Sunday was dedicated to the mystery of the Holy Trinity,
Monday to the
Holy Ghost, Tuesday to the Guardian Angels, Wednesday
to saint Joseph,
Thursday to the Most Blessed Sacrament of the Altar,
Friday to the
Suffering Jesus, Saturday to the Blessed Virgin Mary.
Every morning he hallowed himself
anew in the presence of some holy image or mystery.
His day began with an heroic offering of its every
moment of thought or action for the intentions of the
sovereign pontiff and with an early mass. The
raw morning air whetted his resolute piety; and often
as he knelt among the few worshippers at the side-altar,
following with his interleaved prayer-book the murmur
of the priest, he glanced up for an instant towards
the vested figure standing in the gloom between the
two candles, which were the old and the new testaments,
and imagined that he was kneeling at mass in the catacombs.
His daily life was laid out in devotional
areas. By means of ejaculations and prayers he
stored up ungrudgingly for the souls in purgatory
centuries of days and quarantines and years; yet the
spiritual triumph which he felt in achieving with ease
so many fabulous ages of canonical penances did not
wholly reward his zeal of prayer, since he could never
know how much temporal punishment he had remitted
by way of suffrage for the agonizing souls; and fearful
lest in the midst of the purgatorial fire, which differed
from the infernal only in that it was not everlasting,
his penance might avail no more than a drop of moisture,
he drove his soul daily through an increasing circle
of works of supererogation.
Every part of his day, divided by
what he regarded now as the duties of his station
in life, circled about its own centre of spiritual
energy. His life seemed to have drawn near to
eternity; every thought, word, and deed, every instance
of consciousness could be made to revibrate radiantly
in heaven; and at times his sense of such immediate
repercussion was so lively that he seemed to feel his
soul in devotion pressing like fingers the keyboard
of a great cash register and to see the amount of
his purchase start forth immediately in heaven, not
as a number but as a frail column of incense or as
a slender flower.
The rosaries, too, which he said constantly for
he carried his beads loose in his trousers’
pockets that he might tell them as he walked the streets transformed
themselves into coronals of flowers of such vague
unearthly texture that they seemed to him as hueless
and odourless as they were nameless. He offered
up each of his three daily chaplets that his soul
might grow strong in each of the three theological
virtues, in faith in the Father Who had created him,
in hope in the Son Who had redeemed him and in love
of the Holy Ghost Who had sanctified him; and this
thrice triple prayer he offered to the Three Persons
through Mary in the name of her joyful and sorrowful
and glorious mysteries.
On each of the seven days of the week
he further prayed that one of the seven gifts of the
Holy Ghost might descend upon his soul and drive out
of it day by day the seven deadly sins which had defiled
it in the past; and he prayed for each gift on its
appointed day, confident that it would descend upon
him, though it seemed strange to him at times that
wisdom and understanding and knowledge were so distinct
in their nature that each should be prayed for apart
from the others. Yet he believed that at some
future stage of his spiritual progress this difficulty
would be removed when his sinful soul had been raised
up from its weakness and enlightened by the Third
Person of the Most Blessed Trinity. He believed
this all the more, and with trepidation, because of
the divine gloom and silence wherein dwelt the unseen
Paraclete, Whose symbols were a dove and a mighty wind,
to sin against Whom was a sin beyond forgiveness,
the eternal mysterious secret Being to Whom, as God,
the priests offered up mass once a year, robed in the
scarlet of the tongues of fire.
The imagery through which the nature
and kinship of the Three Persons of the Trinity were
darkly shadowed forth in the books of devotion which
he read the Father contemplating from all
eternity as in a mirror His Divine Perfections and
thereby begetting eternally the Eternal Son and the
Holy Spirit proceeding out of Father and Son from
all eternity were easier of acceptance by
his mind by reason of their august incomprehensibility
than was the simple fact that God had loved his soul
from all eternity, for ages before he had been born
into the world, for ages before the world itself had
existed.
He had heard the names of the passions
of love and hate pronounced solemnly on the stage
and in the pulpit, had found them set forth solemnly
in books and had wondered why his soul was unable to
harbour them for any time or to force his lips to
utter their names with conviction. A brief anger
had often invested him but he had never been able
to make it an abiding passion and had always felt himself
passing out of it as if his very body were being divested
with ease of some outer skin or peel. He had
felt a subtle, dark, and murmurous presence penetrate
his being and fire him with a brief iniquitous lust:
it, too, had slipped beyond his grasp leaving his
mind lucid and indifferent. This, it seemed,
was the only love and that the only hate his soul
would harbour.
But he could no longer disbelieve
in the reality of love, since God Himself had loved
his individual soul with divine love from all eternity.
Gradually, as his soul was enriched with spiritual
knowledge, he saw the whole world forming one vast
symmetrical expression of God’s power and love.
Life became a divine gift for every moment and sensation
of which, were it even the sight of a single leaf hanging
on the twig of a tree, his soul should praise and
thank the Giver. The world for all its solid
substance and complexity no longer existed for his
soul save as a theorem of divine power and love and
universality. So entire and unquestionable was
this sense of the divine meaning in all nature granted
to his soul that he could scarcely understand why it
was in any way necessary that he should continue to
live. Yet that was part of the divine purpose
and he dared not question its use, he above all others
who had sinned so deeply and so foully against the
divine purpose. Meek and abased by this consciousness
of the one eternal omnipresent perfect reality his
soul took up again her burden of pieties, masses and
prayers and sacraments and mortifications, and only
then for the first time since he had brooded on the
great mystery of love did he feel within him a warm
movement like that of some newly born life or virtue
of the soul itself. The attitude of rapture in
sacred art, the raised and parted hands, the parted
lips and eyes as of one about to swoon, became for
him an image of the soul in prayer, humiliated and
faint before her Creator.
But he had been forewarned of the
dangers of spiritual exaltation and did not allow
himself to desist from even the least or lowliest
devotion, striving also by constant mortification to
undo the sinful past rather than to achieve a saintliness
fraught with peril. Each of his senses was brought
under a rigorous discipline. In order to mortify
the sense of sight he made it his rule to walk in the
street with downcast eyes, glancing neither to right
nor left and never behind him. His eyes shunned
every encounter with the eyes of women. From time
to time also he balked them by a sudden effort of
the will, as by lifting them suddenly in the middle
of an unfinished sentence and closing the book.
To mortify his hearing he exerted no control over his
voice which was then breaking, neither sang nor whistled,
and made no attempt to flee from noises which caused
him painful nervous irritation such as the sharpening
of knives on the knife board, the gathering of cinders
on the fire-shovel and the twigging of the carpet.
To mortify his smell was more difficult as he found
in himself no instinctive repugnance to bad odours
whether they were the odours of the outdoor world,
such as those of dung or tar, or the odours of his
own person among which he had made many curious comparisons
and experiments. He found in the end that the
only odour against which his sense of smell revolted
was a certain stale fishy stink like that of long-standing
urine; and whenever it was possible he subjected himself
to this unpleasant odour. To mortify the taste
he practised strict habits at table, observed to the
letter all the fasts of the church and sought by distraction
to divert his mind from the savours of different foods.
But it was to the mortification of touch he brought
the most assiduous ingenuity of inventiveness.
He never consciously changed his position in bed, sat
in the most uncomfortable positions, suffered patiently
every itch and pain, kept away from the fire, remained
on his knees all through the mass except at the gospels,
left part of his neck and face undried so that air
might sting them and, whenever he was not saying his
beads, carried his arms stiffly at his sides like
a runner and never in his pockets or clasped behind
him.
He had no temptations to sin mortally.
It surprised him however to find that at the end of
his course of intricate piety and self-restraint he
was so easily at the mercy of childish and unworthy
imperfections. His prayers and fasts availed
him little for the suppression of anger at hearing
his mother sneeze or at being disturbed in his devotions.
It needed an immense effort of his will to master
the impulse which urged him to give outlet to such
irritation. Images of the outbursts of trivial
anger which he had often noted among his masters, their
twitching mouths, close-shut lips and flushed cheeks,
recurred to his memory, discouraging him, for all
his practice of humility, by the comparison.
To merge his life in the common tide of other lives
was harder for him than any fasting or prayer and
it was his constant failure to do this to his own
satisfaction which caused in his soul at last a sensation
of spiritual dryness together with a growth of doubts
and scruples. His soul traversed a period of desolation
in which the sacraments themselves seemed to have
turned into dried-up sources. His confession
became a channel for the escape of scrupulous and unrepented
imperfections. His actual reception of the eucharist
did not bring him the same dissolving moments of virginal
self-surrender as did those spiritual communions
made by him sometimes at the close of some visit to
the Blessed Sacrament. The book which he used
for these visits was an old neglected book written
by saint Alphonsus Liguori, with fading characters
and sere foxpapered leaves. A faded world of fervent
love and virginal responses seemed to be evoked for
his soul by the reading of its pages in which the
imagery of the canticles was interwoven with the communicant’s
prayers. An inaudible voice seemed to caress the
soul, telling her names and glories, bidding her arise
as for espousal and come away, bidding her look forth,
a spouse, from Amana and from the mountains of the
leopards; and the soul seemed to answer with the same
inaudible voice, surrendering herself: Inter
UBERA mea COMMORABITUR.
This idea of surrender had a perilous
attraction for his mind now that he felt his soul
beset once again by the insistent voices of the flesh
which began to murmur to him again during his prayers
and meditations. It gave him an intense sense
of power to know that he could, by a single act of
consent, in a moment of thought, undo all that he had
done. He seemed to feel a flood slowly advancing
towards his naked feet and to be waiting for the first
faint timid noiseless wavelet to touch his fevered
skin. Then, almost at the instant of that touch,
almost at the verge of sinful consent, he found himself
standing far away from the flood upon a dry shore,
saved by a sudden act of the will or a sudden ejaculation;
and, seeing the silver line of the flood far away
and beginning again its slow advance towards his feet,
a new thrill of power and satisfaction shook his soul
to know that he had not yielded nor undone all.
When he had eluded the flood of temptation
many times in this way he grew troubled and wondered
whether the grace which he had refused to lose was
not being filched from him little by little. The
clear certitude of his own immunity grew dim and to
it succeeded a vague fear that his soul had really
fallen unawares. It was with difficulty that
he won back his old consciousness of his state of grace
by telling himself that he had prayed to God at every
temptation and that the grace which he had prayed
for must have been given to him inasmuch as God was
obliged to give it. The very frequency and violence
of temptations showed him at last the truth of what
he had heard about the trials of the saints.
Frequent and violent temptations were a proof that
the citadel of the soul had not fallen and that the
devil raged to make it fall.
Often when he had confessed his doubts
and scruples some momentary inattention
at prayer, a movement of trivial anger in his soul,
or a subtle wilfulness in speech or act he
was bidden by his confessor to name some sin of his
past life before absolution was given him. He
named it with humility and shame and repented of it
once more. It humiliated and shamed him to think
that he would never be freed from it wholly, however
holily he might live or whatever virtues or perfections
he might attain. A restless feeling of guilt would
always be present with him: he would confess
and repent and be absolved, confess and repent again
and be absolved again, fruitlessly. Perhaps that
first hasty confession wrung from him by the fear
of hell had not been good? Perhaps, concerned
only for his imminent doom, he had not had sincere
sorrow for his sin? But the surest sign that his
confession had been good and that he had had sincere
sorrow for his sin was, he knew, the amendment of
his life.
I have amended my life, have I not? he
asked himself.
The director stood in the embrasure
of the window, his back to the light, leaning an elbow
on the brown crossblind, and, as he spoke and smiled,
slowly dangling and looping the cord of the other blind,
Stephen stood before him, following for a moment with
his eyes the waning of the long summer daylight above
the roofs or the slow deft movements of the priestly
fingers. The priest’s face was in total
shadow, but the waning daylight from behind him touched
the deeply grooved temples and the curves of the skull.
Stephen followed also with his ears
the accents and intervals of the priest’s voice
as he spoke gravely and cordially of indifferent themes,
the vacation which had just ended, the colleges of
the order abroad, the transference of masters.
The grave and cordial voice went on easily with its
tale and in the pauses Stephen felt bound to set it
on again with respectful questions. He knew that
the tale was a prelude and his mind waited for the
sequel. Ever since the message of summons had
come for him from the director his mind had struggled
to find the meaning of the message; and, during the
long restless time he had sat in the college parlour
waiting for the director to come in, his eyes had
wandered from one sober picture to another around the
walls and his mind wandered from one guess to another
until the meaning of the summons had almost become
clear. Then, just as he was wishing that some
unforeseen cause might prevent the director from coming,
he had heard the handle of the door turning and the
swish of a soutane.
The director had begun to speak of
the dominican and franciscan orders and of the friendship
between saint Thomas and saint Bonaventure. The
capuchin dress, he thought, was rather too...
Stephen’s face gave back the
priest’s indulgent smile and, not being anxious
to give an opinion, he made a slight dubitative
movement with his lips.
I believe, continued the
director, that there is some talk now among the capuchins
themselves of doing away with it and following the
example of the other franciscans.
I suppose they would retain
it in the cloisters? said Stephen.
O certainly, said the
director. For the cloister it is all right but
for the street I really think it would be better to
do away with it, don’t you?
It must be troublesome, I imagine.
Of course it is, of course.
Just imagine when I was in Belgium I used to see them
out cycling in all kinds of weather with this thing
up about their knees! It was really ridiculous.
Les jupes, they call them in Belgium.
The vowel was so modified as to be indistinct.
What do they call them?
Les jupes.
O!
Stephen smiled again in answer to
the smile which he could not see on the priest’s
shadowed face, its image or spectre only passing rapidly
across his mind as the low discreet accent fell upon
his ear. He gazed calmly before him at the waning
sky, glad of the cool of the evening and of the faint
yellow glow which hid the tiny flame kindling upon
his cheek.
The names of articles of dress worn
by women or of certain soft and delicate stuffs used
in their making brought always to his mind a delicate
and sinful perfume. As a boy he had imagined the
reins by which horses are driven as slender silken
bands and it shocked him to feel at Stradbrooke the
greasy leather of harness. It had shocked him,
too, when he had felt for the first time beneath his
tremulous fingers the brittle texture of a woman’s
stocking for, retaining nothing of all he read save
that which seemed to him an echo or a prophecy of his
own state, it was only amid soft-worded phrases or
within rose-soft stuffs that he dared to conceive
of the soul or body of a woman moving with tender
life.
But the phrase on the priest’s
lips was disingenuous for he knew that a priest should
not speak lightly on that theme. The phrase had
been spoken lightly with design and he felt that his
face was being searched by the eyes in the shadow.
Whatever he had heard or read of the craft of jesuits
he had put aside frankly as not borne out by his own
experience. His masters, even when they had not
attracted him, had seemed to him always intelligent
and serious priests, athletic and high-spirited prefects.
He thought of them as men who washed their bodies
briskly with cold water and wore clean cold linen.
During all the years he had lived among them in Clongowes
and in Belvedere he had received only two pandies
and, though these had been dealt him in the wrong,
he knew that he had often escaped punishment.
During all those years he had never heard from any
of his masters a flippant word: it was they who
had taught him christian doctrine and urged him to
live a good life and, when he had fallen into grievous
sin, it was they who had led him back to grace.
Their presence had made him diffident of himself when
he was a muff in Clongowes and it had made him diffident
of himself also while he had held his equivocal position
in Belvedere. A constant sense of this had remained
with him up to the last year of his school life.
He had never once disobeyed or allowed turbulent companions
to seduce him from his habit of quiet obedience; and,
even when he doubted some statement of a master, he
had never presumed to doubt openly. Lately some
of their judgements had sounded a little childish
in his ears and had made him feel a regret and pity
as though he were slowly passing out of an accustomed
world and were hearing its language for the last time.
One day when some boys had gathered round a priest
under the shed near the chapel, he had heard the priest
say:
I believe that Lord Macaulay
was a man who probably never committed a mortal sin
in his life, that is to say, a deliberate mortal sin.
Some of the boys had then asked the
priest if Victor Hugo were not the greatest French
writer. The priest had answered that Victor Hugo
had never written half so well when he had turned
against the church as he had written when he was a
catholic.
But there are many eminent
French critics, said the priest, who consider that
even Victor Hugo, great as he certainly was, had not
so pure a French style as Louis Veuillot.
The tiny flame which the priest’s
allusion had kindled upon Stephen’s cheek had
sunk down again and his eyes were still fixed calmly
on the colourless sky. But an unresting doubt
flew hither and thither before his mind. Masked
memories passed quickly before him: he recognized
scenes and persons yet he was conscious that he had
failed to perceive some vital circumstance in them.
He saw himself walking about the grounds watching
the sports in Clongowes and eating slim jim out of
his cricket cap. Some jesuits were walking round
the cycle-track in the company of ladies. The
echoes of certain expressions used in Clongowes sounded
in remote caves of his mind.
His ears were listening to these distant
echoes amid the silence of the parlour when he became
aware that the priest was addressing him in a different
voice.
I sent for you today,
Stephen, because I wished to speak to you on a very
important subject.
Yes, sir.
Have you ever felt that you had a vocation?
Stephen parted his lips to answer
yes and then withheld the word suddenly. The
priest waited for the answer and added:
I mean, have you ever
felt within yourself, in your soul, a desire to join
the order? Think.
I have sometimes thought of it, said Stephen.
The priest let the blindcord fall
to one side and, uniting his hands, leaned his chin
gravely upon them, communing with himself.
In a college like this,
he said at length, there is one boy or perhaps two
or three boys whom God calls to the religious life.
Such a boy is marked off from his companions by his
piety, by the good example he shows to others.
He is looked up to by them; he is chosen perhaps as
prefect by his fellow sodalists. And you, Stephen,
have been such a boy in this college, prefect of Our
Blessed Lady’s sodality. Perhaps you are
the boy in this college whom God designs to call to
Himself.
A strong note of pride reinforcing
the gravity of the priest’s voice made Stephen’s
heart quicken in response.
To receive that call, Stephen, said
the priest, is the greatest honour that the Almighty
God can bestow upon a man. No king or emperor
on this earth has the power of the priest of God.
No angel or archangel in heaven, no saint, not even
the Blessed Virgin herself, has the power of a priest
of God: the power of the keys, the power to bind
and to loose from sin, the power of exorcism, the
power to cast out from the creatures of God the evil
spirits that have power over them; the power, the
authority, to make the great God of Heaven come down
upon the altar and take the form of bread and wine.
What an awful power, Stephen!
A flame began to flutter again on
Stephen’s cheek as he heard in this proud address
an echo of his own proud musings. How often had
he seen himself as a priest wielding calmly and humbly
the awful power of which angels and saints stood in
reverence! His soul had loved to muse in secret
on this desire. He had seen himself, a young
and silent-mannered priest, entering a confessional
swiftly, ascending the altarsteps, incensing, genuflecting,
accomplishing the vague acts of the priesthood which
pleased him by reason of their semblance of reality
and of their distance from it. In that dim life
which he had lived through in his musings he had assumed
the voices and gestures which he had noted with various
priests. He had bent his knee sideways like such
a one, he had shaken the thurible only slightly like
such a one, his chasuble had swung open like that
of such another as he turned to the altar again after
having blessed the people. And above all it had
pleased him to fill the second place in those dim
scenes of his imagining. He shrank from the dignity
of celebrant because it displeased him to imagine that
all the vague pomp should end in his own person or
that the ritual should assign to him so clear and
final an office. He longed for the minor sacred
offices, to be vested with the tunicle of subdeacon
at high mass, to stand aloof from the altar, forgotten
by the people, his shoulders covered with a humeral
veil, holding the paten within its folds or, when
the sacrifice had been accomplished, to stand as deacon
in a dalmatic of cloth of gold on the step below the
celebrant, his hands joined and his face towards the
people, and sing the chant ITE Missa EST. If
ever he had seen himself celebrant it was as in the
pictures of the mass in his child’s massbook,
in a church without worshippers, save for the angel
of the sacrifice, at a bare altar, and served by an
acolyte scarcely more boyish than himself. In
vague sacrificial or sacramental acts alone his will
seemed drawn to go forth to encounter reality; and
it was partly the absence of an appointed rite which
had always constrained him to inaction whether he had
allowed silence to cover his anger or pride or had
suffered only an embrace he longed to give.
He listened in reverent silence now
to the priest’s appeal and through the words
he heard even more distinctly a voice bidding him approach,
offering him secret knowledge and secret power.
He would know then what was the sin of Simon Magus
and what the sin against the Holy Ghost for which
there was no forgiveness. He would know obscure
things, hidden from others, from those who were conceived
and born children of wrath. He would know the
sins, the sinful longings and sinful thoughts and
sinful acts, of others, hearing them murmured into
his ears in the confessional under the shame of a
darkened chapel by the lips of women and of girls;
but rendered immune mysteriously at his ordination
by the imposition of hands, his soul would pass again
uncontaminated to the white peace of the altar.
No touch of sin would linger upon the hands with which
he would elevate and break the host; no touch of sin
would linger on his lips in prayer to make him eat
and drink damnation to himself not discerning the
body of the Lord. He would hold his secret knowledge
and secret power, being as sinless as the innocent,
and he would be a priest for ever according to the
order of Melchisedec.
I will offer up my mass
tomorrow morning, said the director, that Almighty
God may reveal to you His holy will. And let you,
Stephen, make a novena to your holy patron saint,
the first martyr, who is very powerful with God, that
God may enlighten your mind. But you must be
quite sure, Stephen, that you have a vocation because
it would be terrible if you found afterwards that
you had none. Once a priest always a priest,
remember. Your catechism tells you that the sacrament
of Holy Orders is one of those which can be received
only once because it imprints on the soul an indelible
spiritual mark which can never be effaced. It
is before you must weigh well, not after. It is
a solemn question, Stephen, because on it may depend
the salvation of your eternal soul. But we will
pray to God together.
He held open the heavy hall door and
gave his hand as if already to a companion in the
spiritual life. Stephen passed out on to the wide
platform above the steps and was conscious of the caress
of mild evening air. Towards Findlater’s
church a quartet of young men were striding along
with linked arms, swaying their heads and stepping
to the agile melody of their leader’s concertina.
The music passed in an instant, as the first bars
of sudden music always did, over the fantastic fabrics
of his mind, dissolving them painlessly and noiselessly
as a sudden wave dissolves the sand-built turrets of
children. Smiling at the trivial air he raised
his eyes to the priest’s face and, seeing in
it a mirthless reflection of the sunken day, detached
his hand slowly which had acquiesced faintly in the
companionship.
As he descended the steps the impression
which effaced his troubled self-communion was that
of a mirthless mask reflecting a sunken day from the
threshold of the college. The shadow, then, of
the life of the college passed gravely over his consciousness.
It was a grave and ordered and passionless life that
awaited him, a life without material cares. He
wondered how he would pass the first night in the novitiate
and with what dismay he would wake the first morning
in the dormitory. The troubling odour of the
long corridors of Clongowes came back to him and he
heard the discreet murmur of the burning gasflames.
At once from every part of his being unrest began
to irradiate. A feverish quickening of his pulses
followed, and a din of meaningless words drove his
reasoned thoughts hither and thither confusedly.
His lungs dilated and sank as if he were inhaling
a warm moist unsustaining air and he smelt again the
moist warm air which hung in the bath in Clongowes
above the sluggish turf-coloured water.
Some instinct, waking at these memories,
stronger than education or piety, quickened within
him at every near approach to that life, an instinct
subtle and hostile, and armed him against acquiescence.
The chill and order of the life repelled him.
He saw himself rising in the cold of the morning and
filing down with the others to early mass and trying
vainly to struggle with his prayers against the fainting
sickness of his stomach. He saw himself sitting
at dinner with the community of a college. What,
then, had become of that deep-rooted shyness of his
which had made him loth to eat or drink under a strange
roof? What had come of the pride of his spirit
which had always made him conceive himself as a being
apart in every order?
The Reverend Stephen Dedalus, S.J.
His name in that new life leaped into
characters before his eyes and to it there followed
a mental sensation of an undefined face or colour of
a face. The colour faded and became strong like
a changing glow of pallid brick red. Was it the
raw reddish glow he had so often seen on wintry mornings
on the shaven gills of the priests? The face was
eyeless and sour-favoured and devout, shot with pink
tinges of suffocated anger. Was it not a
mental spectre of the face of one of the jesuits whom
some of the boys called Lantern Jaws and others Foxy
Campbell?
He was passing at that moment before
the jesuit house in Gardiner Street and wondered vaguely
which window would be his if he ever joined the order.
Then he wondered at the vagueness of his wonder, at
the remoteness of his own soul from what he had hitherto
imagined her sanctuary, at the frail hold which so
many years of order and obedience had of him when
once a definite and irrevocable act of his threatened
to end for ever, in time and in eternity, his freedom.
The voice of the director urging upon him the proud
claims of the church and the mystery and power of
the priestly office repeated itself idly in his memory.
His soul was not there to hear and greet it and he
knew now that the exhortation he had listened to had
already fallen into an idle formal tale. He would
never swing the thurible before the tabernacle as priest.
His destiny was to be elusive of social or religious
orders. The wisdom of the priest’s appeal
did not touch him to the quick. He was destined
to learn his own wisdom apart from others or to learn
the wisdom of others himself wandering among the snares
of the world.
The snares of the world were its ways
of sin. He would fall. He had not yet fallen
but he would fall silently, in an instant. Not
to fall was too hard, too hard; and he felt the silent
lapse of his soul, as it would be at some instant
to come, falling, falling, but not yet fallen, still
unfallen, but about to fall.
He crossed the bridge over the stream
of the Tolka and turned his eyes coldly for an instant
towards the faded blue shrine of the Blessed Virgin
which stood fowl-wise on a pole in the middle of a
ham-shaped encampment of poor cottages. Then,
bending to the left, he followed the lane which led
up to his house. The faint Sour stink of rotted
cabbages came towards him from the kitchen gardens
on the rising ground above the river. He smiled
to think that it was this disorder, the misrule and
confusion of his father’s house and the stagnation
of vegetable life, which was to win the day in his
soul. Then a short laugh broke from his lips
as he thought of that solitary farmhand in the kitchen
gardens behind their house whom they had nicknamed
the man with the hat. A second laugh, taking
rise from the first after a pause, broke from him
involuntarily as he thought of how the man with the
hat worked, considering in turn the four points of
the sky and then regretfully plunging his spade in
the earth.
He pushed open the latchless door
of the porch and passed through the naked hallway
into the kitchen. A group of his brothers and
sisters was sitting round the table. Tea was
nearly over and only the last of the second watered
tea remained in the bottoms of the small glass jars
and jampots which did service for teacups. Discarded
crusts and lumps of sugared bread, turned brown by
the tea which had been poured over them, lay scattered
on the table. Little wells of tea lay here and
there on the board, and a knife with a broken ivory
handle was stuck through the pith of a ravaged turnover.
The sad quiet grey-blue glow of the
dying day came through the window and the open door,
covering over and allaying quietly a sudden instinct
of remorse in Stephen’s heart. All that
had been denied them had been freely given to him,
the eldest; but the quiet glow of evening showed him
in their faces no sign of rancour.
He sat near them at the table and
asked where his father and mother were. One answered:
Goneboro toboro lookboro atboro aboro
houseboro.
Still another removal! A boy
named Fallon in Belvedere had often asked him with
a silly laugh why they moved so often. A frown
of scorn darkened quickly his forehead as he heard
again the silly laugh of the questioner.
He asked:
Why are we on the move again if it’s
a fair question?
Becauseboro theboro landboro lordboro
willboro putboro usboro outboro.
The voice of his youngest brother
from the farther side of the fireplace began to sing
the air oft in the stilly night.
One by one the others took up the air until a full
choir of voices was singing. They would sing
so for hours, melody after melody, glee after glee,
till the last pale light died down on the horizon,
till the first dark night clouds came forth and night
fell.
He waited for some moments, listening,
before he too took up the air with them. He was
listening with pain of spirit to the overtone of weariness
behind their frail fresh innocent voices. Even
before they set out on life’s journey they seemed
weary already of the way.
He heard the choir of voices in the
kitchen echoed and multiplied through an endless reverberation
of the choirs of endless generations of children and
heard in all the echoes an echo also of the recurring
note of weariness and pain. All seemed weary of
life even before entering upon it. And he remembered
that Newman had heard this note also in the broken
lines of Virgil, giving utterance, like
the voice of nature herself,
to that pain and weariness
yet hope of better things
which has been the experience
of her children in every time.
He could wait no longer.
From the door of Byron’s public-house
to the gate of Clontarf Chapel, from the gate of Clontail
Chapel to the door of Byron’s public-house and
then back again to the chapel and then back again to
the public-house he had paced slowly at first, planting
his steps scrupulously in the spaces of the patchwork
of the footpath, then timing their fall to the fall
of verses. A full hour had passed since his father
had gone in with Dan Crosby, the tutor, to find out
for him something about the university. For a
full hour he had paced up and down, waiting: but
he could wait no longer.
He set off abruptly for the Bull,
walking rapidly lest his father’s shrill whistle
might call him back; and in a few moments he had rounded
the curve at the police barrack and was safe.
Yes, his mother was hostile to the
idea, as he had read from her listless silence.
Yet her mistrust pricked him more keenly than his
father’s pride and he thought coldly how he had
watched the faith which was fading down in his soul
ageing and strengthening in her eyes. A dim antagonism
gathered force within him and darkened his mind as
a cloud against her disloyalty and when it passed,
cloud-like, leaving his mind serene and dutiful towards
her again, he was made aware dimly and without regret
of a first noiseless sundering of their lives.
The university! So he had passed
beyond the challenge of the sentries who had stood
as guardians of his boyhood and had sought to keep
him among them that he might be subject to them and
serve their ends. Pride after satisfaction uplifted
him like long slow waves. The end he had been
born to serve yet did not see had led him to escape
by an unseen path and now it beckoned to him once
more and a new adventure was about to be opened to
him. It seemed to him that he heard notes of fitful
music leaping upwards a tone and downwards a diminished
fourth, upwards a tone and downwards a major third,
like triple-branching flames leaping fitfully, flame
after flame, out of a midnight wood. It was an
elfin prelude, endless and formless; and, as it grew
wilder and faster, the flames leaping out of time,
he seemed to hear from under the boughs and grasses
wild creatures racing, their feet pattering like rain
upon the leaves. Their feet passed in pattering
tumult over his mind, the feet of hares and rabbits,
the feet of harts and hinds and antelopes, until
he heard them no more and remembered only a proud cadence
from Newman:
Whose feet are as the
feet of harts and underneath the everlasting arms.
The pride of that dim image brought
back to his mind the dignity of the office he had
refused. All through his boyhood he had mused
upon that which he had so often thought to be his
destiny and when the moment had come for him to obey
the call he had turned aside, obeying a wayward instinct.
Now time lay between: the oils of ordination would
never anoint his body. He had refused. Why?
He turned seaward from the road at
Dollymount and as he passed on to the thin wooden
bridge he felt the planks shaking with the tramp of
heavily shod feet. A squad of christian brothers
was on its way back from the Bull and had begun to
pass, two by two, across the bridge. Soon the
whole bridge was trembling and resounding. The
uncouth faces passed him two by two, stained yellow
or red or livid by the sea, and, as he strove to look
at them with ease and indifference, a faint stain
of personal shame and commiseration rose to his own
face. Angry with himself he tried to hide his
face from their eyes by gazing down sideways into
the shallow swirling water under the bridge but he
still saw a reflection therein of their top-heavy
silk hats and humble tape-like collars and loosely-hanging
clerical clothes.
Brother Hickey.
Brother Quaid.
Brother MacArdle.
Brother Keogh.
Their piety would be like their names,
like their faces, like their clothes, and it was idle
for him to tell himself that their humble and contrite
hearts, it might be, paid a far richer tribute of devotion
than his had ever been, a gift tenfold more acceptable
than his elaborate adoration. It was idle for
him to move himself to be generous towards them, to
tell himself that if he ever came to their gates,
stripped of his pride, beaten and in beggar’s
weeds, that they would be generous towards him, loving
him as themselves. Idle and embittering, finally,
to argue, against his own dispassionate certitude,
that the commandment of love bade us not to love our
neighbour as ourselves with the same amount and intensity
of love but to love him as ourselves with the same
kind of love.
He drew forth a phrase from his treasure
and spoke it softly to himself:
A day of dappled seaborne clouds.
The phrase and the day and the scene
harmonized in a chord. Words. Was it their
colours? He allowed them to glow and fade, hue
after hue: sunrise gold, the russet and green
of apple orchards, azure of waves, the grey-fringed
fleece of clouds. No, it was not their colours:
it was the poise and balance of the period itself.
Did he then love the rhythmic rise and fall of words
better than their associations of legend and colour?
Or was it that, being as weak of sight as he was shy
of mind, he drew less pleasure from the reflection
of the glowing sensible world through the prism of
a language many-coloured and richly storied than from
the contemplation of an inner world of individual
emotions mirrored perfectly in a lucid supple periodic
prose?
He passed from the trembling bridge
on to firm land again. At that instant, as it
seemed to him, the air was chilled and, looking askance
towards the water, he saw a flying squall darkening
and crisping suddenly the tide. A faint click
at his heart, a faint throb in his throat told him
once more of how his flesh dreaded the cold infrahuman
odour of the sea; yet he did not strike across the
downs on his left but held straight on along the spine
of rocks that pointed against the river’s mouth.
A veiled sunlight lit up faintly the
grey sheet of water where the river was embayed.
In the distance along the course of the slow-flowing
Liffey slender masts flecked the sky and, more distant
still, the dim fabric of the city lay prone in haze.
Like a scene on some vague arras, old as man’s
weariness, the image of the seventh city of christendom
was visible to him across the timeless air, no older
nor more weary nor less patient of subjection than
in the days of the thingmote.
Disheartened, he raised his eyes towards
the slow-drifting clouds, dappled and seaborne.
They were voyaging across the deserts of the sky,
a host of nomads on the march, voyaging high over Ireland,
westward bound. The Europe they had come from
lay out there beyond the Irish Sea, Europe of strange
tongues and valleyed and woodbegirt and citadelled
and of entrenched and marshalled races. He heard
a confused music within him as of memories and names
which he was almost conscious of but could not capture
even for an instant; then the music seemed to recede,
to recede, to recede, and from each receding trail
of nebulous music there fell always one longdrawn
calling note, piercing like a star the dusk of silence.
Again! Again! Again! A voice from beyond
the world was calling.
Hello, Stephanos!
Here comes The Dedalus!
Ao!... Eh, give it
over, Dwyer, I’m telling you, or I’ll give
you a stuff in the kisser for yourself... Ao!
Good man, Towser! Duck him!
Come along, Dedalus! Bous Stephanoumenos!
Bous Stephaneforos!
Duck him! Guzzle him now, Towser!
Help! Help!... Ao!
He recognized their speech collectively
before he distinguished their faces. The mere
sight of that medley of wet nakedness chilled him to
the bone. Their bodies, corpse-white or suffused
with a pallid golden light or rawly tanned by the
sun, gleamed with the wet of the sea. Their diving-stone,
poised on its rude supports and rocking under their
plunges, and the rough-hewn stones of the sloping breakwater
over which they scrambled in their horseplay gleamed
with cold wet lustre. The towels with which they
smacked their bodies were heavy with cold seawater;
and drenched with cold brine was their matted hair.
He stood still in deference to their
calls and parried their banter with easy words.
How characterless they looked: Shuley without
his deep unbuttoned collar, Ennis without his scarlet
belt with the snaky clasp, and Connolly without his
Norfolk coat with the flapless side-pockets!
It was a pain to see them, and a sword-like pain to
see the signs of adolescence that made repellent their
pitiable nakedness. Perhaps they had taken refuge
in number and noise from the secret dread in their
souls. But he, apart from them and in silence,
remembered in what dread he stood of the mystery of
his own body.
Stephanos Dedalos! Bous Stephanoumenos!
Bous Stephaneforos!
Their banter was not new to him and
now it flattered his mild proud sovereignty.
Now, as never before, his strange name seemed to him
a prophecy. So timeless seemed the grey warm
air, so fluid and impersonal his own mood, that all
ages were as one to him. A moment before the
ghost of the ancient kingdom of the Danes had looked
forth through the vesture of the hazewrapped City.
Now, at the name of the fabulous artificer, he seemed
to hear the noise of dim waves and to see a winged
form flying above the waves and slowly climbing the
air. What did it mean? Was it a quaint device
opening a page of some medieval book of prophecies
and symbols, a hawk-like man flying sunward above the
sea, a prophecy of the end he had been born to serve
and had been following through the mists of childhood
and boyhood, a symbol of the artist forging anew in
his workshop out of the sluggish matter of the earth
a new soaring impalpable imperishable being?
His heart trembled; his breath came
faster and a wild spirit passed over his limbs as
though he was soaring sunward. His heart trembled
in an ecstasy of fear and his soul was in flight.
His soul was soaring in an air beyond the world and
the body he knew was purified in a breath and delivered
of incertitude and made radiant and commingled with
the element of the spirit. An ecstasy of flight
made radiant his eyes and wild his breath and tremulous
and wild and radiant his windswept limbs.
One! Two!... Look out!
Oh, Cripes, I’m drownded!
One! Two! Three and away!
The next! The next!
One!... Uk!
Stephaneforos!
His throat ached with a desire to
cry aloud, the cry of a hawk or eagle on high, to
cry piercingly of his deliverance to the winds.
This was the call of life to his soul not the dull
gross voice of the world of duties and despair, not
the inhuman voice that had called him to the pale
service of the altar. An instant of wild flight
had delivered him and the cry of triumph which his
lips withheld cleft his brain.
Stephaneforos!
What were they now but cerements shaken
from the body of death the fear he had
walked in night and day, the incertitude that had ringed
him round, the shame that had abased him within and
without cerements, the linens of the grave?
His soul had arisen from the grave
of boyhood, spurning her grave-clothes. Yes!
Yes! Yes! He would create proudly out of
the freedom and power of his soul, as the great artificer
whose name he bore, a living thing, new and soaring
and beautiful, impalpable, imperishable.
He started up nervously from the stone-block
for he could no longer quench the flame in his blood.
He felt his cheeks aflame and his throat throbbing
with song. There was a lust of wandering in his
feet that burned to set out for the ends of the earth.
On! On! his heart seemed to cry. Evening
would deepen above the sea, night fall upon the plains,
dawn glimmer before the wanderer and show him strange
fields and hills and faces. Where?
He looked northward towards Howth.
The sea had fallen below the line of seawrack on the
shallow side of the breakwater and already the tide
was running out fast along the foreshore. Already
one long oval bank of sand lay warm and dry amid the
wavelets. Here and there warm isles of sand gleamed
above the shallow tide and about the isles and around
the long bank and amid the shallow currents of the
beach were lightclad figures, wading and delving.
In a few moments he was barefoot,
his stockings folded in his pockets and his canvas
shoes dangling by their knotted laces over his shoulders
and, picking a pointed salt-eaten stick out of the
jetsam among the rocks, he clambered down the slope
of the breakwater.
There was a long rivulet in the strand
and, as he waded slowly up its course, he wondered
at the endless drift of seaweed. Emerald and black
and russet and olive, it moved beneath the current,
swaying and turning. The water of the rivulet
was dark with endless drift and mirrored the high-drifting
clouds. The clouds were drifting above him silently
and silently the seatangle was drifting below him and
the grey warm air was still and a new wild life was
singing in his veins.
Where was his boyhood now? Where
was the soul that had hung back from her destiny,
to brood alone upon the shame of her wounds and in
her house of squalor and subterfuge to queen it in
faded cerements and in wreaths that withered at the
touch? Or where was he?
He was alone. He was unheeded,
happy and near to the wild heart of life. He
was alone and young and wilful and wildhearted, alone
amid a waste of wild air and brackish waters and the
sea-harvest of shells and tangle and veiled grey sunlight
and gayclad lightclad figures of children and girls
and voices childish and girlish in the air.
A girl stood before him in midstream,
alone and still, gazing out to sea. She seemed
like one whom magic had changed into the likeness of
a strange and beautiful seabird. Her long slender
bare legs were delicate as a crane’s and pure
save where an emerald trail of seaweed had fashioned
itself as a sign upon the flesh. Her thighs, fuller
and soft-hued as ivory, were bared almost to the hips,
where the white fringes of her drawers were like feathering
of soft white down. Her slate-blue skirts were
kilted boldly about her waist and dovetailed behind
her. Her bosom was as a bird’s, soft and
slight, slight and soft as the breast of some dark-plumaged
dove. But her long fair hair was girlish:
and girlish, and touched with the wonder of mortal
beauty, her face.
She was alone and still, gazing out
to sea; and when she felt his presence and the worship
of his eyes her eyes turned to him in quiet sufferance
of his gaze, without shame or wantonness. Long,
long she suffered his gaze and then quietly withdrew
her eyes from his and bent them towards the stream,
gently stirring the water with her foot hither and
thither. The first faint noise of gently moving
water broke the silence, low and faint and whispering,
faint as the bells of sleep; hither and thither, hither
and thither; and a faint flame trembled on her cheek.
Heavenly God! cried Stephen’s
soul, in an outburst of profane joy.
He turned away from her suddenly and
set off across the strand. His cheeks were aflame;
his body was aglow; his limbs were trembling.
On and on and on and on he strode, far out over the
sands, singing wildly to the sea, crying to greet
the advent of the life that had cried to him.
Her image had passed into his soul
for ever and no word had broken the holy silence of
his ecstasy. Her eyes had called him and his soul
had leaped at the call. To live, to err, to fall,
to triumph, to recreate life out of life! A wild
angel had appeared to him, the angel of mortal youth
and beauty, an envoy from the fair courts of life,
to throw open before him in an instant of ecstasy
the gates of all the ways of error and glory.
On and on and on and on!
He halted suddenly and heard his heart
in the silence. How far had he walked? What
hour was it?
There was no human figure near him
nor any sound borne to him over the air. But
the tide was near the turn and already the day was
on the wane. He turned landward and ran towards
the shore and, running up the sloping beach, reckless
of the sharp shingle, found a sandy nook amid a ring
of tufted sandknolls and lay down there that the peace
and silence of the evening might still the riot of
his blood.
He felt above him the vast indifferent
dome and the calm processes of the heavenly bodies;
and the earth beneath him, the earth that had borne
him, had taken him to her breast.
He closed his eyes in the languor
of sleep. His eyelids trembled as if they felt
the vast cyclic movement of the earth and her watchers,
trembled as if they felt the strange light of some
new world. His soul was swooning into some new
world, fantastic, dim, uncertain as under sea, traversed
by cloudy shapes and beings. A world, a glimmer
or a flower? Glimmering and trembling, trembling
and unfolding, a breaking light, an opening flower,
it spread in endless succession to itself, breaking
in full crimson and unfolding and fading to palest
rose, leaf by leaf and wave of light by wave of light,
flooding all the heavens with its soft flushes, every
flush deeper than the other.
Evening had fallen when he woke and
the sand and arid grasses of his bed glowed no longer.
He rose slowly and, recalling the rapture of his sleep,
sighed at its joy.
He climbed to the crest of the sandhill
and gazed about him. Evening had fallen.
A rim of the young moon cleft the pale waste of skyline,
the rim of a silver hoop embedded in grey sand; and
the tide was flowing in fast to the land with a low
whisper of her waves, islanding a few last figures
in distant pools.