<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0002" id="link2H_4_0002"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THE LEGEND OF SAINT JULIAN THE HOSPITALLER </h2>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0001" id="link2HCH0001"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> CHAPTER I </h2>
<h3> THE CURSE </h3>
<p>Julian’s father and mother dwelt in a castle built on the slope of a hill,
in the heart of the woods.</p>
<p>The towers at its four corners had pointed roofs covered with leaden
tiles, and the foundation rested upon solid rocks, which descended
abruptly to the bottom of the moat.</p>
<p>In the courtyard, the stone flagging was as immaculate as the floor of a
church. Long rain-spouts, representing dragons with yawning jaws, directed
the water towards the cistern, and on each window-sill of the castle a
basil or a heliotrope bush bloomed, in painted flower-pots.</p>
<p>A second enclosure, surrounded by a fence, comprised a fruit-orchard, a
garden decorated with figures wrought in bright-hued flowers, an arbour
with several bowers, and a mall for the diversion of the pages. On the
other side were the kennel, the stables, the bakery, the wine-press and
the barns. Around these spread a pasture, also enclosed by a strong hedge.</p>
<p>Peace had reigned so long that the portcullis was never lowered; the moats
were filled with water; swallows built their nests in the cracks of the
battlements, and as soon as the sun shone too strongly, the archer who all
day long paced to and fro on the curtain, withdrew to the watch-tower and
slept soundly.</p>
<p>Inside the castle, the locks on the doors shone brightly; costly
tapestries hung in the apartments to keep out the cold; the closets
overflowed with linen, the cellar was filled with casks of wine, and the
oak chests fairly groaned under the weight of money-bags.</p>
<p>In the armoury could be seen, between banners and the heads of wild
beasts, weapons of all nations and of all ages, from the slings of the
Amalekites and the javelins of the Garamantes, to the broad-swords of the
Saracens and the coats of mail of the Normans.</p>
<p>The largest spit in the kitchen could hold an ox; the chapel was as
gorgeous as a king’s oratory. There was even a Roman bath in a secluded
part of the castle, though the good lord of the manor refrained from using
it, as he deemed it a heathenish practice.</p>
<p>Wrapped always in a cape made of fox-skins, he wandered about the castle,
rendered justice among his vassals and settled his neighbours’ quarrels.
In the winter, he gazed dreamily at the falling snow, or had stories read
aloud to him. But as soon as the fine weather returned, he would mount his
mule and sally forth into the country roads, edged with ripening wheat, to
talk with the peasants, to whom he distributed advice. After a number of
adventures he took unto himself a wife of high lineage.</p>
<p>She was pale and serious, and a trifle haughty. The horns of her
head-dress touched the top of the doors and the hem of her gown trailed
far behind her. She conducted her household like a cloister. Every morning
she distributed work to the maids, supervised the making of preserves and
unguents, and afterwards passed her time in spinning, or in embroidering
altar-cloths. In response to her fervent prayers, God granted her a son!</p>
<p>Then there was great rejoicing; and they gave a feast which lasted three
days and four nights, with illuminations and soft music. Chickens as large
as sheep, and the rarest spices were served; for the entertainment of the
guests, a dwarf crept out of a pie; and when the bowls were too few, for
the crowd swelled continuously, the wine was drunk from helmets and
hunting-horns.</p>
<p>The young mother did not appear at the feast. She was quietly resting in
bed. One night she awoke, and beheld in a moonbeam that crept through the
window something that looked like a moving shadow. It was an old man clad
in sackcloth, who resembled a hermit. A rosary dangled at his side and he
carried a beggar’s sack on his shoulder. He approached the foot of the
bed, and without opening his lips said: “Rejoice, O mother! Thy son shall
be a saint.”</p>
<p>She would have cried out, but the old man, gliding along the moonbeam,
rose through the air and disappeared. The songs of the banqueters grew
louder. She could hear angels’ voices, and her head sank back on the
pillow, which was surmounted by the bone of a martyr, framed in precious
stones.</p>
<p>The following day, the servants, upon being questioned, declared, to a
man, that they had seen no hermit. Then, whether dream or fact, this must
certainly have been a communication from heaven; but she took care not to
speak of it, lest she should be accused of presumption.</p>
<p>The guests departed at daybreak, and Julian’s father stood at the castle
gate, where he had just bidden farewell to the last one, when a beggar
suddenly emerged from the mist and confronted him. He was a gipsy—for
he had a braided beard and wore silver bracelets on each arm. His eyes
burned and, in an inspired way, he muttered some disconnected words: “Ah!
Ah! thy son!—great bloodshed—great glory—happy always—an
emperor’s family.”</p>
<p>Then he stooped to pick up the alms thrown to him, and disappeared in the
tall grass.</p>
<p>The lord of the manor looked up and down the road and called as loudly as
he could. But no one answered him! The wind only howled and the morning
mists were fast dissolving.</p>
<p>He attributed his vision to a dullness of the brain resulting from too
much sleep. “If I should speak of it,” quoth he, “people would laugh at
me.” Still, the glory that was to be his son’s dazzled him, albeit the
meaning of the prophecy was not clear to him, and he even doubted that he
had heard it.</p>
<p>The parents kept their secret from each other. But both cherished the
child with equal devotion, and as they considered him marked by God, they
had great regard for his person. His cradle was lined with the softest
feathers, and lamp representing a dove burned continually over it; three
nurses rocked him night and day, and with his pink cheeks and blue eyes,
brocaded cloak and embroidered cap he looked like a little Jesus. He cut
all his teeth without even a whimper.</p>
<p>When he was seven years old his mother taught him to sing, and his father
lifted him upon a tall horse, to inspire him with courage. The child
smiled with delight, and soon became familiar with everything pertaining
to chargers. An old and very learned monk taught him the Gospel, the
Arabic numerals, the Latin letters, and the art of painting delicate
designs on vellum. They worked in the top of a tower, away from all noise
and disturbance.</p>
<p>When the lesson was over, they would go down into the garden and study the
flowers.</p>
<p>Sometimes a herd of cattle passed through the valley below, in charge of a
man in Oriental dress. The lord of the manor, recognising him as a
merchant, would despatch a servant after him. The stranger, becoming
confident, would stop on his way and after being ushered into the
castle-hall, would display pieces of velvet and silk, trinkets and strange
objects whose use was unknown in those parts. Then, in due time, he would
take leave, without having been molested and with a handsome profit.</p>
<p>At other times, a band of pilgrims would knock at the door. Their wet
garments would be hung in front of the hearth and after they had been
refreshed by food they would relate their travels, and discuss the
uncertainty of vessels on the high seas, their long journeys across
burning sands, the ferocity of the infidels, the caves of Syria, the
Manger and the Holy Sepulchre. They made presents to the young heir of
beautiful shells, which they carried in their cloaks.</p>
<p>The lord of the manor very often feasted his brothers-at-arms, and over
the wine the old warriors would talk of battles and attacks, of
war-machines and of the frightful wounds they had received, so that
Julian, who was a listener, would scream with excitement; then his father
felt convinced that some day he would be a conqueror. But in the evening,
after the Angelus, when he passed through the crowd of beggars who
clustered about the church-door, he distributed his alms with so much
modesty and nobility that his mother fully expected to see him become an
archbishop in time.</p>
<p>His seat in the chapel was next to his parents, and no matter how long the
services lasted, he remained kneeling on his <i>prie-dieu,</i> with folded
hands and his velvet cap lying close beside him on the floor.</p>
<p>One day, during mass, he raised his head and beheld a little white mouse
crawling out of a hole in the wall. It scrambled to the first altar-step
and then, after a few gambols, ran back in the same direction. On the
following Sunday, the idea of seeing the mouse again worried him. It
returned; and every Sunday after that he watched for it; and it annoyed
him so much that he grew to hate it and resolved to do away with it.</p>
<p>So, having closed the door and strewn some crumbs on the steps of the
altar, he placed himself in front of the hole with a stick. After a long
while a pink snout appeared, and then whole mouse crept out. He struck it
lightly with his stick and stood stunned at the sight of the little,
lifeless body. A drop of blood stained the floor. He wiped it away hastily
with his sleeve, and picking up the mouse, threw it away, without saying a
word about it to anyone.</p>
<p>All sorts of birds pecked at the seeds in the garden. He put some peas in
a hollow reed, and when he heard birds chirping in a tree, he would
approach cautiously, lift the tube and swell his cheeks; then, when the
little creatures dropped about him in multitudes, he could not refrain
from laughing and being delighted with his own cleverness.</p>
<p>One morning, as he was returning by way of the curtain, he beheld a fat
pigeon sunning itself on the top of the wall. He paused to gaze at it;
where he stood the rampart was cracked and a piece of stone was near at
hand; he gave his arm a jerk and the well-aimed missile struck the bird
squarely, sending it straight into the moat below.</p>
<p>He sprang after it, unmindful of the brambles, and ferreted around the
bushes with the litheness of a young dog.</p>
<p>The pigeon hung with broken wings in the branches of a privet hedge.</p>
<p>The persistence of its life irritated the boy. He began to strangle it,
and its convulsions made his heart beat quicker, and filled him with a
wild, tumultuous voluptuousness, the last throb of its heart making him
feel like fainting.</p>
<p>At supper that night, his father declared that at his age a boy should
begin to hunt; and he arose and brought forth an old writing-book which
contained, in questions and answers, everything pertaining to the pastime.
In it, a master showed a supposed pupil how to train dogs and falcons, lay
traps, recognise a stag by its fumets, and a fox or a wolf by footprints.
He also taught the best way of discovering their tracks, how to start
them, where their refuges are usually to be found, what winds are the most
favourable, and further enumerated the various cries, and the rules of the
quarry.</p>
<p>When Julian was able to recite all these things by heart, his father made
up a pack of hounds for him. There were twenty-four greyhounds of Barbary,
speedier than gazelles, but liable to get out of temper; seventeen couples
of Breton dogs, great barkers, with broad chests and russet coats flecked
with white. For wild-boar hunting and perilous doublings, there were forty
boarhounds as hairy as bears.</p>
<p>The red mastiffs of Tartary, almost as large as donkeys, with broad backs
and straight legs, were destined for the pursuit of the wild bull. The
black coats of the spaniels shone like satin; the barking of the setters
equalled that of the beagles. In a special enclosure were eight growling
bloodhounds that tugged at their chains and rolled their eyes, and these
dogs leaped at men’s throats and were not afraid even of lions.</p>
<p>All ate wheat bread, drank from marble troughs, and had high-sounding
names.</p>
<p>Perhaps the falconry surpassed the pack; for the master of the castle, by
paying great sums of money, had secured Caucasian hawks, Babylonian
sakers, German gerfalcons, and pilgrim falcons captured on the cliffs
edging the cold seas, in distant lands. They were housed in a thatched
shed and were chained to the perch in the order of size. In front of them
was a little grass-plot where, from time to time, they were allowed to
disport themselves.</p>
<p>Bag-nets, baits, traps and all sorts of snares were manufactured.</p>
<p>Often they would take out pointers who would set almost immediately; then
the whippers-in, advancing step by step, would cautiously spread a huge
net over their motionless bodies. At the command, the dogs would bark and
arouse the quails; and the ladies of the neighbourhood, with their
husbands, children and hand-maids, would fall upon them and capture them
with ease.</p>
<p>At other times they used a drum to start hares; and frequently foxes fell
into the ditches prepared for them, while wolves caught their paws in the
traps.</p>
<p>But Julian scorned these convenient contrivances; he preferred to hunt
away from the crowd, alone with his steed and his falcon. It was almost
always a large, snow-white, Scythian bird. His leather hood was ornamented
with a plume, and on his blue feet were bells; and he perched firmly on
his master’s arm while they galloped across the plains. Then Julian would
suddenly untie his tether and let him fly, and the bold bird would dart
through the air like an arrow, One might perceive two spots circle around,
unite, and then disappear in the blue heights. Presently the falcon would
return with a mutilated bird, and perch again on his master’s gauntlet
with trembling wings.</p>
<p>Julian loved to sound his trumpet and follow his dogs over hills and
streams, into the woods; and when the stag began to moan under their
teeth, he would kill it deftly, and delight in the fury of the brutes,
which would devour the pieces spread out on the warm hide.</p>
<p>On foggy days, he would hide in the marshes to watch for wild geese,
otters and wild ducks.</p>
<p>At daybreak, three equerries waited for him at the foot of the steps; and
though the old monk leaned out of the dormer-window and made signs to him
to return, Julian would not look around.</p>
<p>He heeded neither the broiling sun, the rain nor the storm; he drank
spring water and ate wild berries, and when he was tired, he lay down
under a tree; and he would come home at night covered with earth and
blood, with thistles in his hair and smelling of wild beasts. He grew to
be like them. And when his mother kissed him, he responded coldly to her
caress and seemed to be thinking of deep and serious things.</p>
<p>He killed bears with a knife, bulls with a hatchet, and wild boars with a
spear; and once, with nothing but a stick, he defended himself against
some wolves, which were gnawing corpses at the foot of a gibbet.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><br/><br/></p>
<p>One winter morning he set out before daybreak, with a bow slung across his
shoulder and a quiver of arrows attached to the pummel of his saddle. The
hoofs of his steed beat the ground with regularity and his two beagles
trotted close behind. The wind was blowing hard and icicles clung to his
cloak. A part of the horizon cleared, and he beheld some rabbits playing
around their burrows. In an instant, the two dogs were upon them, and
seizing as many as they could, they broke their backs in the twinkling of
an eye.</p>
<p>Soon he came to a forest. A woodcock, paralysed by the cold, perched on a
branch, with its head hidden under its wing. Julian, with a lunge of his
sword, cut off its feet, and without stopping to pick it up, rode away.</p>
<p>Three hours later he found himself on the top of a mountain so high that
the sky seemed almost black. In front of him, a long, flat rock hung over
a precipice, and at the end two wild goats stood gazing down into the
abyss. As he had no arrows (for he had left his steed behind), he thought
he would climb down to where they stood; and with bare feet and bent back
he at last reached the first goat and thrust his dagger below its ribs.
But the second animal, in its terror, leaped into the precipice. Julian
threw himself forward to strike it, but his right foot slipped, and he
fell, face downward and with outstretched arms, over the body of the first
goat.</p>
<p>After he returned to the plains, he followed a stream bordered by willows.
From time to time, some cranes, flying low, passed over his head. He
killed them with his whip, never missing a bird. He beheld in the distance
the gleam of a lake which appeared to be of lead, and in the middle of it
was an animal he had never seen before, a beaver with a black muzzle.
Notwithstanding the distance that separated them, an arrow ended its life
and Julian only regretted that he was not able to carry the skin home with
him.</p>
<p>Then he entered an avenue of tall trees, the tops of which formed a
triumphal arch to the entrance of a forest. A deer sprang out of the
thicket and a badger crawled out of its hole, a stag appeared in the road,
and a peacock spread its fan-shaped tail on the grass—and after he
had slain them all, other deer, other stags, other badgers, other
peacocks, and jays, blackbirds, foxes, porcupines, polecats, and lynxes,
appeared; in fact, a host of beasts that grew more and more numerous with
every step he took. Trembling, and with a look of appeal in their eyes,
they gathered around Julian, but he did not stop slaying them; and so
intent was he on stretching his bow, drawing his sword and whipping out
his knife, that he had little thought for aught else. He knew that he was
hunting in some country since an indefinite time, through the very fact of
his existence, as everything seemed to occur with the ease one experiences
in dreams. But presently an extraordinary sight made him pause.</p>
<p>He beheld a valley shaped like a circus and filled with stags which,
huddled together, were warming one another with the vapour of their
breaths that mingled with the early mist.</p>
<p>For a few minutes, he almost choked with pleasure at the prospect of so
great a carnage. Then he sprang from his horse, rolled up his sleeves, and
began to aim.</p>
<p>When the first arrow whizzed through the air, the stags turned their heads
simultaneously. They huddled closer, uttered plaintive cries, and a great
agitation seized the whole herd. The edge of the valley was too high to
admit of flight; and the animals ran around the enclosure in their efforts
to escape. Julian aimed, stretched his bow and his arrows fell as fast and
thick as raindrops in a shower.</p>
<p>Maddened with terror, the stags fought and reared and climbed on top of
one another; their antlers and bodies formed a moving mountain which
tumbled to pieces whenever it displaced itself. Finally the last one
expired. Their bodies lay stretched out on the sand with foam gushing from
the nostrils and the bowels protruding. The heaving of their bellies grew
less and less noticeable, and presently all was still.</p>
<p>Night came, and behind the trees, through the branches, the sky appeared
like a sheet of blood.</p>
<p>Julian leaned against a tree and gazed with dilated eyes at the enormous
slaughter. He was now unable to comprehend how he had accomplished it.</p>
<p>On the opposite side of the valley, he suddenly beheld a large stag, with
a doe and their fawn. The buck was black and of enormous size; he had a
white beard and carried sixteen antlers. His mate was the color of dead
leaves, and she browsed upon the grass, while the fawn, clinging to her
udder, followed her step by step.</p>
<p>Again the bow was stretched, and instantly the fawn dropped dead, and
seeing this, its mother raised her head and uttered a poignant, almost
human wail of agony. Exasperated, Julian thrust his knife into her chest,
and felled her to the ground.</p>
<p>The great stag had watched everything and suddenly he sprang forward.
Julian aimed his last arrow at the beast. It struck him between his
antlers and stuck there.</p>
<p>The stag did not appear to notice it; leaping over the bodies, he was
coming nearer and nearer with the intention, Julian thought, of charging
at him and ripping him open, and he recoiled with inexpressible horror.
But presently the huge animal halted, and, with eyes aflame and the solemn
air of a patriarch and a judge, repeated thrice, while a bell tolled in
the distance: “Accursed! Accursed! Accursed! some day, ferocious soul,
thou wilt murder thy father and thy mother!”</p>
<p>Then he sank on his knees, gently closed his lids and expired.</p>
<p>At first Julian was stunned, and then a sudden lassitude and an immense
sadness came over him. Holding his head between his hands, he wept for a
long time.</p>
<p>His steed had wandered away; his dogs had forsaken him; the solitude
seemed to threaten him with unknown perils. Impelled by a sense of
sickening terror, he ran across the fields, and choosing a path at random,
found himself almost immediately at the gates of the castle.</p>
<p>That night he could not rest, for, by the flickering light of the hanging
lamp, he beheld again the huge black stag. He fought against the obsession
of the prediction and kept repeating: “No! No! No! I cannot slay them!”
and then he thought: “Still, supposing I desired to?—” and he feared
that the devil might inspire him with this desire.</p>
<p>During three months, his distracted mother prayed at his bedside, and his
father paced the halls of the castle in anguish. He consulted the most
celebrated physicians, who prescribed quantities of medicine. Julian’s
illness, they declared, was due to some injurious wind or to amorous
desire. But in reply to their questions, the young man only shook his
head. After a time, his strength returned, and he was able to take a walk
in the courtyard, supported by his father and the old monk.</p>
<p>But after he had completely recovered, he refused to hunt.</p>
<p>His father, hoping to please him, presented him with a large Saracen
sabre. It was placed on a panoply that hung on a pillar, and a ladder was
required to reach it. Julian climbed up to it one day, but the heavy
weapon slipped from his grasp, and in falling grazed his father and tore
his cloak. Julian, believing he had killed him, fell in a swoon.</p>
<p>After that, he carefully avoided weapons. The sight of a naked sword made
him grow pale, and this weakness caused great distress to his family.</p>
<p>In the end, the old monk ordered him in the name of God, and of his
forefathers, once more to indulge in the sports of a nobleman.</p>
<p>The equerries diverted themselves every day with javelins and Julian soon
excelled in the practice.</p>
<p>He was able to send a javelin into bottles, to break the teeth of the
weather-cocks on the castle and to strike door-nails at a distance of one
hundred feet.</p>
<p>One summer evening, at the hour when dusk renders objects indistinct, he
was in the arbour in the garden, and thought he saw two white wings in the
background hovering around the espalier. Not for a moment did he doubt
that it was a stork, and so he threw his javelin at it.</p>
<p>A heart-rending scream pierced the air.</p>
<p>He had struck his mother, whose cap and long streams remained nailed to
the wall.</p>
<p>Julian fled from home and never returned.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />