Seraphita-Seraphitus
After a pause, during which the pastor
seemed to be gathering his recollections, he continued
in the following words:—
“Emanuel Swedenborg was born
at Upsala in Sweden, in the month of January, 1688,
according to various authors,—in 1689, according
to his epitaph. His father was Bishop of Skara.
Swedenborg lived eighty-five years; his death occurred
in London, March 29, 1772. I use that term to
convey the idea of a simple change of state. According
to his disciples, Swedenborg was seen at Jarvis and
in Paris after that date. Allow me, my dear Monsieur
Wilfrid,” said Monsieur Becker, making a gesture
to prevent all interruption, “I relate these
facts without either affirming or denying them.
Listen; afterwards you can think and say what you
like. I will inform you when I judge, criticise,
and discuss these doctrines, so as to keep clearly
in view my own intellectual neutrality between him
and Reason.
“The life of Swedenborg was
divided into two parts,” continued the pastor.
“From 1688 to 1745 Baron Emanuel Swedenborg appeared
in the world as a man of vast learning, esteemed and
cherished for his virtues, always irreproachable and
constantly useful. While fulfilling high public
functions in Sweden, he published, between 1709 and
1740, several important works on mineralogy, physics,
mathematics, and astronomy, which enlightened the
world of learning. He originated a method of
building docks suitable for the reception of large
vessels, and he wrote many treatises on various important
questions, such as the rise of tides, the theory of
the magnet and its qualities, the motion and position
of the earth and planets, and while Assessor in the
Royal College of Mines, on the proper system of working
salt mines. He discovered means to construct
canal-locks or sluices; and he also discovered and
applied the simplest methods of extracting ore and
of working metals. In fact he studied no science
without advancing it. In youth he learned Hebrew,
Greek, and Latin, also the oriental languages, with
which he became so familiar that many distinguished
scholars consulted him, and he was able to decipher
the vestiges of the oldest known books of Scripture,
namely: ‘The Wars of Jehovah’ and
‘The Enunciations,’ spoken of by Moses
(Numbers xxi. 14, 15, 27-30), also by Joshua, Jeremiah,
and Samuel,—’The Wars of Jehovah’
being the historical part and ‘The Enunciations’
the prophetical part of the Mosaical Books anterior
to Genesis. Swedenborg even affirms that ’the
Book of Jasher,’ the Book of the Righteous, mentioned
by Joshua, was in existence in Eastern Tartary, together
with the doctrine of Correspondences. A Frenchman
has lately, so they tell me, justified these statements
of Swedenborg, by the discovery at Bagdad of several
portions of the Bible hitherto unknown to Europe.
During the widespread discussion on animal magnetism
which took its rise in Paris, and in which most men
of Western science took an active part about the year
1785, Monsieur le Marquis de Thome vindicated the
memory of Swedenborg by calling attention to certain
assertions made by the Commission appointed by the
King of France to investigate the subject. These
gentlemen declared that no theory of magnetism existed,
whereas Swedenborg had studied and promulgated it ever
since the year 1720. Monsieur de Thome seizes
this opportunity to show the reason why so many men
of science relegated Swedenborg to oblivion while they
delved into his treasure-house and took his facts to
aid their work. ‘Some of the most illustrious
of these men,’ said Monsieur de Thome, alluding
to the ‘Theory of the Earth’ by Buffon,
’have had the meanness to wear the plumage of
the noble bird and refuse him all acknowledgment’;
and he proved, by masterly quotations drawn from the
encyclopaedic works of Swedenborg, that the great prophet
had anticipated by over a century the slow march of
human science. It suffices to read his philosophical
and mineralogical works to be convinced of this.
In one passage he is seen as the precursor of modern
chemistry by the announcement that the productions
of organized nature are decomposable and resolve into
two simple principles; also that water, air, and fire
are not elements. In another, he goes in
a few words to the heart of magnetic mysteries and
deprives Mesmer of the honors of a first knowledge
of them.
“There,” said Monsieur
Becker, pointing to a long shelf against the wall
between the stove and the window on which were ranged
books of all sizes, “behold him! here are seventeen
works from his pen, of which one, his ‘Philosophical
and Mineralogical Works,’ published in 1734,
is in three folio volumes. These productions,
which prove the incontestable knowledge of Swedenborg,
were given to me by Monsieur Seraphitus, his cousin
and the father of Seraphita.
“In 1740,” continued Monsieur
Becker, after a slight pause, “Swedenborg fell
into a state of absolute silence, from which he emerged
to bid farewell to all his earthly occupations; after
which his thoughts turned exclusively to the Spiritual
Life. He received the first commands of heaven
in 1745, and he thus relates the nature of the vocation
to which he was called: One evening, in London,
after dining with a great appetite, a thick white
mist seemed to fill his room. When the vapor
dispersed a creature in human form rose from one corner
of the apartment, and said in a stern tone, ’Do
not eat so much.’ He refrained. The
next night the same man returned, radiant in light,
and said to him, ’I am sent of God, who has chosen
you to explain to men the meaning of his Word and
his Creation. I will tell you what to write.’
The vision lasted but a few moments. The angel
was clothed in purple. During that night the eyes
of his inner man were opened, and he was forced
to look into the heavens, into the world of spirits,
and into hell,—three separate spheres; where
he encountered persons of his acquaintance who had
departed from their human form, some long since, others
lately. Thenceforth Swedenborg lived wholly in
the spiritual life, remaining in this world only as
the messenger of God. His mission was ridiculed
by the incredulous, but his conduct was plainly that
of a being superior to humanity. In the first
place, though limited in means to the bare necessaries
of life, he gave away enormous sums, and publicly,
in several cities, restored the fortunes of great
commercial houses when they were on the brink of failure.
No one ever appealed to his generosity who was not
immediately satisfied. A sceptical Englishman,
determined to know the truth, followed him to Paris,
and relates that there his doors stood always open.
One day a servant complained of this apparent negligence,
which laid him open to suspicion of thefts that might
be committed by others. ’He need feel no
anxiety,’ said Swedenborg, smiling. ’But
I do not wonder at his fear; he cannot see the guardian
who protects my door.’ In fact, no matter
in what country he made his abode he never closed his
doors, and nothing was ever stolen from him.
At Gottenburg—a town situated some sixty
miles from Stockholm—he announced, eight
days before the news arrived by courier, the conflagration
which ravaged Stockholm, and the exact time at which
it took place. The Queen of Sweden wrote to her
brother, the King, at Berlin, that one of her ladies-in-waiting,
who was ordered by the courts to pay a sum of money
which she was certain her husband had paid before
his death, went to Swedenborg and begged him to ask
her husband where she could find proof of the payment.
The following day Swedenborg, having done as the lady
requested, pointed out the place where the receipt
would be found. He also begged the deceased to
appear to his wife, and the latter saw her husband
in a dream, wrapped in a dressing-gown which he wore
just before his death; and he showed her the paper
in the place indicated by Swedenborg, where it had
been securely put away. At another time, embarking
from London in a vessel commanded by Captain Dixon,
he overheard a lady asking if there were plenty of
provisions on board. ‘We do not want a
great quantity,’ he said; ’in eight days
and two hours we shall reach Stockholm,’—which
actually happened. This peculiar state of vision
as to the things of the earth—into which
Swedenborg could put himself at will, and which astonished
those about him—was, nevertheless, but
a feeble representative of his faculty of looking
into heaven.
“Not the least remarkable of
his published visions is that in which he relates
his journeys through the Astral Regions; his descriptions
cannot fail to astonish the reader, partly through
the crudity of their details. A man whose scientific
eminence is incontestable, and who united in his own
person powers of conception, will, and imagination,
would surely have invented better if he had invented
at all. The fantastic literature of the East
offers nothing that can give an idea of this astounding
work, full of the essence of poetry, if it is permissible
to compare a work of faith with one of oriental fancy.
The transportation of Swedenborg by the Angel who served
as guide to this first journey is told with a sublimity
which exceeds, by the distance which God has placed
betwixt the earth and the sun, the great epics of
Klopstock, Milton, Tasso, and Dante. This description,
which serves in fact as an introduction to his work
on the Astral Regions, has never been published; it
is among the oral traditions left by Swedenborg to
the three disciples who were nearest to his heart.
Monsieur Silverichm has written them down. Monsieur
Seraphitus endeavored more than once to talk to me
about them; but the recollection of his cousin’s
words was so burning a memory that he always stopped
short at the first sentence and became lost in a revery
from which I could not rouse him.”
The old pastor sighed as he continued:
“The baron told me that the argument by which
the Angel proved to Swedenborg that these bodies are
not made to wander through space puts all human science
out of sight beneath the grandeur of a divine logic.
According to the Seer, the inhabitants of Jupiter
will not cultivate the sciences, which they call darkness;
those of Mercury abhor the expression of ideas by
speech, which seems to them too material,—their
language is ocular; those of Saturn are continually
tempted by evil spirits; those of the Moon are as
small as six-year-old children, their voices issue
from the abdomen, on which they crawl; those of Venus
are gigantic in height, but stupid, and live by robbery,—although
a part of this latter planet is inhabited by beings
of great sweetness, who live in the love of Good.
In short, he describes the customs and morals of all
the peoples attached to the different globes, and explains
the general meaning of their existence as related
to the universe in terms so precise, giving explanations
which agree so well with their visible evolutions
in the system of the world, that some day, perhaps,
scientific men will come to drink of these living waters.
“Here,” said Monsieur
Becker, taking down a book and opening it at a mark,
“here are the words with which he ended this
work:—
“’If any man doubts that
I was transported through a vast number of Astral
Regions, let him recall my observation of the distances
in that other life, namely, that they exist only in
relation to the external state of man; now, being
transformed within like unto the Angelic Spirits of
those Astral Spheres, I was able to understand them.’
“The circumstances to which
we of this canton owe the presence among us of Baron
Seraphitus, the beloved cousin of Swedenborg, enabled
me to know all the events of the extraordinary life
of that prophet. He has lately been accused of
imposture in certain quarters of Europe, and the public
prints reported the following fact based on a letter
written by the Chevalier Baylon. Swedenborg, they
said, informed by certain senators of a secret correspondence
of the late Queen of Sweden with her brother, the
Prince of Prussia, revealed his knowledge of the secrets
contained in that correspondence to the Queen, making
her believe he had obtained this knowledge by supernatural
means. A man worthy of all confidence, Monsieur
Charles-Leonhard de Stahlhammer, captain in the Royal
guard and knight of the Sword, answered the calumny
with a convincing letter.”
The pastor opened a drawer of his
table and looked through a number of papers until
he found a gazette which he held out to Wilfrid, asking
him to read aloud the following letter:—
Stockholm, May 18, 1788.
I have read with amazement a letter which
purports to relate the interview of the famous Swedenborg
with Queen Louisa-Ulrika. The circumstances
therein stated are wholly false; and I hope the writer
will excuse me for showing him by the following faithful
narration, which can be proved by the testimony of
many distinguished persons then present and still
living, how completely he has been deceived.
In 1758, shortly after the death of the
Prince of Prussia Swedenborg came to court, where
he was in the habit of attending regularly.
He had scarcely entered the queen’s presence
before she said to him: “Well, Mr. Assessor,
have you seen my brother?” Swedenborg answered
no, and the queen rejoined: “If you do see
him, greet him for me.” In saying this
she meant no more than a pleasant jest, and had
no thought whatever of asking him for information
about her brother. Eight days later (not twenty-four
as stated, nor was the audience a private one), Swedenborg
again came to court, but so early that the queen
had not left her apartment called the White Room,
where she was conversing with her maids-of-honor
and other ladies attached to the court. Swedenborg
did not wait until she came forth, but entered the
said room and whispered something in her ear.
The queen, overcome with amazement, was taken ill,
and it was some time before she recovered herself.
When she did so she said to those about her:
“Only God and my brother knew the thing that
he has just spoken of.” She admitted
that it related to her last correspondence with the
prince on a subject which was known to them alone.
I cannot explain how Swedenborg came to know the
contents of that letter, but I can affirm on my
honor, that neither Count H—— (as
the writer of the article states) nor any other
person intercepted, or read, the queen’s letters.
The senate allowed her to write to her brother in
perfect security, considering the correspondence as
of no interest to the State. It is evident
that the author of the said article is ignorant
of the character of Count H——. This
honored gentleman, who has done many important services
to his country, unites the qualities of a noble
heart to gifts of mind, and his great age has not
yet weakened these precious possessions. During
his whole administration he added the weight of scrupulous
integrity to his enlightened policy and openly declared
himself the enemy of all secret intrigues and underhand
dealings, which he regarded as unworthy means to
attain an end. Neither did the writer of that
article understand the Assessor Swedenborg. The
only weakness of that essentially honest man was
a belief in the apparition of spirits; but I knew
him for many years, and I can affirm that he was
as fully convinced that he met and talked with spirits
as I am that I am writing at this moment. As a
citizen and as a friend his integrity was absolute;
he abhorred deception and led the most exemplary
of lives. The version which the Chevalier Baylon
gave of these facts is, therefore, entirely without
justification; the visit stated to have been made
to Swedenborg in the night-time by Count H——
and Count T—— is hereby contradicted.
In conclusion, the writer of the letter may rest assured
that I am not a follower of Swedenborg. The love
of truth alone impels me to give this faithful account
of a fact which has been so often stated with details
that are entirely false. I certify to the truth
of what I have written by adding my signature.
Charles-Leonhard
de Stahlhammer.
“The proofs which Swedenborg
gave of his mission to the royal families of Sweden
and Prussia were no doubt the foundation of the belief
in his doctrines which is prevalent at the two courts,”
said Monsieur Becker, putting the gazette into the
drawer. “However,” he continued,
“I shall not tell you all the facts of his visible
and material life; indeed his habits prevented them
from being fully known. He lived a hidden life;
not seeking either riches or fame. He was even
noted for a sort of repugnance to making proselytes;
he opened his mind to few persons, and never showed
his external powers of second-sight to any who were
not eminent in faith, wisdom, and love. He could
recognize at a glance the state of the soul of every
person who approached him, and those whom he desired
to reach with his inward language he converted into
Seers. After the year 1745, his disciples never
saw him do a single thing from any human motive.
One man alone, a Swedish priest, named Mathesius,
set afloat a story that he went mad in London in 1744.
But a eulogium on Swedenborg prepared with minute care
as to all the known events of his life, was pronounced
after his death in 1772 on behalf of the Royal Academy
of Sciences in the Hall of the Nobles at Stockholm,
by Monsieur Sandels, counsellor of the Board of Mines.
A declaration made before the Lord Mayor of London
gives the details of his last illness and death, in
which he received the ministrations of Monsieur Ferelius
a Swedish priest of the highest standing, and pastor
of the Swedish Church in London, Mathesius being his
assistant. All persons present attested that
so far from denying the value of his writings Swedenborg
firmly asserted their truth. ’In one hundred
years,’ Monsieur Ferelius quotes him as saying,
’my doctrine will guide the Church.’
He predicted the day and hour of his death. On
that day, Sunday, March 29, 1772, hearing the clock
strike, he asked what time it was. ‘Five
o’clock’ was the answer. ‘It
is well,’ he answered; ‘thank you, God
bless you.’ Ten minutes later he tranquilly
departed, breathing a gentle sigh. Simplicity,
moderation, and solitude were the features of his
life. When he had finished writing any of his
books he sailed either for London or for Holland,
where he published them, and never spoke of them again.
He published in this way twenty-seven different treatises,
all written, he said, from the dictation of Angels.
Be it true or false, few men have been strong enough
to endure the flames of oral illumination.
“There they all are,”
said Monsieur Becker, pointing to a second shelf on
which were some sixty volumes. “The treatises
on which the Divine Spirit casts its most vivid gleams
are seven in number, namely: ‘Heaven and
Hell’; ’Angelic Wisdom concerning the Divine
Love and the Divine Wisdom’; ‘Angelic
Wisdom concerning the Divine Providence’; ‘The
Apocalypse Revealed’; ‘Conjugial Love and
its Chaste Delights’; ‘The True Christian
Religion’; and ’An Exposition of the Internal
Sense.’ Swedenborg’s explanation of
the Apocalypse begins with these words,” said
Monsieur Becker, taking down and opening the volume
nearest to him: “’Herein I have written
nothing of mine own; I speak as I am bidden by the
Lord, who said, through the same angel, to John:
“Thou shalt not seal the sayings of this Prophecy.”’
(Revelation xxii. 10.)
“My dear Monsieur Wilfrid,”
said the old man, looking at his guest, “I often
tremble in every limb as I read, during the long winter
evenings the awe-inspiring works in which this man
declares with perfect artlessness the wonders that
are revealed to him. ‘I have seen,’
he says, ’Heaven and the Angels. The spiritual
man sees his spiritual fellows far better than the
terrestrial man sees the men of earth. In describing
the wonders of heaven and beneath the heavens I obey
the Lord’s command. Others have the right
to believe me or not as they choose. I cannot
put them into the state in which God has put me; it
is not in my power to enable them to converse with
Angels, nor to work miracles within their understanding;
they alone can be the instrument of their rise to
angelic intercourse. It is now twenty-eight years
since I have lived in the Spiritual world with angels,
and on earth with men; for it pleased God to open
the eyes of my spirit as he did that of Paul, and
of Daniel and Elisha.’
“And yet,” continued the
pastor, thoughtfully, “certain persons have
had visions of the spiritual world through the complete
detachment which somnambulism produces between their
external form and their inner being. ‘In
this state,’ says Swedenborg in his treatise
on Angelic Wisdom (No. 257) ’Man may rise into
the region of celestial light because, his corporeal
senses being abolished, the influence of heaven acts
without hindrance on his inner man.’ Many
persons who do not doubt that Swedenborg received
celestial revelations think that his writings are
not all the result of divine inspiration. Others
insist on absolute adherence to him; while admitting
his many obscurities, they believe that the imperfection
of earthly language prevented the prophet from clearly
revealing those spiritual visions whose clouds disperse
to the eyes of those whom faith regenerates; for,
to use the words of his greatest disciple, ’Flesh
is but an external propagation.’ To poets
and to writers his presentation of the marvellous
is amazing; to Seers it is simply reality. To
some Christians his descriptions have seemed scandalous.
Certain critics have ridiculed the celestial substance
of his temples, his golden palaces, his splendid cities
where angels disport themselves; they laugh at his
groves of miraculous trees, his gardens where the flowers
speak and the air is white, and the mystical stones,
the sard, carbuncle, chrysolite, chrysoprase, jacinth,
chalcedony, beryl, the Urim and Thummim, are endowed
with motion, express celestial truths, and reply by
variations of light to questions put to them (’True
Christian Religion,’ 219). Many noble souls
will not admit his spiritual worlds where colors are
heard in delightful concert, where language flames
and flashes, where the Word is writ in pointed spiral
letters (’True Christian Religion,’ 278).
Even in the North some writers have laughed at the
gates of pearl, and the diamonds which stud the floors
and walls of his New Jerusalem, where the most ordinary
utensils are made of the rarest substances of the globe.
‘But,’ say his disciples, ’because
such things are sparsely scattered on this earth does
it follow that they are not abundant in other worlds?
On earth they are terrestrial substances, whereas in
heaven they assume celestial forms and are in keeping
with angels.’ In this connection Swedenborg
has used the very words of Jesus Christ, who said,
’If I have told you earthly things and ye believe
not, how shall ye believe if I tell you of heavenly
things?’
“Monsieur,” continued
the pastor, with an emphatic gesture, “I have
read the whole of Swedenborg’s works; and I say
it with pride, because I have done it and yet retained
my reason. In reading him men either miss his
meaning or become Seers like him. Though I have
evaded both extremes, I have often experienced unheard-of
delights, deep emotions, inward joys, which alone
can reveal to us the plenitude of truth,—the
evidence of celestial Light. All things here below
seem small indeed when the soul is lost in the perusal
of these Treatises. It is impossible not to be
amazed when we think that in the short space of thirty
years this man wrote and published, on the truths of
the Spiritual World, twenty-five quarto volumes, composed
in Latin, of which the shortest has five hundred pages,
all of them printed in small type. He left, they
say, twenty others in London, bequeathed to his nephew,
Monsieur Silverichm, formerly almoner to the King of
Sweden. Certainly a man who, between the ages
of twenty and sixty, had already exhausted himself
in publishing a series of encyclopaedical works, must
have received supernatural assistance in composing
these later stupendous treatises, at an age, too,
when human vigor is on the wane. You will find
in these writings thousands of propositions, all numbered,
none of which have been refuted. Throughout we
see method and precision; the presence of the spirit
issuing and flowing down from a single fact,—the
existence of angels. His ’True Christian
Religion,’ which sums up his whole doctrine and
is vigorous with light, was conceived and written
at the age of eighty-three. In fact, his amazing
vigor and omniscience are not denied by any of his
critics, not even by his enemies.
“Nevertheless,” said Monsieur
Becker, slowly, “though I have drunk deep in
this torrent of divine light, God has not opened the
eyes of my inner being, and I judge these writings
by the reason of an unregenerated man. I have
often felt that the inspired Swedenborg must
have misunderstood the Angels. I have laughed
over certain visions which, according to his disciples,
I ought to have believed with veneration. I have
failed to imagine the spiral writing of the Angels
or their golden belts, on which the gold is of great
or lesser thickness. If, for example, this statement,
’Some angels are solitary,’ affected me
powerfully for a time, I was, on reflection, unable
to reconcile this solitude with their marriages.
I have not understood why the Virgin Mary should continue
to wear blue satin garments in heaven. I have
even dared to ask myself why those gigantic demons,
Enakim and Hephilim, came so frequently to fight the
cherubim on the apocalyptic plains of Armageddon;
and I cannot explain to my own mind how Satans can
argue with Angels. Monsieur le Baron Seraphitus
assured me that those details concerned only the angels
who live on earth in human form. The visions
of the prophet are often blurred with grotesque figures.
One of his spiritual tales, or ‘Memorable relations,’
as he called them, begins thus: ’I see the
spirits assembling, they have hats upon their heads.’
In another of these Memorabilia he receives from heaven
a bit of paper, on which he saw, he says, the hieroglyphics
of the primitive peoples, which were composed of curved
lines traced from the finger-rings that are worn in
heaven. However, perhaps I am wrong; possibly
the material absurdities with which his works are
strewn have spiritual significations. Otherwise,
how shall we account for the growing influence of his
religion? His church numbers to-day more than
seven hundred thousand believers,—as many
in the United States of America as in England, where
there are seven thousand Swedenborgians in the city
of Manchester alone. Many men of high rank in
knowledge and in social position in Germany, in Prussia,
and in the Northern kingdoms have publicly adopted
the beliefs of Swedenborg; which, I may remark, are
more comforting than those of all other Christian communions.
I wish I had the power to explain to you clearly in
succinct language the leading points of the doctrine
on which Swedenborg founded his church; but I fear
such a summary, made from recollection, would be necessarily
defective. I shall, therefore, allow myself to
speak only of those ‘Arcana’ which concern
the birth of Seraphita.”
Here Monsieur Becker paused, as though
composing his mind to gather up his ideas. Presently
he continued, as follows:—
“After establishing mathematically
that man lives eternally in spheres of either a lower
or a higher grade, Swedenborg applies the term ‘Spiritual
Angels’ to beings who in this world are prepared
for heaven, where they become angels. According
to him, God has not created angels; none exist who
have not been men upon the earth. The earth is
the nursery-ground of heaven. The Angels are therefore
not Angels as such (’Angelic Wisdom,’
57), they are transformed through their close conjunction
with God; which conjunction God never refuses, because
the essence of God is not negative, but essentially
active. The spiritual angels pass through three
natures of love, because man is only regenerated through
successive stages (’True Religion’).
First, the love of self: the supreme expression
of this love is human genius, whose works are worshipped.
Next, love of life: this love produces
prophets,—great men whom the world accepts
as guides and proclaims to be divine. Lastly,
love of heaven, and this creates the Spiritual
Angel. These angels are, so to speak, the flowers
of humanity, which culminates in them and works for
that culmination. They must possess either the
love of heaven or the wisdom of heaven, but always
Love before Wisdom.
“Thus the transformation of
the natural man is into Love. To reach this first
degree, his previous existences must have passed through
Hope and Charity, which prepare him for Faith and Prayer.
The ideas acquired by the exercise of these virtues
are transmitted to each of the human envelopes within
which are hidden the metamorphoses of the inner
being; for nothing is separate, each existence
is necessary to the other existences. Hope cannot
advance without Charity, nor Faith without Prayer;
they are the four fronts of a solid square. ’One
virtue missing,’ he said, ’and the Spiritual
Angel is like a broken pearl.’ Each of
these existences is therefore a circle in which revolves
the celestial riches of the inner being. The perfection
of the Spiritual Angels comes from this mysterious
progression in which nothing is lost of the high qualities
that are successfully acquired to attain each glorious
incarnation; for at each transformation they cast
away unconsciously the flesh and its errors. When
the man lives in Love he has shed all evil passions:
Hope, Charity, Faith, and Prayer have, in the words
of Isaiah, purged the dross of his inner being, which
can never more be polluted by earthly affections.
Hence the grand saying of Christ quoted by Saint Matthew,
’Lay up for yourselves treasures in Heaven where
neither moth nor rust doth corrupt,’ and those
still grander words: ’If ye were of this
world the world would love you, but I have chosen
you out of the world; be ye therefore perfect as your
Father in heaven is perfect.’
“The second transformation of
man is to Wisdom. Wisdom is the understanding
of celestial things to which the Spirit is brought
by Love. The Spirit of Love has acquired strength,
the result of all vanquished terrestrial passions;
it loves God blindly. But the Spirit of Wisdom
has risen to understanding and knows why it loves.
The wings of the one are spread and bear the spirit
to God; the wings of the other are held down by the
awe that comes of understanding: the spirit knows
God. The one longs incessantly to see God and
to fly to Him; the other attains to Him and trembles.
The union effected between the Spirit of Love and
the Spirit of Wisdom carries the human being into a
Divine state during which time his soul is woman
and his body man, the last human manifestation
in which the Spirit conquers Form, or Form still struggles
against the Spirit,—for Form, that is, the
flesh, is ignorant, rebels, and desires to continue
gross. This supreme trial creates untold sufferings
seen by Heaven alone,—the agony of Christ
in the Garden of Olives.
“After death the first heaven
opens to this dual and purified human nature.
Therefore it is that man dies in despair while the
Spirit dies in ecstasy. Thus, the natural,
the state of beings not yet regenerated; the spiritual,
the state of those who have become Angelic Spirits,
and the divine, the state in which the Angel
exists before he breaks from his covering of flesh,
are the three degrees of existence through which man
enters heaven. One of Swedenborg’s thoughts
expressed in his own words will explain to you with
wonderful clearness the difference between the natural
and the spiritual. ’To the minds
of men,’ he says, ’the Natural passes into
the Spiritual; they regard the world under its visible
aspects, they perceive it only as it can be realized
by their senses. But to the apprehension of Angelic
Spirits, the Spiritual passes into the Natural; they
regard the world in its inward essence and not in
its form.’ Thus human sciences are but
analyses of form. The man of science as the world
goes is purely external like his knowledge; his inner
being is only used to preserve his aptitude for the
perception of external truths. The Angelic Spirit
goes far beyond that; his knowledge is the thought
of which human science is but the utterance; he derives
that knowledge from the Logos, and learns the law
of correspondences by which the world is placed
in unison with heaven. The word of God
was wholly written by pure Correspondences, and covers
an esoteric or spiritual meaning, which according
to the science of Correspondences, cannot be understood.
‘There exist,’ says Swedenborg (’Celestial
Doctrine’ 26), ’innumerable Arcana within
the hidden meaning of the Correspondences. Thus
the men who scoff at the books of the Prophets where
the Word is enshrined are as densely ignorant as those
other men who know nothing of a science and yet ridicule
its truths. To know the Correspondences which
exist between the things visible and ponderable in
the terrestrial world and the things invisible and
imponderable in the spiritual world, is to hold heaven
within our comprehension. All the objects of
the manifold creations having emanated from God necessarily
enfold a hidden meaning; according, indeed, to the
grand thought of Isaiah, ‘The earth is a garment.’
“This mysterious link between
Heaven and the smallest atoms of created matter constitutes
what Swedenborg calls a Celestial Arcanum, and his
treatise on the ‘Celestial Arcana’ in which
he explains the correspondences or significances of
the Natural with, and to, the Spiritual, giving, to
use the words of Jacob Boehm, the sign and seal of
all things, occupies not less than sixteen volumes
containing thirty thousand propositions. ’This
marvellous knowledge of Correspondences which the
goodness of God granted to Swedenborg,’ says
one of his disciples, ’is the secret of the interest
which draws men to his works. According to him,
all things are derived from heaven, all things lead
back to heaven. His writings are sublime and clear;
he speaks in heaven, and earth hears him. Take
one of his sentences by itself and a volume could
be made of it’; and the disciple quotes the
following passages taken from a thousand others that
would answer the same purpose.
“‘The kingdom of heaven,’
says Swedenborg (’Celestial Arcana’), ’is
the kingdom of motives. Action is born in heaven,
thence into the world, and, by degrees, to the infinitely
remote parts of earth. Terrestrial effects being
thus linked to celestial causes, all things are correspondent
and significant. Man is the means of union
between the Natural and the Spiritual.’
“The Angelic Spirits therefore
know the very nature of the Correspondences which
link to heaven all earthly things; they know, too,
the inner meaning of the prophetic words which foretell
their evolutions. Thus to these Spirits everything
here below has its significance; the tiniest flower
is a thought,—a life which corresponds
to certain lineaments of the Great Whole, of which
they have a constant intuition. To them Adultery
and the excesses spoken of in Scripture and by the
Prophets, often garbled by self-styled scholars, mean
the state of those souls which in this world persist
in tainting themselves with earthly affections, thus
compelling their divorce from Heaven. Clouds
signify the veil of the Most High. Torches, shew-bread,
horses and horsemen, harlots, precious stones, in
short, everything named in Scripture, has to them a
clear-cut meaning, and reveals the future of terrestrial
facts in their relation to Heaven. They penetrate
the truths contained in the Revelation of Saint John
the divine, which human science has subsequently demonstrated
and proved materially; such, for instance, as the
following (’big,’ said Swedenborg, ’with
many human sciences’): ’I saw a new
heaven and a new earth, for the first heaven and the
first earth were passed away’ (Revelation xxi.
1). These Spirits know the supper at which the
flesh of kings and the flesh of all men, free and
bond, is eaten, to which an Angel standing in the
sun has bidden them. They see the winged woman,
clothed with the sun, and the mailed man. ’The
horse of the Apocalypse,’ says Swedenborg, ’is
the visible image of human intellect ridden by Death,
for it bears within itself the elements of its own
destruction.’ Moreover, they can distinguish
beings concealed under forms which to ignorant eyes
would seem fantastic. When a man is disposed
to receive the prophetic afflation of Correspondences,
it rouses within him a perception of the Word; he
comprehends that the creations are transformations
only; his intellect is sharpened, a burning thirst
takes possession of him which only Heaven can quench.
He conceives, according to the greater or lesser perfection
of his inner being, the power of the Angelic Spirits;
and he advances, led by Desire (the least imperfect
state of unregenerated man) towards Hope, the gateway
to the world of Spirits, whence he reaches Prayer,
which gives him the Key of Heaven.
“What being here below would
not desire to render himself worthy of entrance into
the sphere of those who live in secret by Love and
Wisdom? Here on earth, during their lifetime,
such spirits remain pure; they neither see, nor think,
nor speak like other men. There are two ways
by which perception comes,—one internal,
the other external. Man is wholly external, the
Angelic Spirit wholly internal. The Spirit goes
to the depth of Numbers, possesses a full sense of
them, knows their significances. It controls
Motion, and by reason of its ubiquity it shares in
all things. ‘An Angel,’ says Swedenborg,
’is ever present to a man when desired’
(’Angelic Wisdom’); for the Angel has the
gift of detaching himself from his body, and he sees
into heaven as the prophets and as Swedenborg himself
saw into it. ‘In this state,’ writes
Swedenborg (’True Religion,’ 136), ’the
spirit of a man may move from one place to another,
his body remaining where it is,—a condition
in which I lived for over twenty-six years.’
It is thus that we should interpret all Biblical statements
which begin, ’The Spirit led me.’
Angelic Wisdom is to human wisdom what the innumerable
forces of nature are to its action, which is one.
All things live again, and move and have their being
in the Spirit, which is in God. Saint Paul expresses
this truth when he says, ’In Deo sumus, movemur,
et vivimus,’—we live, we act, we
are in God.
“Earth offers no hindrance to
the Angelic Spirit, just as the Word offers him no
obscurity. His approaching divinity enables him
to see the thought of God veiled in the Logos, just
as, living by his inner being, the Spirit is in communion
with the hidden meaning of all things on this earth.
Science is the language of the Temporal world, Love
is that of the Spiritual world. Thus man takes
note of more than he is able to explain, while the
Angelic Spirit sees and comprehends. Science
depresses man; Love exalts the Angel. Science
is still seeking, Love has found. Man judges
Nature according to his own relations to her; the
Angelic Spirit judges it in its relation to Heaven.
In short, all things have a voice for the Spirit.
Spirits are in the secret of the harmony of all creations
with each other; they comprehend the spirit of sound,
the spirit of color, the spirit of vegetable life;
they can question the mineral, and the mineral makes
answer to their thoughts. What to them are sciences
and the treasures of the earth when they grasp all
things by the eye at all moments, when the worlds
which absorb the minds of so many men are to them but
the last step from which they spring to God? Love
of heaven, or the Wisdom of heaven, is made manifest
to them by a circle of light which surrounds them,
and is visible to the Elect. Their innocence,
of which that of children is a symbol, possesses,
nevertheless, a knowledge which children have not;
they are both innocent and learned. ‘And,’
says Swedenborg, ’the innocence of Heaven makes
such an impression upon the soul that those whom it
affects keep a rapturous memory of it which lasts
them all their lives, as I myself have experienced.
It is perhaps sufficient,’ he goes on, ’to
have only a minimum perception of it to be forever
changed, to long to enter Heaven and the sphere of
Hope.’
“His doctrine of Marriage can
be reduced to the following words: ’The
Lord has taken the beauty and the grace of the life
of man and bestowed them upon woman. When man
is not reunited to this beauty and this grace of his
life, he is harsh, sad, and sullen; when he is reunited
to them he is joyful and complete.’ The
Angels are ever at the perfect point of beauty.
Marriages are celebrated by wondrous ceremonies.
In these unions, which produce no children, man contributes
the understanding, woman the will; they
become one being, one Flesh here below, and pass to
heaven clothed in the celestial form. On this
earth, the natural attraction of the sexes towards
enjoyment is an Effect which allures, fatigues and
disgusts; but in the form celestial the pair, now
one in Spirit find within theirself a ceaseless
source of joy. Swedenborg was led to see these
nuptials of the Spirits, which in the words of Saint
Luke (xx. 35) are neither marrying nor giving in marriage,
and which inspire none but spiritual pleasures.
An Angel offered to make him witness of such a marriage
and bore him thither on his wings (the wings are a
symbol and not a reality). The Angel clothed
him in a wedding garment and when Swedenborg, finding
himself thus robed in light, asked why, the answer
was: ’For these events, our garments are
illuminated; they shine; they are made nuptial.’
(’Conjugial Love,’ 19, 20, 21.) Then he
saw the two Angels, one coming from the South, the
other from the East; the Angel of the South was in
a chariot drawn by two white horses, with reins of
the color and brilliance of the dawn; but lo, when
they were near him in the sky, chariot and horses
vanished. The Angel of the East, clothed in crimson,
and the Angel of the South, in purple, drew together,
like breaths, and mingled: one was the Angel of
Love, the other the Angel of Wisdom. Swedenborg’s
guide told him that the two Angels had been linked
together on earth by an inward friendship and ever
united though separated in life by great distances.
Consent, the essence of all good marriage upon earth,
is the habitual state of Angels in Heaven. Love
is the light of their world. The eternal rapture
of Angels comes from the faculty that God communicates
to them to render back to Him the joy they feel through
Him. This reciprocity of infinitude forms their
life. They become infinite by participating of
the essence of God, who generates Himself by Himself.
“The immensity of the Heavens
where the Angels dwell is such that if man were endowed
with sight as rapid as the darting of light from the
sun to the earth, and if he gazed throughout eternity,
his eyes could not reach the horizon, nor find an
end. Light alone can give an idea of the joys
of heaven. ‘It is,’ says Swedenborg
(’Angelic Wisdom,’ 7, 25, 26, 27), ’a
vapor of the virtue of God, a pure emanation of His
splendor, beside which our greatest brilliance is obscurity.
It can compass all; it can renew all, and is never
absorbed: it environs the Angel and unites him
to God by infinite joys which multiply infinitely
of themselves. This Light destroys whosoever is
not prepared to receive it. No one here below,
nor yet in Heaven can see God and live. This
is the meaning of the saying (Exodus xix. 12, 13, 21-23)
“Take heed to yourselves that ye go not up into
the mount—lest ye break through unto the
Lord to gaze, and many perish.” And again
(Exodus xxxiv. 29-35), “When Moses came down
from Mount Sinai with the two Tables of testimony
in his hand, his face shone, so that he put a veil
upon it when he spake with the people, lest any of
them die.” The Transfiguration of Jesus
Christ likewise revealed the light surrounding the
Messengers from on high and the ineffable joys of the
Angels who are forever imbued with it. “His
face,” says Saint Matthew (xvii. 1-5), “did
shine as the sun and his raiment was white as the
light—and a bright cloud overshadowed them.”’
“When a planet contains only
those beings who reject the Lord, when his word is
ignored, then the Angelic Spirits are gathered together
by the four winds, and God sends forth an Exterminating
Angel to change the face of the refractory earth,
which in the immensity of this universe is to Him
what an unfruitful seed is to Nature. Approaching
the globe, this Exterminating Angel, borne by a comet,
causes the planet to turn upon its axis, and the lands
lately covered by the seas reappear, adorned in freshness
and obedient to the laws proclaimed in Genesis; the
Word of God is once more powerful on this new earth,
which everywhere exhibits the effects of terrestrial
waters and celestial flames. The light brought
by the Angel from On High, causes the sun to pale.
‘Then,’ says Isaiah, (xix. 20) ’men
will hide in the clefts of the rock and roll themselves
in the dust of the earth.’ ‘They
will cry to the mountains’ (Revelation), ’Fall
on us! and to the seas, Swallow us up! Hide us
from the face of Him that sitteth on the throne, and
from the wrath of the Lamb!’ The Lamb is the
great figure and hope of the Angels misjudged and
persecuted here below. Christ himself has said,
’Blessed are those who mourn! Blessed are
the simple-hearted! Blessed are they that love!’—All
Swedenborg is there! Suffer, Believe, Love.
To love truly must we not suffer? must we not believe?
Love begets Strength, Strength bestows Wisdom, thence
Intelligence; for Strength and Wisdom demand Will.
To be intelligent, is not that to Know, to Wish, and
to Will,—the three attributes of the Angelic
Spirit? ‘If the universe has a meaning,’
Monsieur Saint-Martin said to me when I met him during
a journey which he made in Sweden, ‘surely this
is the one most worthy of God.’
“But, Monsieur,” continued
the pastor after a thoughtful pause, “of what
avail to you are these shreds of thoughts taken here
and there from the vast extent of a work of which
no true idea can be given except by comparing it to
a river of light, to billows of flame? When a
man plunges into it he is carried away as by an awful
current. Dante’s poem seems but a speck
to the reader submerged in the almost Biblical verses
with which Swedenborg renders palpable the Celestial
Worlds, as Beethoven built his palaces of harmony with
thousands of notes, as architects have reared cathedrals
with millions of stones. We roll in soundless
depths, where our minds will not always sustain us.
Ah, surely a great and powerful intellect is needed
to bring us back, safe and sound, to our own social
beliefs.
“Swedenborg,” resumed
the pastor, “was particularly attached to the
Baron de Seraphitz, whose name, according to an old
Swedish custom, had taken from time immemorial the
Latin termination of ‘us.’ The baron
was an ardent disciple of the Swedish prophet, who
had opened the eyes of his Inner-Man and brought him
to a life in conformity with the decrees from On-High.
He sought for an Angelic Spirit among women; Swedenborg
found her for him in a vision. His bride was the
daughter of a London shoemaker, in whom, said Swedenborg,
the life of Heaven shone, she having passed through
all anterior trials. After the death, that is,
the transformation of the prophet, the baron came to
Jarvis to accomplish his celestial nuptials with the
observances of Prayer. As for me, who am not
a Seer, I have only known the terrestrial works of
this couple. Their lives were those of saints
whose virtues are the glory of the Roman Church.
They ameliorated the condition of our people; they
supplied them all with means in return for work,—little,
perhaps, but enough for all their wants. Those
who lived with them in constant intercourse never
saw them show a sign of anger or impatience; they
were constantly beneficent and gentle, full of courtesy
and loving-kindness; their marriage was the harmony
of two souls indissolubly united. Two eiders
winging the same flight, the sound in the echo, the
thought in the word,—these, perhaps, are
true images of their union. Every one here in
Jarvis loved them with an affection which I can compare
only to the love of a plant for the sun. The
wife was simple in her manners, beautiful in form,
lovely in face, with a dignity of bearing like that
of august personages. In 1783, being then twenty-six
years old, she conceived a child; her pregnancy was
to the pair a solemn joy. They prepared to bid
the earth farewell; for they told me they should be
transformed when their child had passed the state
of infancy which needed their fostering care until
the strength to exist alone should be given to her.
“Their child was born,—the
Seraphita we are now concerned with. From the
moment of her conception father and mother lived a
still more solitary life than in the past, lifting
themselves up to heaven by Prayer. They hoped
to see Swedenborg, and faith realized their hope.
The day on which Seraphita came into the world Swedenborg
appeared in Jarvis, and filled the room of the new-born
child with light. I was told that he said, ‘The
work is accomplished; the Heavens rejoice!’
Sounds of unknown melodies were heard throughout the
house, seeming to come from the four points of heaven
on the wings of the wind. The spirit of Swedenborg
led the father forth to the shores of the fiord and
there quitted him. Certain inhabitants of Jarvis,
having approached Monsieur Seraphitus as he stood
on the shore, heard him repeat those blissful words
of Scripture: ’How beautiful on the mountains
are the feet of Him who is sent of God!’
“I had left the parsonage on
my way to baptize the infant and name it, and perform
the other duties required by law, when I met the baron
returning to the house. ‘Your ministrations
are superfluous,’ he said; ’our child
is to be without name on this earth. You must
not baptize in the waters of an earthly Church one
who has just been immersed in the fires of Heaven.
This child will remain a blossom, it will not grow
old; you will see it pass away. You exist, but
our child has life; you have outward senses, the child
has none, its being is always inward.’
These words were uttered in so strange and supernatural
a voice that I was more affected by them than by the
shining of his face, from which light appeared to
exude. His appearance realized the phantasmal
ideas which we form of inspired beings as we read the
prophesies of the Bible. But such effects are
not rare among our mountains, where the nitre of perpetual
snows produces extraordinary phenomena in the human
organization.
“I asked him the cause of his
emotion. ’Swedenborg came to us; he has
just left me; I have breathed the air of heaven,’
he replied. ’Under what form did he appear?’
I said. ’Under his earthly form; dressed
as he was the last time I saw him in London, at the
house of Richard Shearsmith, Coldbath-fields, in July,
1771. He wore his brown frieze coat with steel
buttons, his waistcoat buttoned to the throat, a white
cravat, and the same magisterial wig rolled and powdered
at the sides and raised high in front, showing his
vast and luminous brow, in keeping with the noble
square face, where all is power and tranquillity.
I recognized the large nose with its fiery nostril,
the mouth that ever smiled,—angelic mouth
from which these words, the pledge of my happiness,
have just issued, “We shall meet soon.”’
“The conviction that shone on
the baron’s face forbade all discussion; I listened
in silence. His voice had a contagious heat which
made my bosom burn within me; his fanaticism stirred
my heart as the anger of another makes our nerves
vibrate. I followed him in silence to his house,
where I saw the nameless child lying mysteriously folded
to its mother’s breast. The babe heard
my step and turned its head toward me; its eyes were
not those of an ordinary child. To give you an
idea of the impression I received, I must say that
already they saw and thought. The childhood of
this predestined being was attended by circumstances
quite extraordinary in our climate. For nine years
our winters were milder and our summers longer than
usual. This phenomenon gave rise to several discussions
among scientific men; but none of their explanations
seemed sufficient to academicians, and the baron smiled
when I told him of them. The child was never seen
in its nudity as other children are; it was never
touched by man or woman, but lived a sacred thing
upon the mother’s breast, and it never cried.
If you question old David he will confirm these facts
about his mistress, for whom he feels an adoration
like that of Louis IX. for the saint whose name he
bore.
“At nine years of age the child
began to pray; prayer is her life. You saw her
in the church at Christmas, the only day on which she
comes there; she is separated from the other worshippers
by a visible space. If that space does not exist
between herself and men she suffers. That is
why she passes nearly all her time alone in the chateau.
The events of her life are unknown; she is seldom
seen; her days are spent in the state of mystical
contemplation which was, so Catholic writers tell
us, habitual with the early Christian solitaries, in
whom the oral tradition of Christ’s own words
still remained. Her mind, her soul, her body,
all within her is virgin as the snow on those mountains.
At ten years of age she was just what you see her
now. When she was nine her father and mother
expired together, without pain or visible malady,
after naming the day and hour at which they would cease
to be. Standing at their feet she looked at them
with a calm eye, not showing either sadness, or grief,
or joy, or curiosity. When we approached to remove
the two bodies she said, ‘Carry them away!’
‘Seraphita,’ I said, for so we called
her, ’are you not affected by the death of your
father and your mother who loved you so much?’
‘Dead?’ she answered, ‘no, they
live in me forever— That is nothing,’
she pointed without emotion to the bodies they were
bearing away. I then saw her for the third time
only since her birth. In church it is difficult
to distinguish her; she stands near a column which,
seen from the pulpit, is in shadow, so that I cannot
observe her features.
“Of all the servants of the
household there remained after the death of the master
and mistress only old David, who, in spite of his
eighty-two years, suffices to wait on his mistress.
Some of our Jarvis people tell wonderful tales about
her. These have a certain weight in a land so
essentially conducive to mystery as ours; and I am
now studying the treatise on Incantations by Jean
Wier and other works relating to demonology, where
pretended supernatural events are recorded, hoping
to find facts analogous to those which are attributed
to her.”
“Then you do not believe in her?” said
Wilfrid.
“Oh yes, I do,” said the
pastor, genially, “I think her a very capricious
girl; a little spoilt by her parents, who turned her
head with the religious ideas I have just revealed
to you.”
Minna shook her head in a way that
gently expressed contradiction.
“Poor girl!” continued
the old man, “her parents bequeathed to her
that fatal exaltation of soul which misleads mystics
and renders them all more or less mad. She subjects
herself to fasts which horrify poor David. The
good old man is like a sensitive plant which quivers
at the slightest breeze, and glows under the first
sun-ray. His mistress, whose incomprehensible
language has become his, is the breeze and the sun-ray
to him; in his eyes her feet are diamonds and her brow
is strewn with stars; she walks environed with a white
and luminous atmosphere; her voice is accompanied
by music; she has the gift of rendering herself invisible.
If you ask to see her, he will tell you she has gone
to the astral regions. It is difficult
to believe such a story, is it not? You know
all miracles bear more or less resemblance to the
story of the Golden Tooth. We have our golden
tooth in Jarvis, that is all. Duncker the fisherman
asserts that he has seen her plunge into the fiord
and come up in the shape of an eider-duck, at other
times walking on the billows of a storm. Fergus,
who leads the flocks to the saeters, says that in
rainy weather a circle of clear sky can be seen over
the Swedish castle; and that the heavens are always
blue above Seraphita’s head when she is on the
mountain. Many women hear the tones of a mighty
organ when Seraphita enters the church, and ask their
neighbors earnestly if they too do not hear them.
But my daughter, for whom during the last two years
Seraphita has shown much affection, has never heard
this music, and has never perceived the heavenly perfumes
which, they say, make the air fragrant about her when
she moves. Minna, to be sure, has often on returning
from their walks together expressed to me the delight
of a young girl in the beauties of our spring-time,
in the spicy odors of budding larches and pines and
the earliest flowers; but after our long winters what
can be more natural than such pleasure? The companionship
of this so-called spirit has nothing so very extraordinary
in it, has it, my child?”
“The secrets of that spirit
are not mine,” said Minna. “Near it
I know all, away from it I know nothing; near that
exquisite life I am no longer myself, far from it
I forget all. The time we pass together is a
dream which my memory scarcely retains. I may
have heard yet not remember the music which the women
tell of; in that presence, I may have breathed celestial
perfumes, seen the glory of the heavens, and yet be
unable to recollect them here.”
“What astonishes me most,”
resumed the pastor, addressing Wilfrid, “is
to notice that you suffer from being near her.”
“Near her!” exclaimed
the stranger, “she has never so much as let me
touch her hand. When she saw me for the first
time her glance intimidated me; she said: ’You
are welcome here, for you were to come.’
I fancied that she knew me. I trembled. It
is fear that forces me to believe in her.”
“With me it is love,” said Minna, without
a blush.
“Are you making fun of me?”
said Monsieur Becker, laughing good-humoredly; “you
my daughter, in calling yourself a Spirit of Love,
and you, Monsieur Wilfrid, in pretending to be a Spirit
of Wisdom?”
He drank a glass of beer and so did
not see the singular look which Wilfrid cast upon
Minna.
“Jesting apart,” resumed
the old gentleman, “I have been much astonished
to hear that these two mad-caps ascended to the summit
of the Falberg; it must be a girlish exaggeration;
they probably went to the crest of a ledge. It
is impossible to reach the peaks of the Falberg.”
“If so, father,” said
Minna, in an agitated voice, “I must have been
under the power of a spirit; for indeed we reached
the summit of the Ice-Cap.”
“This is really serious,”
said Monsieur Becker. “Minna is always
truthful.”
“Monsieur Becker,” said
Wilfrid, “I swear to you that Seraphita exercises
such extraordinary power over me that I know no language
in which I can give you the least idea of it.
She has revealed to me things known to myself alone.”
“Somnambulism!” said the
old man. “A great many such effects are
related by Jean Wier as phenomena easily explained
and formerly observed in Egypt.”
“Lend me Swedenborg’s
theosophical works,” said Wilfrid, “and
let me plunge into those gulfs of light,—you
have given me a thirst for them.”
Monsieur Becker took down a volume
and gave it to his guest, who instantly began to read
it. It was about nine o’clock in the evening.
The serving-woman brought in the supper. Minna
made tea. The repast over, each turned silently
to his or her occupation; the pastor read the Incantations;
Wilfrid pursued the spirit of Swedenborg; and the
young girl continued to sew, her mind absorbed in recollections.
It was a true Norwegian evening—peaceful,
studious, and domestic; full of thoughts, flowers
blooming beneath the snow. Wilfrid, as he devoured
the pages of the prophet, lived by his inner senses
only; the pastor, looking up at times from his book,
called Minna’s attention to the absorption of
their guest with an air that was half-serious, half-jesting.
To Minna’s thoughts the face of Seraphitus smiled
upon her as it hovered above the clouds of smoke which
enveloped them. The clock struck twelve.
Suddenly the outer door was opened violently.
Heavy but hurried steps, the steps of a terrified
old man, were heard in the narrow vestibule between
the two doors; then David burst into the parlor.
“Danger, danger!” he cried.
“Come! come, all! The evil spirits are
unchained! Fiery mitres are on their heads!
Demons, Vertumni, Sirens! they tempt her as Jesus
was tempted on the mountain! Come, come! and
drive them away.”
“Do you not recognize the language
of Swedenborg?” said the pastor, laughing, to
Wilfrid. “Here it is; pure from the source.”
But Wilfrid and Minna were gazing
in terror at old David, who, with hair erect, and
eyes distraught, his legs trembling and covered with
snow, for he had come without snow-shoes, stood swaying
from side to side, as if some boisterous wind were
shaking him.
“Is he harmed?” cried Minna.
“The devils hope and try to conquer her,”
replied the old man.
The words made Wilfrid’s pulses throb.
“For the last five hours she
has stood erect, her eyes raised to heaven and her
arms extended; she suffers, she cries to God.
I cannot cross the barrier; Hell has posted the Vertumni
as sentinels. They have set up an iron wall between
her and her old David. She wants me, but what
can I do? Oh, help me! help me! Come and
pray!”
The old man’s despair was terrible to see.
“The Light of God is defending
her,” he went on, with infectious faith, “but
oh! she might yield to violence.”
“Silence, David! you are raving.
This is a matter to be verified. We will go with
you,” said the pastor, “and you shall see
that there are no Vertumni, nor Satans, nor Sirens,
in that house.”
“Your father is blind,” whispered David
to Minna.
Wilfrid, on whom the reading of Swedenborg’s
first treatise, which he had rapidly gone through,
had produced a powerful effect, was already in the
corridor putting on his skees; Minna was ready in a
few moments, and both left the old men far behind
as they darted forward to the Swedish castle.
“Do you hear that cracking sound?” said
Wilfrid.
“The ice of the fiord stirs,” answered
Minna; “the spring is coming.”
Wilfrid was silent. When the
two reached the courtyard they were conscious that
they had neither the faculty nor the strength to enter
the house.
“What think you of her?” asked Wilfrid.
“See that radiance!” cried
Minna, going towards the window of the salon.
“He is there! How beautiful! O my Seraphitus,
take me!”
The exclamation was uttered inwardly.
She saw Seraphitus standing erect, lightly swathed
in an opal-tinted mist that disappeared at a little
distance from the body, which seemed almost phosphorescent.
“How beautiful she is!” cried Wilfrid,
mentally.
Just then Monsieur Becker arrived,
followed by David; he saw his daughter and guest standing
before the window; going up to them, he looked into
the salon and said quietly, “Well, my good David,
she is only saying her prayers.”
“Ah, but try to enter, Monsieur.”
“Why disturb those who pray?” answered
the pastor.
At this instant the moon, rising above
the Falberg, cast its rays upon the window. All
three turned round, attracted by this natural effect
which made them quiver; when they turned back to again
look at Seraphita she had disappeared.
“How strange!” exclaimed Wilfrid.
“I hear delightful sounds,” said Minna.
“Well,” said the pastor,
“it is all plain enough; she is going to bed.”
David had entered the house.
The others took their way back in silence; none of
them interpreted the vision in the same manner, —Monsieur
Becker doubted, Minna adored, Wilfrid longed.
Wilfrid was a man about thirty-six
years of age. His figure, though broadly developed,
was not wanting in symmetry. Like most men who
distinguish themselves above their fellows, he was
of medium height; his chest and shoulders were broad,
and his neck short,—a characteristic of
those whose hearts are near their heads; his hair
was black, thick, and fine; his eyes, of a yellow brown,
had, as it were, a solar brilliancy, which proclaimed
with what avidity his nature aspired to Light.
Though these strong and virile features were defective
through the absence of an inward peace,—granted
only to a life without storms or conflicts,—they
plainly showed the inexhaustible resources of impetuous
senses and the appetites of instinct; just as every
motion revealed the perfection of the man’s
physical apparatus, the flexibility of his senses,
and their fidelity when brought into play. This
man might contend with savages, and hear, as they
do, the tread of enemies in distant forests; he could
follow a scent in the air, a trail on the ground,
or see on the horizon the signal of a friend.
His sleep was light, like that of all creatures who
will not allow themselves to be surprised. His
body came quickly into harmony with the climate of
any country where his tempestuous life conducted him.
Art and science would have admired his organization
in the light of a human model. Everything about
him was symmetrical and well-balanced,—action
and heart, intelligence and will. At first sight
he might be classed among purely instinctive beings,
who give themselves blindly up to the material wants
of life; but in the very morning of his days he had
flung himself into a higher social world, with which
his feelings harmonized; study had widened his mind,
reflection had sharpened his power of thought, and
the sciences had enlarged his understanding.
He had studied human laws, —the working
of self-interests brought into conflict by the passions,
and he seemed to have early familiarized himself with
the abstractions on which societies rest. He
had pored over books,—those deeds of dead
humanity; he had spent whole nights of pleasure in
every European capital; he had slept on fields of
battle the night before the combat and the night that
followed victory. His stormy youth may have flung
him on the deck of some corsair and sent him among
the contrasting regions of the globe; thus it was
that he knew the actions of a living humanity.
He knew the present and the past,—a double
history; that of to-day, that of other days.
Many men have been, like Wilfrid, equally powerful
by the Hand, by the Heart, by the Head; like him, the
majority have abused their triple power. But though
this man still held by certain outward liens to the
slimy side of humanity, he belonged also and positively
to the sphere where force is intelligent. In
spite of the many veils which enveloped his soul, there
were certain ineffable symptoms of this fact which
were visible to pure spirits, to the eyes of the child
whose innocence has known no breath of evil passions,
to the eyes of the old man who has lived to regain
his purity.
These signs revealed a Cain for whom
there was still hope,—one who seemed as
though he were seeking absolution from the ends of
the earth. Minna suspected the galley-slave of
glory in the man; Seraphita recognized him. Both
admired and both pitied him. Whence came their
prescience? Nothing could be more simple nor yet
more extraordinary. As soon as we seek to penetrate
the secrets of Nature, where nothing is secret, and
where it is only necessary to have the eyes to see,
we perceive that the simple produces the marvellous.
“Seraphitus,” said Minna
one evening a few days after Wilfrid’s arrival
in Jarvis, “you read the soul of this stranger
while I have only vague impressions of it. He
chills me or else he excites me; but you seem to know
the cause of this cold and of this heat; tell me what
it means, for you know all about him.”
“Yes, I have seen the causes,”
said Seraphitus, lowing his large eyelids.
“By what power?” asked the curious Minna.
“I have the gift of Specialism,”
he answered. “Specialism is an inward sight
which can penetrate all things; you will only understand
its full meaning through a comparison. In the
great cities of Europe where works are produced by
which the human Hand seeks to represent the effects
of the moral nature was well as those of the physical
nature, there are glorious men who express ideas in
marble. The sculptor acts on the stone; he fashions
it; he puts a realm of ideas into it. There are
statues which the hand of man has endowed with the
faculty of representing the noble side of humanity,
or the whole evil side; most men see in such marbles
a human figure and nothing more; a few other men,
a little higher in the scale of being, perceive a fraction
of the thoughts expressed in the statue; but the Initiates
in the secrets of art are of the same intellect as
the sculptor; they see in his work the whole universe
of his thought. Such persons are in themselves
the principles of art; they bear within them a mirror
which reflects nature in her slightest manifestations.
Well! so it is with me; I have within me a mirror
before which the moral nature, with its causes and
effects, appears and is reflected. Entering thus
into the consciousness of others I am able to divine
both the future and the past. How? do you still
ask how? Imagine that the marble statue is the
body of a man, a piece of statuary in which we see
the emotion, sentiment, passion, vice or crime, virtue
or repentance which the creating hand has put into
it, and you will then comprehend how it is that I
read the soul of this foreigner—though what
I have said does not explain the gift of Specialism;
for to conceive the nature of that gift we must possess
it.”
Though Wilfrid belonged to the two
first divisions of humanity, the men of force and
the men of thought, yet his excesses, his tumultuous
life, and his misdeeds had often turned him towards
Faith; for doubt has two sides; a side to the light
and a side to the darkness. Wilfrid had too closely
clasped the world under its forms of Matter and of
Mind not to have acquired that thirst for the unknown,
that longing to go beyond which lay their grasp
upon the men who know, and wish, and will. But
neither his knowledge, nor his actions, nor his will,
had found direction. He had fled from social
life from necessity; as a great criminal seeks the
cloister. Remorse, that virtue of weak beings,
did not touch him. Remorse is impotence, impotence
which sins again. Repentance alone is powerful;
it ends all. But in traversing the world, which
he made his cloister, Wilfrid had found no balm for
his wounds; he saw nothing in nature to which he could
attach himself. In him, despair had dried the
sources of desire. He was one of those beings
who, having gone through all passions and come out
victorious, have nothing more to raise in their hot-beds,
and who, lacking opportunity to put themselves at
the head of their fellow-men to trample under iron
heel entire populations, buy, at the price of a horrible
martyrdom, the faculty of ruining themselves in some
belief, —rocks sublime, which await the
touch of a wand that comes not to bring the waters
gushing from their far-off spring.
Led by a scheme of his restless, inquiring
life to the shores of Norway, the sudden arrival of
winter had detained the wanderer at Jarvis. The
day on which, for the first time, he saw Seraphita,
the whole past of his life faded from his mind.
The young girl excited emotions which he had thought
could never be revived. The ashes gave forth
a lingering flame at the first murmurings of that voice.
Who has ever felt himself return to youth and purity
after growing cold and numb with age and soiled with
impurity? Suddenly, Wilfrid loved as he had never
loved; he loved secretly, with faith, with fear, with
inward madness. His life was stirred to the very
source of his being at the mere thought of seeing
Seraphita. As he listened to her he was transported
into unknown worlds; he was mute before her, she magnetized
him. There, beneath the snows, among the glaciers,
bloomed the celestial flower to which his hopes, so
long betrayed, aspired; the sight of which awakened
ideas of freshness, purity, and faith which grouped
about his soul and lifted it to higher regions,—as
Angels bear to heaven the Elect in those symbolic pictures
inspired by the guardian spirit of a great master.
Celestial perfumes softened the granite hardness of
the rocky scene; light endowed with speech shed its
divine melodies on the path of him who looked to heaven.
After emptying the cup of terrestrial love which his
teeth had bitten as he drank it, he saw before him
the chalice of salvation where the limpid waters sparkled,
making thirsty for ineffable delights whoever dare
apply his lips burning with a faith so strong that
the crystal shall not be shattered.
But Wilfrid now encountered the wall
of brass for which he had been seeking up and down
the earth. He went impetuously to Seraphita,
meaning to express the whole force and bearing of a
passion under which he bounded like the fabled horse
beneath the iron horseman, firm in his saddle, whom
nothing moves while the efforts of the fiery animal
only made the rider heavier and more solid. He
sought her to relate his life,—to prove
the grandeur of his soul by the grandeur of his faults,
to show the ruins of his desert. But no sooner
had he crossed her threshold, and found himself within
the zone of those eyes of scintillating azure, that
met no limits forward and left none behind, than he
grew calm and submissive, as a lion, springing on his
prey in the plains of Africa, receives from the wings
of the wind a message of love, and stops his bound.
A gulf opened before him, into which his frenzied
words fell and disappeared, and from which uprose a
voice which changed his being; he became as a child,
a child of sixteen, timid and frightened before this
maiden with serene brow, this white figure whose inalterable
calm was like the cruel impassibility of human justice.
The combat between them had never ceased until this
evening, when with a glance she brought him down, as
a falcon making his dizzy spirals in the air around
his prey causes it to fall stupefied to earth, before
carrying it to his eyrie.
We may note within ourselves many
a long struggle the end of which is one of our own
actions,—struggles which are, as it were,
the reverse side of humanity. This reverse side
belongs to God; the obverse side to men. More
than once Seraphita had proved to Wilfrid that she
knew this hidden and ever varied side, which is to
the majority of men a second being. Often she
said to him in her dove-like voice: “Why
all this vehemence?” when on his way to her
he had sworn she should be his. Wilfrid was,
however, strong enough to raise the cry of revolt to
which he had given utterance in Monsieur Becker’s
study. The narrative of the old pastor had calmed
him. Sceptical and derisive as he was, he saw
belief like a sidereal brilliance dawning on his life.
He asked himself if Seraphita were not an exile from
the higher spheres seeking the homeward way.
The fanciful deifications of all ordinary lovers he
could not give to this lily of Norway in whose divinity
he believed. Why lived she here beside this fiord?
What did she? Questions that received no answer
filled his mind. Above all, what was about to
happen between them? What fate had brought him
there? To him, Seraphita was the motionless marble,
light nevertheless as a vapor, which Minna had seen
that day poised above the precipices of the Falberg.
Could she thus stand on the edge of all gulfs without
danger, without a tremor of the arching eyebrows,
or a quiver of the light of the eye? If his love
was to be without hope, it was not without curiosity.
From the moment when Wilfrid suspected
the ethereal nature of the enchantress who had told
him the secrets of his life in melodious utterance,
he had longed to try to subject her, to keep her to
himself, to tear her from the heaven where, perhaps,
she was awaited. Earth and Humanity seized their
prey; he would imitate them. His pride, the only
sentiment through which man can long be exalted, would
make him happy in this triumph for the rest of his
life. The idea sent the blood boiling through
his veins, and his heart swelled. If he did not
succeed, he would destroy her,—it is so
natural to destroy that which we cannot possess, to
deny what we cannot comprehend, to insult that which
we envy.
On the morrow, Wilfrid, laden with
ideas which the extraordinary events of the previous
night naturally awakened in his mind, resolved to
question David, and went to find him on the pretext
of asking after Seraphita’s health. Though
Monsieur Becker spoke of the old servant as falling
into dotage, Wilfrid relied on his own perspicacity
to discover scraps of truth in the torrent of the
old man’s rambling talk.
David had the immovable, undecided,
physiognomy of an octogenarian. Under his white
hair lay a forehead lined with wrinkles like the stone
courses of a ruined wall; and his face was furrowed
like the bed of a dried-up torrent. His life
seemed to have retreated wholly to the eyes, where
light still shone, though its gleams were obscured
by a mistiness which seemed to indicate either an
active mental alienation or the stupid stare of drunkenness.
His slow and heavy movements betrayed the glacial
weight of age, and communicated an icy influence to
whoever allowed themselves to look long at him,—for
he possessed the magnetic force of torpor. His
limited intelligence was only roused by the sight,
the hearing, or the recollection of his mistress.
She was the soul of this wholly material fragment
of an existence. Any one seeing David alone by
himself would have thought him a corpse; let Seraphita
enter, let her voice be heard, or a mention of her
be made, and the dead came forth from his grave and
recovered speech and motion. The dry bones were
not more truly awakened by the divine breath in the
valley of Jehoshaphat, and never was that apocalyptic
vision better realized than in this Lazarus issuing
from the sepulchre into life at the voice of a young
girl. His language, which was always figurative
and often incomprehensible, prevented the inhabitants
of the village from talking with him; but they respected
a mind that deviated so utterly from common ways,—a
thing which the masses instinctively admire.
Wilfrid found him in the antechamber,
apparently asleep beside the stove. Like a dog
who recognizes a friend of the family, the old man
raised his eyes, saw the foreigner, and did not stir.
“Where is she?” inquired
Wilfrid, sitting down beside him.
David fluttered his fingers in the
air as if to express the flight of a bird.
“Does she still suffer?” asked Wilfrid.
“Beings vowed to Heaven are
able so to suffer that suffering does not lessen their
love; this is the mark of the true faith,” answered
the old man, solemnly, like an instrument which, on
being touched, gives forth an accidental note.
“Who taught you those words?”
“The Spirit.”
“What happened to her last night?
Did you force your way past the Vertumni standing
sentinel? did you evade the Mammons?”
“Yes”; answered David, as though awaking
from a dream.
The misty gleam of his eyes melted
into a ray that came direct from the soul and made
it by degrees brilliant as that of an eagle, as intelligent
as that of a poet.
“What did you see?” asked Wilfrid, astonished
at this sudden change.
“I saw Species and Shapes; I
heard the Spirit of all things; I beheld the revolt
of the Evil Ones; I listened to the words of the Good.
Seven devils came, and seven archangels descended from
on high. The archangels stood apart and looked
on through veils. The devils were close by; they
shone, they acted. Mammon came on his pearly shell
in the shape of a beautiful naked woman; her snowy
body dazzled the eye, no human form ever equalled
it; and he said, ’I am Pleasure; thou shalt
possess me!’ Lucifer, prince of serpents, was
there in sovereign robes; his Manhood was glorious
as the beauty of an angel, and he said, ‘Humanity
shall be at thy feet!’ The Queen of misers,—she
who gives back naught that she has ever received,—the
Sea, came wrapped in her virent mantle; she opened
her bosom, she showed her gems, she brought forth
her treasures and offered them; waves of sapphire and
of emerald came at her bidding; her hidden wonders
stirred, they rose to the surface of her breast, they
spoke; the rarest pearl of Ocean spread its iridescent
wings and gave voice to its marine melodies, saying,
’Twin daughter of suffering, we are sisters!
await me; let us go together; all I need is to become
a Woman.’ The Bird with the wings of an
eagle and the paws of a lion, the head of a woman and
the body of a horse, the Animal, fell down before
her and licked her feet, and promised seven hundred
years of plenty to her best-beloved daughter.
Then came the most formidable of all, the Child, weeping
at her knees, and saying, ’Wilt thou leave me,
feeble and suffering as I am? oh, my mother, stay!’
and he played with her, and shed languor on the air,
and the Heavens themselves had pity for his wail.
The Virgin of pure song brought forth her choirs to
relax the soul. The Kings of the East came with
their slaves, their armies, and their women; the Wounded
asked her for succor, the Sorrowful stretched forth
their hands: ’Do not leave us! do not leave
us!’ they cried. I, too, I cried, ’Do
not leave us! we adore thee! stay!’ Flowers,
bursting from the seed, bathed her in their fragrance
which uttered, ‘Stay!’ The giant Enakim
came forth from Jupiter, leading Gold and its friends
and all the Spirits of the Astral Regions which are
joined with him, and they said, ‘We are thine
for seven hundred years.’ At last came Death
on his pale horse, crying, ‘I will obey thee!’
One and all fell prostrate before her. Could
you but have seen them! They covered as it were
a vast plain, and they cried aloud to her, ’We
have nurtured thee, thou art our child; do not abandon
us!’ At length Life issued from her Ruby Waters,
and said, ‘I will not leave thee!’ then,
finding Seraphita silent, she flamed upon her as the
sun, crying out, ‘I am light!’ ’The
light is there!’ cried Seraphita, pointing
to the clouds where stood the archangels; but she
was wearied out; Desire had wrung her nerves, she
could only cry, ‘My God! my God!’ Ah! many
an Angelic Spirit, scaling the mountain and nigh to
the summit, has set his foot upon a rolling stone
which plunged him back into the abyss! All these
lost Spirits adored her constancy; they stood around
her,—a choir without a song,—weeping
and whispering, ‘Courage!’ At last she
conquered; Desire—let loose upon her in
every Shape and every Species—was vanquished.
She stood in prayer, and when at last her eyes were
lifted she saw the feet of Angels circling in the
Heavens.”
“She saw the feet of Angels?” repeated
Wilfrid.
“Yes,” said the old man.
“Was it a dream that she told you?” asked
Wilfrid.
“A dream as real as your life,” answered
David; “I was there.”
The calm assurance of the old servant
affected Wilfrid powerfully. He went away asking
himself whether these visions were any less extraordinary
than those he had read of in Swedenborg the night
before.
“If Spirits exist, they must
act,” he was saying to himself as he entered
the parsonage, where he found Monsieur Becker alone.
“Dear pastor,” he said,
“Seraphita is connected with us in form only,
and even that form is inexplicable. Do not think
me a madman or a lover; a profound conviction cannot
be argued with. Convert my belief into scientific
theories, and let us try to enlighten each other.
To-morrow evening we shall both be with her.”
“What then?” said Monsieur Becker.
“If her eye ignores space,”
replied Wilfrid, “if her thought is an intelligent
sight which enables her to perceive all things in their
essence, and to connect them with the general evolution
of the universe, if, in a word, she sees and knows
all, let us seat the Pythoness on her tripod, let
us force this pitiless eagle by threats to spread
its wings! Help me! I breathe a fire which
burns my vitals; I must quench it or it will consume
me. I have found a prey at last, and it shall
be mine!”
“The conquest will be difficult,”
said the pastor, “because this girl is—”
“Is what?” cried Wilfrid.
“Mad,” said the old man.
“I will not dispute her madness,
but neither must you dispute her wonderful powers.
Dear Monsieur Becker, she has often confounded me
with her learning. Has she travelled?”
“From her house to the fiord, no further.”
“Never left this place!”
exclaimed Wilfrid. “Then she must have read
immensely.”
“Not a page, not one iota!
I am the only person who possesses any books in Jarvis.
The works of Swedenborg—the only books that
were in the chateau—you see before you.
She has never looked into a single one of them.”
“Have you tried to talk with her?”
“What good would that do?”
“Does no one live with her in that house?”
“She has no friends but you
and Minna, nor any servant except old David.”
“It cannot be that she knows nothing of science
nor of art.”
“Who should teach her?” said the pastor.
“But if she can discuss such
matters pertinently, as she has often done with me,
what do you make of it?”
“The girl may have acquired
through years of silence the faculties enjoyed by
Apollonius of Tyana and other pretended sorcerers burned
by the Inquisition, which did not choose to admit the
fact of second-sight.”
“If she can speak Arabic, what would you say
to that?”
“The history of medical science
gives many authentic instances of girls who have spoken
languages entirely unknown to them.”
“What can I do?” exclaimed
Wilfrid. “She knows of secrets in my past
life known only to me.”
“I shall be curious if she can
tell me thoughts that I have confided to no living
person,” said Monsieur Becker.
Minna entered the room.
“Well, my daughter, and how is your familiar
spirit?”
“He suffers, father,”
she answered, bowing to Wilfrid. “Human
passions, clothed in their false riches, surrounded
him all night, and showed him all the glories of the
world. But you think these things mere tales.”
“Tales as beautiful to those
who read them in their brains as the ‘Arabian
Nights’ to common minds,” said the pastor,
smiling.
“Did not Satan carry our Savior
to the pinnacle of the Temple, and show him all the
kingdoms of the world?” she said.
“The Evangelists,” replied
her father, “did not correct their copies very
carefully, and several versions are in existence.”
“You believe in the reality
of these visions?” said Wilfrid to Minna.
“Who can doubt when he relates them.”
“He?” demanded Wilfrid. “Who?”
“He who is there,” replied Minna, motioning
towards the chateau.
“Are you speaking of Seraphita?” he said.
The young girl bent her head, and
looked at him with an expression of gentle mischief.
“You too!” exclaimed Wilfrid,
“you take pleasure in confounding me. Who
and what is she? What do you think of her?”
“What I feel is inexplicable,” said Minna,
blushing.
“You are all crazy!” cried the pastor.
“Farewell, until to-morrow evening,” said
Wilfrid.