THEREAFTER for two years the Hermit
and the Wild Woman lived side by side, meeting together
to pray on the great feast-days of the year, but on
all other days dwelling apart, engaged in pious practices.
At first the Hermit, knowing the weakness
of woman, and her little aptitude for the life apart,
had feared that he might be disturbed by the nearness
of his penitent; but she faithfully held to his commands,
abstaining from all sight of him save on the Days of
Obligation; and when they met, so modest and devout
was her demeanour that she raised his soul to fresh
fervency. And gradually it grew sweet to him
to think that, near by though unseen, was one who
performed the same tasks at the same hours; so that,
whether he tended his garden, or recited his chaplet,
or rose under the stars to repeat the midnight office,
he had a companion in all his labours and devotions.
Meanwhile the report had spread abroad
that a holy woman who cast out devils had made her
dwelling in the Hermit’s cliff; and many sick
persons from the valley sought her out, and went away
restored by her. These poor pilgrims brought
her oil and flour, and with her own hands she made
a garden like the Hermit’s, and planted it with
corn and lentils; but she would never take a trout
from the brook, or receive the gift of a snared wild-fowl,
for she said that in her vagrant life the wild creatures
of the wood had befriended her, and as she had slept
in peace among them, so now she would never suffer
them to be molested.
In the third year came a plague, and
death walked the cities, and many poor peasants fled
to the hills to escape it. These the Hermit and
his penitent faithfully tended, and so skilful were
the Wild Woman’s ministrations that the report
of them reached the town across the valley, and a
deputation of burgesses came with rich offerings,
and besought her to descend and comfort their sick.
The Hermit, seeing her depart on so dangerous a mission,
would have accompanied her, but she bade him remain
and tend those who fled to the hills; and for many
days his heart was consumed in prayer for her, and
he feared lest every fugitive should bring him word
of her death.
But at length she returned, wearied-out
but whole, and covered with the blessings of the townsfolk;
and thereafter her name for holiness spread as wide
as the Hermit’s.
Seeing how constant she remained in
her chosen life, and what advance she had made in
the way of perfection, the Hermit now felt that it
behoved him to exhort her again to return to the convent;
and more than once he resolved to speak with her, but
his heart hung back. At length he bethought him
that by failing in this duty he imperilled his own
soul, and thereupon, on the next feast-day, when they
met, he reminded her that in spite of her good works
she still lived in sin and excommunicate, and that,
now she had once more tasted the sweets of godliness,
it was her duty to confess her fault and give herself
up to her superiors.
She heard him meekly, but when he
had spoken she was silent and her tears ran over;
and looking at her he wept also, and said no more.
And they prayed together, and returned each to his
cave.
It was not till late winter that the
plague abated; and the spring and early summer following
were heavy with rains and great heat. When the
Hermit visited his penitent at the feast of Pentecost,
she appeared to him so weak and wasted that, when
they had recited the Veni, sancte spiritus,
and the proper psalms, he taxed her with too great
rigour of penitential practices; but she replied that
her weakness was not due to an excess of discipline,
but that she had brought back from her labours among
the sick a heaviness of body which the intemperance
of the season no doubt increased. The evil rains
continued, falling chiefly at night, while by day the
land reeked with heat and vapours; so that lassitude
fell on the Hermit also, and he could hardly drag
himself down to the spring whence he drew his drinking-water.
Thus he fell into the habit of going down to the glen
before cockcrow, after he had recited Matins; for at
that hour the rain commonly ceased, and a faint air
was stirring. Now because of the wet season the
stream had not gone dry, and instead of replenishing
his flagon slowly at the trickling spring, the Hermit
went down to the waterside to fill it; and once, as
he descended the steep slope of the glen, he heard
the covert rustle, and saw the leaves stir as though
something moved behind them. As he looked silence
fell, and the leaves grew still; but his heart was
shaken, for it seemed to him that what he had seen
in the dusk had a human semblance, such as the wood-people
wear. And he was loth to think that such unhallowed
beings haunted the glen.
A few days passed, and again, descending
to the stream, he saw a figure flit by him through
the covert; and this time a deeper fear entered into
him; but he put away the thought, and prayed fervently
for all souls in temptation. And when he spoke
with the Wild Woman again, on the feast of the Seven
Maccabees, which falls on the first day of August,
he was smitten with fear to see her wasted looks, and
besought her to cease from labouring and let him minister
to her in her weakness. But she denied him gently,
and replied that all she asked of him was to keep
her steadfastly in his prayers.
Before the feast of the Assumption
the rains ceased, and the plague, which had begun
to show itself, was stayed; but the ardency of the
sun grew greater, and the Hermit’s cliff was
a fiery furnace. Never had such heat been known
in those regions; but the people did not murmur, for
with the cessation of the rain their crops were saved
and the pestilence banished; and these mercies they
ascribed in great part to the prayers and macerations
of the two holy anchorets. Therefore on the eve
of the Assumption they sent a messenger to the Hermit,
saying that at daylight on the morrow the townspeople
and all the dwellers in the valley would come forth,
led by their Bishop, who bore the Pope’s blessing
to the two solitaries, and who was mindful to celebrate
the Mass of the Assumption in the Hermit’s cave
in the cliffside. At the blessed word the Hermit
was well-nigh distraught with joy, for he felt this
to be a sign from heaven that his prayers were heard,
and that he had won the Wild Woman’s grace as
well as his own. And all night he prayed that
on the morrow she might confess her fault and receive
the Sacrament with him.
Before dawn he recited the psalms
of the proper nocturn; then he girded on his gown
and sandals, and went forth to meet the Bishop in
the valley.
As he went downward daylight stood
on the mountains, and he thought he had never seen
so fair a dawn. It filled the farthest heaven
with brightness, and penetrated even to the woody
crevices of the glen, as the grace of God had entered
into the obscurest folds of his heart. The morning
airs were hushed, and he heard only the sound of his
own footfall, and the murmur of the stream which, though
diminished, still poured a swift current between the
rocks; but as he reached the bottom of the glen a
sound of chanting came to him, and he knew that the
pilgrims were at hand. His heart leapt up and
his feet hastened forward; but at the streamside they
were suddenly stayed, for in a pool where the water
was still deep he saw the shining of a woman’s
body—and on a stone hard by lay the Wild
Woman’s gown and sandals.
Fear and rage possessed the Hermit’s
heart, and he stood as one smitten speechless, covering
his eyes from the shame. But the song of the
approaching pilgrims swelled ever louder and nearer,
and finding voice he cried to the Wild Woman to come
forth and hide herself from the people.
She made no answer, but in the dusk
he saw her limbs sway with the swaying of the water,
and her eyes were turned to him as if in mockery.
At the sight blind fury filled him, and clambering
over the rocks to the pool’s edge he bent down
and caught her by the shoulder. At that moment
he could have strangled her with his hands, so abhorrent
to him was the touch of her flesh; but as he cried
out on her, heaping her with cruel names, he saw that
her eyes returned his look without wavering; and suddenly
it came to him that she was dead. Then through
all his anger and fear a great pang smote him; for
here was his work undone, and one he had loved in Christ
laid low in her sin, in spite of all his labours.
One moment pity possessed him; the
next he bethought him how the people would find him
bending above the body of a naked woman, whom he had
held up to them as holy, but whom they might now well
take for the secret instrument of his undoing; and
beholding how at her touch all the slow edifice of
his holiness was demolished, and his soul in mortal
jeopardy, he felt the earth reel round him and his
sight grew red.
Already the head of the procession
had entered the glen, and the stillness shook with
the great sound of the Salve Regina. When
the Hermit opened his eyes once more the air was quivering
with thronged candle-flames, which glittered on the
gold thread of priestly vestments, and on the blazing
monstrance beneath its canopy; and close above him
was bent the Bishop’s face.
The Hermit struggled to his knees.
“My Father in God,” he
cried, “behold, for my sins I have been visited
by a demon—” But as he spoke he perceived
that those about him no longer heeded him, and that
the Bishop and all his clergy had fallen on their
knees about the pool. Then the Hermit, following
their gaze, saw that the brown waters of the pool covered
the Wild Woman’s limbs as with a garment, and
that about her floating head a great light floated;
and to the utmost edges of the throng a cry of praise
went up, for many were there whom the Wild Woman had
healed and comforted, and who read God’s mercy
in this wonder. But fresh fear fell on the Hermit,
for he had cursed a dying saint, and denounced her
aloud to all the people; and this new anguish, coming
so close upon the other, smote down his weakened frame,
so that his limbs failed him and he sank once more
to the ground.
Again the earth reeled about him,
and the bending faces grew remote; but as he forced
his weak voice once more to proclaim his sins he felt
the blessed touch of absolution, and the holy oils
of the last voyage laid on his lips and eyes.
Peace returned to him then, and with it a great longing
to look once more upon his lauds, as he had dreamed
of doing at his last hour; but he was too far gone
to make this longing known, and so tried to banish
it from his mind. Yet in his weakness the wish
held him, and the tears ran down his face.
Then, as he lay there, feeling the
earth slip from under him, and the Everlasting Arms
replace it, he heard a great peal of voices that seemed
to come down from the sky and mingle with the singing
of the throng; and the words of the chant were the
words of his own lauds, so long hidden in the secret
of his breast, and now rejoicing above him through
the spheres. And his soul rose on the chant, and
soared with it to the seat of mercy.