down again. “Chut, child!
I would be at peace.”
When he reached the Mission, he was
tenderly cared for, and in a few weeks was enabled
to resume those duties from which, as will be seen,
not even the machinations of the Evil One could divert
him. The news of his physical disaster spread
over the country; and a letter to the Bishop of Guadalaxara
contained a confidential and detailed account of the
good Father’s spiritual temptation. But
in some way the story leaked out; and long after Jose
was gathered to his fathers, his mysterious encounter
formed the theme of thrilling and whispered narrative.
The mountain was generally shunned. It is true
that Senor Joaquin Pedrillo afterward located a grant
near the base of the mountain; but as Senora Pedrillo
was known to be a termagant half-breed, the Senor was
not supposed to be over-fastidious.
Such is the Legend of Monte del
Diablo. As I said before, it may seem to
lack essential corroboration. The discrepancy
between the Father’s narrative and the actual
climax has given rise to some scepticism on the part
of ingenious quibblers. All such I would simply
refer to that part of the report of Senor Julio Serro,
Sub-Prefect of San Pablo, before whom attest of the
above was made. Touching this matter, the worthy
Prefect observes, “That although the body of
Father Jose doth show evidence of grievous conflict
in the flesh, yet that is no proof that the Enemy
of Souls, who could assume the figure of a decorous
elderly caballero, could not at the same time transform
himself into a bear for his own vile purposes.”