The Hermit lived in a cave in the
hollow of a hill. Below him was a glen, with
a stream in a coppice of oaks and alders, and on the
farther side of the valley, half a day’s journey
distant, another hill, steep and bristling, which
raised aloft a little walled town with Ghibelline
swallow-tails notched against the sky.
When the Hermit was a lad, and lived
in the town, the crenellations of the walls had been
square-topped, and a Guelf lord had flown his standard
from the keep. Then one day a steel-coloured line
of men-at-arms rode across the valley, wound up the
hill and battered in the gates. Stones and Greek
fire rained from the ramparts, shields clashed in
the streets, blade sprang at blade in passages and
stairways, pikes and lances dripped above huddled flesh,
and all the still familiar place was a stew of dying
bodies. The boy fled from it in horror.
He had seen his father go forth and not come back,
his mother drop dead from an arquebuse shot as she
leaned from the platform of the tower, his little
sister fall with a slit throat across the altar steps
of the chapel—and he ran, ran for his life,
through the slippery streets, over warm twitching bodies,
between legs of soldiers carousing, out of the gates,
past burning farmsteads, trampled wheat-fields, orchards
stripped and broken, till the still woods received
him and he fell face down on the unmutilated earth.
He had no wish to go back. His
longing was to live hidden from life. Up the
hillside he found a hollow in the rock, and built before
it a porch of boughs bound together with withies.
He fed on nuts and roots, and on trout which he caught
with his hands under the stones in the stream.
He had always been a quiet boy, liking to sit at his
mother’s feet and watch the flowers grow on her
embroidery frame, while the chaplain read aloud the
histories of the Desert Fathers from a great silver-clasped
volume. He would rather have been bred a clerk
and scholar than a knight’s son, and his happiest
moments were when he served mass for the chaplain
in the early morning, and felt his heart flutter up
and up like a lark, up and up till it was lost in
infinite space and brightness. Almost as happy
were the hours when he sat beside the foreign painter
who came over the mountains to paint the chapel, and
under whose brush celestial faces grew out of the
rough wall as if he had sown some magic seed which
flowered while you watched it. With the appearing
of every gold-rimmed face the boy felt he had won
another friend, a friend who would come and bend above
him at night, keeping off the ugly visions which haunted
his pillow—visions of the gnawing monsters
about the church-porch, evil-faced bats and dragons,
giant worms and winged bristling hogs, a devil’s
flock who crept down from the stone-work at night and
hunted the souls of sinful children through the town.
With the growth of the picture the bright mailed angels
thronged so close about the boy’s bed that between
their interwoven wings not a snout or a claw could
force itself; and he would turn over sighing on his
pillow, which felt as soft and warm as if it had been
lined with down from those sheltering pinions.
All these thoughts came back to him
now in his cave on the cliff-side. The stillness
seemed to enclose him with wings, to fold him away
from life and evil. He was never restless or discontented.
He loved the long silent empty days, each one as like
the other as pearls in a well-matched string.
Above all he liked to have time to save his soul.
He had been greatly troubled about his soul since a
band of Flagellants had passed through the town, exhibiting
their gaunt scourged bodies and exhorting the people
to turn from soft raiment and delicate fare, from
marriage and money-getting and dancing and games,
and think only how they might escape the devil’s
talons and the great red blaze of hell. For days
that red blaze hung on the edge of the boy’s
thoughts like the light of a burning city across a
plain. There seemed to be so many pitfalls to
avoid—so many things were wicked which
one might have supposed to be harmless. How could
a child of his age tell? He dared not for a moment
think of anything else. And the scene of sack
and slaughter from which he had fled gave shape and
distinctness to that blood-red vision. Hell was
like that, only a million million times worse.
Now he knew how flesh looked when devils’ pincers
tore it, how the shrieks of the damned sounded, and
how roasting bodies smelled. How could a Christian
spare one moment of his days and nights from the long
long struggle to keep safe from the wrath to come?
Gradually the horror faded, leaving
only a tranquil pleasure in the minute performance
of his religious duties. His mind was not naturally
given to the contemplation of evil, and in the blessed
solitude of his new life his thoughts dwelt more and
more on the beauty of holiness. His desire was
to be perfectly good, and to live in love and charity
with his fellow-men; and how could one do this without
fleeing from them?
At first his life was difficult, for
in the winter season he was put to great straits to
feed himself; and there were nights when the sky was
like an iron vault, and a hoarse wind rattled the oakwood
in the valley, and a great fear came on him that was
worse than any cold. But in time it became known
to his townsfolk and to the peasants in the neighbouring
valleys that he had withdrawn to the wilderness to
lead a godly life; and after that his worst hardships
were over, for pious persons brought him gifts of
oil and dried fruit, one good woman gave him seeds
from her garden, another spun for him a hodden gown,
and others would have brought him all manner of food
and clothing, had he not refused to accept anything
but for his bare needs. The good woman who had
given him the seeds showed him also how to build a
little garden on the southern ledge of his cliff, and
all one summer the Hermit carried up soil from the
streamside, and the next he carried up water to keep
his garden green. After that the fear of solitude
quite passed from him, for he was so busy all day
long that at night he had much ado to fight off the
demon of sleep, which Saint Arsenius the Abbot has
denounced as the chief foe of the solitary. His
memory kept good store of prayers and litanies, besides
long passages from the Mass and other offices, and
he marked the hours of his day by different acts of
devotion. On Sundays and feast days, when the
wind was set his way, he could hear the church bells
from his native town, and these helped him to follow
the worship of the faithful, and to bear in mind the
seasons of the liturgical year; and what with carrying
up water from the river, digging in the garden, gathering
fagots for his fire, observing his religious duties,
and keeping his thoughts continually upon the salvation
of his soul, the Hermit knew not a moment’s idleness.
At first, during his night vigils,
he had felt a great fear of the stars, which seemed
to set a cruel watch upon him, as though they spied
out the frailty of his heart and took the measure of
his littleness. But one day a wandering clerk,
to whom he chanced to give a night’s shelter,
explained to him that, in the opinion of the most
learned doctors of theology, the stars were inhabited
by the spirits of the blessed, and this thought brought
great consolation to the Hermit. Even on winter
nights, when the eagle’s wings clanged among
the peaks, and he heard the long howl of wolves about
the sheep-cotes in the valley, he no longer felt any
fear, but thought of those sounds as representing
the evil voices of the world, and hugged himself in
the solitude of his cave. Sometimes, to keep
himself awake, he composed lauds in honour of Christ
and the saints, and they seemed to him so pleasant
that he feared to forget them, so after much debate
with himself he decided to ask a friendly priest from
the valley, who sometimes visited him, to write down
the lauds; and the priest wrote them down on comely
sheepskin, which the Hermit dried and prepared with
his own hands. When the Hermit saw them written
down they appeared to him so beautiful that he feared
to commit the sin of vanity if he looked at them too
often, so he hid them between two smooth stones in
his cave, and vowed that he would take them out only
once in the year, at Easter, when our Lord has risen
and it is meet that Christians should rejoice.
And this vow he faithfully kept; but, alas, when Easter
drew near, he found he was looking forward to the
blessed festival less because of our Lord’s
rising than because he should then be able to read
his pleasant lauds written on fair sheepskin; and
thereupon he took a vow that he would not look upon
the lauds till he lay dying.
So the Hermit, for many years, lived
to the glory of God and in great peace of mind.