Toward the middle of Lent the Society
of the Holy Gethsemane was visited by its ecclesiastical
Visitor. This was the Bishop of the diocese, a
liberal-minded man and not a very rigid ecclesiastic,
abrupt, brusque, businesslike, and a good administrator.
When the brothers had gathered in the community room,
he took from the Superior the leathern-bound volume
containing the rule of the Brotherhood and read aloud
the text of it.
“And now, gentlemen,”
he said, “whether I approve of your rule or not
is a matter with which we have no concern at present.
My sole duty is to see that it is lawfully administered.
Are you satisfied with the administration of it and
willing to remain under its control?”
There was only one response from the
brothersthey were entirely satisfied.
The Bishop rose with a smile and bowed
to the brothers, and they began to leave the room.
“There are two of my people
whom you have not yet seen,” said the Father.
“Where are they?”
“In their cells.”
“Why in their cells?”
“One of them is ill; the other
is under the rule of silence and solitude.”
“Let us visit them,” said
the Bishop, and they began to ascend the stairs.
“I may not agree with your theory
of the religious life, Father, but when I see your
people giving up the world and its comforts, its joys
and possessions, its ties of blood and affection ”
They had reached the topmost story,
and the Father had paused to recover breath.
“This cell to the right,” said he, “is
occupied by a lay brother who was tempted by the Evil
One to a grievous act of disobedience, and the wrath
of God has fallen on him. But Satan has overreached
himself for once, and by that very act grace has triumphed.
Not a member of our community rejoices more in the
blessed sacrament, and when I place the body of our
Lord ”
“May we go in to him?”
“Certainly; he is dying of lung
disease, but you shall see with what patience he possesses
his soul.”
Brother Paul was sitting before a
small fire in an arm-chair padded with pillows, holding
in his dried-up hands a heavy crucifix which was suspended
from his heck.
“How lightsome and cosy we are
up here!” said the Bishop. “A long
way up, certainly, but no doubt you get everything
you require.”
“Everything,” said Paul.
“I dare say the brothers are
very good to youthey usually are so to
the weak and ailing in a monastery.”
“Too good, my lord.”
“Of course you see a doctor occasionally?”
“Three times a week, and if
he would only let me escape from an evil and troublesome
world ”
“Hush! It’s not right
to talk like that, my son. Whatever happens, it
is our duty to live, you know.”
“I’ve lost all there was to live for,
and besides ”
“Then there is nothing you wish for?”
said the Bishop.
“Nothing but death,” said
Paul, and lifting the crucifix he carried it to his
lips.
“Thank God we are born to die!”
said the Bishop, and they stepped back to the corridor
and closed the door.
“This next cell,” said
the Father, “is occupied by such a one as you
were thinking ofone who was born to possess
the world and to achieve its sounding triumphs, but ”
“Has he given it up entirely?”
“Entirely.”
“Is he young?”
“Quite young, and he has left
the world, not as Augustine did, after learning by
bitter experience the deceitfulness of sin ”
“Then why is he here?”
“He can not trust himself yet.
He feels the inward strivings and struggles of our
rebellious nature and ”
“Then his solitude and silence are voluntary?”
“Now they are. See,”
said the Father, and stooping to the floor he picked
up a key that lay at his feet.
“What does that mean?”
“He locks himself in and pushes the key under
the door.”
When they entered the cell John Storm
was standing by the window in a stream of morning
sunlight, looking out on the world below with fixed
and yearning eyes.
“This is our Visitor,”
said the Father. “The rule of silence is
relaxed in his case.”
“Have I not seen you before?” said the
Bishop.
“I think not, Father,” said John.
“What is your name, and where did you live before
you came here?”
John told him.
“Then I have both seen and heard
you. But I perceive that the world has gone on
a little since you left ityour canon is
an archdeacon now, and one of the chaplains to the
Queen as well. How long have you been in the
Brotherhood?”
“Since the 14th of August.”
“And how long have you kept your cell?”
“Since the octave of Epiphany.”
“But this is Lentrather a long penance,
Father.”
“I have often urged our dear brother ”
began the Father.
“You carry your fastings and
prayers too far, Mr. Storm,” said the Bishop.
He was picking up one by one some black-letter books
that were lying on the table and on the bed.
“I know that divines in all ages tell us that
the body is evil, and that its desires and appetites
must be eradicated. But they also teach us that
the perfect Christian character is the blending of
the two lives, the life of Nature and the life of
grace. Don’t despise your humanity, my son.
Your Master did not despise it. He came down
from heaven that he might live and work among the sinful
brotherhood of man. And don’t pray for death,
or fast as if you wished for it. You would have
no right to do that even if you were like your poor
neighbour next door, whom Death smiles on and beckons
to repose. But you are young and you are strong.
Who knows what good work your heavenly Father keeps
waiting for you yet?”
John had returned to the window and was looking out
with vacant eyes.
“But all this is beside my present
business,” said the Bishop. “There
is nothing you wish to complain of?”
“Nothing whatever.”
“You are content to live in
this house, under the laws and statutes of this society
and in voluntary obedience to its Superior?”
“Yes.”
“That is enough.”
The Bishop was leaving the cell, when
his eye was arrested by some writing in pencil on
the wall. It ran, “9th of NovemberLord
Mayor’s Day”; and under it were short
lines such as a prisoner makes when he keeps a reckoning.
“What is the meaning of this date?” said
the Bishop.
John was silent, but the Father answered
with a smile: “That is the date of his
vow, my lord. It is part of the discipline of
his life of grace to keep count of the days of his
novitiate, so eager is he for the time when he may
dedicate his whole life to God.”
Back at the head of the stairs the Father paused again
and said,
“Listen!”
There was the sound as of a trembling
hand turning the key in the lock of the door they
had shut behind them, and at the next moment the key
itself came out of the aperture under it.
When the door closed on the Bishop
and John Storm was alone in his cell, one idea was
left with himthe idea of work. He
had tried everything else, and everything had failed.
He had tried solitude. On asking
to be shut up in a cell, he had said to himself:
“The thought of Glory is a temptation of my unquickened
and unspiritual nature. It has already betrayed
me into an act of cowardice and inhumanity, and it
will drive me out into the world and fling me back
again, as it drove out and flung back Brother Paul.”
But the result of his solitude was specious and deceitful.
As pictures seem to float before the eyes after the
eyelids are closed, so his past life, now that it was
over, seemed to rise up before him with awful distinctness.
Sitting alone in his cell, every event of his life
with Glory passed before him in review, and harassed
him with pitiless condemnation. Why had he failed
to realize the essential difference of temperament
between himself and that joyous creature? Why
had he hesitated to gratify her natural and innocent
love of mere life? Why had he done this?
Why had he not done that? If Glory were lost,
if the wicked and merciless world had betrayed her,
the fault was his, and God would surely punish him.
Thus did solitude enervate his soul by frightening
it, and the temptation he had hoped to vanquish became
the more strong and tyrannical.
He had tried reading. The Fathers
told him that God allowed ascetics to keep the keys
of their nature in their own hands; that they had only
to think of woman as more bitter than death, and of
her beauty as a cause of perdition, and that if any
woman’s face tormented them they were to picture
it to the eye of the mind as old and wrinkled, defaced
by disease, and even the prey of the worm. He
tried to think of Glory as the Fathers directed, but
when darkness fell and he lay on his bed, with the
first dream of the night the strong powers of Nature
that had no mind to surrender swept down the pitiful
bulwarks of religion, and Glory was smiling upon him
in her youth, her beauty, her sweetness, her humour,
and all the grace of her countless gifts.
He had tried fasting. Three times
a day Brother Andrew brought him his food, and twice
a day, when the lay brother had left him, he opened
the window and spread the food on the sill for the
birds to take. But the results of his fasting
were the reverse of his expectations. At one
moment he was uplifted by strong emotions, at the next
moment he was in collapse. Visions began to pass
before him. His father’s face tormented
him constantly, and sometimes he was conscious of the
face of his mother, though he had never known her.
But above all and through all there came the face
of Glory. Fasting had only extended his dreams
about her. He was dreaming both by day and by
night now, and Glory was with him always.
He had tried prayer. Hitherto
he had said his Offices regularly, but now he would
say special prayers as well. To get the victory
over his lawless and rebellious nature he would turn
his eyes to the mother of the Lord. But when
he tried to fix his mind on Mary there was nothing
to answer to it. All was shadowy and impalpable.
There was only a vague, empty cloud before his eyes,
until suddenly a luminous face glided into the vacant
place, and it was full of tenderness, of sweetness,
of charm, of pity and womanly lovebut
it was the face of Glory.
Despair laid hold of him. His
attempts to overcome Nature were clearly rejected
by the Almighty. Winter passed with its foggy
days. The Father wished him to return to the
ordinary life of the community, yet he begged to be
allowed to remain.
But the spring came and diffused its
joy throughout all Nature. He listened to the
leaves, he watched the birds threading their way in
the clear air, he caught glimpses of the yellow flowers,
and strained his eyes for the green country beyond.
The young birds began to take wing, and one little
sparrow came hopping into his room as often as he opened
his window in the morning and played about his feet
like a mouse, and then was gone to the mother bird
that called to it from the tree.
Little by little hope grew to impatience,
and impatience rose to fever heat; but he remembered
his vow, and, to put himself out of temptation, he
locked the door of his cell and pushed the key through
the aperture under it. But he could not lock
the door of his soul, and his old trouble came up
again with the throb of a stronger and fresher life.
Every morning when he awoke he thought of Glory.
Where was she now? What had become of her by
this time? He wrote on the wall the date of her
disappearance from the hospital“9th
of November; Lord Mayor’s Day”and
tried to keep pace in his mind with the chances of
her fate. “I am guilty of a folly,”
he thought. The pride of his reason revolted
against what he was doing. Nevertheless, he knew
full well it would be the same to-morrow, and the
next day, and the next year, for his human passions
would not yield, and his vow still clutched him as
with fangs.
He was standing one morning by the
window looking through an opening between high buildings
to the river, with its hay barges gliding down the
glistening water-way, and its little steamers with
their spirals of smoke ascending, when everything
in the world began in a moment to bear another moral
interpretation. The lesson of life was work.
Man could not exist without it. If he departed
from that condition, no matter how much he fasted
and meditated and prayed, he was useless and miserable
and depraved.
Then the lock turned in the door of
his cell and the Father and the Bishop entered.
When they were gone he felt suffocated by their praises
of his piety, and asked himself, “What am I doing
here?” He was a hypocrite. Ten thousand
other men whom the Church called saints had been hypocrites
before him, and as they paced their cloisters they
had asked themselves the same question. But the
mighty hand of the Church was over him still, and
with trembling fingers he turned the key again and
pushed it under the door. Then he knew that he
was a coward also, and that religion had deprived
him of his will, of his manhood, and enervated his
soul itself.
Brother Paul was moving about in the
adjoining cell. The lay brother had become very
weak; his step was slow, his feet dragged along the
floor; his breath was audible and sometimes his cough
was long and raucous. John had heard these sounds
every day and had tried not to listen, but now he
strained his ears to hear. A new thought had come
to him: he would ask to be allowed to nurse Brother
Paul; that should be his work, for work alone could
save him.
Next morning he leaped up from sleep
at the first syllable of “Benedicamus Domino,”
and cried, “Father!” But when the door
opened in answer to his call it was the Father Minister
who entered. The Superior had gone to give a
Retreat to a sisterhood in York, and would be absent
until the end of Lent. John looked at the hard
face of the deputy, the very mirror of its closed
and frozen soul, and he could say nothing.
“Is it anything that I can do
for you?” said the Father Minister.
“Nothat is to sayno,
no,” said John.
When he opened his window that day
he could hear the Lenten services in the church.
The prayers, the responses, the psalms, and the hymns
woke to fresh life the memory of things long past,
and for the first time he became oppressed with a
great loneliness. The near neighbourhood of Brother
Paul intensified that loneliness, and at length he
asked for an indulgence and spoke to the Father Minister
again.
“Brother Paul is ill; let me attend to him,”
he said.
The Father Minister shook his head.
“The brother gets all he wants. He does
not wish for constant attendance.”
“But he is a dying man, and
somebody should be with him always.”
“The doctor says nothing can
be done for him. He may live months. But
if he is dying, let us leave him to meditate on the
happiness and glory of another world.”
John made no further struggle.
Another door had closed on him. But it was not
necessary to go to Brother Paul that he might be with
him always. The spiritual eye could see everything.
Listening to the sounds in the adjoining cell, it
was the same at length as if the wall between them
had fallen down and the two rooms were one. Whatever
Brother Paul did John seemed to see, whatever he said
in his hours of pain John seemed to hear, and when
he lifted his scuttle of coal from the place at the
door where the lay brother left it, John’s hand
seemed to bear up the weight.
It was a poor, pathetic folly, but
it brought the comfort of company, and John thought
with a pang of the time when he had wished to be separated
from Paul, and had all but asked for a cell elsewhere.
Paul had a fire, and John could hear him build and
light and stir it; and sometimes when this was done
he could sit down himself before his own empty grate
on his own side of the wall and fancy they were good
comrades sitting side by side.
As the day passed he thought that
Brother Paul on his part also was touched by the same
sense of company. His silence at certain moments,
his half-articulate salutations, his repetition of
the sounds that John himself made, seemed to be the
dumb expression of a sense that, in spite of the wall
that divided them, and the rule of silence and solitude
that separated them on John’s side, they were,
nevertheless, together.
Brother Paul’s cough grew rapidly
worse, and at last it burst into a fit so long and
violent as to seem as if it would never end. John
held his breath and listened. “He’ll
suffocate,” he thought; “he’ll never
live through it!” But the spasm passed, and
there was a prolonged hush, a dead stillness, that
was not broken by so much as the sound of a breath.
Was he gone? By a sudden impulse, in the agony
of his suspense, John stretched out his hand and knocked
three times on the wall.
There was a short silence, and then
faintly, slowly, and irregularly three other knocks
came back to him.
Paul had understood, and John shouted
in his joy. But even on top of his relief came
his religious fears. Had he broken the rule of
silence? Were they guilty of a sin?
Nevertheless, for many days thereafter,
though they knew it was a fault, in this vague and
dumb and feeble fashion they communicated constantly.
On going to bed they rapped “Good-night”:
on rising for the day they rapped “Good-morning.”
They rapped when the bell rang for midday service,
and again when the singing came up through the courtyard.
And sometimes they rapped from sympathy and sometimes
from pity, and sometimes from mere human loneliness
and the love of company.
Thus did these exiles from life, struggling
to live under the eye of God in obedience to their
earthly vow, try to cheer their crushed and fettered
souls, and to comfort each other like imprisoned children.