Next day in the novitiate Mother Hilda
explained to Evelyn how the centre of their life was
the perpetual adoration of the Blessed Sacrament exposed
on the altar.
“Our life is a life of expiation;
we expiate by our prayers and our penances and our
acts of adoration the many insults which are daily
flung at our divine Lord by those who not only disobey
His commandments, but deny His very presence on our
altars. To our prayers of expiation we add prayers
of intercession; we pray for the many people in this
country outside the faith who offend our Lord Jesus
Christ more from ignorance than from malice. All
our little acts of mortification are offered with
this intention. From morning Mass until Benediction
our chapel, as you know, is never left empty for a
single instant of the day; two silent watchers kneel
before the Blessed Sacrament, offering themselves
in expiation of the sins of others. This watch
before the Blessed Sacrament is the chief duty laid
upon the members of our community. Nothing is
ever allowed to interfere with it. Unfailing
punctuality is asked from every one in being in the
chapel at the moment her watch begins, and no excuse
is accepted from those who fail in this respect.
Our idea is that all through the day a ceaseless stream
of supplication should mount to heaven, that not for
a single instant should there be a break in the work
of prayer. If our numbers permitted it we should
have Perpetual Adoration by day and night, as in the
mother house in France; but here the bishop only allows
us to have exposition once a month throughout the
night, and all our Sisters look forward to this as
their greatest privilege.”
“It is a very beautiful life,
Mother Hilda; but I wonder if I have a vocation?”
“That is the great question,
my dear,” and a cloud gathered in Mother Hilda’s
face, for it had come into her mind to tell Evelyn
that she hardly knew anything of the religious life
as yet; but remembering her promise to the Prioress,
she said: “Obedience is the beginning of
the religious life, and you must try to think that
you are a child in school, with nothing to teach and
everything to learn. The experience of your past
life, which you may think entitles you to consideration ”
“But, dear Mother, I think nothing
of the kind; my whole concern is to try to forget
my past life. Ah, if I could only ”
Mother Hilda wondered what it must be to bring that
look of fear into Evelyn’s eyes, but she refrained
from questioning her, saying:
“I beg of you to put all the
teachings of the world as far from your mind as possible.
It will only confuse you. What we think wise the
world thinks foolish, and the wisdom of the world is
to us a vanity.”
“If it were only a vanity,”
Evelyn answered. And her thoughts moved away
from the Mother Mistress to herself, wondering how
it was that this conventual life was so sympathetic
to her, finding a reason in the fact that her idea
had alienated her from the world; she had come here
in quest of herself, and had found something, not exactly
herself, perhaps, but at all events a refuge from one
side of herself, and many other things a
group of women who thought as she did. But would
the convent always be as necessary to her as it was
to-day? And what a grief it would be to the nuns
when the term of her noviceship ended. Would
she find courage to tell them that she did not wish
to take final vows? But she must listen to Mother
Hilda who was instructing her in the virtue of obedience.
After obedience came the rule of silence.
“But I don’t know how
the work in the garden will be done if one isn’t
allowed to speak.”
“The work in the garden must
wait until your retreat is over. Now go, my dear;
I am waiting for Sisters Winifred and Veronica, who
are coming to me for their Latin lesson.”
“May I go into the garden?”
It amused Evelyn to ask the question,
so strange did it seem that she should ask, like a
little child, permission to go into the garden; and
as she went along the passages she began to fear that
the old Evelyn was on her way back, the woman who
had disappeared for so many months. Be that as
it may, she was not altogether Sister Teresa on the
day of her clothing, though she tried to imitate the
infantile glee of the novices, and of the nuns too;
for they were nearly as childish as the novices.
In spite of herself she wearied of the babble and
the laughter over orange-blossoms and wedding-cake,
especially of Sister Jerome’s babble. She
was particularly noisy that afternoon; her unceasing
humour had begun to jar, and Evelyn had begun to feel
that she must get away from it all, and she asked leave
to go into the garden.
Ah, the deep breath she drew!
How refreshing it was after the long time spent in
church in the smell of burning wax and incense.
“The incense of the earth is sweeter,”
she said; and the sound of the wind in the boughs
reminded her of the voice of the priest intoning the
“Veni Creator.” “Nature
is more musical,” and her eyes strayed over
the great park to its rim miles away, indistinct, though
the sky was white as white linen above it, only here
and there a weaving of some faint cream tones amid
clouds rising very slowly; a delicious warmth fell
out of the noonday sky, enfolding the earth; and, discomforted
by her habit a voluminous trailing habit
with wide hanging sleeves she stood on
the edge of the terrace thinking that the stiff white
head-dress made her feel more like a nun than her vows.
“Of what am I thinking?”
she asked herself, for her thoughts seemed to go out
faintly, like the clouds; she seemed more conscious
of the spring-time than she had ever been before,
of a sense of delight going through her when, before
her eyes, the sun came out, lighting up the distant
inter-spaces and the stems of the trees close by.
The ash was coming into leaf, but among the green
tufts, every bough could still be traced. The
poplars looked like great brooms, but they were reddening,
and in another week or two would be dark green again.
The season being a little late, the lilacs and laburnums
were out together; pink and white blossoms had begun
to light up the close leafage of the hawthorns, and
under the flowering trees grass was springing up,
beautiful silky grass. “There is nothing
so beautiful in the world as grabs,” Evelyn
thought, “fair spring grass.” The
gardener was mowing it between the flower beds, and
it lay behind his hissing scythe along the lawn in
irregular lines.
“There is the first swallow,
just come in time to see the tulips, the tall May
tulips which the Dutchmen used to paint.”
So did Evelyn think, and her eyes
followed Sister Mary John’s jackdaw. He
seemed to know the hour of the day, and was looking
out for his mistress, who generally came out after
dinner with food for him, and speech the
bird seemed to like being spoken to, and always put
his head on one side so that he might listen more attentively.
A little further on Evelyn met three goslings straying
under the flowering laburnums, and she returned them
to their mother in the orchard. Something was
moving among the potato ridges, and wondering what
it could be, she discovered the cat playing with the
long-lost tortoise. How funny her great fluffy
tom-cat looked, as he sat in front of the tortoise,
tapping its black head whenever it appeared beyond
the shell. All cats are a beautiful shape, but
this one was a beautiful colour, “grey as a
cloud at even”; but to leave him playing with
the tortoise would be cruel to the tortoise, so she
decided to carry the cat to the other end of the garden,
where the sparrows were picking up the green peas.
The pear blossom had disappeared some
weeks ago, and now the apple was in bloom. Some
trees were later than others, and there were still
tight pink knots amid the brown boughs. Evelyn
sat down and closed her eyes, so that she might enjoy
more intensely the magic of this Maytime. Every
now and again a breeze shook the branches, shedding
white blossom over the bright grass, and faint shadows
rushed out and retreated The sun was swallowed up
in a sudden cloud. A dimness came and a chill,
but not for long enduring; the world was lit up, all
the lilac leaves were catching the light and dancing
in the breeze. “How living the world is,
no death anywhere.” Then her eyes turned
to the convent, for at that moment she caught sight
of one of the lay sisters coming towards her, evidently
the bearer of a message. Sister Agnes had come
to tell her that a lady had called to see her.
“The lady is in the parlour. Mother Hilda
is with her”
“But her name?”
Sister Agnes could not give Evelyn
her visitor’s name; but on the way to the parlour
they were met by the Prioress, who told Evelyn that
the lady who had come to see her was a French lady,
Mademoiselle Helbrun.
“Louise! Dear Mother, she
is an actress, one of the women I used to sing with.”
“Perhaps you had better not
see her, and you may count upon me not to offend her;
she will understand that on the day of your clothing ”
“No, no, dear Mother, I must see her.”
“Teresa, one never uses the
word ‘must’ to the Prioress, nor to any
one in the convent; and on the day of your clothing
it seems to me you might have remembered this first
rule of our life.”
“Of course I am very sorry,
Mother; but now that she has come I am afraid it would
agitate me more not to see her than to see her.
It was the surprise of hearing her name after such
a long while there is no reason I can think
of ”
“Teresa, it is for me to think,
it is for you to obey.”
“Well, Mother, if you will allow me.”
“Ah, that is better. Of
course she has come here to oppose your being here.
How will you answer her?”
“Louise is an old friend, and
knows me well, and will not argue with me, so it seems
to me; and if she should ask me why I’m here
and if I intend to remain, it will be easy for me
to answer her, “I am here because I am not safe
in the world.”
“But she’ll not understand.”
“Yes she will, Mother. Let me see her.”
“Perhaps you are fight, Teresa;
it will be better for you to see her. But it
is strange she should have come this afternoon.”
“Some intuition, some voice must have told her.”
“Teresa, those are fancies;
you mustn’t let your mind run on such things.”
They were at the door of the parlour.
Evelyn opened it for the Prioress, allowing her to
pass in first.
“Louise, how good of you to
come to see me. How did you find my address?
Did Merat give it to you?”
“No, but I have heard we
all know you are thinking of becoming a nun.”
“If you had been here a little
earlier,” the Prioress said, “you would
have been in time for Teresa’s clothing.”
And there was an appeal in the Prioress’s voice,
the appeal that one Catholic makes to another.
The Prioress, of course, assumed that Louise had been
brought up a Catholic, though very likely she did not
practise her religion; few actresses did. So
did the Prioress’s thoughts run as she leaned
forward; her voice became winning, and she led Louise
to ask her questions regarding the Order. And
she told Louise that it was a French Order originally,
wearying her with the story of the arrival of the
first nuns. “How can Evelyn stop here listening
to such nonsense?” she thought. And then
Mother Hilda told Louise about Evelyn’s singing
at Benediction, and the number of converts she had
won to the Church of Rome.
“As no doubt you know.
Mademoiselle Helbrun, once people are drawn into a
Catholic atmosphere ”
“Yes, I quite understand.
So you sing every day at Benediction, do you, Evelyn?
You are singing to-day? It will be strange to
hear you singing an ‘Ave Maria.’”
“But, Louise, if I sing an ‘O
Salutaris,’ will you sing Schubert’s ’Ave
Maria’?”
“No, you sing Schubert’s
‘Ave Maria’ and I will sing an ’O
Salutaris.’”
Evelyn turned to the Prioress.
“Of course, we shall be only
too glad if Mademoiselle Helbrun will sing for us.”
“The last time we saw each other,
Louise, was the day of your party in the Savoy Hotel.”
“Yes, didn’t we have fun
that day? We were like a lot of children.
But you went away early.”
“Yes, that day I went to Confession to Monsignor.”
“Was it that day? We noticed
something strange in you. You seemed to care
less for the stage, to have lost your vocation.”
“We hope she has begun to find
her vocation,” Mother Hilda answered.
“But that is just what I mean in
losing her vocation for the stage she has gained,
perhaps, her vocation for the religious life.”
“Vocation for the stage?”
“Yes, Mother Hilda,” the
Prioress said, turning to the Mistress of the Novices,
“the word vocation isn’t used in our limited
sense, but for anything for which a person may have
a special aptitude.”
“That day of your party dear
me, how long ago it seems, Louise! How much has
happened since then? You have sung how many operas?
In whose company are you now?” Before they were
aware of it the two singers had begun to chatter of
opera companies and operas. Ulick Dean was secretary
of the opera company with which Louise was travelling.
They were going to America in the autumn. The
conversation was taking too theatrical a turn, and
the Prioress judged it necessary to intervene.
And without anybody being able to detect the transition,
the talk was led from America to the Pope and the
Papal Choir.
“May we go into the garden,
dear Mother?” Evelyn said, interrupting.
Her interruption was a welcome one; the Prioress in
her anxiety to change the subject had forgotten Mr.
Innes’s death and Evelyn’s return to Rome.
She gave the required permission, and the four women
went out together.
“Do you think we shall be able to talk alone?”
“Yes, presently,” Evelyn
whispered. Soon after, in St. Peter’s Walk,
an opportunity occurred. The nuns had dropped
behind, and Evelyn led her friend through the hazels,
round by the fish-pond, where they would be able to
talk undisturbed. Evelyn took her friend’s
arm. “Dear Louise, how kind of you to come
to see me. I thought I was forgotten. But
how did you find me out?”
“Sir Owen Asher, whom I met
in London, told me I would probably get news of you
here.”
Evelyn did not answer.
“Aren’t you glad to see me?”
“Of course I am. Haven’t
I said so? Don’t you see I am? And
you have brought beautiful weather with you, Louise.
Was there ever a more beautiful day? White clouds
rising up in the blue sky like great ships, sail over
sail.”
“My dear Evelyn, I have not
come to talk to you about clouds, nor green trees,
though the birds are singing beautifully here, and
it would be pleasant to talk about them if we were
going to be alone the whole afternoon. But as
the nuns may come round the corner at any minute I
had better ask you at once if you are going to stop
here?”
“Is that what you have come to ask me?”
Evelyn got up, though they had only just sat down.
“Evelyn, dear, sit down.
You are not angry with me for asking you these questions?
What do you think I came here for?”
“You came here, then, as Reverend
Mother suspected, to try to persuade me away?
You would like to have me back on the stage?”
“Of course we should like to
have you back among us again. Owen Asher ”
“Louise, you mustn’t speak to me of my
past life.”
“Ulick ”
“Still less of him. You
have come here, sent by Owen Asher or by Ulick Dean which
is it?”
“My dear Evelyn, I came here
because we have always been friends and for old friendship’s
sake by nobody.”
These words seemed to reassure her,
and she sat down by her friend, saying that if Louise
only knew the trouble she had been through.
“But all that is forgotten...
if it can be forgotten. Do you know if our sins
are ever forgotten, Louise?”
“Sins, Evelyn? What sins?
The sin of liking one man a little better than another?”
“That is exactly it, Louise.
The sin and the shame are in just what you have said liking
one man better than another. But I wish, Louise,
you wouldn’t speak to me of these things, for
I’ll have to get up and go back to the convent.”
“Well, Evelyn, let us talk about
the white clouds going by, and how beautiful the wood
is when the sun is shining, flecking the ground with
spots of light; birds are singing in the branches,
and that thrush! I have never heard a better
one.” Louise walked a little way.
Returning to Evelyn quickly, she said, “There
are all kinds of birds here linnets, robins,
yes, and a blackbird. A fine contralto!”
“But why, Louise, do you begin
to talk about clouds and birds?”
“Well, dear, because you won’t
talk about our friends.”
“Or is it because you think
I must be mad to stay here and to wear this dress?
You are quite wrong if you think such a thing, for
it was to save myself from going mad that I came here.”
“My dear Evelyn, what could
have put such ideas into your head?”
“Louise, we mustn’t talk
of the past. I can see you are astonished at
this dress, yet you are a Catholic of a sort, but still
a Catholic. I was like you once, only a change
came. One day perhaps you will be like me.”
“You think I shall end in a convent, Evelyn?”
Evelyn did not answer, and; not knowing
exactly what to say next, Louise spoke of the convent
garden.
“You always used to be fond
of flowers. I suppose a great part of your time
is spent in gardening?”
An angry colour rose into Evelyn’s cheek.
“You don’t wish me,”
she said, “to talk about myself? You think
Never mind, I don’t care what you think about
me.”
Louise assured her that she was mistaken;
and in the middle of a long discourse Evelyn’s
thoughts seemed suddenly to break away, and she spoke
to Louise of the greenhouse which she had made that
winter, asking her if she would like to come to see
it with her.
“A great deal of it was built
with my own hands, Sister Mary John and I. You don’t
know her yet; she is our organist, and an excellent
one.”
At that moment Evelyn laid her hand
on Louise’s arm, and a light seemed to burst
into her face.
“Listen!” she said, “listen
to the bird! Don’t you hear him?”
“Hear what, dear?”
“The bird in the branches singing
the song that leads Siegfried to Brunnhilde.”
“A bird singing Wagner?”
“Well, what more natural than that a bird should
sing his own song?”
“But no bird ”
A look of wonder, mingled with fear, came into Louise’s
face.
“If you listen, Louise.”
In the silence of the wood Louise heard somebody whistling
Wagner’s music. “Don’t you hear
it?”
Louise did not answer at once.
Had she caught some of Evelyn’s madness... or
was she in an enchanted garden?
“It is a boy in the park, or one of the nuns.”
“Nuns don’t whistle, and
the common is hundreds of yards away. And no
boy on the common knows the bird music from ‘Siegfried’?
Listen, Louise, listen! There it goes, note for
note. Francis is singing well to-day.”
“Francis!”
“Look, look, you can see him! Now are you
convinced?”
And the wonder in Louise’s face
passed into a look of real fear, and she said:
“Let us go away.”
“But why won’t you listen
to Francis? None of my birds sings as he does.
Let me tell you, Louise ”
But Louise’s step hastened.
“Stop! Don’t you hear the Sword motive?
That is Aloysius.”
Louise stopped for a moment, and,
true enough, there was the Sword motive whistled from
the branches of a sycamore. And Louise began to
doubt her own sanity.
“You do hear him, I can see you do.”
“What does all this mean?”
Louise said to the Reverend Mother, drawing her aside.
“The birds, the birds, Mother Superior, the
birds!”
“What birds?”
“The birds singing the motives of ‘The
Ring.’”
“You mean Teresa’s bullfinches,
Mademoiselle Helbrun? Yes, they whistle very
well.”
“But they whistle the motives of ‘The
Ring!’”
“Ah! she taught them.”
“Is that all? I thought
she and I were mad. You’ll excuse me, Mother
Superior? May I ask her about them?”
“Of course, Mademoiselle Helbrun,
you can.” And Louise walked on in front
with Evelyn.
“Mother Superior tells me you
have taught bullfinches the motives of ‘The
Ring,’ is it true?”
“Of course. How could they
have learned the motives unless from me?”
“But why the motives of ’The Ring’?”
“Why not, Louise? Short little phrases,
just suited to a bird.”
“But, dear, you must have spent hours teaching
them.”
“It requires a great deal of
patience, but when there is a great whirl in one’s
head ”
Evelyn stopped speaking, and Louise
understood that she shrank from the confession that
to retain her sanity she had taught bullfinches to
whistle,
“So she is sane, saner than
any of us, for she has kept herself sane by an effort
of her own will,” Louise said to herself.
“Some birds learn much quicker
than others; they vary a great deal.”
“My dear Evelyn, it is ever
so nice of you. Just fancy teaching bullfinches
to sing the motives of ‘The Ring,’ It seemed
to me I was in an enchanted garden. But tell
me, why, when you had taught them, did you let them
fly away?”
“Well, you see, they can only
remember two tunes. If you teach them a third
they forget the first two, and it seemed a pity to
confuse them.”
“So when a bullfinch knows two
motives you let him go? Well, it is all very
simple now you have explained it. They find everything
they want in the garden. The bullfinch is a homely
little bird, almost as domestic as the robin; they
just stay here, isn’t that it?”
“Sometimes they go into the
park, but they come every morning to be fed.
On the whole, Francis is my best bird; but there is
another who in a way excels him Timothy.
I don’t know why we call him Timothy; it isn’t
a pretty name, but it seems suited to him because I
taught him ‘The Shepherd’s Pipe’;
and you know how difficult it is, dropping half a
note each time? Yet he knows it nearly all; sometimes
he will whistle it through without a mistake.
We could have got a great deal of money for him if
he had been sold, and Reverend Mother wanted me to
sell him, but I wouldn’t.”
And Evelyn led Louise away to a far corner.
“He is generally in this corner;
these are his trees.” And Evelyn began
to whistle.
“Does he answer you when you whistle?”
“No; scraping one’s feet
against the gravel, some little material noise, will
set him whistling.” And Evelyn scraped her
feet. “I’m afraid he isn’t
here to-day. But there is the bell for Benediction.
We must not keep the nuns waiting.” And
the singers hurried towards the convent, where they
met the Prioress and the Mistress of the Novices and
Sister Mary John.
“Dear me, how late you are,
Sister!” said Sister Mary John. “I
suppose you were listening to the bullfinches.
Aren’t they wonderful? But won’t
you introduce me to Mademoiselle Helbrun? It would
be delightful, mademoiselle, if you would only sing
for us.”
“I shall be very pleased indeed.”
“Well, we have only got two
or three minutes to decide what it is to be.
Will you come up to the organ loft?”
And that afternoon the Wimbledon laity
had the pleasure of hearing two prima donne at Benediction.