I was born (said she) in the north
country, where the winters are long and cold, where
snow sometimes falls in the valleys, and the high
mountains for months are white with it. My father’s
castle is in a tall green wood, where the winds always
rustle, and a cold river runs down from the ice-gorges.
South of us was the wide plain, glowing with heat,
but above us were stony passes where the eagle nests
and the storms howl; in winter great fires roared in
our chimneys, and even in summer there was always
a cool air off the gorges. But when I was a child
my mother went southward in the great Empress’s
train and I went with her. We travelled many days,
across plains and mountains, and saw Rome, where the
Pope lives in a golden palace, and many other cities,
till we came to the great Emperor’s court.
There for two years or more we lived in pomp and merriment,
for it was a wonderful court, full of mimes, magicians,
philosophers and poets; and the Empress’s ladies
spent their days in mirth and music, dressed in light
silken garments, walking in gardens of roses, and
bathing in a great cool marble tank, while the Emperor’s
eunuchs guarded the approach to the gardens. Oh,
those baths in the marble tank, my Father! I
used to lie awake through the whole hot southern night,
and think of that plunge at sunrise under the last
stars. For we were in a burning country, and I
pined for the tall green woods and the cold stream
of my father’s valley; and when I had cooled
my limbs in the tank I lay all day in the scant cypress
shade and dreamed of my next bath.
My mother pined for the coolness till
she died; then the Empress put me in a convent and
I was forgotten. The convent was on the side of
a bare yellow hill, where bees made a hot buzzing in
the thyme. Below was the sea, blazing with a
million shafts of light; and overhead a blinding sky,
which reflected the sun’s glitter like a huge
baldric of steel. Now the convent was built on
the site of an old pleasure-house which a holy Princess
had given to our Order; and a part of the house was
left standing with its court and garden. The
nuns had built all about the garden; but they left
the cypresses in the middle, and the long marble tank
where the Princess and her ladies had bathed.
The tank, however, as you may conceive, was no longer
used as a bath; for the washing of the body is an indulgence
forbidden to cloistered virgins; and our Abbess, who
was famed for her austerities, boasted that, like
holy Sylvia the nun, she never touched water save
to bathe her finger-tips before receiving the Sacrament.
With such an example before them, the nuns were obliged
to conform to the same pious rule, and many, having
been bred in the convent from infancy, regarded all
ablutions with horror, and felt no temptation to cleanse
the filth from their flesh; but I, who had bathed
daily, had the freshness of clear water in my veins,
and perished slowly for want of it, like your garden
herbs in a drought.
My cell did not look on the garden,
but on the steep mule-path leading up the cliff, where
all day long the sun beat as if with flails of fire,
and I saw the sweating peasants toil up and down behind
their thirsty asses, and the beggars whining and scraping
their sores in the heat. Oh, how I hated to look
out through the bars on that burning world! I
used to turn away from it, sick with disgust, and
lying on my hard bed, stare up by the hour at the
ceiling of my cell. But flies crawled in hundreds
on the ceiling, and the hot noise they made was worse
than the glare. Sometimes, at an hour when I
knew myself unobserved, I tore off my stifling gown,
and hung it over the grated window, that I might no
longer see the shaft of hot sunlight lying across
my cell, and the dust dancing in it like fat in the
fire. But the darkness choked me, and I struggled
for breath as though I lay at the bottom of a pit;
so that at last I would spring up, and dragging down
the dress, fling myself on my knees before the Cross,
and entreat our Lord to give me the gift of holiness,
that I might escape the everlasting fires of hell,
of which this heat was like an awful foretaste.
For if I could not endure the scorching of a summer’s
day, with what constancy could I meet the thought
of the flame that dieth not?
This longing to escape the heat of
hell made me apply myself to a devouter way of living,
and I reflected that if my bodily distress were somewhat
eased I should be able to throw myself with greater
zeal into the practice of vigils and austerities.
And at length, having set forth to the Abbess that
the sultry air of my cell induced in me a grievous
heaviness of sleep, I prevailed on her to lodge me
in that part of the building which overlooked the garden.
For a few days I was quite happy,
for instead of the dusty mountainside, and the sight
of the sweating peasants and their asses, I looked
out on dark cypresses and rows of budding vegetables.
But presently I found I had not bettered myself.
For with the approach of midsummer the garden, being
all enclosed with buildings, grew as stifling as my
cell. All the green things in it withered and
dried off, leaving trenches of bare red earth, across
which the cypresses cast strips of shade too narrow
to cool the aching heads of the nuns who sought shelter
there; and I began to think sorrowfully of my former
cell, where now and then there came a sea-breeze,
hot and languid, yet alive, and where at least I could
look out upon the sea. But this was not the worst;
for when the dog-days came I found that the sun, at
a certain hour, cast on the ceiling of my cell the
reflection of the ripples on the garden-tank; and
to say how I suffered from this sight is not within
the power of speech. It was indeed agony to watch
the clear water rippling and washing above my head,
yet feel no solace of it on my limbs: as though
I had been a senseless brazen image lying at the bottom
of a well. But the image, if it felt no refreshment,
would have suffered no torture; whereas every inch
of my skin throbbed with thirst, and every vein was
a mouth of Dives praying for a drop of water.
Oh, Father, how shall I tell you the grievous pains
that I endured? Sometimes I so feared the sight
of the mocking ripples overhead that I hid my eyes
from their approach, lying face down on my burning
bed till I knew that they were gone; yet on cloudy
days, when they did not come, the heat was even worse
to bear.
By day I hardly dared trust myself
in the garden, for the nuns walked there, and one
fiery noon they found me hanging so close above the
tank that they snatched me away, crying out that I
had tried to destroy myself. The scandal of this
reaching the Abbess, she sent for me to know what
demon had beset me; and when I wept and said, the
longing to bathe my burning body, she broke into great
anger and cried out: “Do you not know that
this is a sin well-nigh as great as the other, and
condemned by all the greatest saints? For a nun
may be tempted to take her life through excess of
self-scrutiny and despair of her own worthiness; but
this desire to indulge the despicable body is one
of the lusts of the flesh, to be classed with concupiscence
and adultery.” And she ordered me to sleep
every night for a month in my heavy gown, with a veil
upon my face.
Now, Father, I believe it was this
penance that drove me to sin. For we were in
the dog-days, and it was more than flesh could bear.
And on the third night, after the portress had passed,
and the lights were out, I rose and flung off my veil
and gown, and knelt in my window fainting. There
was no moon, but the sky was full of stars. At
first the garden was all blackness; but as I looked
I saw a faint twinkle between the cypress-trunks,
and I knew it was the starlight on the tank.
The water! The water! It was there close
to me—only a few bolts and bars were between
us.
The portress was a heavy sleeper,
and I knew where her keys hung, on a nail just within
the door of her cell. I stole thither, unlatched
the door, seized the keys and crept barefoot down the
corridor. The bolts of the cloister-door were
stiff and heavy, and I dragged at them till the veins
in my wrists were bursting. Then I turned the
key and it cried out in the ward. I stood still,
my whole body beating with fear lest the hinges too
should have a voice—but no one stirred,
and I pushed open the door and slipped out. The
garden was as airless as a pit, but at least I could
stretch my arms in it; and, oh, my Father, the sweetness
of the stars! The stones in the path cut my feet
as I ran, but I thought of the joy of bathing them
in the tank, and that made the wounds sweet to me.
. . . My Father, I have heard of the temptations
which in times past assailed the holy Solitaries of
the desert, flattering the reluctant flesh beyond
resistance; but none, I think, could have surpassed
in ecstasy that first touch of the water on my limbs.
To prolong the joy I let myself slip in slowly, resting
my hands on the edge of the tank, and smiling to see
my body, as I lowered it, break up the shining black
surface and shatter the starbeams into splinters.
And the water, my Father, seemed to crave me as I
craved it. Its ripples rose about me, first in
furtive touches, then in a long embrace that clung
and drew me down; till at length they lay like kisses
on my lips. It was no frank comrade like the
mountain pools of my childhood, but a secret playmate
compassionating my pains and soothing them with noiseless
hands. From the first I thought of it as an accomplice—its
whisper seemed to promise me secrecy if I would promise
it love. And I went back and back to it, my Father;
all day I lived in the thought of it; each night I
stole to it with fresh thirst. . . .
But at length the old portress died,
and a young lay-sister took her place. She was
a light sleeper, and keen-eared; and I knew the danger
of venturing to her cell. I knew the danger, but
when darkness came I felt the water drawing me.
The first night I fought on my bed and held out; but
the second I crept to her door. She made no motion
when I entered, but rose up secretly and stole after
me; and the second night she warned the Abbess, and
the two came on me as I stood by the tank.
I was punished with terrible penances:
fasting, scourging, imprisonment, and the privation
of drinking water; for the Abbess stood amazed at
the obduracy of my sin, and was resolved to make me
an example to my fellows. For a month I endured
the pains of hell; then one night the Saracen pirates
fell on our convent. On a sudden the darkness
was full of flames and blood; but while the other nuns
ran hither and thither, clinging to the Abbess’s
feet or shrieking on the steps of the altar, I slipped
through an unwatched postern and made my way to the
hills. The next day the Emperor’s soldiery
descended on the carousing heathen, slew them and burned
their vessels on the beach; the Abbess and nuns were
rescued, the convent walls rebuilt, and peace restored
to the holy precincts. All this I heard from
a shepherdess of the hills, who found me in my hiding,
and brought me honeycomb and water. In her simplicity
she offered to lead me home to the convent; but while
she slept I laid off my wimple and scapular, and stealing
her cloak fled away lest she should betray me.
And since then I have wandered alone over the face
of the world, living in woods and desert places, often
hungry, often cold and sometimes fearful; yet resigned
to any hardship, and with a front for any peril, if
only I may sleep under the free heaven and wash the
dust from my body in cool water.