The swift December dusk had come tumbling
clownishly after its dull day and, as he stared through
the dull square of the window of the schoolroom, he
felt his belly crave for its food. He hoped there
would be stew for dinner, turnips and carrots and
bruised potatoes and fat mutton pieces to be ladled
out in thick peppered flour-fattened sauce. Stuff
it into you, his belly counselled him.
It would be a gloomy secret night.
After early nightfall the yellow lamps would light
up, here and there, the squalid quarter of the brothels.
He would follow a devious course up and down the streets,
circling always nearer and nearer in a tremor of fear
and joy, until his feet led him suddenly round a dark
corner. The whores would be just coming out of
their houses making ready for the night, yawning lazily
after their sleep and settling the hairpins in their
clusters of hair. He would pass by them calmly
waiting for a sudden movement of his own will or a
sudden call to his sin-loving soul from their soft
perfumed flesh. Yet as he prowled in quest of
that call, his senses, stultified only by his desire,
would note keenly all that wounded or shamed them;
his eyes, a ring of porter froth on a clothless table
or a photograph of two soldiers standing to attention
or a gaudy playbill; his ears, the drawling jargon
of greeting:
Hello, Bertie, any good in your mind?
Is that you, pigeon?
Number ten. Fresh Nelly is waiting
on you.
Good night, husband! Coming in to
have a short time?
The equation on the page of his scribbler
began to spread out a widening tail, eyed and starred
like a peacock’s; and, when the eyes and stars
of its indices had been eliminated, began slowly to
fold itself together again. The indices appearing
and disappearing were eyes opening and closing; the
eyes opening and closing were stars being born and
being quenched. The vast cycle of starry life
bore his weary mind outward to its verge and inward
to its centre, a distant music accompanying him outward
and inward. What music? The music came nearer
and he recalled the words, the words of Shelley’s
fragment upon the moon wandering companionless, pale
for weariness. The stars began to crumble and
a cloud of fine stardust fell through space.
The dull light fell more faintly upon
the page whereon another equation began to unfold
itself slowly and to spread abroad its widening tail.
It was his own soul going forth to experience, unfolding
itself sin by sin, spreading abroad the bale-fire
of its burning stars and folding back upon itself,
fading slowly, quenching its own lights and fires.
They were quenched: and the cold darkness filled
chaos.
A cold lucid indifference reigned
in his soul. At his first violent sin he had
felt a wave of vitality pass out of him and had feared
to find his body or his soul maimed by the excess.
Instead the vital wave had carried him on its bosom
out of himself and back again when it receded:
and no part of body or soul had been maimed but a dark
peace had been established between them. The
chaos in which his ardour extinguished itself was
a cold indifferent knowledge of himself. He had
sinned mortally not once but many times and he knew
that, while he stood in danger of eternal damnation
for the first sin alone, by every succeeding sin he
multiplied his guilt and his punishment. His days
and works and thoughts could make no atonement for
him, the fountains of sanctifying grace having ceased
to refresh his soul. At most, by an alms given
to a beggar whose blessing he fled from, he might hope
wearily to win for himself some measure of actual grace.
Devotion had gone by the board. What did it avail
to pray when he knew that his soul lusted after its
own destruction? A certain pride, a certain awe,
withheld him from offering to God even one prayer at
night, though he knew it was in God’s power
to take away his life while he slept and hurl his
soul hellward ere he could beg for mercy. His
pride in his own sin, his loveless awe of God, told
him that his offence was too grievous to be atoned
for in whole or in part by a false homage to the All-seeing
and All-knowing.
Well now, Ennis, I declare
you have a head and so has my stick! Do you mean
to say that you are not able to tell me what a surd
is?
The blundering answer stirred the
embers of his contempt of his fellows. Towards
others he felt neither shame nor fear. On Sunday
mornings as he passed the church door he glanced coldly
at the worshippers who stood bareheaded, four deep,
outside the church, morally present at the mass which
they could neither see nor hear. Their dull piety
and the sickly smell of the cheap hair-oil with which
they had anointed their heads repelled him from the
altar they prayed at. He stooped to the evil
of hypocrisy with others, sceptical of their innocence
which he could cajole so easily.
On the wall of his bedroom hung an
illuminated scroll, the certificate of his prefecture
in the college of the sodality of the Blessed Virgin
Mary. On Saturday mornings when the sodality met
in the chapel to recite the little office his place
was a cushioned kneeling-desk at the right of the
altar from which he led his wing of boys through the
responses. The falsehood of his position did not
pain him. If at moments he felt an impulse to
rise from his post of honour and, confessing before
them all his unworthiness, to leave the chapel, a
glance at their faces restrained him. The imagery
of the psalms of prophecy soothed his barren pride.
The glories of Mary held his soul captive: spikenard
and myrrh and frankincense, symbolizing her royal
lineage, her emblems, the late-flowering plant and
late-blossoming tree, symbolizing the age-long gradual
growth of her cultus among men. When it
fell to him to read the lesson towards the close of
the office he read it in a veiled voice, lulling his
conscience to its music.
Quasi cedrus EXALTATA sum
in Libanon et quasi cupressus
in Monte sion. Quasi Palma
EXALTATA sum in Gades et quasi
plantatio rosae in Jericho.
Quasi ULIVA speciosa in CAMPIS et
quasi platanus EXALTATA sum juxta
AQUAM in PLATEIS. Sicut cinnamomum
et balsamum AROMATIZANS ODOREM dedi
et quasi myrrha electa dedi
SUAVITATEM odoris.
His sin, which had covered him from
the sight of God, had led him nearer to the refuge
of sinners. Her eyes seemed to regard him with
mild pity; her holiness, a strange light glowing faintly
upon her frail flesh, did not humiliate the sinner
who approached her. If ever he was impelled to
cast sin from him and to repent the impulse that moved
him was the wish to be her knight. If ever his
soul, re-entering her dwelling shyly after the frenzy
of his body’s lust had spent itself, was turned
towards her whose emblem is the morning star, bright
and musical, telling of heaven
and infusing peace, it was when her
names were murmured softly by lips whereon there still
lingered foul and shameful words, the savour itself
of a lewd kiss.
That was strange. He tried to
think how it could be. But the dusk, deepening
in the schoolroom, covered over his thoughts.
The bell rang. The master marked the sums and
cuts to be done for the next lesson and went out.
Heron, beside Stephen, began to hum tunelessly.
My excellent friend BOMBADOS.
Ennis, who had gone to the yard, came back, saying:
The boy from the house is coming up for
the rector.
A tall boy behind Stephen rubbed his hands and said:
That’s game ball.
We can scut the whole hour. He won’t be
in till after half two. Then you can ask him
questions on the catechism, Dedalus.
Stephen, leaning back and drawing
idly on his scribbler, listened to the talk about
him which Heron checked from time to time by saying:
Shut up, will you. Don’t make
such a bally racket!
It was strange too that he found an
arid pleasure in following up to the end the rigid
lines of the doctrines of the church and penetrating
into obscure silences only to hear and feel the more
deeply his own condemnation. The sentence of
saint James which says that he who offends against
one commandment becomes guilty of all, had seemed to
him first a swollen phrase until he had begun to grope
in the darkness of his own state. From the evil
seed of lust all other deadly sins had sprung forth:
pride in himself and contempt of others, covetousness
in using money for the purchase of unlawful pleasures,
envy of those whose vices he could not reach to and
calumnious murmuring against the pious, gluttonous
enjoyment of food, the dull glowering anger amid which
he brooded upon his longing, the swamp of spiritual
and bodily sloth in which his whole being had sunk.
As he sat in his bench gazing calmly
at the rector’s shrewd harsh face, his mind
wound itself in and out of the curious questions proposed
to it. If a man had stolen a pound in his youth
and had used that pound to amass a huge fortune how
much was he obliged to give back, the pound he had
stolen only or the pound together with the compound
interest accruing upon it or all his huge fortune?
If a layman in giving baptism pour the water before
saying the words is the child baptized? Is baptism
with a mineral water valid? How comes it that
while the first beatitude promises the kingdom of
heaven to the poor of heart the second beatitude promises
also to the meek that they shall possess the land?
Why was the sacrament of the eucharist instituted under
the two species of bread and wine if Jesus Christ
be present body and blood, soul and divinity, in the
bread alone and in the wine alone? Does a tiny
particle of the consecrated bread contain all the body
and blood of Jesus Christ or a part only of the body
and blood? If the wine change into vinegar and
the host crumble into corruption after they have been
consecrated, is Jesus Christ still present under their
species as God and as man?
Here he is! Here he is!
A boy from his post at the window
had seen the rector come from the house. All
the catechisms were opened and all heads bent upon
them silently. The rector entered and took his
seat on the dais. A gentle kick from the tall
boy in the bench behind urged Stephen to ask a difficult
question.
The rector did not ask for a catechism
to hear the lesson from. He clasped his hands
on the desk and said:
The retreat will begin
on Wednesday afternoon in honour of saint Francis
Xavier whose feast day is Saturday. The retreat
will go on from Wednesday to Friday. On Friday
confession will be heard all the afternoon after beads.
If any boys have special confessors perhaps it will
be better for them not to change. Mass will be
on Saturday morning at nine o’clock and general
communion for the whole college. Saturday will
be a free day. But Saturday and Sunday being free
days some boys might be inclined to think that Monday
is a free day also. Beware of making that mistake.
I think you, Lawless, are likely to make that mistake.
I sir? Why, sir?
A little wave of quiet mirth broke
forth over the class of boys from the rector’s
grim smile. Stephen’s heart began slowly
to fold and fade with fear like a withering flower.
The rector went on gravely:
You are all familiar with
the story of the life of saint Francis Xavier, I suppose,
the patron of your college. He came of an old
and illustrious Spanish family and you remember that
he was one of the first followers of saint Ignatius.
They met in Paris where Francis Xavier was professor
of philosophy at the university. This young and
brilliant nobleman and man of letters entered heart
and soul into the ideas of our glorious founder and
you know that he, at his own desire, was sent by saint
Ignatius to preach to the Indians. He is called,
as you know, the apostle of the Indies. He went
from country to country in the east, from Africa to
India, from India to Japan, baptizing the people.
He is said to have baptized as many as ten thousand
idolaters in one month. It is said that his right
arm had grown powerless from having been raised so
often over the heads of those whom he baptized.
He wished then to go to China to win still more souls
for God but he died of fever on the island of Sancian.
A great saint, saint Francis Xavier! A great
soldier of God!
The rector paused and then, shaking
his clasped hands before him, went on:
He had the faith in him
that moves mountains. Ten thousand souls won
for God in a single month! That is a true conqueror,
true to the motto of our order: Ad MAJOREM
dei GLORIAM! A saint who has great power
in heaven, remember: power to intercede for us
in our grief; power to obtain whatever we pray for
if it be for the good of our souls; power above all
to obtain for us the grace to repent if we be in sin.
A great saint, saint Francis Xavier! A great
fisher of souls!
He ceased to shake his clasped hands
and, resting them against his forehead, looked right
and left of them keenly at his listeners out of his
dark stern eyes.
In the silence their dark fire kindled
the dusk into a tawny glow. Stephen’s heart
had withered up like a flower of the desert that feels
the simoom coming from afar.
Remember only
thy last things and thou shalt
not sin for ever words
taken, my dear little brothers in Christ, from the
book of Ecclesiastes, seventh chapter, fortieth verse.
In the name of the Father and of the Son and of the
Holy Ghost. Amen.
Stephen sat in the front bench of
the chapel. Father Arnall sat at a table to the
left of the altar. He wore about his shoulders
a heavy cloak; his pale face was drawn and his voice
broken with rheum. The figure of his old master,
so strangely re-arisen, brought back to Stephen’s
mind his life at Clongowes: the wide playgrounds,
swarming with boys; the square ditch; the little cemetery
off the main avenue of limes where he had dreamed
of being buried; the firelight on the wall of the
infirmary where he lay sick; the sorrowful face of
Brother Michael. His soul, as these memories
came back to him, became again a child’s soul.
We are assembled here
today, my dear little brothers in Christ, for one
brief moment far away from the busy bustle of the outer
world to celebrate and to honour one of the greatest
of saints, the apostle of the Indies, the patron saint
also of your college, saint Francis Xavier. Year
after year, for much longer than any of you, my dear
little boys, can remember or than I can remember, the
boys of this college have met in this very chapel
to make their annual retreat before the feast day
of their patron saint. Time has gone on and brought
with it its changes. Even in the last few years
what changes can most of you not remember? Many
of the boys who sat in those front benches a few years
ago are perhaps now in distant lands, in the burning
tropics, or immersed in professional duties or in seminaries,
or voyaging over the vast expanse of the deep or, it
may be, already called by the great God to another
life and to the rendering up of their stewardship.
And still as the years roll by, bringing with them
changes for good and bad, the memory of the great saint
is honoured by the boys of this college who make every
year their annual retreat on the days preceding the
feast day set apart by our Holy Mother the Church
to transmit to all the ages the name and fame of one
of the greatest sons of catholic Spain.
Now what is the meaning
of this word retreat and why is it allowed on
all hands to be a most salutary practice for all who
desire to lead before God and in the eyes of men a
truly christian life? A retreat, my dear boys,
signifies a withdrawal for awhile from the cares of
our life, the cares of this workaday world, in order
to examine the state of our conscience, to reflect
on the mysteries of holy religion and to understand
better why we are here in this world. During these
few days I intend to put before you some thoughts
concerning the four last things. They are, as
you know from your catechism, death, judgement, hell,
and heaven. We shall try to understand them fully
during these few days so that we may derive from the
understanding of them a lasting benefit to our souls.
And remember, my dear boys, that we have been sent
into this world for one thing and for one thing alone:
to do God’s holy will and to save our immortal
souls. All else is worthless. One thing
alone is needful, the salvation of one’s soul.
What doth it profit a man to gain the whole world
if he suffer the loss of his immortal soul? Ah,
my dear boys, believe me there is nothing in this
wretched world that can make up for such a loss.
I will ask you, therefore,
my dear boys, to put away from your minds during these
few days all worldly thoughts, whether of study or
pleasure or ambition, and to give all your attention
to the state of your souls. I need hardly remind
you that during the days of the retreat all boys are
expected to preserve a quiet and pious demeanour and
to shun all loud unseemly pleasure. The elder
boys, of course, will see that this custom is not
infringed and I look especially to the prefects and
officers of the sodality of Our Blessed Lady and of
the sodality of the holy angels to set a good example
to their fellow-students.
Let us try, therefore,
to make this retreat in honour of saint Francis with
our whole heart and our whole mind. God’s
blessing will then be upon all your year’s studies.
But, above and beyond all, let this retreat be one
to which you can look back in after years when maybe
you are far from this college and among very different
surroundings, to which you can look back with joy and
thankfulness and give thanks to God for having granted
you this occasion of laying the first foundation of
a pious honourable zealous christian life. And
if, as may so happen, there be at this moment in these
benches any poor soul who has had the unutterable
misfortune to lose God’s holy grace and to fall
into grievous sin, I fervently trust and pray that
this retreat may be the turning point in the life
of that soul. I pray to God through the merits
of His zealous servant Francis Xavier, that such a
soul may be led to sincere repentance and that the
holy communion on saint Francis’s day of this
year may be a lasting covenant between God and that
soul. For just and unjust, for saint and sinner
alike, may this retreat be a memorable one.
Help me, my dear little
brothers in Christ. Help me by your pious attention,
by your own devotion, by your outward demeanour.
Banish from your minds all worldly thoughts and think
only of the last things, death, judgement, hell, and
heaven. He who remembers these things, says Ecclesiastes,
shall not sin for ever. He who remembers the last
things will act and think with them always before
his eyes. He will live a good life and die a
good death, believing and knowing that, if he has
sacrificed much in this earthly life, it will be given
to him a hundredfold and a thousandfold more in the
life to come, in the kingdom without end a
blessing, my dear boys, which I wish you from my heart,
one and all, in the name of the Father and of the Son
and of the Holy Ghost. Amen!
As he walked home with silent companions,
a thick fog seemed to compass his mind. He waited
in stupor of mind till it should lift and reveal what
it had hidden. He ate his dinner with surly appetite
and when the meal was over and the grease-strewn plates
lay abandoned on the table, he rose and went to the
window, clearing the thick scum from his mouth with
his tongue and licking it from his lips. So he
had sunk to the state of a beast that licks his chaps
after meat. This was the end; and a faint glimmer
of fear began to pierce the fog of his mind. He
pressed his face against the pane of the window and
gazed out into the darkening street. Forms passed
this way and that through the dull light. And
that was life. The letters of the name of Dublin
lay heavily upon his mind, pushing one another surlily
hither and thither with slow boorish insistence.
His soul was fattening and congealing into a gross
grease, plunging ever deeper in its dull fear into
a sombre threatening dusk while the body that was
his stood, listless and dishonoured, gazing out of
darkened eyes, helpless, perturbed, and human for a
bovine god to stare upon.
The next day brought death and judgement,
stirring his soul slowly from its listless despair.
The faint glimmer of fear became a terror of spirit
as the hoarse voice of the preacher blew death into
his soul. He suffered its agony. He felt
the death chill touch the extremities and creep onward
towards the heart, the film of death veiling the eyes,
the bright centres of the brain extinguished one by
one like lamps, the last sweat oozing upon the skin,
the powerlessness of the dying limbs, the speech thickening
and wandering and failing, the heart throbbing faintly
and more faintly, all but vanquished, the breath, the
poor breath, the poor helpless human spirit, sobbing
and sighing, gurgling and rattling in the throat.
No help! No help! He he himself his
body to which he had yielded was dying. Into the
grave with it. Nail it down into a wooden box,
the corpse. Carry it out of the house on the
shoulders of hirelings. Thrust it out of men’s
sight into a long hole in the ground, into the grave,
to rot, to feed the mass of its creeping worms and
to be devoured by scuttling plump-bellied rats.
And while the friends were still standing
in tears by the bedside the soul of the sinner was
judged. At the last moment of consciousness the
whole earthly life passed before the vision of the
soul and, ere it had time to reflect, the body had
died and the soul stood terrified before the judgement
seat. God, who had long been merciful, would then
be just. He had long been patient, pleading with
the sinful soul, giving it time to repent, sparing
it yet awhile. But that time had gone. Time
was to sin and to enjoy, time was to scoff at God and
at the warnings of His holy church, time was to defy
His majesty, to disobey His commands, to hoodwink
one’s fellow men, to commit sin after sin and
to hide one’s corruption from the sight of men.
But that time was over. Now it was God’s
turn: and He was not to be hoodwinked or deceived.
Every sin would then come forth from its lurking place,
the most rebellious against the divine will and the
most degrading to our poor corrupt nature, the tiniest
imperfection and the most heinous atrocity. What
did it avail then to have been a great emperor, a great
general, a marvellous inventor, the most learned of
the learned? All were as one before the judgement
seat of God. He would reward the good and punish
the wicked. One single instant was enough for
the trial of a man’s soul. One single instant
after the body’s death, the soul had been weighed
in the balance. The particular judgement was over
and the soul had passed to the abode of bliss or to
the prison of purgatory or had been hurled howling
into hell.
Nor was that all. God’s
justice had still to be vindicated before men:
after the particular there still remained the general
judgement. The last day had come. The doomsday
was at hand. The stars of heaven were falling
upon the earth like the figs cast by the fig-tree which
the wind has shaken. The sun, the great luminary
of the universe, had become as sackcloth of hair.
The moon was blood-red. The firmament was as
a scroll rolled away. The archangel Michael, the
prince of the heavenly host, appeared glorious and
terrible against the sky. With one foot on the
sea and one foot on the land he blew from the arch-angelical
trumpet the brazen death of time. The three blasts
of the angel filled all the universe. Time is,
time was, but time shall be no more. At the last
blast the souls of universal humanity throng towards
the valley of Jehoshaphat, rich and poor, gentle and
simple, wise and foolish, good and wicked. The
soul of every human being that has ever existed, the
souls of all those who shall yet be born, all the sons
and daughters of Adam, all are assembled on that supreme
day. And lo, the supreme judge is coming!
No longer the lowly Lamb of God, no longer the meek
Jesus of Nazareth, no longer the Man of Sorrows, no
longer the Good Shepherd, He is seen now coming upon
the clouds, in great power and majesty, attended by
nine choirs of angels, angels and archangels, principalities,
powers and virtues, thrones and dominations, cherubim
and seraphim, God Omnipotent, God Everlasting.
He speaks: and His voice is heard even at the
farthest limits of space, even In the bottomless abyss.
Supreme Judge, from His sentence there will be and
can be no appeal. He calls the just to His side,
bidding them enter into the kingdom, the eternity
of bliss prepared for them. The unjust He casts
from Him, crying in His offended majesty: Depart
from me, ye cursed, into
everlasting fire which was prepared
for the devil and his angels.
O, what agony then for the miserable sinners!
Friend is torn apart from friend, children are torn
from their parents, husbands from their wives.
The poor sinner holds out his arms to those who were
dear to him in this earthly world, to those whose
simple piety perhaps he made a mock of, to those who
counselled him and tried to lead him on the right
path, to a kind brother, to a loving sister, to the
mother and father who loved him so dearly. But
it is too late: the just turn away from the wretched
damned souls which now appear before the eyes of all
in their hideous and evil character. O you hypocrites,
O, you whited sepulchres, O you who present a smooth
smiling face to the world while your soul within is
a foul swamp of sin, how will it fare with you in
that terrible day?
And this day will come, shall come,
must come: the day of death and the day of judgement.
It is appointed unto man to die and after death the
judgement. Death is certain. The time and
manner are uncertain, whether from long disease or
from some unexpected accident: the Son of God
cometh at an hour when you little expect Him.
Be therefore ready every moment, seeing that you may
die at any moment. Death is the end of us all.
Death and judgement, brought into the world by the
sin of our first parents, are the dark portals that
close our earthly existence, the portals that open
into the unknown and the unseen, portals through which
every soul must pass, alone, unaided save by its good
works, without friend or brother or parent or master
to help it, alone and trembling. Let that thought
be ever before our minds and then we cannot sin.
Death, a cause of terror to the sinner, is a blessed
moment for him who has walked in the right path, fulfilling
the duties of his station in life, attending to his
morning and evening prayers, approaching the holy
sacrament frequently and performing good and merciful
works. For the pious and believing catholic, for
the just man, death is no cause of terror. Was
it not Addison, the great English writer, who, when
on his deathbed, sent for the wicked young earl of
Warwick to let him see how a christian can meet his
end? He it is and he alone, the pious and believing
christian, who can say in his heart:
O grave, where is thy victory?
O death, where is thy sting?
Every word of it was for him.
Against his sin, foul and secret, the whole wrath
of God was aimed. The preacher’s knife had
probed deeply into his disclosed conscience and he
felt now that his soul was festering in sin.
Yes, the preacher was right. God’s turn
had come. Like a beast in its lair his soul had
lain down in its own filth but the blasts of the angel’s
trumpet had driven him forth from the darkness of
sin into the light. The words of doom cried by
the angel shattered in an instant his presumptuous
peace. The wind of the last day blew through
his mind, his sins, the jewel-eyed harlots of his
imagination, fled before the hurricane, squeaking like
mice in their terror and huddled under a mane of hair.
As he crossed the square, walking
homeward, the light laughter of a girl reached his
burning ear. The frail gay sound smote his heart
more strongly than a trumpet blast, and, not daring
to lift his eyes, he turned aside and gazed, as he
walked, into the shadow of the tangled shrubs.
Shame rose from his smitten heart and flooded his whole
being. The image of Emma appeared before him,
and under her eyes the flood of shame rushed forth
anew from his heart. If she knew to what his mind
had subjected her or how his brute-like lust had torn
and trampled upon her innocence! Was that boyish
love? Was that chivalry? Was that poetry?
The sordid details of his orgies stank under his very
nostrils. The soot-coated packet of pictures
which he had hidden in the flue of the fireplace and
in the presence of whose shameless or bashful wantonness
he lay for hours sinning in thought and deed; his monstrous
dreams, peopled by ape-like creatures and by harlots
with gleaming jewel eyes; the foul long letters he
had written in the joy of guilty confession and carried
secretly for days and days only to throw them under
cover of night among the grass in the corner of a field
or beneath some hingeless door in some niche in the
hedges where a girl might come upon them as she walked
by and read them secretly. Mad! Mad!
Was it possible he had done these things? A cold
sweat broke out upon his forehead as the foul memories
condensed within his brain.
When the agony of shame had passed
from him he tried to raise his soul from its abject
powerlessness. God and the Blessed Virgin were
too far from him: God was too great and stern
and the Blessed Virgin too pure and holy. But
he imagined that he stood near Emma in a wide land
and, humbly and in tears, bent and kissed the elbow
of her sleeve.
In the wide land under a tender lucid
evening sky, a cloud drifting westward amid a pale
green sea of heaven, they stood together, children
that had erred. Their error had offended deeply
God’s majesty though it was the error of two
children; but it had not offended her whose beauty
is not like earthly beauty,
dangerous to look upon, but
like the morning star which
is its emblem, bright and
musical. The eyes were not offended which
she turned upon him nor reproachful. She placed
their hands together, hand in hand, and said, speaking
to their hearts:
Take hands, Stephen and
Emma. It is a beautiful evening now in heaven.
You have erred but you are always my children.
It is one heart that loves another heart. Take
hands together, my dear children, and you will be
happy together and your hearts will love each other.
The chapel was flooded by the dull
scarlet light that filtered through the lowered blinds;
and through the fissure between the last blind and
the sash a shaft of wan light entered like a spear
and touched the embossed brasses of the candlesticks
upon the altar that gleamed like the battle-worn mail
armour of angels.
Rain was falling on the chapel, on
the garden, on the college. It would rain for
ever, noiselessly. The water would rise inch by
inch, covering the grass and shrubs, covering the
trees and houses, covering the monuments and the mountain
tops. All life would be choked off, noiselessly:
birds, men, elephants, pigs, children: noiselessly
floating corpses amid the litter of the wreckage of
the world. Forty days and forty nights the rain
would fall till the waters covered the face of the
earth.
It might be. Why not?
Hell has enlarged
its soul and opened its mouth
without any limits words
taken, my dear little brothers in Christ Jesus, from
the book of Isaias, fifth chapter, fourteenth verse.
In the name of the Father and of the Son and of the
Holy Ghost. Amen.
The preacher took a chainless watch
from a pocket within his soutane and, having considered
its dial for a moment in silence, placed it silently
before him on the table.
He began to speak in a quiet tone.
Adam and Eve, my dear
boys, were, as you know, our first parents, and you
will remember that they were created by God in order
that the seats in heaven left vacant by the fall of
Lucifer and his rebellious angels might be filled
again. Lucifer, we are told, was a son of the
morning, a radiant and mighty angel; yet he fell:
he fell and there fell with him a third part of the
host of heaven: he fell and was hurled with his
rebellious angels into hell. What his sin was
we cannot say. Theologians consider that it was
the sin of pride, the sinful thought conceived in
an instant: Non SERVIAM: I will
not serve. That instant was his ruin.
He offended the majesty of God by
the sinful thought of one instant and God cast him
out of heaven into hell for ever.
Adam and Eve were then
created by God and placed in Eden, in the plain of
Damascus, that lovely garden resplendent with sunlight
and colour, teeming with luxuriant vegetation.
The fruitful earth gave them her bounty: beasts
and birds were their willing servants: they knew
not the ills our flesh is heir to, disease and poverty
and death: all that a great and generous God
could do for them was done. But there was one
condition imposed on them by God: obedience to
His word. They were not to eat of the fruit of
the forbidden tree.
Alas, my dear little boys,
they too fell. The devil, once a shining angel,
a son of the morning, now a foul fiend came in the
shape of a serpent, the subtlest of all the beasts
of the field. He envied them. He, the fallen
great one, could not bear to think that man, a being
of clay, should possess the inheritance which he by
his sin had forfeited for ever. He came to the
woman, the weaker vessel, and poured the poison of
his eloquence into her ear, promising her O,
the blasphemy of that promise! that if
she and Adam ate of the forbidden fruit they would
become as gods, nay as God Himself. Eve yielded
to the wiles of the archtempter. She ate the
apple and gave it also to Adam who had not the moral
courage to resist her. The poison tongue of Satan
had done its work. They fell.
And then the voice of
God was heard in that garden, calling His creature
man to account: and Michael, prince of the heavenly
host, with a sword of flame in his hand, appeared
before the guilty pair and drove them forth from Eden
into the world, the world of sickness and striving,
of cruelty and disappointment, of labour and hardship,
to earn their bread in the sweat of their brow.
But even then how merciful was God! He took pity
on our poor degraded parents and promised that in
the fullness of time He would send down from heaven
One who would redeem them, make them once more children
of God and heirs to the kingdom of heaven: and
that One, that Redeemer of fallen man, was to be God’s
only begotten Son, the Second Person of the Most Blessed
Trinity, the Eternal Word.
He came. He was born
of a virgin pure, Mary the virgin mother. He
was born in a poor cowhouse in Judea and lived as a
humble carpenter for thirty years until the hour of
His mission had come. And then, filled with love
for men, He went forth and called to men to hear the
new gospel.
Did they listen?
Yes, they listened but would not hear. He was
seized and bound like a common criminal, mocked at
as a fool, set aside to give place to a public robber,
scourged with five thousand lashes, crowned with a
crown of thorns, hustled through the streets by the
jewish rabble and the Roman soldiery, stripped of his
garments and hanged upon a gibbet and His side was
pierced with a lance and from the wounded body of
our Lord water and blood issued continually.
Yet even then, in that
hour of supreme agony, Our Merciful Redeemer had pity
for mankind. Yet even there, on the hill of Calvary,
He founded the holy catholic church against which,
it is promised, the gates of hell shall not prevail.
He founded it upon the rock of ages, and endowed it
with His grace, with sacraments and sacrifice, and
promised that if men would obey the word of His church
they would still enter into eternal life; but if,
after all that had been done for them, they still
persisted in their wickedness, there remained for them
an eternity of torment: hell.
The preacher’s voice sank.
He paused, joined his palms for an instant, parted
them. Then he resumed:
Now let us try for a moment
to realize, as far as we can, the nature of that abode
of the damned which the justice of an offended God
has called into existence for the eternal punishment
of sinners. Hell is a strait and dark and foul-smelling
prison, an abode of demons and lost souls, filled
with fire and smoke. The straitness of this prison
house is expressly designed by God to punish those
who refused to be bound by His laws. In earthly
prisons the poor captive has at least some liberty
of movement, were it only within the four walls of
his cell or in the gloomy yard of his prison.
Not so in hell. There, by reason of the great
number of the damned, the prisoners are heaped together
in their awful prison, the walls of which are said
to be four thousand miles thick: and the damned
are so utterly bound and helpless that, as a blessed
saint, saint Anselm, writes in his book on similitudes,
they are not even able to remove from the eye a worm
that gnaws it.
They lie in exterior darkness.
For, remember, the fire of hell gives forth no light.
As, at the command of God, the fire of the Babylonian
furnace lost its heat but not its light, so, at the
command of God, the fire of hell, while retaining
the intensity of its heat, burns eternally in darkness.
It is a never ending storm of darkness, dark flames
and dark smoke of burning brimstone, amid which the
bodies are heaped one upon another without even a
glimpse of air. Of all the plagues with which
the land of the Pharaohs were smitten one plague alone,
that of darkness, was called horrible. What name,
then, shall we give to the darkness of hell which
is to last not for three days alone but for all eternity?
The horror of this strait
and dark prison is increased by its awful stench.
All the filth of the world, all the offal and scum
of the world, we are told, shall run there as to a
vast reeking sewer when the terrible conflagration
of the last day has purged the world. The brimstone,
too, which burns there in such prodigious quantity
fills all hell with its intolerable stench; and the
bodies of the damned themselves exhale such a pestilential
odour that, as saint Bonaventure says, one of them
alone would suffice to infect the whole world.
The very air of this world, that pure element, becomes
foul and unbreathable when it has been long enclosed.
Consider then what must be the foulness of the air
of hell. Imagine some foul and putrid corpse
that has lain rotting and decomposing in the grave,
a jelly-like mass of liquid corruption. Imagine
such a corpse a prey to flames, devoured by the fire
of burning brimstone and giving off dense choking fumes
of nauseous loathsome decomposition. And then
imagine this sickening stench, multiplied a millionfold
and a millionfold again from the millions upon millions
of fetid carcasses massed together in the reeking
darkness, a huge and rotting human fungus. Imagine
all this, and you will have some idea of the horror
of the stench of hell.
But this stench is not,
horrible though it is, the greatest physical torment
to which the damned are subjected. The torment
of fire is the greatest torment to which the tyrant
has ever subjected his fellow creatures. Place
your finger for a moment in the flame of a candle and
you will feel the pain of fire. But our earthly
fire was created by God for the benefit of man, to
maintain in him the spark of life and to help him
in the useful arts, whereas the fire of hell is of
another quality and was created by God to torture
and punish the unrepentant sinner. Our earthly
fire also consumes more or less rapidly according
as the object which it attacks is more or less combustible,
so that human ingenuity has even succeeded in inventing
chemical preparations to check or frustrate its action.
But the sulphurous brimstone which burns in hell is
a substance which is specially designed to burn for
ever and for ever with unspeakable fury. Moreover,
our earthly fire destroys at the same time as it burns,
so that the more intense it is the shorter is its
duration; but the fire of hell has this property,
that it preserves that which it burns, and, though
it rages with incredible intensity, it rages for ever.
Our earthly fire again,
no matter how fierce or widespread it may be, is always
of a limited extent; but the lake of fire in hell is
boundless, shoreless and bottomless. It is on
record that the devil himself, when asked the question
by a certain soldier, was obliged to confess that
if a whole mountain were thrown into the burning ocean
of hell it would be burned up In an instant like a
piece of wax. And this terrible fire will not
afflict the bodies of the damned only from without,
but each lost soul will be a hell unto itself, the
boundless fire raging in its very vitals. O,
how terrible is the lot of those wretched beings!
The blood seethes and boils in the veins, the brains
are boiling in the skull, the heart in the breast glowing
and bursting, the bowels a red-hot mass of burning
pulp, the tender eyes flaming like molten balls.
And yet what I have said
as to the strength and quality and boundlessness of
this fire is as nothing when compared to its intensity,
an intensity which it has as being the instrument chosen
by divine design for the punishment of soul and body
alike. It is a fire which proceeds directly from
the ire of God, working not of its own activity but
as an instrument of Divine vengeance. As the waters
of baptism cleanse the soul with the body, so do the
fires of punishment torture the spirit with the flesh.
Every sense of the flesh is tortured and every faculty
of the soul therewith: the eyes with impenetrable
utter darkness, the nose with noisome odours, the ears
with yells and howls and exécrations, the taste
with foul matter, leprous corruption, nameless suffocating
filth, the touch with redhot goads and spikes, with
cruel tongues of flame. And through the several
torments of the senses the immortal soul is tortured
eternally in its very essence amid the leagues upon
leagues of glowing fires kindled in the abyss by the
offended majesty of the Omnipotent God and fanned into
everlasting and ever-increasing fury by the breath
of the anger of the God-head.
Consider finally that
the torment of this infernal prison is increased by
the company of the damned themselves. Evil company
on earth is so noxious that the plants, as if by instinct,
withdraw from the company of whatsoever is deadly
or hurtful to them. In hell all laws are overturned there
is no thought of family or country, of ties, of relationships.
The damned howl and scream at one another, their torture
and rage intensified by the presence of beings tortured
and raging like themselves. All sense of humanity
is forgotten. The yells of the suffering sinners
fill the remotest corners of the vast abyss.
The mouths of the damned are full of blasphemies against
God and of hatred for their fellow sufferers and of
curses against those souls which were their accomplices
in sin. In olden times it was the custom to punish
the parricide, the man who had raised his murderous
hand against his father, by casting him into the depths
of the sea in a sack in which were placed a cock,
a monkey, and a serpent. The intention of those
law-givers who framed such a law, which seems cruel
in our times, was to punish the criminal by the company
of hurtful and hateful beasts. But what is the
fury of those dumb beasts compared with the fury of
execration which bursts from the parched lips and aching
throats of the damned in hell when they behold in their
companions in misery those who aided and abetted them
in sin, those whose words sowed the first seeds of
evil thinking and evil living in their minds, those
whose immodest suggestions led them on to sin, those
whose eyes tempted and allured them from the path
of virtue. They turn upon those accomplices and
upbraid them and curse them. But they are helpless
and hopeless: it is too late now for repentance.
Last of all consider the
frightful torment to those damned souls, tempters
and tempted alike, of the company of the devils.
These devils will afflict the damned in two ways,
by their presence and by their reproaches. We
can have no idea of how horrible these devils are.
Saint Catherine of Siena once saw a devil and she
has written that, rather than look again for one single
instant on such a frightful monster, she would prefer
to walk until the end of her life along a track of
red coals. These devils, who were once beautiful
angels, have become as hideous and ugly as they once
were beautiful. They mock and jeer at the lost
souls whom they dragged down to ruin. It is they,
the foul demons, who are made in hell the voices of
conscience. Why did you sin? Why did you
lend an ear to the temptings of friends? Why did
you turn aside from your pious practices and good
works? Why did you not shun the occasions of
sin? Why did you not leave that evil companion?
Why did you not give up that lewd habit, that impure
habit? Why did you not listen to the counsels
of your confessor? Why did you not, even after
you had fallen the first or the second or the third
or the fourth or the hundredth time, repent of your
evil ways and turn to God who only waited for your
repentance to absolve you of your sins? Now the
time for repentance has gone by. Time is, time
was, but time shall be no more! Time was to sin
in secrecy, to indulge in that sloth and pride, to
covet the unlawful, to yield to the promptings of your
lower nature, to live like the beasts of the field,
nay worse than the beasts of the field, for they,
at least, are but brutes and have no reason to guide
them: time was, but time shall be no more.
God spoke to you by so many voices, but you would
not hear. You would not crush out that pride and
anger in your heart, you would not restore those ill-gotten
goods, you would not obey the precepts of your holy
church nor attend to your religious duties, you would
not abandon those wicked companions, you would not
avoid those dangerous temptations. Such is the
language of those fiendish tormentors, words of taunting
and of reproach, of hatred and of disgust. Of
disgust, yes! For even they, the very devils,
when they sinned, sinned by such a sin as alone was
compatible with such angelical natures, a rebellion
of the intellect: and they, even they, the foul
devils must turn away, revolted and disgusted, from
the contemplation of those unspeakable sins by which
degraded man outrages and defiles the temple of the
Holy Ghost, defiles and pollutes himself.
O, my dear little brothers
in Christ, may it never be our lot to hear that language!
May it never be our lot, I say! In the last day
of terrible reckoning I pray fervently to God that
not a single soul of those who are in this chapel
today may be found among those miserable beings whom
the Great Judge shall command to depart for ever from
His sight, that not one of us may ever hear ringing
in his ears the awful sentence of rejection:
Depart from me, ye cursed,
into everlasting fire which was
prepared for the devil and
his angels!
He came down the aisle of the chapel,
his legs shaking and the scalp of his head trembling
as though it had been touched by ghostly fingers.
He passed up the staircase and into the corridor along
the walls of which the overcoats and waterproofs hung
like gibbeted malefactors, headless and dripping and
shapeless. And at every step he feared that he
had already died, that his soul had been wrenched
forth of the sheath of his body, that he was plunging
headlong through space.
He could not grip the floor with his
feet and sat heavily at his desk, opening one of his
books at random and poring over it. Every word
for him. It was true. God was almighty.
God could call him now, call him as he sat at his
desk, before he had time to be conscious of the summons.
God had called him. Yes? What? Yes?
His flesh shrank together as it felt the approach
of the ravenous tongues of flames, dried up as it
felt about it the swirl of stifling air. He had
died. Yes. He was judged. A wave of
fire swept through his body: the first. Again
a wave. His brain began to glow. Another.
His brain was simmering and bubbling within the cracking
tenement of the skull. Flames burst forth from
his skull like a corolla, shrieking like voices:
Hell! Hell! Hell! Hell!
Hell!
Voices spoke near him:
On hell.
I suppose he rubbed it into you well.
You bet he did. He put us all into
a blue funk.
That’s what you fellows want:
and plenty of it to make you work.
He leaned back weakly in his desk.
He had not died. God had spared him still.
He was still in the familiar world of the school.
Mr Tate and Vincent Heron stood at the window, talking,
jesting, gazing out at the bleak rain, moving their
heads.
I wish it would clear
up. I had arranged to go for a spin on the bike
with some fellows out by Malahide. But the roads
must be knee-deep.
It might clear up, sir.
The voices that he knew so well, the
common words, the quiet of the classroom when the
voices paused and the silence was filled by the sound
of softly browsing cattle as the other boys munched
their lunches tranquilly, lulled his aching soul.
There was still time. O Mary, refuge of sinners,
intercede for him! O
Virgin Undefiled, save him from the gulf of death!
The English lesson began with the
hearing of the history. Royal persons, favourites,
intriguers, bishops, passed like mute phantoms behind
their veil of names. All had died: all had
been judged. What did it profit a man to gain
the whole world if he lost his soul? At last he
had understood: and human life lay around him,
a plain of peace whereon ant-like men laboured in
brotherhood, their dead sleeping under quiet mounds.
The elbow of his companion touched him and his heart
was touched: and when he spoke to answer a question
of his master he heard his own voice full of the quietude
of humility and contrition.
His soul sank back deeper into depths
of contrite peace, no longer able to suffer the pain
of dread, and sending forth, as he sank, a faint prayer.
Ah yes, he would still be spared; he would repent in
his heart and be forgiven; and then those above, those
in heaven, would see what he would do to make up for
the past: a whole life, every hour of life.
Only wait.
All, God! All, all!
A messenger came to the door to say
that confessions were being heard in the chapel.
Four boys left the room; and he heard others passing
down the corridor. A tremulous chill blew round
his heart, no stronger than a little wind, and yet,
listening and suffering silently, he seemed to have
laid an ear against the muscle of his own heart, feeling
it close and quail, listening to the flutter of its
ventricles.
No escape. He had to confess,
to speak out in words what he had done and thought,
sin after sin. How? How?
Father, I...
The thought slid like a cold shining
rapier into his tender flesh: confession.
But not there in the chapel of the college. He
would confess all, every sin of deed and thought,
sincerely; but not there among his school companions.
Far away from there in some dark place he would murmur
out his own shame; and he besought God humbly not to
be offended with him if he did not dare to confess
in the college chapel and in utter abjection of spirit
he craved forgiveness mutely of the boyish hearts
about him.
Time passed.
He sat again in the front bench of
the chapel. The daylight without was already
failing and, as it fell slowly through the dull red
blinds, it seemed that the sun of the last day was
going down and that all souls were being gathered
for the judgement.
I am cast away
from the sight of thine eyes:
words taken, my dear little brothers in Christ, from
the Book of Psalms, thirtieth chapter, twenty-third
verse. In the name of the Father and of the Son
and of the Holy Ghost. Amen.
The preacher began to speak in a quiet
friendly tone. His face was kind and he joined
gently the fingers of each hand, forming a frail cage
by the union of their tips.
This morning we endeavoured,
in our reflection upon hell, to make what our holy
founder calls in his book of spiritual exercises, the
composition of place. We endeavoured, that is,
to imagine with the senses of the mind, in our imagination,
the material character of that awful place and of
the physical torments which all who are in hell endure.
This evening we shall consider for a few moments the
nature of the spiritual torments of hell.
Sin, remember, is a twofold
enormity. It is a base consent to the promptings
of our corrupt nature to the lower instincts, to that
which is gross and beast-like; and it is also a turning
away from the counsel of our higher nature, from all
that is pure and holy, from the Holy God Himself.
For this reason mortal sin is punished in hell by two
different forms of punishment, physical and spiritual.
Now of all these spiritual pains by
far the greatest is the pain of loss, so great, in
fact, that in itself it is a torment greater than
all the others. Saint Thomas, the greatest doctor
of the church, the angelic doctor, as he is called,
says that the worst damnation consists in this, that
the understanding of man is totally deprived of divine
light and his affection obstinately turned away from
the goodness of God. God, remember, is a being
infinitely good, and therefore the loss of such a
being must be a loss infinitely painful. In this
life we have not a very clear idea of what such a
loss must be, but the damned in hell, for their greater
torment, have a full understanding of that which they
have lost, and understand that they have lost it through
their own sins and have lost it for ever. At the
very instant of death the bonds of the flesh are broken
asunder and the soul at once flies towards God as
towards the centre of her existence. Remember,
my dear little boys, our souls long to be with God.
We come from God, we live by God, we belong to God:
we are His, inalienably His. God loves with a
divine love every human soul, and every human soul
lives in that love. How could it be otherwise?
Every breath that we draw, every thought of our brain,
every instant of life proceeds from God’s inexhaustible
goodness. And if it be pain for a mother to be
parted from her child, for a man to be exiled from
hearth and home, for friend to be sundered from friend,
O think what pain, what anguish it must be for the
poor soul to be spurned from the presence of the supremely
good and loving Creator Who has called that soul into
existence from nothingness and sustained it in life
and loved it with an immeasurable love. This,
then, to be separated for ever from its greatest good,
from God, and to feel the anguish of that separation,
knowing full well that it is unchangeable: this
is the greatest torment which the created soul is
capable of bearing, Poena damni, the pain
of loss.
The second pain which will afflict
the souls of the damned in hell is the pain of conscience.
Just as in dead bodies worms are engendered by putrefaction,
so in the souls of the lost there arises a perpetual
remorse from the putrefaction of sin, the sting of
conscience, the worm, as Pope Innocent the Third calls
it, of the triple sting. The first sting inflicted
by this cruel worm will be the memory of past pleasures.
O what a dreadful memory will that be! In the
lake of all-devouring flame the proud king will remember
the pomps of his court, the wise but wicked man his
libraries and instruments of research, the lover of
artistic pleasures his marbles and pictures and other
art treasures, he who delighted in the pleasures of
the table his gorgeous feasts, his dishes prepared
with such delicacy, his choice wines; the miser will
remember his hoard of gold, the robber his ill-gotten
wealth, the angry and revengeful and merciless murderers
their deeds of blood and violence in which they revelled,
the impure and adulterous the unspeakable and filthy
pleasures in which they delighted. They will
remember all this and loathe themselves and their
sins. For how miserable will all those pleasures
seem to the soul condemned to suffer in hellfire for
ages and ages. How they will rage and fume to
think that they have lost the bliss of heaven for the
dross of earth, for a few pieces of metal, for vain
honours, for bodily comforts, for a tingling of the
nerves. They will repent indeed: and this
is the second sting of the worm of conscience, a late
and fruitless sorrow for sins committed. Divine
justice insists that the understanding of those miserable
wretches be fixed continually on the sins of which
they were guilty, and moreover, as saint Augustine
points out, God will impart to them His own knowledge
of sin, so that sin will appear to them in all its
hideous malice as it appears to the eyes of God Himself.
They will behold their sins in all their foulness and
repent but it will be too late and then they will bewail
the good occasions which they neglected. This
is the last and deepest and most cruel sting of the
worm of conscience. The conscience will say:
You had time and opportunity to repent and would not.
You were brought up religiously by your parents.
You had the sacraments and grace and indulgences of
the church to aid you. You had the minister of
God to preach to you, to call you back when you had
strayed, to forgive you your sins, no matter how many,
how abominable, if only you had confessed and repented.
No. You would not. You flouted the ministers
of holy religion, you turned your back on the confessional,
you wallowed deeper and deeper in the mire of sin.
God appealed to you, threatened you, entreated you
to return to Him. O, what shame, what misery!
The Ruler of the universe entreated you, a creature
of clay, to love Him Who made you and to keep His
law. No. You would not. And now, though
you were to flood all hell with your tears if you could
still weep, all that sea of repentance would not gain
for you what a single tear of true repentance shed
during your mortal life would have gained for you.
You implore now a moment of earthly life wherein to
repent: In vain. That time is gone:
gone for ever.
Such is the threefold
sting of conscience, the viper which gnaws the very
heart’s core of the wretches in hell, so that
filled with hellish fury they curse themselves for
their folly and curse the evil companions who have
brought them to such ruin and curse the devils who
tempted them in life and now mock them in eternity
and even revile and curse the Supreme Being Whose
goodness and patience they scorned and slighted but
Whose justice and power they cannot evade.
The next spiritual pain
to which the damned are subjected is the pain of extension.
Man, in this earthly life, though he be capable of
many evils, is not capable of them all at once, inasmuch
as one evil corrects and counteracts another just
as one poison frequently corrects another. In
hell, on the contrary, one torment, instead of counteracting
another, lends it still greater force: and, moreover,
as the internal faculties are more perfect than the
external senses, so are they more capable of suffering.
Just as every sense is afflicted with a fitting torment,
so is every spiritual faculty; the fancy with horrible
images, the sensitive faculty with alternate longing
and rage, the mind and understanding with an interior
darkness more terrible even than the exterior darkness
which reigns in that dreadful prison. The malice,
impotent though it be, which possesses these demon
souls is an evil of boundless extension, of limitless
duration, a frightful state of wickedness which we
can scarcely realize unless we bear in mind the enormity
of sin and the hatred God bears to it.
Opposed to this pain of
extension and yet coexistent with it we have the pain
of intensity. Hell is the centre of evils and,
as you know, things are more intense at their centres
than at their remotest points. There are no contraries
or admixtures of any kind to temper or soften in the
least the pains of hell. Nay, things which are
good in themselves become evil in hell. Company,
elsewhere a source of comfort to the afflicted, will
be there a continual torment: knowledge, so much
longed for as the chief good of the intellect, will
there be hated worse than ignorance: light, so
much coveted by all creatures from the lord of creation
down to the humblest plant in the forest, will be
loathed intensely. In this life our sorrows are
either not very long or not very great because nature
either overcomes them by habits or puts an end to
them by sinking under their weight. But in hell
the torments cannot be overcome by habit, for while
they are of terrible intensity they are at the same
time of continual variety, each pain, so to speak,
taking fire from another and re-endowing that which
has enkindled it with a still fiercer flame.
Nor can nature escape from these intense and various
tortures by succumbing to them for the soul is sustained
and maintained in evil so that its suffering may be
the greater. Boundless extension of torment,
incredible intensity of suffering, unceasing variety
of torture this is what the divine majesty,
so outraged by sinners, demands; this is what the
holiness of heaven, slighted and set aside for the
lustful and low pleasures of the corrupt flesh, requires;
this is what the blood of the innocent Lamb of God,
shed for the redemption of sinners, trampled upon by
the vilest of the vile, insists upon.
Last and crowning torture
of all the tortures of that awful place is the eternity
of hell. Eternity! O, dread and dire word.
Eternity! What mind of man can understand it?
And remember, it is an eternity of pain. Even
though the pains of hell were not so terrible as they
are, yet they would become infinite, as they are destined
to last for ever. But while they are everlasting
they are at the same time, as you know, intolerably
intense, unbearably extensive. To bear even the
sting of an insect for all eternity would be a dreadful
torment. What must it be, then, to bear the manifold
tortures of hell for ever? For ever! For
all eternity! Not for a year or for an age but
for ever. Try to imagine the awful meaning of
this. You have often seen the sand on the seashore.
How fine are its tiny grains! And how many of
those tiny little grains go to make up the small handful
which a child grasps in its play. Now imagine
a mountain of that sand, a million miles high, reaching
from the earth to the farthest heavens, and a million
miles broad, extending to remotest space, and a million
miles in thickness; and imagine such an enormous mass
of countless particles of sand multiplied as often
as there are leaves in the forest, drops of water
in the mighty ocean, feathers on birds, scales on fish,
hairs on animals, atoms in the vast expanse of the
air: and imagine that at the end of every million
years a little bird came to that mountain and carried
away in its beak a tiny grain of that sand. How
many millions upon millions of centuries would pass
before that bird had carried away even a square foot
of that mountain, how many eons upon eons of ages
before it had carried away all? Yet at the end
of that immense stretch of time not even one instant
of eternity could be said to have ended. At the
end of all those billions and trillions of years eternity
would have scarcely begun. And if that mountain
rose again after it had been all carried away, and
if the bird came again and carried it all away again
grain by grain, and if it so rose and sank as many
times as there are stars in the sky, atoms in the
air, drops of water in the sea, leaves on the trees,
feathers upon birds, scales upon fish, hairs upon
animals, at the end of all those innumerable risings
and sinkings of that immeasurably vast mountain not
one single instant of eternity could be said to have
ended; even then, at the end of such a period, after
that eon of time the mere thought of which makes our
very brain reel dizzily, eternity would scarcely have
begun.
A holy saint (one of our
own fathers I believe it was) was once vouchsafed
a vision of hell. It seemed to him that he stood
in the midst of a great hall, dark and silent save
for the ticking of a great clock. The ticking
went on unceasingly; and it seemed to this saint that
the sound of the ticking was the ceaseless repetition
of the words ever, never; ever, never.
Ever to be in hell, never to be in heaven; ever to
be shut off from the presence of God, never to enjoy
the beatific vision; ever to be eaten with flames,
gnawed by vermin, goaded with burning spikes, never
to be free from those pains; ever to have the conscience
upbraid one, the memory enrage, the mind filled with
darkness and despair, never to escape; ever to curse
and revile the foul demons who gloat fiendishly over
the misery of their dupes, never to behold the shining
raiment of the blessed spirits; ever to cry out of
the abyss of fire to God for an instant, a single instant,
of respite from such awful agony, never to receive,
even for an instant, God’s pardon; ever to suffer,
never to enjoy; ever to be damned, never to be saved;
ever, never; ever, never. O, what a dreadful punishment!
An eternity of endless agony, of endless bodily and
spiritual torment, without one ray of hope, without
one moment of cessation, of agony limitless in intensity,
of torment infinitely varied, of torture that sustains
eternally that which it eternally devours, of anguish
that everlastingly preys upon the spirit while it
racks the flesh, an eternity, every instant of which
is itself an eternity of woe. Such is the terrible
punishment decreed for those who die in mortal sin
by an almighty and a just God.
Yes, a just God!
Men, reasoning always as men, are astonished that
God should mete out an everlasting and infinite punishment
in the fires of hell for a single grievous sin.
They reason thus because, blinded by the gross illusion
of the flesh and the darkness of human understanding,
they are unable to comprehend the hideous malice of
mortal sin. They reason thus because they are
unable to comprehend that even venial sin is of such
a foul and hideous nature that even if the omnipotent
Creator could end all the evil and misery in the world,
the wars, the diseases, the robberies, the crimes,
the deaths, the murders, on condition that he allowed
a single venial sin to pass unpunished, a single venial
sin, a lie, an angry look, a moment of wilful sloth,
He, the great omnipotent God could not do so because
sin, be it in thought or deed, is a transgression
of His law and God would not be God if He did not
punish the transgressor.
A sin, an instant of rebellious
pride of the intellect, made Lucifer and a third part
of the cohort of angels fall from their glory.
A sin, an instant of folly and weakness, drove Adam
and Eve out of Eden and brought death and suffering
into the world. To retrieve the consequences
of that sin the Only Begotten Son of God came down
to earth, lived and suffered and died a most painful
death, hanging for three hours on the cross.
O, my dear little brethren
in Christ Jesus, will we then offend that good Redeemer
and provoke His anger? Will we trample again upon
that torn and mangled corpse? Will we spit upon
that face so full of sorrow and love? Will we
too, like the cruel jews and the brutal soldiers,
mock that gentle and compassionate Saviour Who trod
alone for our sake the awful wine-press of sorrow?
Every word of sin is a wound in His tender side.
Every sinful act is a thorn piercing His head.
Every impure thought, deliberately yielded to, is
a keen lance transfixing that sacred and loving heart.
No, no. It is impossible for any human being to
do that which offends so deeply the divine majesty,
that which is punished by an eternity of agony, that
which crucifies again the Son of God and makes a mockery
of Him.
I pray to God that my
poor words may have availed today to confirm in holiness
those who are in a state of grace, to strengthen the
wavering, to lead back to the state of grace the poor
soul that has strayed if any such be among you.
I pray to God, and do you pray with me, that we may
repent of our sins. I will ask you now, all of
you, to repeat after me the act of contrition, kneeling
here in this humble chapel in the presence of God.
He is there in the tabernacle burning with love for
mankind, ready to comfort the afflicted. Be not
afraid. No matter how many or how foul the sins
if you only repent of them they will be forgiven you.
Let no worldly shame hold you back. God is still
the merciful Lord who wishes not the eternal death
of the sinner but rather that he be converted and
live.
He calls you to Him.
You are His. He made you out of nothing.
He loved you as only a God can love. His arms
are open to receive you even though you have sinned
against Him. Come to Him, poor sinner, poor vain
and erring sinner. Now is the acceptable time.
Now is the hour.
The priest rose and, turning towards
the altar, knelt upon the step before the tabernacle
in the fallen gloom. He waited till all in the
chapel had knelt and every least noise was still.
Then, raising his head, he repeated the act of contrition,
phrase by phrase, with fervour. The boys answered
him phrase by phrase. Stephen, his tongue cleaving
to his palate, bowed his head, praying with his heart.
O my God! O
my God! I am heartily sorry
I am heartily sorry for
having offended Thee for
having offended Thee and
I detest my sins and I detest
my sins above every other
evil above every other evil
because they displease Thee, my God
because they displease Thee, my God
Who art so deserving Who
art so deserving of all
my love of all my love
and I firmly purpose and
I firmly purpose by Thy
holy grace by Thy holy grace
never more to offend Thee
never more to offend Thee
and to amend my life and
to amend my life
He went up to his room after dinner
in order to be alone with his soul, and at every step
his soul seemed to sigh; at every step his soul mounted
with his feet, sighing in the ascent, through a region
of viscid gloom.
He halted on the landing before the
door and then, grasping the porcelain knob, opened
the door quickly. He waited in fear, his soul
pining within him, praying silently that death might
not touch his brow as he passed over the threshold,
that the fiends that inhabit darkness might not be
given power over him. He waited still at the threshold
as at the entrance to some dark cave. Faces were
there; eyes: they waited and watched.
We knew perfectly well
of course that though it was bound to come to the
light he would find considerable difficulty in endeavouring
to try to induce himself to try to endeavour to ascertain
the spiritual plenipotentiary and so we knew of course
perfectly well
Murmuring faces waited and watched;
murmurous voices filled the dark shell of the cave.
He feared intensely in spirit and in flesh but, raising
his head bravely, he strode into the room firmly.
A doorway, a room, the same room, same window.
He told himself calmly that those words had absolutely
no sense which had seemed to rise murmurously from
the dark. He told himself that it was simply his
room with the door open.
He closed the door and, walking swiftly
to the bed, knelt beside it and covered his face with
his hands. His hands were cold and damp and his
limbs ached with chill. Bodily unrest and chill
and weariness beset him, routing his thoughts.
Why was he kneeling there like a child saying his
evening prayers? To be alone with his soul, to
examine his conscience, to meet his sins face to face,
to recall their times and manners and circumstances,
to weep over them. He could not weep. He
could not summon them to his memory. He felt only
an ache of soul and body, his whole being, memory,
will, understanding, flesh, benumbed and weary.
That was the work of devils, to scatter
his thoughts and over-cloud his conscience, assailing
him at the gates of the cowardly and sin-corrupted
flesh: and, praying God timidly to forgive him
his weakness, he crawled up on to the bed and, wrapping
the blankets closely about him, covered his face again
with his hands. He had sinned. He had sinned
so deeply against heaven and before God that he was
not worthy to be called God’s child.
Could it be that he, Stephen Dedalus,
had done those things? His conscience sighed
in answer. Yes, he had done them, secretly, filthily,
time after time, and, hardened in sinful impenitence,
he had dared to wear the mask of holiness before the
tabernacle itself while his soul within was a living
mass of corruption. How came it that God had not
struck him dead? The leprous company of his sins
closed about him, breathing upon him, bending over
him from all sides. He strove to forget them
in an act of prayer, huddling his limbs closer together
and binding down his eyelids: but the senses
of his soul would not be bound and, though his eyes
were shut fast, he saw the places where he had sinned
and, though his ears were tightly covered, he heard.
He desired with all his will not to hear or see.
He desired till his frame shook under the strain of
his desire and until the senses of his soul closed.
They closed for an instant and then opened. He
saw.
A field of stiff weeds and thistles
and tufted nettle-bunches. Thick among the tufts
of rank stiff growth lay battered canisters and clots
and coils of solid excrement. A faint marshlight
struggling upwards from all the ordure through the
bristling grey-green weeds. An evil smell, faint
and foul as the light, curled upwards sluggishly out
of the canisters and from the stale crusted dung.
Creatures were in the field:
one, three, six: creatures were moving in the
field, hither and thither. Goatish creatures with
human faces, hornybrowed, lightly bearded and grey
as india-rubber. The malice of evil glittered
in their hard eyes, as they moved hither and thither,
trailing their long tails behind them. A rictus
of cruel malignity lit up greyly their old bony faces.
One was clasping about his ribs a torn flannel waistcoat,
another complained monotonously as his beard stuck
in the tufted weeds. Soft language issued from
their spittleless lips as they swished in slow circles
round and round the field, winding hither and thither
through the weeds, dragging their long tails amid
the rattling canisters. They moved in slow circles,
circling closer and closer to enclose, to enclose,
soft language issuing from their lips, their long
swishing tails besmeared with stale shite, thrusting
upwards their terrific faces...
Help!
He flung the blankets from him madly
to free his face and neck. That was his hell.
God had allowed him to see the hell reserved for his
sins: stinking, bestial, malignant, a hell of
lecherous goatish fiends. For him! For him!
He sprang from the bed, the reeking
odour pouring down his throat, clogging and revolting
his entrails. Air! The air of heaven!
He stumbled towards the window, groaning and almost
fainting with sickness. At the washstand a convulsion
seized him within; and, clasping his cold forehead
wildly, he vomited profusely in agony.
When the fit had spent itself he walked
weakly to the window and, lifting the sash, sat in
a corner of the embrasure and leaned his elbow upon
the sill. The rain had drawn off; and amid the
moving vapours from point to point of light the city
was spinning about herself a soft cocoon of yellowish
haze. Heaven was still and faintly luminous and
the air sweet to breathe, as in a thicket drenched
with showers; and amid peace and shimmering lights
and quiet fragrance he made a covenant with his heart.
He prayed:
He once had meant
to come on earth in heavenly
glory but we sinned; and
then he could not safely
visit us but with A shrouded
majesty and A
bedimmed radiance for he was
god. So he came himself
in weakness not in
power and he sent Thee, A
creature in his stead, with
A creatures
comeliness and lustre suited to
our state. And now thy
very face and
form, dear mother speak to
us of the eternal not like
earthly beauty,
dangerous to look upon, but
like the morning star which
is thy emblem,
bright and musical, breathing
Purity, telling of heaven and
infusing
peace. O Harbinger of day!
O light of the Pilgrim! Lead
us still as
thou hast led. In the dark
night, across the bleak Wilderness
guide us
on to our lord Jesus, guide
us home.
His eyes were dimmed with tears and,
looking humbly up to heaven, he wept for the innocence
he had lost.
When evening had fallen he left the
house, and the first touch of the damp dark air and
the noise of the door as it closed behind him made
ache again his conscience, lulled by prayer and tears.
Confess! Confess! It was not enough to lull
the conscience with a tear and a prayer. He had
to kneel before the minister of the Holy Ghost and
tell over his hidden sins truly and repentantly.
Before he heard again the footboard of the housedoor
trail over the threshold as it opened to let him in,
before he saw again the table in the kitchen set for
supper he would have knelt and confessed. It
was quite simple.
The ache of conscience ceased and
he walked onward swiftly through the dark streets.
There were so many flagstones on the footpath of that
street and so many streets in that city and so many
cities in the world. Yet eternity had no end.
He was in mortal sin. Even once was a mortal
sin. It could happen in an instant. But how
so quickly? By seeing or by thinking of seeing.
The eyes see the thing, without having wished first
to see. Then in an instant it happens. But
does that part of the body understand or what?
The serpent, the most subtle beast of the field.
It must understand when it desires in one instant and
then prolongs its own desire instant after instant,
sinfully. It feels and understands and desires.
What a horrible thing! Who made it to be like
that, a bestial part of the body able to understand
bestially and desire bestially? Was that then
he or an inhuman thing moved by a lower soul?
His soul sickened at the thought of a torpid snaky
life feeding itself out of the tender marrow of his
life and fattening upon the slime of lust. O
why was that so? O why?
He cowered in the shadow of the thought,
abasing himself in the awe of God Who had made all
things and all men. Madness. Who could think
such a thought? And, cowering in darkness and
abject, he prayed mutely to his guardian angel to
drive away with his sword the demon that was whispering
to his brain.
The whisper ceased and he knew then
clearly that his own soul had sinned in thought and
word and deed wilfully through his own body.
Confess! He had to confess every sin. How
could he utter in words to the priest what he had
done? Must, must. Or how could he explain
without dying of shame? Or how could he have done
such things without shame? A madman! Confess!
O he would indeed to be free and sinless again!
Perhaps the priest would know. O dear God!
He walked on and on through ill-lit
streets, fearing to stand still for a moment lest
it might seem that he held back from what awaited him,
fearing to arrive at that towards which he still turned
with longing. How beautiful must be a soul in
the state of grace when God looked upon it with love!
Frowsy girls sat along the curbstones
before their baskets. Their dank hair hung trailed
over their brows. They were not beautiful to see
as they crouched in the mire. But their souls
were seen by God; and if their souls were in a state
of grace they were radiant to see: and God loved
them, seeing them.
A wasting breath of humiliation blew
bleakly over his soul to think of how he had fallen,
to feel that those souls were dearer to God than his.
The wind blew over him and passed on to the myriads
and myriads of other souls on whom God’s favour
shone now more and now less, stars now brighter and
now dimmer sustained and failing. And the glimmering
souls passed away, sustained and failing, merged in
a moving breath. One soul was lost; a tiny soul:
his. It flickered once and went out, forgotten,
lost. The end: black, cold, void waste.
Consciousness of place came ebbing
back to him slowly over a vast tract of time unlit,
unfelt, unlived. The squalid scene composed itself
around him; the common accents, the burning gas-jets
in the shops, odours of fish and spirits and wet sawdust,
moving men and women. An old woman was about
to cross the street, an oilcan in her hand. He
bent down and asked her was there a chapel near.
A chapel, sir? Yes, sir. Church
Street chapel.
Church?
She shifted the can to her other hand
and directed him; and, as she held out her reeking
withered right hand under its fringe of shawl, he
bent lower towards her, saddened and soothed by her
voice.
Thank you.
You are quite welcome, sir.
The candles on the high altar had
been extinguished but the fragrance of incense still
floated down the dim nave. Bearded workmen with
pious faces were guiding a canopy out through a side
door, the sacristan aiding them with quiet gestures
and words. A few of the faithful still lingered
praying before one of the side-altars or kneeling in
the benches near the confessionals. He approached
timidly and knelt at the last bench in the body, thankful
for the peace and silence and fragrant shadow of the
church. The board on which he knelt was narrow
and worn and those who knelt near him were humble
followers of Jesus. Jesus too had been born in
poverty and had worked in the shop of a carpenter,
cutting boards and planing them, and had first spoken
of the kingdom of God to poor fishermen, teaching
all men to be meek and humble of heart.
He bowed his head upon his hands,
bidding his heart be meek and humble that he might
be like those who knelt beside him and his prayer as
acceptable as theirs. He prayed beside them but
it was hard. His soul was foul with sin and he
dared not ask forgiveness with the simple trust of
those whom Jesus, in the mysterious ways of God, had
called first to His side, the carpenters, the fishermen,
poor and simple people following a lowly trade, handling
and shaping the wood of trees, mending their nets
with patience.
A tall figure came down the aisle
and the penitents stirred; and at the last moment,
glancing up swiftly, he saw a long grey beard and the
brown habit of a capuchin. The priest entered
the box and was hidden. Two penitents rose and
entered the confessional at either side. The
wooden slide was drawn back and the faint murmur of
a voice troubled the silence.
His blood began to murmur in his veins,
murmuring like a sinful city summoned from its sleep
to hear its doom. Little flakes of fire fell
and powdery ashes fell softly, alighting on the houses
of men. They stirred, waking from sleep, troubled
by the heated air.
The slide was shot back. The
penitent emerged from the side of the box. The
farther side was drawn. A woman entered quietly
and deftly where the first penitent had knelt.
The faint murmur began again.
He could still leave the chapel.
He could stand up, put one foot before the other and
walk out softly and then run, run, run swiftly through
the dark streets. He could still escape from the
shame. Had it been any terrible crime but that
one sin! Had it been murder! Little fiery
flakes fell and touched him at all points, shameful
thoughts, shameful words, shameful acts. Shame
covered him wholly like fine glowing ashes falling
continually. To say it in words! His soul,
stifling and helpless, would cease to be.
The slide was shot back. A penitent
emerged from the farther side of the box. The
near slide was drawn. A penitent entered where
the other penitent had come out. A soft whispering
noise floated in vaporous cloudlets out of the box.
It was the woman: soft whispering cloudlets,
soft whispering vapour, whispering and vanishing.
He beat his breast with his fist humbly,
secretly under cover of the wooden armrest. He
would be at one with others and with God. He would
love his neighbour. He would love God who had
made and loved him. He would kneel and pray with
others and be happy. God would look down on him
and on them and would love them all.
It was easy to be good. God’s
yoke was sweet and light. It was better never
to have sinned, to have remained always a child, for
God loved little children and suffered them to come
to Him. It was a terrible and a sad thing to
sin. But God was merciful to poor sinners who
were truly sorry. How true that was! That
was indeed goodness.
The slide was shot to suddenly.
The penitent came out. He was next. He stood
up in terror and walked blindly into the box.
At last it had come. He knelt
in the silent gloom and raised his eyes to the white
crucifix suspended above him. God could see that
he was sorry. He would tell all his sins.
His confession would be long, long. Everybody
in the chapel would know then what a sinner he had
been. Let them know. It was true. But
God had promised to forgive him if he was sorry.
He was sorry. He clasped his hands and raised
them towards the white form, praying with his darkened
eyes, praying with all his trembling body, swaying
his head to and fro like a lost creature, praying
with whimpering lips.
Sorry! Sorry! O sorry!
The slide clicked back and his heart
bounded in his breast. The face of an old priest
was at the grating, averted from him, leaning upon
a hand. He made the sign of the cross and prayed
of the priest to bless him for he had sinned.
Then, bowing his head, he repeated the confiteor
in fright. At the words my most grievous
fault he ceased, breathless.
How long is it since your last confession,
my child?
A long time, father.
A month, my child?
Longer, father.
Three months, my child?
Longer, father.
Six months?
Eight months, father.
He had begun. The priest asked:
And what do you remember since that time?
He began to confess his sins: masses missed,
prayers not said, lies.
Anything else, my child?
Sins of anger, envy of others, gluttony, vanity, disobedience.
Anything else, my child?
There was no help. He murmured:
I... committed sins of impurity, father.
The priest did not turn his head.
With yourself, my child?
And... with others.
With women, my child?
Yes, father.
Were they married women, my child?
He did not know. His sins trickled
from his lips, one by one, trickled in shameful drops
from his soul, festering and oozing like a sore, a
squalid stream of vice. The last sins oozed forth,
sluggish, filthy. There was no more to tell.
He bowed his head, overcome.
The Priest was silent. Then he asked:
How old are you, my child?
Sixteen, father.
The priest passed his hand several
times over his face. Then, resting his forehead
against his hand, he leaned towards the grating and,
with eyes still averted, spoke slowly. His voice
was weary and old.
You are very young, my
child, he said, and let me implore of you to give
up that sin. It is a terrible sin. It kills
the body and it kills the soul. It is the cause
of many crimes and misfortunes. Give it up, my
child, for God’s sake. It is dishonourable
and unmanly. You cannot know where that wretched
habit will lead you or where it will come against
you. As long as you commit that sin, my poor child,
you will never be worth one farthing to God.
Pray to our mother Mary to help you. She will
help you, my child. Pray to Our Blessed Lady when
that sin comes into your mind. I am sure you
will do that, will you not? You repent of all
those sins. I am sure you do. And you will
promise God now that by His holy grace you will never
offend Him any more by that wicked sin. You will
make that solemn promise to God, will you not?
Yes, father.
The old and weary voice fell like
sweet rain upon his quaking parching heart. How
sweet and sad!
Do so my poor child.
The devil has led you astray. Drive him back to
hell when he tempts you to dishonour your body in that
way the foul spirit who hates our Lord.
Promise God now that you will give up that sin, that
wretched wretched sin.
Blinded by his tears and by the light
of God’s mercifulness he bent his head and heard
the grave words of absolution spoken and saw the priest’s
hand raised above him in token of forgiveness.
God bless you, my child. Pray for
me.
He knelt to say his penance, praying
in a corner of the dark nave; and his prayers ascended
to heaven from his purified heart like perfume streaming
upwards from a heart of white rose.
The muddy streets were gay. He
strode homeward, conscious of an invisible grace pervading
and making light his limbs. In spite of all he
had done it. He had confessed and God had pardoned
him. His soul was made fair and holy once more,
holy and happy.
It would be beautiful to die if God
so willed. It was beautiful to live in grace
a life of peace and virtue and forbearance with others.
He sat by the fire in the kitchen,
not daring to speak for happiness. Till that
moment he had not known how beautiful and peaceful
life could be. The green square of paper pinned
round the lamp cast down a tender shade. On the
dresser was a plate of sausages and white pudding and
on the shelf there were eggs. They would be for
the breakfast in the morning after the communion in
the college chapel. White pudding and eggs and
sausages and cups of tea. How simple and beautiful
was life after all! And life lay all before him.
In a dream he fell asleep. In
a dream he rose and saw that it was morning.
In a waking dream he went through the quiet morning
towards the college.
The boys were all there, kneeling
in their places. He knelt among them, happy and
shy. The altar was heaped with fragrant masses
of white flowers; and in the morning light the pale
flames of the candles among the white flowers were
clear and silent as his own soul.
He knelt before the altar with his
classmates, holding the altar cloth with them over
a living rail of hands. His hands were trembling
and his soul trembled as he heard the priest pass
with the ciborium from communicant to communicant.
Corpus domini nostri.
Could it be? He knelt there sinless
and timid; and he would hold upon his tongue the host
and God would enter his purified body.
In VITAM ETERNAM. Amen.
Another life! A life of grace
and virtue and happiness! It was true. It
was not a dream from which he would wake. The
past was past.
Corpus domini nostri.
The ciborium had come to him.