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<h1> THE MONK AND THE HANGMAN'S DAUGHTER </h1>
<h2> By Adolphe Danziger De Castro and Ambrose Bierce </h2>
<h3> 1911 </h3>
<p><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><br/></p>
<p>Under the name of G. A. Danziger I wrote in the year 1889 a story founded
on a German tale, which I called <i>The Monk and the Hangman's Daughter</i>.
The story was tragic but I gave it a happy ending. Submitting it to the
late Ambrose Bierce, asking him to revise the story, he suggested the
retention of the tragic part and so revised it. The story was published
and the house failed.</p>
<p>When in 1900 a publisher desired to bring out the story provided I gave it
a happy ending, I submitted the matter to Bierce and on August 21, 1900,
he wrote me a long letter on the subject of which the following is an
extract:</p>
<p>'I have read twice and carefully, your proposed addition to <i>The Monk</i>,
and you must permit me to speak plainly, if not altogether agreeably, of
it. It will not do for these reasons and others:</p>
<p>'The book is almost perfect as you wrote it; the part of the work that
pleases me least is <i>my</i> part (underscores Bierce's). I am surprised
that you should yield to the schoolgirl desire for that shallowest of all
literary devices, a "happy ending," by which all the pathos of the book is
effaced to "make a woman holiday." It is unworthy of you. So much vii did
I feel this unworthiness that I hesitated a long time before even deciding
to have so much of "odious ingenuity" and "mystery" as your making
Benedicta the daughter of the Saltmaster and inventing her secret love for
Ambrosius instead of Rochus.</p>
<p>'"Dramatic action," which is no less necessary in a story than in a play,
requires that so far as is possible what takes place shall be <i>seen</i>
to take place, not related as having previously taken place.... Compare
Shakespeare's <i>Cymbeline</i> with his better plays. See how he spoiled
it the same way. You need not feel ashamed to err as Shakespeare erred.
Indeed, you did better than he, for his explanations were of things
already known to the reader, or spectator, of the play. <i>Your</i>
explanations are needful to an understanding of the things explained; it
is <i>they</i> that are needless. All "explanation" is unspeakably
tedious, and is to be cut as short as possible. Far better to have nothing
to explain—to <i>show</i> everything that occurs, in the very act of
occurring. We cannot always do that, but we should come as near to doing
it as we can. Anyhow, the "harking back" should not be done at the end of
the book, when the d�nouement is already known and the reader's interest
in the action exhausted....</p>
<p>'Ambrosius and Benedicta are unique in letters. Their nobility, their
simplicity, their sufferings—everything that is theirs stamps them
as "beings apart." They live in the memory sanctified and glorified by
these qualities and sorrows. They are, in the last and most gracious
sense, children of nature. Leave them lying there in the lovely valley of
the gallows, where Ambrosius shuddered as his foot fell on the spot where
he was destined to sleep....</p>
<p>'Let <i>The Monk and the Hangman's Daughter</i> alone. It is great work
and <i>you</i> should live to see the world confess it. Let me know if my
faith in your faith in me is an error. You once believed in my judgment; I
think it is not yet impaired by age.</p>
<p>'Sincerely yours,</p>
<p>'(Signed) Ambrose Bierce.'</p>
<p><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><br/></p>
<p>I can only add that my faith in Bierce's judgment of letters is as firm
to-day as it was then, when I gave him power of attorney to place my book
with a publisher. This publisher embodied <i>The Monk and the Hangman's
Daughter</i> in Bierce's collected works, then sold the right to Messrs.
Albert and Charles Boni who without knowledge of the true facts brought
out an edition under Bierce's name.</p>
<p>ADOLPHE de CASTRO.</p>
<p><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><br/></p>
<h2> THE MONK AND THE HANGMAN'S DAUGHTER </h2>
<p>1</p>
<p>On the first day of May in the year of our Blessed Lord 1680, the
Franciscan monks �gidius, Romanus and Ambrosius were sent by their
Superior from the Christian city of Passau to the Monastery of
Berchtesgaden, near Salzburg. I, Ambrosius, was the strongest and youngest
of the three, being but twenty-one years of age.</p>
<p>The Monastery of Berchtesgaden was, we knew, in a wild and mountainous
country, covered with dismal forests, which were infested with bears and
evil spirits; and our hearts were filled with sadness to think what might
become of us in so dreadful a place. But since it is Christian duty to
obey the mandates of the Church, we did not complain, and were even glad
to serve the wish of our beloved and revered Superior.</p>
<p>Having received the benediction, and prayed for the last time in the
church of our Saint, we tied up our cowls, put new sandals on our feet,
and set out, attended by the blessings of all. Although the way was long
and perilous, we did not lose our hope, for hope is not only the beginning
and the end of religion, but also the strength of youth and the support of
age. Therefore our hearts soon forgot the sadness of parting, and rejoiced
in the new and varying scenes that gave us our first real knowledge of the
beauty of the earth as God has made it. The colour and brilliance of the
air were like the garment of the Blessed Virgin; the sun shone like the
Golden Heart of the Saviour, from which streameth light and life for all
mankind; the dark blue canopy that hung above formed a grand and beautiful
house of prayer, in which every blade of grass, every flower and living
creature praised the glory of God.</p>
<p>As we passed through the many hamlets, villages and cities that lay along
our way, the thousands of people, busy in all the vocations of life,
presented to us poor monks a new and strange spectacle, which filled us
with wonder and admiration. When so many churches came into view as we
journeyed on, and the piety and ardour of the people were made manifest by
the acclamations with which they hailed us and their alacrity in
ministering to our needs, our hearts were full of gratitude and happiness.
All the institutions of the Church were prosperous and wealthy, which
showed that they had found favour in the sight of the good God whom we
serve. The gardens and orchards of the monasteries and convents were well
kept, proving the care and industry of the pious peasantry and the holy
inmates of the cloisters. It was glorious to hear the peals of bells
announcing the hours of the day: we actually breathed music in the air—the
sweet tones were like the notes of angels singing praise to the Lord.</p>
<p>Wherever we went we greeted the people in the name of our patron Saint. On
all sides were manifest humility and joy: women and children hastened to
the wayside, crowding about us to kiss our hands and beseech a blessing.
It almost seemed as if we were no longer poor servitors of God and man,
but lords and masters of this whole beautiful earth. Let us, however, not
grow proud in spirit, but remain humble, looking carefully into our hearts
lest we deviate from the rules of our holy Order and sin against our
blessed Saint.</p>
<p>I, Brother Ambrosius, confess with penitence and shame that my soul caught
itself upon exceedingly worldly and sinful thoughts. It seemed to me that
the women sought more eagerly to kiss my hands than those of my companions—which
surely was not right, since I am not more holy than they; besides, I am
younger and less experienced and tried in the fear and commandments of the
Lord. When I observed this error of the women, and saw how the maidens
kept their eyes upon me, I became frightened, and wondered if I could
resist should temptation accost me; and often I thought, with fear and
trembling, that vows and prayer and penance alone do not make one a saint;
one must be so pure in heart that temptation is unknown. Ah me!</p>
<p>At night we always lodged in some monastery, invariably receiving a
pleasant welcome. Plenty of food and drink was set before us, and as we
sat at table the monks would crowd about, asking for news of the great
world of which it was our blessed privilege to see and learn so much. When
our destination was learned we were usually pitied for being doomed to
live in the mountain wilderness. We were told of ice-fields, snow-crowned
mountains and tremendous rocks, roaring torrents, caves and gloomy
forests; also of a lake so mysterious and terrible that there was none
like it in the world. God be with us!</p>
<p>On the fifth day of our journey, while but a short distance beyond the
city of Salzburg, we saw a strange and ominous sight. On the horizon,
directly in our front, lay a bank of mighty clouds, with many grey points
and patches of darker hue, and above, between them and the blue sky, a
second firmament of perfect white. This spectacle greatly puzzled and
alarmed us. The clouds had no movement; we watched them for hours and
could see no change. Later in the afternoon, when the sun was sinking into
the west, they became ablaze with light. They glowed and gleamed in a
wonderful manner, and looked at times as if they were on fire!</p>
<p>No one can imagine our surprise when we discovered that what we had
mistaken for clouds was simply earth and rocks. These, then, were the
mountains of which we had heard so much, and the white firmament was
nothing else than the snowy summit of the range—which the Lutherans
say their faith can remove. I greatly doubt it.</p>
<p>2</p>
<p>When we stood at the opening of the pass leading into the mountains we
were overcome with dejection; it looked like the mouth of Hell. Behind us
lay the beautiful country through which we had come, and which now we were
compelled to leave forever; before us frowned the mountains with their
inhospitable gorges and haunted forests, forbidding to the sight and full
of peril to the body and the soul. Strengthening our hearts with prayer
and whispering anathemas against evil spirits, we entered the narrow pass
in the name of God, and pressed forward, prepared to suffer whatever might
befall.</p>
<p>As we proceeded cautiously on our way giant trees barred our progress and
dense foliage almost shut out the light of day, the darkness being deep
and chill. The sound of our footfalls and of our voices, when we dared to
speak, was returned to us from the great rocks bordering the pass, with
such distinctness and so many repetitions, yet withal so changed, that we
could hardly believe we were not accompanied by troops of invisible beings
who mocked us and made sport of our fears. Great birds of prey, startled
from their nests in the treetops and the sides of the cliffs, perched upon
high pinnacles of rock and eyed us malignly as we passed; vultures and
ravens croaked above us in hoarse and savage tones that made our blood run
cold. Nor could our prayers and hymns give us peace; they only called
forth other fowl and by their own echoes multiplied the dreadful noises
that beset us. It surprised us to observe that huge trees had been plucked
out of the earth by the roots and hurled down the sides of the hills, and
we shuddered to think by what powerful hands this had been done. At times
we passed along the edges of high precipices, and the dark chasms that
yawned below were a terrible sight. A storm arose, and we were
half-blinded by the fires of heaven and stunned by thunder a thousand
times louder than we had ever heard. Our fears were at last worked up to
so great a degree that we expected every minute to see some devil from
Hell leap from behind a rock in our front, or a ferocious bear appear from
the undergrowth to dispute our progress. But only deer and foxes crossed
our path, and our fears were somewhat quieted to perceive that our blessed
Saint was no less powerful in the mountains than on the plains below.</p>
<p>At length we reached the bank of a stream whose silvery waters presented a
most refreshing sight. In its crystal depths between the rocks we could
see beautiful golden trout as large as the carp in the pond of our
monastery at Passau. Even in these wild places Heaven had provided
bountifully for the fasting of the faithful.</p>
<p>Beneath the black pines and close to the large lichen-covered rocks
bloomed rare flowers of dark blue and golden yellow. Brother �gidius, who
was as learned as pious, knew them from his herbarium and told us their
names. We were delighted by the sight of various brilliant beetles and
butterflies which had come out of their hiding-places after the rain. We
gathered handfuls of flowers and chased the pretty winged insects,
forgetting our fears and prayers, the bears and evil spirits, in the
exuberance of our joy.</p>
<p>For many hours we had not seen a dwelling nor a human being. Deeper and
deeper we penetrated the mountain region; greater and greater became the
difficulties we experienced in forest and ravine, and all the horrors of
the wilderness that we had already passed were repeated, but without so
great an effect upon our souls, for we all perceived that the good God was
preserving us for longer service to His holy will. A branch of the
friendly river lay in our course, and, approaching it, we were delighted
to find it spanned by a rough but substantial bridge. As we were about to
cross I happened to cast my eyes to the other shore, where I saw a sight
that made my blood turn cold with terror. On the opposite bank of the
stream was a meadow, covered with beautiful flowers, and in the centre a
gallows upon which hung the body of a man! The face was turned toward us,
and I could plainly distinguish the features, which, though black and
distorted, showed unmistakable signs that death had come that very day.</p>
<p>I was upon the point of directing my companions' attention to the dreadful
spectacle, when a strange incident occurred: in the meadow appeared a
young girl, with long golden hair, upon which rested a wreath of blossoms.
She wore a bright red dress, which seemed to me to light up the whole
scene like a flame of fire. Nothing in her actions indicated fear of the
corpse upon the gallows; on the contrary, she glided toward it barefooted
through the grass, singing in a loud but sweet voice, and waving her arms
to scare away the birds of prey that had gathered about it, uttering harsh
cries and with a great buffeting of wings and snapping of beaks. At the
girl's approach they all took flight, except one great vulture, which
retained its perch upon the gallows and appeared to defy and threaten her.
She ran close up to the obscene creature, jumping, dancing, screaming,
until it, too, put out its wide wings and flapped heavily away. Then she
ceased her dancing, and, taking a position at the gibbet's foot, calmly
and thoughtfully looked up at the swinging body of the unfortunate man.</p>
<p>The maiden's singing had attracted the attention of my companions, and we
all stood watching the lovely child and her strange surroundings with too
much amazement to speak.</p>
<p>While gazing on the surprising scene, I felt a cold shiver run through my
body. This is said to be a sure sign that someone has stepped upon the
spot which is to be your grave. Strange to say, I felt this chill at the
moment the maiden stepped under the gallows. But this only shows how the
true beliefs of men are mixed up with foolish superstitions; for how could
a sincere follower of Saint Franciscus possibly come to be buried beneath
a gallows?</p>
<p>'Let us hasten,' I said to my companions, 'and pray for the soul of the
dead.'</p>
<p>We soon found our way to the spot, and, without raising our eyes, said
prayers with great fervour; especially did I, for my heart was full of
compassion for the poor sinner who hung above. I recalled the words of
God, who said, 'Vengeance is mine,' and remembered that the dear Saviour
had pardoned the thief upon the cross at His side; and who knows that
there were not mercy and forgiveness for this poor wretch who had died
upon the gallows?</p>
<p>On our approach the maiden had retired a short distance, not knowing what
to make of us and our prayers. Suddenly, however, in the midst of our
devotions, I heard her sweet, bell-like tones exclaim: 'The vulture! the
vulture!' and her voice was agitated, as if she felt great fear. I looked
up and saw a great grey bird above the pines, swooping downward. It showed
no fear of us, our sacred calling and our pious rites. My brothers,
however, were indignant at the interruption caused by the child's voice,
and scolded her. But I said: 'The girl is probably a relation of the dead
man. Now think of it, brothers; this terrible bird comes to tear the flesh
from his face and feed upon his hands and his body. It is only natural
that she should cry out.'</p>
<p>One of the brothers said: 'Go to her, Ambrosius, and command her to be
silent that we may pray in peace for the departed soul of this sinful
man.'</p>
<p>I walked among the fragrant flowers to where the girl stood with her eyes
still fixed upon the vulture, which swung in ever narrowing circles about
the gallows. Against a mass of silvery flowers on a bush by which she
stood the maid's exquisite figure showed to advantage, as I wickedly
permitted myself to observe. Perfectly erect and motionless, she watched
my advance, though I marked a terrified look in her large, dark eyes, as
if she feared that I would do her harm. Even when I was quite near her she
made no movement to come forward, as women and children usually did, and
kiss my hands.</p>
<p>'Who are you?' I said, 'and what are you doing in this dreadful place all
alone?'</p>
<p>She did not answer me, and made neither sign nor motion; so I repeated my
question:</p>
<p>'Tell me, child, what are you doing here?'</p>
<p>'Scaring away the vultures,' she replied, in a soft, musical voice,
inexpressibly pleasing.</p>
<p>'Are you a relation of the dead man?' I asked.</p>
<p>She shook her head.</p>
<p>'You knew him?' I continued, 'and you pity his unchristian death?'</p>
<p>But she was again silent, and I had to renew my questioning: 'What was his
name, and why was he put to death? What crime did he commit?'</p>
<p>'His name was Nathaniel Alfinger, and he killed a man for a woman,' said
the maiden, distinctly and in the most unconcerned manner that it is
possible to conceive, as if murder and hanging were the commonest and most
uninteresting of all events. I was astounded, and gazed at her sharply,
but her look was passive and calm, denoting nothing unusual. 'Did you know
Nathaniel Alfinger?'</p>
<p>'No.'</p>
<p>'Yet you came here to protect his corpse from the fowls?'</p>
<p>'Yes.'</p>
<p>'Why do you do that service to one whom you did not know?'</p>
<p>'I always do so.'</p>
<p>'How—!'</p>
<p>'Always when any one is hanged here I come and frighten away the birds and
make them find other food. See—there is another vulture!'</p>
<p>She uttered a wild, high scream, threw her arms above her head, and ran
across the meadow so that I thought her mad. The big bird flew away, and
the maiden came quietly back to me, and, pressing her sunburnt hands upon
her breast, sighed deeply, as from fatigue. With as much mildness as I
could put into my voice, I asked her:</p>
<p>'What is your name?'</p>
<p>'Benedicta.'</p>
<p>'And who are your parents?'</p>
<p>'My mother is dead.'</p>
<p>'But your father—where is he?'</p>
<p>She was silent. Then I pressed her to tell me where she lived, for I
wanted to take the poor child home and admonish her father to have better
care of his daughter and not let her stray into such dreadful places
again.</p>
<p>'Where do you live, Benedicta? I pray you tell me.'</p>
<p>'Here.'</p>
<p>'What! here? Ah, my child, here is only the gallows.'</p>
<p>She pointed toward the pines. Following the direction of her finger, I saw
among the trees a wretched hut which looked like a habitation more fit for
animals than human beings. Then I knew better than she could have told me
whose child she was.</p>
<p>When I returned to my companions and they asked me who the girl was, I
answered: 'The hangman's daughter.'</p>
<p>3</p>
<p>Having commended the soul of the dead man to the intercession of the
Blessed Virgin and the Holy Saints, we left the accursed spot, but as we
withdrew I looked back at the lovely child of the hangman. She stood where
I had left her, looking after us. Her fair white brow was still crowned
with the wreath of primroses, which gave an added charm to her wonderful
beauty of feature and expression, and her large, dark eyes shone like the
stars of a winter midnight. My companions, to whom the hangman's daughter
was a most unchristian object, reproved me for the interest that I
manifested in her; but it made me sad to think this sweet and beautiful
child was shunned and despised through no fault of her own. Why should she
be made to suffer blame because of her father's dreadful calling? And was
it not the purest Christian charity which prompted this innocent maiden to
keep the vultures from the body of a fellow-creature whom in life she had
not even known and who had been adjudged unworthy to live? It seemed to me
a more kindly act than that of any professed Christian who bestows money
upon the poor. Expressing these feelings to my companions, I found, to my
sorrow, that they did not share them; on the contrary, I was called a
dreamer and a fool who wished to overthrow the ancient and wholesome
customs of the world. Everyone, they said, was bound to execrate the class
to which the hangman and his family belonged, for all who associated with
such persons would surely be contaminated. I had, however, the temerity to
remain steadfast in my conviction, and with due humility questioned the
justice of treating such persons as criminals because they were a part of
the law's machinery by which criminals were punished. Because in the
church the hangman and his family had a dark corner specially set apart
for them, that could not absolve us from our duty as servants of the Lord
to preach the gospel of justice and mercy and give an example of Christian
love and charity. But my brothers grew very angry with me, and the
wilderness rang with their loud vociferations, so that I began to feel as
if I were very wicked, although unable to perceive my error. I could do
nothing but hope that Heaven would be more merciful to us all than we are
to one another. In thinking of the maiden it gave me comfort to know that
her name was Benedicta. Perhaps her parents had so named her as a means of
blessing to one whom no one else would ever bless.</p>
<p>But I must relate what a wonderful country it was into which we were now
arrived. Were we not assured that all the world is the Lord's, for He made
it, we might be tempted to think such a wild region the kingdom of the
Evil One.</p>
<p>Far down below our path the river roared and foamed between great cliffs,
the grey points of which seemed to pierce the very sky. On our left, as we
gradually rose out of this chasm, was a black forest of pines, frightful
to see, and in front of us a most formidable peak. This mountain, despite
its terrors, had a comical appearance, for it was white and pointed like a
fool's cap, and looked as if some one had put a flour-sack on the knave's
head. After all, it was nothing but snow. Snow in the middle of the
glorious month of May!—surely the works of God are wonderful and
almost past belief! The thought came to me that if this old mountain
should shake his head the whole region would be full of flying snow.</p>
<p>We were not a little surprised to find that in various places along our
road the forest had been cleared away for a space large enough to build a
hut and plant a garden. Some of these rude dwellings stood where one would
have thought that only eagles would have been bold enough to build; but
there is no place, it seems, free from the intrusion of Man, who stretches
out his hand for everything, even that which is in the air. When at last
we arrived at our destination and beheld the temple and the house erected
in this wilderness to the name and glory of our beloved Saint, our hearts
were thrilled with pious emotions. Upon the surface of a pine-covered rock
was a cluster of huts and houses, the monastery in the midst, like a
shepherd surrounded by his flock. The church and monastery were of hewn
stone, of noble architecture, spacious and comfortable.</p>
<p>May the good God bless our entrance into this holy place.</p>
<p>4</p>
<p>I have now been in this wilderness for a few weeks, but the Lord, too, is
here, as everywhere. My health is good, and this house of our beloved
Saint is a stronghold of the Faith, a house of peace, an asylum for those
who flee from the wrath of the Evil One, a rest for all who bear the
burden of sorrow. Of myself, however, I cannot say so much. I am young,
and although my mind is at peace, I have so little experience of the world
and its ways that I feel myself peculiarly liable to error and accessible
to sin. The course of my life is like a rivulet which draws its silver
thread smoothly and silently through friendly fields and flowery meadows,
yet knows that when the storms come and the rains fall it may become a
raging torrent, defiled with earth and whirling away to the sea the
wreckage attesting the madness of its passion and its power.</p>
<p>Not sorrow nor despair drew me away from the world into the sacred retreat
of the Church, but a sincere desire to serve the Lord. My only wish is to
belong to my beloved Saint, to obey the blessed mandates of the Church,
and, as a servant of God, to be charitable to all mankind, whom I dearly
love. The Church is, in truth, my beloved mother, for, my parents having
died in my infancy I, too, might have perished without care had she not
taken pity on me, fed and clothed me and reared me as her own child. And,
oh, what happiness there will be for me, poor monk, when I am ordained and
receive holy orders as a priest of the Most High God! Always I think and
dream of it and try to prepare my soul for that high and sacred gift. I
know I can never be worthy of this great happiness, but I do hope to be an
honest and sincere priest, serving God and Man according to the light that
is given from above. I often pray Heaven to put me to the test of
temptation, that I may pass through the fire unscathed and purified in
mind and soul. As it is, I feel the sovereign peace which, in this
solitude, lulls my spirit to sleep, and all life's temptations and trials
seem far away, like perils of the sea to one who can but faintly hear the
distant thunder of the waves upon the beach.</p>
<p>5</p>
<p>Our Superior, Father Andreas, is a mild and pious gentleman. Our brothers
live in peace and harmony. They are not idle, neither are they worldly nor
arrogant. They are temperate, not indulging too much in the pleasures of
the table—a praiseworthy moderation, for all this region, far and
wide—the hills and the valleys, the river and forest, with all that
they contain—belongs to the monastery. The woods are full of all
kinds of game, of which the choicest is brought to our table, and we
relish it exceedingly. In our monastery a drink is prepared from malt and
barley—a strong, bitter drink, refreshing after fatigue, but not, to
my taste, very good.</p>
<p>The most remarkable thing in this part of the country is the salt-mining.
I am told that the mountains are full of salt—how wonderful are the
works of the Lord! In pursuit of this mineral Man has penetrated deep into
the bowels of the earth by means of shafts and tunnels, and brings forth
the bitter marrow of the hills into the light of the sun. The salt I have
myself seen in red, brown and yellow crystals. The works give employment
to our peasants and their sons, with a few foreign labourers, all under
the command of an overseer, who is known as the Saltmaster. He is a stern
man, exercising great power, but our Superior and the brothers speak
little good of him—not from any unchristian spirit, but because his
actions are evil. The Saltmaster has an only son. His name is Rochus, a
handsome but wild and wicked youth.</p>
<p>6</p>
<p>The people hereabout are a proud, stubborn race. I am told that in an old
chronicle they are described as descendants of the Romans, who in their
day drove many tunnels into these mountains to get out the precious salt;
and some of these tunnels are still in existence. From the window of my
cell I can see these giant hills and the black forests which at sunset
burn like great firebrands along the crests against the sky.</p>
<p>The forefathers of these people (after the Romans) were, I am told, more
stubborn still than they are, and continued in idolatry after all the
neighbouring peoples had accepted the cross of the Lord our Saviour. Now,
however, they bow their stiff necks to the sacred symbol and soften their
hearts to receive the living truth. Powerful as they are in body, in
spirit they are humble and obedient to the Word. Nowhere else did the
people kiss my hand so fervently as here, although I am not a priest—an
evidence of the power and victory of our glorious faith.</p>
<p>Physically they are strong and exceedingly handsome in face and figure,
especially the young men; the elder men, too, walk as erect and proud as
kings. The women have long golden hair, which they braid and twist about
their heads very beautifully, and they love to adorn themselves with
jewels. Some have eyes whose dark brilliancy rivals the lustre of the
rubies and garnets they wear about their white necks. I am told that the
young men fight for the young women as stags for does. Ah, what wicked
passions exist in the hearts of men! But since I know nothing of these
things, nor shall ever feel such unholy emotions, I must not judge and
condemn.</p>
<p>Lord, what a blessing is the peace with which Thou hast filled the spirits
of those who are Thine own! Behold, there is no turmoil in my breast; all
is calm there as in the soul of a babe which calls 'Abba,' dear Father.
And so may it ever be.</p>
<p>7</p>
<p>I have again seen the hangman's beautiful daughter. As the bells were
chiming for mass I saw her in front of the monastery church. I had just
come from the bedside of a sick man, and as my thoughts were gloomy the
sight of her face was pleasant, and I should have liked to greet her, but
her eyes were cast down: she did not notice me. The square in front of the
church was filled with people, the men and youths on one side, on the
other the women and maidens all clad in their high hats and adorned with
their gold chains. They stood close together, but when the poor child
approached all stepped aside, whispering and looking askance at her as if
she were an accursed leper and they feared infection.</p>
<p>Compassion filled my breast, compelling me to follow the maiden, and,
overtaking her, I said aloud:</p>
<p>'God greet you, Benedicta.'</p>
<p>She shrank away as if frightened, then, looking up, recognised me, seemed
astonished, blushed again and again and finally hung her head in silence.</p>
<p>'Do you fear to speak to me?' I asked.</p>
<p>But she made no reply. Again I spoke to her: 'Do good, obey the Lord and
fear no one: then shall you be saved.'</p>
<p>At this she drew a long sigh, and replied in a low voice, hardly more than
a whisper: 'I thank you, my lord.'</p>
<p>'I am not a lord, Benedicta,' I said, 'but a poor servant of God, who is a
gracious and kind Father to all His children, however lowly their estate.
Pray to Him when your heart is heavy, and He will be near you.'</p>
<p>While I spoke she lifted her head and looked at me like a sad child that
is being comforted by its mother. And, still speaking to her out of the
great compassion in my heart, I led her into the church before all the
people.</p>
<p>But do thou, O holy Franciscus, pardon the sin that I committed during
that high sacrament! For while Father Andreas was reciting the solemn
words of the mass my eyes constantly wandered to the spot where the poor
child knelt in a dark corner set apart for her and her father, forsaken
and alone. She seemed to pray with holy zeal, and surely thou didst grace
her with a ray of thy favour, for it was through thy love of mankind that
thou didst become a great saint, and didst bring before the Throne of
Grace thy large heart, bleeding for the sins of all the world. Then shall
not I, the humblest of thy followers, have enough of thy spirit to pity
this poor outcast who suffers for no sin of her own? Nay, I feel for her a
peculiar tenderness, which I cannot help accepting as a sign from Heaven
that I am charged with a special mandate to watch over her, to protect
her, and finally to save her soul.</p>
<p>8</p>
<p>Our Superior has sent for me and rebuked me. He told me I had caused great
ill-feeling among the brothers and the people, and asked what devil had me
in possession that I should walk into church with the daughter of the
public hangman.</p>
<p>What could I say but that I pitied the poor maiden and could not do
otherwise than as I did?</p>
<p>'Why did you pity her?' he asked.</p>
<p>'Because all the people shun her,' I replied, 'as if she were mortal sin
itself, and because she is wholly blameless. It certainly is not her fault
that her father is a hangman, nor his either, since, alas, hangmen must
be.'</p>
<p>Ah, beloved Franciscus, how the Superior scolded thy poor servant for
these bold words.</p>
<p>'And do you repent?' he demanded at the close of his reproof. But how
could I repent of my compassion—incited, as I verily believe, by our
beloved Saint?</p>
<p>On learning my obduracy, the Superior became very sad. He gave me a long
lecture and put me under hard penance. I took my punishment meekly and in
silence, and am now confined to my cell, fasting and chastising myself.
Nor in this do I spare myself at all, for it is happiness to suffer for
the sake of one so unjustly treated as the poor friendless child.</p>
<p>I stand at the grating of my cell, looking out at the high, mysterious
mountains showing black against the evening sky. The weather being mild, I
open the window behind the bars to admit the fresh air and better to hear
the song of the stream below, which speaks to me with a divine
companionship, gentle and consoling.</p>
<p>I know not if I have already mentioned that the monastery is built upon a
rock high over the river. Directly under the windows of our cells are the
rugged edges of great cliffs, which none can scale but at the peril of his
life. Imagine, then, my astonishment when I saw a living figure lift
itself up from the awful abyss by the strength of its hands, and, drawing
itself across the edge, stand erect upon the very verge! In the dusk I
could not make out what kind of creature it was; I thought it some evil
spirit come to tempt me; so I crossed myself and said a prayer. Presently
there is a movement of its arm, and something flies through the window,
past my head, and lies upon the floor of my cell, shining like a white
star. I bend and pick it up. It is a bunch of flowers such as I have never
seen—leafless, white as snow, soft as velvet, and without fragrance.
As I stand by the window, the better to see the wondrous flowers, my eyes
turn again to the figure on the cliff, and I hear a sweet, low voice,
which says: 'I am Benedicta, and I thank you.'</p>
<p>Ah, Heaven! it was the child, who, that she might greet me in my
loneliness and penance, had climbed the dreadful rocks, heedless of the
danger. She knew, then, of my punishment—knew that it was for her.</p>
<p>She knew even the very cell in which I was confined. O holy Saint! surely
she could not have known all this but from thee; and I were worse than an
infidel to doubt that the feeling which I have for her signifies that a
command has been laid upon me to save her.</p>
<p>I saw her bending over the frightful precipice. She turned a moment and
waved her hand to me and disappeared. I uttered an involuntary cry—had
she fallen? I grasped the iron bars of my window and shook them with all
my strength, but they did not yield. In my despair I threw myself upon the
floor, crying and praying to all the saints to protect the dear child in
her dangerous descent if still she lived, to intercede for her unshriven
soul if she had fallen. I was still kneeling when Benedicta gave me a sign
of her safe arrival below. It was such a shout as these mountaineers utter
in their untamed enjoyment of life—only Benedicta's shout, coming
from far below in the gorge, and mingled with its own strange echoes,
sounded like nothing I had ever heard from any human throat, and so
affected me that I wept, and the tears fell upon the wild flowers in my
hand.</p>
<p>9</p>
<p>As a follower of Saint Francisais, I am not permitted to own anything dear
to my heart, so I have disposed of my most precious treasure; I have
presented to my beloved Saint the beautiful flowers which were Benedicta's
offering. They are so placed before his picture in the monastery church as
to decorate the bleeding heart which he carries upon his breast as a
symbol of his suffering for mankind.</p>
<p>I have learned the name of the flower: because of its colour, and because
it is finer than other flowers, it is called Edelweiss—noble white.
It grows in so rare perfection only upon the highest and wildest rocks—mostly
upon cliffs, over abysses many hundred feet in depth, where one false step
would be fatal to him who gathers it.</p>
<p>These beautiful flowers, then, are the real evil spirits of this wild
region; they lure many mortals to a dreadful death. The brothers here have
told me that never a year passes but some shepherd, some hunter or some
bold youth, attracted by these wonderful blossoms, is lost in the attempt
to get them.</p>
<p>May God be merciful to all their souls!</p>
<p>10</p>
<p>I must have turned pale when one of the brothers reported at the supper
table that upon the picture of Saint Franciscus had been found a bunch of
edelweiss of such rare beauty as grows nowhere else in the country but at
the summit of a cliff which is more than a thousand feet high, and
overhangs a dreadful lake. The brothers tell wondrous tales of the horrors
of this lake—how wild its waters and how deep, and how the most
hideous spectres are seen along its shores or rising out of it.</p>
<p>Benedicta's edelweiss, therefore, has caused great commotion and wonder,
for even among the boldest hunters there are few, indeed, who dare to
climb that cliff by the haunted lake. And the tender child has
accomplished the feat! She has gone quite alone to that horrible place,
and has climbed the almost vertical wall of the mountain to the green spot
where the flowers grow with which she was moved to greet me. I doubt not
that Heaven guarded her against mishap in order that I might have a
visible sign and token that I am charged with the duty of her salvation.</p>
<p>Ah, thou poor sinless child, accurst in the eyes of the people, God hath
signified His care of thee, and in my heart I feel already something of
that adoration which shall be thy due when for thy purity and holiness He
shall bestow upon thy relics some signal mark of His favour, and the
Church shall declare thee blessed!</p>
<p>I have learned another thing that I will chronicle here. In this country
these flowers are the sign of a faithful love: the youth presents them to
his sweetheart, and the maidens decorate the hats of their lovers with
them. It is clear that, in expressing her gratitude to a humble servant of
the Church, Benedicta was moved, perhaps without knowing it, to signify at
the same time her love of the Church itself, although, alas, she has yet
too little cause.</p>
<p>As I ramble about here, day after day, I am becoming familiar with every
path in the forest, in the dark pass, and on the slopes of the mountains.</p>
<p>I am often sent to the homes of the peasants, the hunters and the
shepherds, to carry either medicine to the sick or consolation to the sad.
The most reverend Superior has told me that as soon as I receive holy
orders I shall have to carry the sacraments to the dying, for I am the
youngest and the strongest of the brothers. In these high places it
sometimes occurs that a hunter or a shepherd falls from the rocks, and
after some days is found, still living. It is then the duty of the priest
to perform the offices of our holy religion at the bedside of the
sufferer, so that the blessed Saviour may be there to receive the
departing soul.</p>
<p>That I may be worthy of such grace, may our beloved Saint keep my heart
pure from every earthly passion and desire!</p>
<p>11</p>
<p>The monastery has celebrated a great festival, and I will report all that
occurred.</p>
<p>For many days before the event the brothers were busy preparing for it.
Some decorated the church with sprays of pine and birch and with flowers.</p>
<p>They went with the other men and gathered the most beautiful Alpine roses
they could find, and as it is midsummer they grow in great abundance. On
the day before the festival the brothers sat in the garden, weaving
garlands to adorn the church; even the most reverend Superior and the
Fathers took pleasure in our merry task. They walked beneath the trees and
chatted pleasantly while encouraging the brother butler to spend freely
the contents of the cellars.</p>
<p>The next morning was the holy procession. It was very beautiful to see,
and added to the glory of our holy Church. The Superior walked under a
purple silken canopy, surrounded by the worthy Fathers, and bore in his
hands the sacred emblem of the crucifixion of our Saviour. We brothers
followed, bearing burning candles and singing psalms. Behind us came a
great crowd of the people, dressed in their finest attire.</p>
<p>The proudest of those in the procession were the mountaineers and the
salt-miners, the Saltmaster at their head on a beautiful horse adorned
with costly trappings. He was a proud-looking man, with his great sword at
his side and a plumed hat upon his broad, high brow. Behind him rode
Rochus, his son. When we had collected in front of the gate to form a line
I took special notice of that young man. I judged him to be self-willed
and bold. He wore his hat on the side of his head and cast flaming glances
upon the women and the maidens. He looked contemptuously upon us monks. I
fear he is not a good Christian, but he is the most beautiful youth that I
have ever seen: tall and slender like a young pine, with light brown eyes
and golden locks.</p>
<p>The Saltmaster is as powerful in this region as our Superior. He is
appointed by the Duke and has judicial powers in all affairs. He has even
the power of life and death over those accused of murder or any other
abominable crime. But the Lord has fortunately endowed him with good
judgment and wisdom.</p>
<p>Through the village the procession moved out into the valley and down to
the entrances of the great salt mines. In front of the principal mine an
altar was erected, and there our Superior read high mass, while all the
people knelt. I observed that the Salt-master and his son knelt and bent
their heads with visible reluctance and this made me very sad. After the
service the procession moved toward the hill called 'Mount Calvary,' which
is still higher than the monastery, and from the top of which one has a
good view of the whole country below. There the reverend Superior
displayed the crucifix in order to banish the evil powers which abound in
these terrible mountains; and he also said prayers and pronounced
anathemas against all demons infesting the valley below. The bells chimed
their praises to the Lord, and it seemed as if divine voices were ringing
through the wilderness. It was all, indeed, most beautiful and good.</p>
<p>I looked about me to see if the child of the hangman were present, but I
could not see her anywhere, and knew not whether to rejoice that she was
out of reach of the insults of the people or to mourn because deprived of
the spiritual strength that might have come to me from looking upon her
heavenly beauty.</p>
<p>After the services came the feast. Upon a meadow sheltered by trees tables
were spread, and the clergy and the people, the most reverend Superior and
the great Saltmaster partook of the viands served by the young men. It was
interesting to see the young men make big fires of pine and maple, put
great pieces of beef upon wooden spits, turn them over the coals until
they were brown, and then lay them before the Fathers and the
mountaineers. They also boiled mountain trout and carp in large kettles.
The wheaten bread was brought in immense baskets, and as to drink, there
was assuredly no scarcity of that, for the Superior and the Saltmaster had
each given a mighty cask of beer. Both of these monstrous barrels lay on
wooden stands under an ancient oak. The boys and the Saltmaster's men drew
from the cask which he had given, while that of the Superior was served by
the brother butler and a number of us younger monks. In honour of Saint
Franciscus I must say that the clerical barrel was of vastly greater size
than that of the Saltmaster.</p>
<p>Separate tables had been provided for the Superior and the Fathers, and
for the Saltmaster and the best of his people. The Saltmaster and Superior
sat upon chairs which stood upon a beautiful carpet, and their seats were
screened from the sun by a linen canopy. At the table, surrounded by their
beautiful wives and daughters, sat many knights, who had come from their
distant castles to share in the great festival. I helped at table. I
handed the dishes and filled the goblets and was able to see how good an
appetite the company had, and how they loved that brown and bitter drink.
I could see also how amorously the Saltmaster's son looked at the ladies,
which provoked me very much, as he could not marry them all, especially
those already married.</p>
<p>We had music, too. Some boys from the village, who practise on various
instruments in their spare moments, were the performers. Ah, how they
yelled, those flutes and pipes, and how the fiddle bows danced and
chirped! I do not doubt the music was very good, but Heaven has not seen
fit to give me the right kind of ears.</p>
<p>I am sure our blessed Saint must have derived great satisfaction from the
sight of so many people eating and drinking their bellies full. Heavens!
how they did eat—what unearthly quantities they did away with! But
that was nothing to their drinking. I firmly believe that if every
mountaineer had brought along a barrel of his own he would have emptied
it, all by himself. But the women seemed to dislike the beer, especially
the young girls. Usually before drinking a young man would hand his cup to
one of the maids, who barely touched it with her lips, and, making a
grimace, turned away her face. I am not sufficiently acquainted with the
ways of woman to say with certainty if this proved that at other times
they were so abstemious.</p>
<p>After eating, the young men played at various games which exhibited their
agility and strength. Holy Franciscus! what legs they have, what arms and
necks! They leapt, they wrestled with one another; it was like the
fighting of bears. The mere sight of it caused me to feel great fear. It
seemed as if they would crush one another. But the maidens looked on,
feeling neither fear nor anxiety; they giggled and appeared well pleased.
It was wonderful, too, to hear the voices of these young mountaineers;
they threw back their heads and shouted till the echoes rang from the
mountain-sides and roared in the gorges as if from the throats of a legion
of demons.</p>
<p>Foremost among all was the Saltmaster's son. He sprang like a deer, fought
like a fiend, and bellowed like a wild bull. Among these mountaineers he
was a king. I observed that many were jealous of his strength and beauty,
and secretly hated him; yet all obeyed. It was beautiful to see how this
young man bent his slender body while leaping and playing the games—how
he threw up his head like a stag at gaze, shook his golden locks and stood
in the midst of his fellows with flaming cheeks and sparkling eyes. How
sad to think that pride and passion should make their home in so lovely a
body, which seems created for the habitation of a soul that would glorify
its Maker!</p>
<p>It was near dusk when the Superior, the Saltmaster, the Fathers and all
the distinguished guests parted and retired to their homes, leaving the
others at drink and dance. My duties compelled me to remain with the
brother butler to serve the debauching youths with beer from the great
cask. Young Rochus remained too. I do not know how it occurred, but
suddenly he stood before me. His looks were dark and his manner proud.</p>
<p>'Are you,' he said, 'the monk who gave offence to the people the other
day?'</p>
<p>I asked humbly—though beneath my monk's robe I felt a sinful anger:
'What are you speaking of?'</p>
<p>'As if you did not know!' he said, haughtily. 'Now bear in mind what I
tell you; if you ever show any friendship toward that girl I shall teach
you a lesson which you will not soon forget. You monks are likely to call
your impertinence by the name of some virtue; but I know the trick, and
will have none of it. Make a note of that, you young cowl=wearer, for your
handsome face and big eyes will not save you.'</p>
<p>With that he turned his back upon me and went away, but I heard his strong
voice ringing out upon the night as he sang and shouted with the others. I
was greatly alarmed to learn that this bold boy had cast his eyes upon the
hangman's lovely daughter. His feeling for her was surely not honourable,
or, instead of hating me for being kind to her, he would have been
grateful and would have thanked me. I feared for the child, and again and
again did I promise my blessed Saint that I would watch over and protect
her, in obedience to the miracle which he has wrought in my breast
regarding her. With that wondrous feeling to urge me on, I cannot be slack
in my duty, and, Benedicta, thou shalt be saved—thy body and thy
soul!</p>
<p>12</p>
<p>Let me continue my report.</p>
<p>The boys threw dry brushwood into the fire so that the flames illuminated
the whole meadow and shone red upon the trees. Then they laid hands upon
the village maidens and began to turn and swing them round and round. Holy
saints! how they stamped and turned and threw their hats in the air,
kicked up their heels, and lifted the girls from the ground, as if the
sturdy wenches were nothing but feather balls! They shouted and yelled as
if all the evil spirits had them in possession, so that I wished a herd of
swine might come, that the devils might leave these human brutes and go
into the four-legged ones. The boys were quite full of the brown beer,
which for its bitterness and strength is a beastly drink.</p>
<p>Before long the madness of intoxication broke out; they attacked one
another with fists and knives, and it looked as if they would do murder.
Suddenly the Saltmaster's son, who had stood looking on, leaped among
them, caught two of the combatants by the hair and knocked their heads
together with such force that the blood started from their noses, and I
thought surely their skulls had been crushed like egg-shells; but they
must have been very hard-headed, for on being released they seemed little
the worse for their punishment. After much shouting and screaming, Rochus
succeeded in making peace, which seemed to me, poor worm, quite heroic.
The music set in again: the fiddles scraped and the pipes shrieked, while
the boys with torn clothes and scratched and bleeding faces, renewed the
dance as if nothing had occurred. Truly, this is a people that would
gladden the heart of a Bramarbas or a Holofernes!</p>
<p>I had scarcely recovered from the fright which Rochus had given me, when I
was made to feel a far greater one. Rochus was dancing with a tall and
beautiful girl, who looked the very queen of this young king. They made
such mighty leaps and dizzy turns, but at the same time so graceful, that
all looked on with astonishment and pleasure. The girl had a sensuous
smile on her lips and a bold look in her brown face, which seemed to say:
'See! I am the mistress of his heart!' But suddenly he pushed her from him
as in disgust, broke from the circle of dancers, and cried to his friends:
'I am going to bring my own partner. Who will go with me?'</p>
<p>The tall girl, maddened by the insult, stood looking at him with the face
of a demon, her black eyes burning like flames of hell! But her
discomfiture amused the drunken youths, and they laughed aloud.</p>
<p>Snatching a firebrand and swinging it about his head till the sparks flew
in showers, Rochus cried again: 'Who goes with me?' and walked rapidly
away into the forest. The others seizing firebrands also, ran after him,
and soon their voices could be heard far away, ringing out upon the night,
themselves no longer seen. I was still looking in the direction which they
had taken, when the tall girl whom Rochus had insulted stepped to my side
and hissed something into my ear. I felt her hot breath on my cheek.</p>
<p>'If you care for the hangman's daughter, then hasten and save her from
that drunken wretch. No woman resists him!'</p>
<p>God! how the wild words of that woman horrified me! I did not doubt the
girl's words, but in my anxiety for the poor child I asked: 'How can I
save her?'</p>
<p>'Run and warn her, monk,' the wench replied: 'she will listen to you.'</p>
<p>'But they will find her sooner than I.'</p>
<p>'They are drunk and will not go fast. Besides, I know a path leading to
the hangman's hut by a shorter route.'</p>
<p>'Then show me and be quick!' I cried.</p>
<p>She glided away, motioning me to follow. We were soon in the woods, where
it was so dark I could hardly see the woman's figure; but she moved as
fast and her step was as sure as in the light of day. Above us we could
see the torches of the boys, which showed that they had taken the longer
path along the mountain-side. I heard their wild shouts, and trembled for
the child. We had walked for some time in silence, having left the youths
far behind, when the young woman began speaking to herself. At first I did
not understand, but soon my ears caught every passionate word:</p>
<p>'He shall not have her! To the devil with the hangman's whelp! Every one
despises her and spits at the sight of her. It is just like him—he
does not care for what people think or say. Because they hate he loves.
Besides, she has a pretty face. I'll make it pretty for her! I'll mark it
with blood! But if she were the daughter of the devil himself he would not
rest until he had her. He shall not!'</p>
<p>She lifted her arms and laughed wildly—I shuddered to hear her! I
thought of the dark powers that live in the human breast, though I know as
little of them, thank God, as a child.</p>
<p>At length we reached the Galgenberg, where stands the hangman's hut, and a
few moments' climb brought us near the door.</p>
<p>'There she lives,' said the girl, pointing to the hut, through the windows
of which shone the yellow light of a tallow candle; 'go warn her. The
hangman is ill and unable to protect his daughter, even if he dared. You'd
better take her away—take her to the Alpfeld on the G�ll, where my
father has a house. They will not look for her up there.'</p>
<p>With that she left me and vanished in the darkness.</p>
<p>13</p>
<p>Looking in at the window of the hut, I saw the hangman sitting in a chair,
with his daughter beside him, her hand upon his shoulder. I could hear him
cough and groan, and knew that she was trying to soothe him in his pain. A
world of love and sorrow was in her face, which was more beautiful than
ever.</p>
<p>Nor did I fail to observe how clean and tidy were the room and all in it.
The humble dwelling looked, indeed, like a place blessed by the peace of
God. Yet these blameless persons are treated as accurst and hated like
mortal sin! What greatly pleased me was an image of the Blessed Virgin on
the wall opposite the window at which I stood. The frame was decorated
with flowers of the field, and the mantle of the Holy Mother festooned
with edelweiss.</p>
<p>I knocked at the door, calling out at the same time: 'Do not fear; it is I—Brother
Ambrosius.'</p>
<p>It seemed to me that, on hearing my voice and name, Benedicta showed a
sudden joy in her face, but perhaps it was only surprise—may the
saints preserve me from the sin of pride. She came to the window and
opened it.</p>
<p>'Benedicta,' said I, hastily, after returning her greeting, 'wild and
drunken boys are on their way hither to take you to the dance. Rochus is
with them, and says that he will fetch you to dance with him. I have come
before them to assist you to escape.' At the name of Rochus I saw the
blood rise into her cheeks and suffuse her whole face with crimson. Alas,
I perceived that my jealous guide was right: no woman could resist that
beautiful boy, not even this pious and virtuous child. When her father
comprehended what I said he rose to his feet and stretched out his feeble
arms as if to shield her from harm, but, although his soul was strong, his
body, I knew, was powerless. I said to him: 'Let me take her away; the
boys are drunk and know not what they do. Your resistance would only make
them angry, and they might harm you both. Ah, look! See their torches;
hear their boisterous voices! Hasten, Benedicta—be quick, be quick!'</p>
<p>Benedicta sprang to the side of the now sobbing old man and tenderly
embraced him. Then she hurried from the room, and after covering my hands
with kisses ran away into the woods, disappearing in the night, at which I
was greatly surprised. I waited for her to return, for a few minutes, then
entered the cabin to protect her father from the wild youths who, I
thought, would visit their disappointment upon him.</p>
<p>But they did not come. I waited and listened in vain. All at once I heard
shouts of joy and screams that made me tremble and pray to the blessed
Saint. But the sounds died away in the distance, and I knew that the boys
had retraced their steps down the Galgenberg to the meadow of the fires.
The sick man and I spoke of the miracle which had changed their hearts,
and we were filled with gratitude and joy. Then I returned along the path
by which I had come. As I arrived near the meadow, I could hear a wilder
and madder uproar than ever, and could see through the trees the glare of
greater fires, with the figures of the youths and a few maids dancing in
the open, their heads uncovered, their hair streaming over their
shoulders, their garments disordered by the fury of their movements. They
circled about the fires, wound in and out among them, showing black or red
according to how the light struck them, and looking altogether like Demons
of the Pit commemorating some infernal anniversary or some new torment for
the damned. And, holy Saviour! there, in the midst of an illuminated
space, upon which the others did not trespass, dancing by themselves and
apparently forgetful of all else, were Rochus and Benedicta!</p>
<p>14</p>
<p>Holy Mother of God! what can be worse than the fall of an angel? I saw—I
understood, then, that in leaving me and her father, Benedicta had gone
willingly to meet the very fate from which I had striven to save her!</p>
<p>'The accurst wench has run into Rochus' arms,' hissed someone at my side,
and, turning, I saw the tall brown girl who had been my guide, her face
distorted with hate. 'I wish that I had killed her. Why did you suffer her
to play us this trick, you fool of a monk?'</p>
<p>I pushed her aside and ran toward the couple without thinking what I did.
But what could I do? Even at that instant, as though to prevent my
interference, though really unconscious of my presence, the drunken youths
formed a circle about them, bawling their admiration and clapping their
hands to mark the time.</p>
<p>As these two beautiful figures danced they were a lovely picture. He,
tall, slender and lithe, was like a god of the heathen Greeks, while
Benedicta looked like a fairy. Seen through the slight mist upon the
meadows, her delicate figure, moving swiftly and swaying from side to
side, seemed veiled with a web of purple and gold. Her eyes were cast
modestly upon the ground; her motions, though agile, were easy and
graceful; her face glowed with excitement, and it seemed as if her whole
soul were absorbed in the dance. Poor, sweet child! her error made me
weep, but I forgave her. Her life was so barren and joyless; why should
she not love to dance? Heaven bless her! But Rochus—ah, God forgive
him!</p>
<p>While I was looking on at all this, and thinking what it was my duty to
do, the jealous girl—she is called Amula—had stood near me,
cursing and blaspheming. When the boys applauded Benedicta's dancing Amula
made as if she would spring forward and strangle her. But I held the
furious creature back, and, stepping forward, called out: 'Benedicta!'</p>
<p>She started at the sound of my voice, but though she hung her head a
little lower, she continued dancing. Amula could control her rage no
longer, and rushed forward with a savage cry, trying to break into the
circle. But the drunken boys prevented. They jeered at her, which maddened
her the more, and she made effort after effort to reach her victim. The
boys drove her away with shouts, curses and laughter. Holy Franciscus,
pray for us!—when I saw the hatred in Amula's eyes a cold shudder
ran through my body. God be with us! I believe the creature capable of
killing the poor child with her own hands, and glorying in the deed!</p>
<p>I ought now to have gone home, but I remained, I thought of what might
occur when the dance was over, for I had been told that the youths
commonly accompanied their partners home, and I was horrified to think of
Rochus and Benedicta alone together in the forest and the night.</p>
<p>Imagine my surprise when all at once Benedicta lifted her head, stopped
dancing, and, looking kindly at Rochus, said in her sweet voice, so like
the sound of silver bells: 'I thank you, sir, for having chosen me for
your partner in the dance in such a knightly way.'</p>
<p>Then, bowing to the Saltmaster's son, she slipped quickly through the
circle, and, before anyone could know what was occurring, disappeared in
the black spaces of the forest. Rochus at first seemed stupefied with
amazement, but when he realized that Benedicta was gone he raved like a
madman. He shouted: 'Benedicta!' He called her endearing names; but all to
no purpose—she had vanished. Then he hurried after her and wanted to
search the forest with torches, but the other youths dissuaded him.
Observing my presence, he turned his wrath upon me; I think if he had
dared he would have struck me. He cried: 'I'll make you smart for this,
you miserable cowl-wearer!'</p>
<p>But I do not fear him. Praise be to God! Benedicta is not guilty, and I
can respect her as before. Yet I tremble to think of the many perils which
beset her. She is defenceless against the hate of Amula as well as against
the lust of Rochus. Ah, if I could be ever at her side to watch over and
protect her! But I commend her to Thee, O Lord: the poor motherless child
shall surely not trust to Thee in vain.</p>
<p>15</p>
<p>Alas! my unhappy fate!—again punished and again unable to find
myself guilty.</p>
<p>It seems that Amula has talked about Benedicta and Rochus. The brown wench
strolled from house to house telling how Rochus went to the gallows for
his partner in the dance. And she added that Benedicta had acted in the
most shameless manner with the drunken boys. When the people spoke to me
of this I enlightened them regarding the facts, as it seemed to me my duty
to do, and told all as it had occurred.</p>
<p>By this testimony, in contradiction of one who broke the Decalogue by
bearing false witness against her neighbour I have, it seems, offended the
Superior. I was summoned before him and accused of defending the hangman's
daughter against the statements of an honest Christian girl. I asked,
meekly, what I should have done—whether I should have permitted the
innocent and defenceless to be calumniated.</p>
<p>'Of what interest,' I was asked, 'can the hangman's daughter be to you?
Moreover, it is a fact that she went of her own will to associate with the
drunken boys.'</p>
<p>To this I replied: 'She went out of love to her father, for if the
intoxicated youths had not found her they would have maltreated him—and
she loves the old man, who is ill and helpless. Thus it happened, and thus
I have testified.'</p>
<p>But His Reverence insisted that I was wrong, and put me under severe
penance. I willingly undergo it: I am glad to suffer for the sweet child.
Nor will I murmur against the revered Superior, for he is my master,
against whom to rebel, even in thought, is sin. Is not obedience the
foremost commandment of our great saint for all his disciples? Ah, how I
long for the priestly ordination and the holy oil! Then I shall have peace
and be able to serve Heaven better and with greater acceptance.</p>
<p>I am troubled about Benedicta. If not confined to my cell I should go
toward the Galgenberg: perhaps I should meet her. I grieve for her as if
she were my sister.</p>
<p>Belonging to the Lord, I have no right to love anything but Him who died
upon the cross for our sins—all other love is evil. O blessed Saints
in Heaven! what if it be that this feeling which I have accepted as a sign
and token that I am charged with the salvation of Benedicta's soul is but
an earthly love?</p>
<p>Pray for me, O dear Franciscus, that I may have the light, lest I stray
into the road which leads down to Hell. Light and strength, beloved Saint,
that I may know the right path, and walk therein forever!</p>
<p>16</p>
<p>I stand at the window of my cell. The sun sinks and the shadows creep
higher on the sides of the mountains beyond the abyss. The abyss itself is
filled with a mist whose billowy surface looks like a great lake. I think
how Benedicta climbed out of these awful depths to fling me the edelweiss;
I listen for the sound of the stones displaced by her daring little feet
and plunging into the chasm below. But night after night has passed. I
hear the wind among the pines; I hear the water roaring in the deeps; I
hear the distant song of the nightingale; but her voice I do not hear.</p>
<p>Every evening the mist rises from the abyss. It forms billows; then rings;
then flakes, and these rise and grow and darken until they are great
clouds. They cover the hill and the valley, the tall pines and the
snow-pointed mountains. They extinguish the last remaining touches of
sunlight on the higher peaks, and it is night. Alas, in my soul also there
is night—dark, starless and without hope of dawn!</p>
<p>To-day is Sunday. Benedicta was not in church—'the dark corner'
remained vacant. I was unable to keep my mind upon the service, a sin for
which I shall do voluntary penance.</p>
<p>Amula was among the other maidens, but I saw nothing of Rochus. It seemed
to me that her watchful black eyes were a sufficient guard against any
rival, and that in her jealousy Benedicta would find protection. God can
make the basest passions serve the most worthy ends, and the reflection
gave me pleasure, which, alas, was of short life.</p>
<p>The services being at an end, the Fathers and friars left the church
slowly in procession, moving through the vestry, while the people went out
at the main entrance. From the long covered gallery leading out of the
vestry one has a full view of the public square of the village. As we
friars, who were behind the Fathers, were in the gallery, something
occurred which I shall remember even to the day of my death as an unjust
deed which Heaven permitted for I know not what purpose. It seems that the
Fathers must have known what was coming, for they halted in the gallery,
giving us all an opportunity to look out upon the square.</p>
<p>I heard a confused noise of voices. It came nearer, and the shouting and
yelling sounded like the approach of all the fiends of Hell. Being at the
farther end of the gallery I was unable to see what was going on in the
square, so I asked a brother at a window near by what it was all about.</p>
<p>'They are taking a woman to the pillory,' he answered.</p>
<p>'Who is it?'</p>
<p>'A girl.'</p>
<p>'What has she done?'</p>
<p>'You ask a foolish question. Whom are pillories and whipping-posts for but
fallen women?'</p>
<p>The howling mob passed farther into the square, so that I had a full view.
In the front were boys, leaping, gesticulating and singing vile songs.
They seemed mad with joy and made savage by the shame and pain of their
fellow-creature. Nor did the maids behave much better. 'Fie upon the
outcast!' they cried. 'See what it is to be a sinner! Thank heaven, we are
virtuous.'</p>
<p>In the rear of these yelling boys, surrounded by this mob of screaming
women and girls—O God! how can I write it? How can I express the
horror of it? In the midst of it all—she, the lovely, the sweet, the
immaculate Benedicta!</p>
<p>O my Saviour! how did I see all this, yet am still living to relate it? I
must have come near to death. The gallery, the square, the people seemed
whirling round and round; the earth sank beneath my feet, and, although I
strained my eyes open to see, yet all was dark. But it must have been for
but a short time; I recovered, and, on looking down into the square, saw
her again.</p>
<p>They had clothed her in a long gray cloak, fastened at the waist with a
rope. Her head bore a wreath of straw, and on her breast, suspended by a
string about the neck, was a black tablet bearing in chalk the word
'Buhle'—harlot.</p>
<p>By the end of the rope about her waist a man led her. I looked at him
closely, and—O most holy Son of God, what brutes and beasts Thou
didst come to save!—it was Benedicta's father! They had compelled
the poor old man to perform one of the duties of his office by leading his
own child to the pillory! I learned later that he had implored the
Superior on his knees not to lay this dreadful command upon him, but all
in vain.</p>
<p>The memory of this scene can never leave me. The hangman did not remove
his eyes from his daughter's face, and she frequently nodded at him and
smiled. By the grace of God, the maiden smiled!</p>
<p>The mob insulted her, called her vile names and spat upon the ground in
front of her feet. Nor was this all. Observing that she took no notice of
them, they pelted her with dust and grass. This was more than the poor
father could endure, and, with a faint, inarticulate moan, he fell to the
ground in a swoon.</p>
<p>Oh, the pitiless wretches!—they wanted to lift him up and make him
finish his task, but Benedicta stretched out her arm in supplication, and
with an expression of so ineffable tenderness upon her beautiful face that
even the brutal mob felt her gentle power and recoiled before her, leaving
the unconscious man upon the ground. She knelt and took her father's head
in her lap. She whispered in his ear words of love and comfort. She
stroked his gray hair and kissed his pale lips until she had coaxed him
into consciousness and he had opened his eyes. Benedicta, thrice blessed
Benedicta, thou surely art born to be a saint, for thou didst show a
divine patience like that with which our Saviour bore His cross and with
it all the sins of the world!</p>
<p>She helped her father to rise, and smiled brightly in his face when he
made out to stand. She shook the dust from his clothing, and then, still
smiling and murmuring words of encouragement, handed him the rope. The
boys yelled and sang, the women screamed, and the wretched old man led his
innocent child to the place of shame.</p>
<p>17</p>
<p>When I was back again in my cell I threw myself upon the stones and cried
aloud to God against the injustice and misery that I had witnessed, and
against the still greater misery of which I had been spared the sight. I
saw in my mind the father binding his child to the post. I saw the brutal
populace dance about her with savage delight. I saw the vicious Amula spit
in the pure one's face. I prayed long and earnestly that the poor child
might be made strong to endure her great affliction.</p>
<p>Then I sat and waited. I waited for the setting of the sun, for at that
time the sufferer is commonly released from the whipping-post. The minutes
seemed hours, the hours eternities. The sun did not move; the day of shame
was denied a night.</p>
<p>It was in vain that I tried to understand it all; I was stunned and dazed.
Why did Rochus permit Benedicta to be so disgraced? Does he think the
deeper her shame the more easily he can win her? I know not, nor do I
greatly care to search out his motive. But, God help me! I myself feel her
disgrace, most keenly.</p>
<p>And, Lord, Lord, what a light has come into the understanding of Thy
servant! It has come to me like a revelation out of Heaven that my feeling
for Benedicta is more and less than what I thought it. It is an earthly
love—the love of a man for a woman. As first this knowledge broke
into my consciousness my breath beat quick and hard; it seemed to me that
I should suffocate. Yet such was the hardness of my heart from witnessing
so terrible an injustice tolerated by Heaven, that I was unable wholly to
repent. In the sudden illumination I was blinded: I could not clearly see
my degree of sin. The tumult of my emotions was not altogether
disagreeable; I had to confess to myself that I would not willingly forego
it even if I knew it wicked. May the Mother of Mercy intercede for me!</p>
<p>Even now I cannot think that in supposing myself to have a divine mandate
to save the soul of Benedicta, and prepare her for a life of sanctity, I
was wholly in error. This other human desire—comes it not also of
God? Is it not concerned for the good of its object? And what can be a
greater good than salvation of the soul?—a holy life on earth, and
in Heaven eternal happiness and glory to reward it. Surely the spiritual
and the carnal love are not so widely different as I have been taught to
think them. They are, perhaps, not antagonistic, and are but expressions
of the same will. O holy Franciscus, in this great light that has fallen
about me, guide thou my steps. Show to my dazzled eyes the straight, right
way to Benedicta's good!</p>
<p>At length the sun disappeared behind the cloister. The flakes and
cloudlets gathered upon the horizon; the haze rose from the abyss and,
beyond, the purple shadow climbed higher and higher, the great slope of
the mountain, extinguishing at last the gleam of light upon the summit.
Thank God, oh, thank God, she is free!</p>
<p>18</p>
<p>I have been very ill, but by the kind attention of the brothers am
sufficiently recovered to leave my bed. It must be God's will that I live
to serve Him, for certainly I have done nothing to merit His great mercy
in restoring me to health. Still, I feel a yearning in my soul for a
complete dedication of my poor life to Him and His service. To embrace Him
and be bound up in His love are now the only aspirations that I have. As
soon as the holy oil is on my brow, these hopes, I am sure, will be
fulfilled, and, purged of my hopeless earthly passion for Benedicta, I
shall be lifted into a new and diviner life. And it may be that then I
can, without offence to Heaven or peril to my soul, watch over and protect
her far better than I can now as a wretched monk.</p>
<p>I have been weak. My feet, like those of an infant, failed to support my
body. The brothers carried me into the garden. With what gratitude I again
looked upward into the blue of the sky! How rapturously I gazed upon the
white peaks of the mountains and the black forests on their slopes! Every
blade of grass seemed to me of special interest, and I greeted each
passing insect as if it were an old acquaintance.</p>
<p>My eyes wander to the south, where the Galgenberg is, and I think
unceasingly of the poor child of the hangman. What has become of her? Has
she survived her terrible experience in the public square? What is she
doing? Oh, that I were strong enough to walk to the Galgenberg! But I am
not permitted to leave the monastery, and there is none of whom I dare ask
her fate. The friars look at me strangely; it is as if they no longer
regarded me as one of them. Why is this so? I love them, and desire to
live in harmony with them. They are kind and gentle, yet they seem to
avoid me as much as they can. What does it all mean?</p>
<p>19</p>
<p>I have been in the presence of the most reverend Superior, Father Andreas.
'Your recovery was miraculous,' said he. 'I wish you to be worthy of such
mercies, and to prepare your soul for the great blessing that awaits you.
I have, therefore, my son, ordained that you leave us for a season, to
dwell apart in the solitude of the mountains, for the double purpose of
restoring your strength and affording you an insight into your own heart.
Make a severe examination apart from any distractions, and you will
perceive, I do not doubt, the gravity of your error. Pray that a divine
light may be shed upon your path, that you may walk upright in the service
of the Lord as a true priest and apostle, with immunity from all base
passions and earthly desires.'</p>
<p>I had not the presumption to reply. I submit to the will of His Reverence
without a murmur, for obedience is a rule of our Order. Nor do I fear the
wilderness, although I have heard that it is infested with wild beasts and
evil spirits. Our superior is right: the time passed in solitude will be
to me a season of probation, purification and healing, of which I am
doubtless in sore need. So far I have progressed in sin only; for in
confession I have kept back many things. Not from the fear of punishment,
but because I could not mention the name of the maiden before any other
than my holy and blessed Francisais, who alone can understand. He looks
kindly down upon me from the skies, listening to my sorrow; and whatever
of guilt there may be in my compassion for the innocent and persecuted
child he willingly overlooks for the sake of our blessed Redeemer, who
also suffered injustice and was acquainted with grief.</p>
<p>In the mountains it will be my duty to dig certain roots and send them to
the monastery. From such roots as I am instructed to gather the Fathers
distil a liquor which has become famous throughout the land, even as far,
I have been told, as the great city of Munich. This liquor is so strong
and so fiery with spices that after drinking it one feels a burning in his
throat as if he had swallowed a flame from Hell; yet it is held in high
esteem everywhere by reason of its medicinal properties, it being a remedy
for many kinds of ills and infirmities; and it is said to be good also for
the health of the soul, though I should suppose a godly life might be
equally efficacious in places where the liquor cannot be obtained. However
this may be, from the sale of the liquor comes the chief revenue of the
monastery.</p>
<p>The root from which it is chiefly made is that of an Alpine plant called
<i>gentiana</i>, which grows in great abundance on the sides of the
mountains. In the months of July and August the friars dig the roots and
dry them by fire in the mountain cabins, and they are then packed and sent
to the monastery. The Fathers have the sole right to dig the root in this
region, and the secret of manufacturing the liquor is jealously guarded.</p>
<p>As I am to live in the high country for some time, the Superior has
directed me to collect the root from time to time as I have the strength.
A boy, a servant in the monastery, is to guide me to my solitary station,
carrying up my provisions and returning immediately. He will come once a
week to renew my supply of food and take away the roots that I shall have
dug.</p>
<p>No time has been lost in dispatching me on my penitential errand. This
very evening I have taken leave of the Superior, and, retiring to my cell,
have packed my holy books, the <i>Agnus</i> and the <i>Life of St.
Franciscus</i>, in a bag. Nor have I forgotten my writing-materials with
which to continue my diary. These preparations made, I have fortified my
soul with prayer, and am ready for any fate, even an encounter with the
beasts and demons.</p>
<p>Beloved Saint, forgive the pain I feel in going away without having seen
Benedicta, or even knowing what has become of her since that dreadful day.
Thou knowest, O glorious one, and humbly do I confess, that I long to
hasten to the Galgenberg, if only to get one glimpse of the hut which
holds the fairest and best of her sex. Take me not, holy one, too severely
to task, I beseech thee, for the weakness of my erring human heart!</p>
<p>20</p>
<p>As I left the monastery with my young guide all was quiet within its
walls; the holy Brotherhood slept the sleep of peace, which had so long
been denied to me. It was early dawn, and the clouds in the east were
beginning to show narrow edges of gold and crimson as we ascended the path
leading to the mountain. My guide, with bag upon his shoulder, led, and I
followed, with my robe fastened back and a stout stick in my hand. This
had a sharp iron point which might be used against wild beasts.</p>
<p>My guide was a light-haired, blue-eyed young fellow with a cheerful and
amiable face. He evidently found a keen delight in climbing his native
hills toward the high country whither we were bound. He seemed not to feel
the weight of the burden that he bore; his gait was light and free, his
footing sure. He sprang up the steep and rugged way like a mountain-goat.</p>
<p>The boy was in high spirits. He told me strange tales of ghosts and
goblins, witches and fairies. These last he seemed to be very well
acquainted with. He said they appeared in shining garments, with bright
hair and beautiful wings, and this description agrees very nearly with
what is related of them in books by certain of the Fathers. Anyone to whom
they take a fancy, says the boy, they are able to keep under their spell,
and no one can break the enchantment, not even the Holy Virgin. But I
judge that this is true of only such as are in sin, and that the pure in
heart have nothing to fear from them.</p>
<p>We travelled up hill and down, through forests and blooming meadows and
across ravines. The mountain-streams, hastening down to the valleys,
full-banked and noisy, seemed to be relating the wonderful things that
they had seen and the strange adventures they had met with on their way.
Sometimes the hillsides and the woods resounded with nature's various
voices, calling, whispering, sighing, chanting praises to the Lord of all.
Now and again we passed a mountaineer's cabin, before which played
children, yellow-haired and unkempt. On seeing strangers, they ran away.
But the women came forward, with infants in their arms, and asked for
benedictions. They offered us milk, butter, green cheese, and black bread.
We frequently found the men seated in front of their huts, carving wood,
mostly images of the Saviour upon the cross. These are sent to the city of
Munich, where they are offered for sale, bringing, I am told, considerable
money and much honour to their pious makers.</p>
<p>At last we arrived at the shore of a lake, but a dense fog prevented a
clear view of it. A clumsy little boat was found moored to the bank; my
guide bade me enter it, and presently it seemed as if we were gliding
through the sky in the midst of the clouds. I had never before been on the
water, and felt a terrible misgiving lest we should capsize and drown. We
heard nothing but the sound of the ripples against the sides of the boat.
Here and there, as we advanced, some dark object became dimly visible for
a moment, then vanished as suddenly as it had appeared, and we seemed
gliding again through empty space. As the mist at times lifted a little, I
observed great black rocks protruding from the water, and not far from
shore were lying giant trees half submerged, with huge limbs that looked
like the bones of some monstrous skeleton. The scene was so full of
horrors that even the joyous youth was silent now, his watchful eye ever
seeking to penetrate the fog in search of new dangers.</p>
<p>By all these signs I knew that we were crossing that fearful lake which is
haunted by ghosts and demons, and I therefore commended my soul to God.
The power of the Lord overcomes all evil. Scarcely had I said my prayer
against the spirits of darkness, when suddenly the veil of fog was rent
asunder, and like a great rose of fire the sun shone out, clothing the
world in garments of colour and gold!</p>
<p>Before this glorious eye of God the darkness fled and was no more. The
dense fog, which had changed to a thin, transparent mist, lingered a
little on the mountain-sides, then vanished quite away. Except in the
black clefts of the hills, no vestige of it stayed. The lake was as liquid
silver; the mountains were gold, bearing forests that were like flames of
fire. My heart was filled with wonder and gratitude.</p>
<p>As our boat crept on I observed that the lake filled a long, narrow basin.
On our right the cliffs rose to a great height, their tops covered with
pines, but to the left and in front lay a pleasant land, where stood a
large building. This was Saint Bartholom�, the summer residence of his
Reverence, Superior Andreas.</p>
<p>This garden spot was of no great extent: it was shut in on all sides but
that upon which the lake lay by cliffs that rose a thousand feet into the
air. High in the front of this awful wall was set a green meadow, which
seemed like a great jewel gleaming upon the gray cloak of the mountain. My
guide pointed it out as the only place in all that region where the
edelweiss grew. This, then, was the very place where Benedicta had culled
the lovely flowers that she had brought to me during my penance. I gazed
upward to that beautiful but terrible spot with feelings that I have no
words to express. The youth, his mood sympathetic with the now joyous
aspect of nature, shouted and sang, but I felt the hot tears rise into my
eyes and flow down upon my cheeks, and concealed my face in my cowl.</p>
<p>21</p>
<p>After leaving the boat we climbed the mountain. Dear Lord, nothing comes
from Thy hand without a purpose and a use, but why Thou shouldst have
piled up these mountains, and why Thou shouldst have covered them with so
many stones, is a mystery to me, since I can see no purpose in stones,
which are a blessing to neither man nor beast.</p>
<p>After hours of climbing we reached a spring, where I sat down, faint and
footsore and out of breath. As I looked about me the scene fully justified
all that I had been told of these high solitudes. Wherever I turned my
eyes was nothing but gray, bare rocks streaked with red and yellow and
brown. There were dreary wastes of stones where nothing grew—no
single plant nor blade of grass—dreadful abysses filled with ice,
and glittering snowfields sloping upward till they seemed to touch the
sky.</p>
<p>Among the rocks I did, however, find a few flowers. It seemed as if the
Creator of this wild and desolate region had Himself found it too
horrible, and, reaching down to the valleys, had gathered a handful of
flowers and scattered them in the barren places. These flowers, so
distinguished by the Divine hand, have bloomed with a celestial beauty
that none others know. The boy pointed out the plant whose root I am to
dig, as well as several strong and wholesome herbs serviceable to man,
among them the golden-flowered arnica.</p>
<p>After an hour we continued our journey, which we pursued until I was
hardly able to drag my feet along the path. At last we reached a lonely
spot surrounded by great black rocks. In the centre was a miserable hut of
stones, with a low opening in one side for an entrance, and this, the
youth told me, was to be my habitation. We entered, and my heart sank to
think of dwelling in such a place. There was no furniture of any kind. A
wide bench, on which was some dry Alpine grass, was to be my bed. There
was a fireplace, with some wood for fuel, and a few simple
cooking-utensils.</p>
<p>The boy took up a pan and ran away with it, and, throwing myself down in
front of the hut, I was soon lost in contemplation of the wildness and
terror of the place in which I was to prepare my soul for service of the
Lord. The boy soon returned, bearing the pan in both hands, and on seeing
me he gave a joyful shout, whose echoes sounded like a hundred voices
babbling among the rocks on every side. After even so short a period of
solitude I was so happy to see a human face that I came near answering his
greeting with unbecoming joy. How, then, could I hope to sustain a week of
isolation in that lonely spot?</p>
<p>When the boy placed the pan before me it was full of milk, and he brought
forth from his clothing a pat of yellow butter, prettily adorned with
Alpine flowers, and a cake of snow-white cheese wrapped in aromatic herbs.
The sight delighted me, and I asked him, jokingly: 'Do butter and cheese,
then, grow on stones up here, and have you found a spring of milk?'</p>
<p>'You might accomplish such a miracle,' he replied, 'but I prefer to hasten
to the Black Lake and ask this food of the young women who live there.' He
then got some flour from a kind of pantry in the hut, and, having kindled
a fire on the hearth, proceeded to make a cake.</p>
<p>'Then we are not alone in this wilderness,' I said. 'Tell me where is that
lake on the shore of which these generous people dwell?'</p>
<p>'The Black Lake,' he replied, blinking his eyes, which were full of smoke,
'is behind that <i>Kogel</i> yonder, and the dairy-house stands on the
edge of the cliff above the water. It is a bad place. The lake reaches
clear down to Hell, and you can hear, through the fissures of the rocks,
the roaring and hissing of the flames and the groans of the souls. And in
no other place in all this world are there so many fierce and evil
spirits. Beware of it! You might fall ill there in spite of your sanctity.
Milk and butter and cheese can be obtained at the Green Lake lower down;
but I will tell the women to send up what you require. They will be glad
to oblige you; and if you will preach them a sermon every Sunday, they
will fight the very devil for you!'</p>
<p>After our meal, which I thought the sweetest I had ever eaten, the boy
stretched himself in the sunshine and straightway fell asleep, snoring so
loudly that, tired as I was, I could hardly follow his example.</p>
<p>22</p>
<p>When I awoke the sun was already behind the mountains, whose tops were
fringed with fire. I felt as one in a dream, but was soon recalled to my
senses, and made to feel that I was alone in the wilderness by shouts of
the young man in the distance. Doubtless he had pitied my condition, for,
instead of disturbing me, he had gone away without taking leave, being
compelled to reach the dairy on the Green Lake before nightfall. Entering
the cabin, I found a fire burning lustily and a quantity of fuel piled
beside it. Nor had the thoughtful youth forgotten to prepare my supper of
bread and milk. He had also shaken up the grass on my hard bed, and
covered it with a woollen cloth, for which I was truly grateful to him.</p>
<p>Refreshed by my long sleep, I remained outside the cabin till late in the
evening. I said my prayers in view of the gray rocks beneath the black
sky, in which the stars blinked merrily. They seemed much more brilliant
up here than when seen from the valley, and it was easy to imagine that,
standing on the extreme summit, one might touch them with his hands.</p>
<p>Many hours of that night I passed under the sky and the stars, examining
my conscience and questioning my heart. I felt as if in church, kneeling
before the altar and feeling the awful presence of the Lord. And at last
my soul was filled with a divine peace, and as an innocent child presses
its mother's breast, even so I leaned my head upon thine, O Nature, mother
of us all!</p>
<p>23</p>
<p>I had not before seen a dawn so glorious! The mountains were rose-red, and
seemed almost transparent. The atmosphere was of a silver lucidity, and so
fresh and pure that with every breath I seemed to be taking new life. The
dew, heavy and white, clung to the scanty grass-blades like rain and
dripped from the sides of the rocks.</p>
<p>It was while engaged in my morning devotions that I involuntarily became
acquainted with my neighbours. All night long the marmots had squealed,
greatly to my dismay, and they were now capering to and fro like hares.
Overhead the brown hawks sailed in circles with an eye to the birds
flitting among the bushes and the wood-mice racing along the rocks. Now
and again a troop of chamois passed near, on their way to the
feeding-grounds on the cliffs, and high above all I saw a single eagle
rising into the sky, higher and higher, as a soul flies heavenward when
purged of sin.</p>
<p>I was still kneeling when the silence was broken by the sound of voices. I
looked about, but, although I could distinctly hear the voices and catch
snatches of song, I saw no one. The sounds seemed to come from the heart
of the mountain and, remembering the malevolent powers that infest the
place, I repeated a prayer against the Evil One and awaited the event.</p>
<p>Again the singing was heard, ascending from a deep chasm, and presently I
saw rising out of it three female figures. As soon as they saw me they
ceased singing and uttered shrill screams. By this sign I knew them to be
daughters of the earth, and thought they might be Christians, and so
waited for them to approach.</p>
<p>As they drew near I observed that they carried baskets on their heads, and
that they were tall, good-looking lasses, light-haired, brown in
complexion and black-eyed. Setting their baskets upon the ground, they
greeted me humbly and kissed my hands, after which they opened the baskets
and displayed the good things they had brought me—milk, cream,
cheese, butter and cakes.</p>
<p>Seating themselves upon the ground, they told me they were from the Green
Lake, and said they were glad to have a 'mountain brother' again,
especially so young and handsome a one; and in saying so there were merry
twinkles in their dark eyes and smiles on their red lips, which pleased me
exceedingly.</p>
<p>I inquired if they were not afraid to live in the wilderness, at which
they laughed, showing their white teeth. They said they had a hunter's gun
in their cabin to keep off bears, and knew several powerful sentences and
anathemas against demons. Nor were they very lonely, they added, for every
Saturday the boys from the valley came up to hunt wild beasts, and then
all made merry. I learned from them that meadows and cabins were common
among the rocks, where herdsmen and herdswomen lived during the whole
summer. The finest meadows, they said, belonged to the monastery, and lay
but a short distance away.</p>
<p>The pleasant chatting of the maidens greatly delighted me, and the
solitude began to be less oppressive. Having received the benediction,
they kissed my hand and went away as they had come, laughing, singing and
shouting in the joy of youth and health. So much I have already observed:
the people in the mountains lead a better and happier life than those in
the damp, deep valleys below. Also, they seem purer in heart and mind, and
that may be due to their living so much nearer to Heaven, which some of
the brothers say approaches more closely to the earth here than at any
other place in the world excepting Rome.</p>
<p>24</p>
<p>The maidens having gone, I stowed away the provisions which they had
brought me, and, taking a short pointed spade and a bag, went in search of
the gentiana roots. They grew in abundance, and my back soon began to ache
from stooping and digging; but I continued the labour, for I desired to
send a good quantity to the monastery to attest my zeal and obedience. I
had gone a long distance from my cabin without observing the direction
which I had taken, when suddenly I found myself on the brink of an abyss
so deep and terrible that I recoiled with a cry of horror. At the bottom
of this chasm, so far below my feet that I was giddy to look down, a small
circular lake was visible, like the eye of a fiend. On the shore of it,
near a cliff overhanging the water, stood a cabin, from the stone-weighted
roof of which rose a thin column of blue smoke. About the cabin, in the
narrow and sterile pasture, a few cows and sheep were grazing. What a
dreadful place for a human habitation!</p>
<p>I was still gazing down with fear into this gulf when I was again
startled: I heard a voice distinctly call a name! The sound came from
behind me, and the name was uttered with so caressing sweetness that I
hastened to cross myself as a protection from the wiles of the fairies
with their spells and enchantments. Soon I heard the voice again, and this
time it caused my heart to beat so that I was near suffocation, for it was
Benedicta's! Benedicta in this wilderness, and I alone with her! Surely I
now had need of thy guidance, blessed Franciscus, to keep, my feet in the
path of the Divine purpose.</p>
<p>I turned about and saw her. She was now springing from rock to rock,
looking backward and calling the name that was strange to me. When she saw
that I looked at her she stood motionless. I walked to her, greeting her
in the name of the Blessed Virgin, though, God forgive me! hardly able in
the tumult of my emotions to articulate that holy title.</p>
<p>Ah, how changed the poor child was! The lovely face was as pale as marble;
the large eyes were sunken and inexpressibly sad. Her beautiful hair alone
was unaltered, flowing over her shoulders like threads of gold. We stood
looking at each other, silent from surprise; then I again addressed her:
'Is it, then, you, Benedicta, who live in the cabin down there by the
Black Lake—near the waters of Avemus? And is your father with you?'</p>
<p>She made no reply, but I observed a quivering about her delicate mouth, as
when a child endeavours to refrain from weeping. I repeated my question:
'Is your father with you?'</p>
<p>She answered faintly, in a tone that was hardly more than a sigh:</p>
<p>'My father is dead.'</p>
<p>I felt a sudden pain in my very heart, and was for some moments unable to
speak further, quite overcome by compassion. Benedicta had turned away her
face to hide her tears, and her fragile frame was shaken by her sobs. I
could no longer restrain myself. Stepping up to her, I took her hand in
mine, and, trying to crush back into my secret heart every human desire,
and address her in words of religious consolation, said: 'My child—dear
Benedicta—your father is gone from you, but another Father remains
who will protect you every day of your life. And as far as may accord with
His holy will I, too, good and beautiful maiden, help you to endure your
great affliction. He whom you mourn is not lost; he is gone to the mercy
seat, and God will be gracious to him.'</p>
<p>But my words seemed only to awaken her sleeping grief. She threw herself
upon the ground and gave way to her tears, sobbing so violently that I was
filled with alarm. O Mother of Mercy! how can I bear the memory of the
anguish I suffered in seeing this beautiful and innocent child overwhelmed
with so great a flood of grief? I bent over her, and my own tears fell
upon her golden hair. My heart urged me to lift her from the earth, but my
hands were powerless to move. At length she composed herself somewhat and
spoke, but as if she were talking to herself rather than to me: 'Oh, my
father, my poor, heart-broken father! Yes, he is dead—they killed
him—he died long ago of grief. My beautiful mother, too, died of
grief—of grief and remorse for some great sin, I know not what,
which he had forgiven her. He could only be compassionate and merciful.
His heart was too tender to let him kill a worm or a beetle, and he was
compelled to kill men. His father and his father's father had lived and
died in the Galgenberg. They were hangmen all, and the awful inheritance
fell to him: there was no escape, for the terrible people held him to the
trade. I have heard him say that he was often tempted to kill himself, and
but for me I am sure he would have done so. He could not leave me to
starve, though he had to see me reviled, and at last, O Holy Virgin!
publicly disgraced for that of which I was not guilty.'</p>
<p>As Benedicta made this reference to the great injustice that she had been
made to suffer, her white cheeks kindled to crimson with the recollection
of the shame which for her father's sake she had, at the time of it, so
differently endured.</p>
<p>During the narrative of her grief she had partly risen and had turned her
beautiful face more and more toward me as her confidence had grown; but
now she veiled it with her hair, and would have turned her back but that I
gently prevented her and spoke some words of comfort, though God knows my
own heart was near breaking through sympathy with hers. After a few
moments she resumed: 'Alas, my poor father! he was unhappy every way. Not
even the comfort of seeing his child baptised was granted him. I was a
hangman's daughter, and my parents were forbidden to present me for
baptism; nor could any priest be found who was willing to bless me in the
name of the Holy Trinity. So they gave me the name Benedicta, and blessed
me themselves, over and over again.</p>
<p>'I was only an infant when my beautiful mother died. They buried her in
unconsecrated ground. She could not go to the Heavenly Father in the
mansions above, but was thrust into the flames. While she was dying my
father had hastened to the Reverend Superior, imploring him to send a
priest with the sacrament. His prayer was denied. No priest came, and my
poor father closed her eyes himself, while his own were blind with tears
of anguish for her terrible fate.</p>
<p>'And all alone he had to dig her grave. He had no other place than near
the gallows, where he had so often buried the hanged and the accurst. With
his own hands he had to place her in that unholy ground, nor could any
masses be said for her suffering soul.</p>
<p>'I well remember how my dear father took me then to the image of the Holy
Virgin and bade me kneel, and, joining my little hands, taught me to pray
for my poor mother, who had stood undefended before the terrible Judge of
the Dead. This I have done every morning and evening since that day, and
now I pray for both; for my father also has died unshriven, and his soul
is not with God, but burns in unceasing fire.</p>
<p>'When he was dying I ran to the Superior, just as he had done for my dear
mother. I besought him on my knees. I prayed and wept and embraced his
feet, and would have kissed his hand but that he snatched it away. He
commanded me to go.'</p>
<p>As Benedicta proceeded with her narrative she gained courage. She rose to
her feet and stood erect, threw back her beautiful head and lifted her
eyes to the heavens as if recounting her wrongs to God's high angels and
ministers of doom. She stretched forth her bare arms in gestures of so
natural force and grace that I was filled with astonishment, and her
unstudied words came from her lips with an eloquence of which I had never
before had any conception. I dare not think it inspiration, for, God
forgive us all! every word was an unconscious arraignment of Him and His
Holy Church; yet surely no mortal with lips untouched by a live coal from
the altar ever so spake before! In the presence of this strange and gifted
being I so felt my own unworth that I had surely knelt, as before a
blessed saint, but that she suddenly concluded, with a pathos that touched
me to tears.</p>
<p>'The cruel people killed him,' she said, with a sob in the heart of every
word. 'They laid hands upon me whom he loved. They charged me falsely with
a foul crime. They attired me in a garment of dishonour, and put a crown
of straw upon my head, and hung about my neck the black tablet of shame.
They spat upon me and reviled me, and compelled him to lead me to the
pillory, where I was bound and struck with whips and stones. That broke
his great, good heart, and so he died, and I am alone.'</p>
<p>25</p>
<p>When Benedicta had finished I remained silent, for in the presence of such
a sorrow what could I say? For such wounds as hers religion has no balm.
As I thought of the cruel wrongs of this humble and harmless family there
came into my heart a feeling of wild rebellion against the world, against
the Church, against God! They were brutally unjust, horribly, devilishly
unjust!—God, the Church, and the world.</p>
<p>Our very surroundings—the stark and soulless wilderness, perilous
with precipices and bleak with everlasting snows—seemed a visible
embodiment of the woeful life to which the poor child had been condemned
from birth; and truly this was more than fancy, for since her father's
death had deprived her of even so humble a home as the hangman's hovel she
had been driven to these eternal solitudes by the stress of want. But
below us were pleasant villages, fertile fields, green gardens, and homes
where peace and plenty abided all the year.</p>
<p>After a time, when Benedicta was somewhat composed, I asked her if she had
anyone with her for protection.</p>
<p>'I have none,' she replied. But observing my look of pain, she added: 'I
have always lived in lonely, accurst places; I am accustomed to that. Now
that my father is dead, there is no one who cares even to speak to me, nor
any whom I care to talk with—except you.' After a pause she said:
'True, there is one who cares to see me, but he——'</p>
<p>Here she broke off, and I did not press her to explain lest it should
embarrass her. Presently she said: 'I knew yesterday that you were here. A
boy came for some milk and butter for you. If you were not a holy man the
boy would not have come to me for your food. As it is, you cannot be
harmed by the evil which attaches to everything I have or do. Are you
sure, though, that you made the sign of the cross over the food
yesterday?'</p>
<p>'Had I known that it came from you, Benedicta, that precaution would have
been omitted,' I answered.</p>
<p>She looked at me with beaming eyes, and said:</p>
<p>'Oh, dear sir, dear Brother!'</p>
<p>And both the look and the words gave me the keenest delight—as, in
truth, do all this saintly creature's words and ways.</p>
<p>I inquired what had brought her to the cliff-top, and who the person was
that I had heard her calling.</p>
<p>'It is no person,' she answered, smiling; 'it is only my goat. She has
strayed away, and I was searching for her among the rocks.'</p>
<p>Then nodding to me as if about to say farewell, she turned to go, but I
detained her, saying that I would assist her to look for the goat.</p>
<p>We soon discovered the animal in a crevice of rock, and so glad was
Benedicta to find her humble companion that she knelt by its side, put her
arms about its neck and called it by many endearing names. I thought this
very charming, and could not help looking upon the group with obvious
admiration.</p>
<p>Benedicta, observing it, said: 'Her mother fell from a cliff and broke her
neck. I took the little one and brought it up on milk, and she is very
fond of me. One who lives alone as I do values the love of a faithful
animal.'</p>
<p>When the maiden was about to leave me I gained courage to speak to her of
what had been so long in my mind. I said: 'It is true, is it not,
Benedicta, that on the night of the festival you went to meet the drunken
boys in order to save your father from harm?'</p>
<p>She looked at me in great astonishment. 'For what other reason could you
suppose I went?'</p>
<p>'I could not think of any other,' I replied, in some confusion.</p>
<p>'And now good-bye, Brother,' she said, moving away.</p>
<p>'Benedicta,' I cried. She paused and turned her head.</p>
<p>'Next Sunday I shall preach to the dairy women at the Green Lake; will you
come?'</p>
<p>'Oh, no, dear Brother,' she replied hesitating and in low tones.</p>
<p>'You will not come?'</p>
<p>'I should like to come, but my presence would frighten away the dairy
women and others whom your goodness would bring there to hear you. Your
charity to me would cause you trouble. I pray you, sir, accept thanks, but
I cannot come.'</p>
<p>'Then I shall come to you.'</p>
<p>'Beware, oh pray, beware!'</p>
<p>'I shall come.'</p>
<p>26</p>
<p>The boy had taught me how to prepare a cake. I knew all that went to the
making of it, and the right proportions, yet when I tried to make it I
could not. All that I was able to make was a smoky, greasy pap, more fit
for the mouth of Satan than for a pious son of the Church and follower of
Saint Franciscus. My failure greatly discouraged me, yet it did not
destroy my appetite; so, taking some stale bread, I dipped it in sour milk
and was about to make my stomach do penance for its many sins, when
Benedicta came with a basketful of good things from her dairy. Ah, the
dear child! I fear that it was not with my heart only that I greeted her
that blessed morning.</p>
<p>Observing the smoky mass in the pan, she smiled, and quietly throwing it
to the birds (which may Heaven guard!) she cleansed the pan at the spring,
and, returning arranged the fire. She then prepared the material for a
fresh cake. Taking two handfuls of flour, she put it into an earthen bowl,
and upon the top of it poured a cup of cream. Adding a pinch of salt, she
mixed the whole vigorously with her slender white hands until it became a
soft, swelling dough. She next greased the pan with a piece of yellow
butter, and, pouring the dough into it, placed it on the fire. When the
heat had penetrated the dough, causing it to expand and rise above the
sides of the pan, she deftly pierced it here and there that it should not
burst, and when it was well browned she took it up and set it before me,
all unworthy as I was. I invited her to share the meal with me, but she
would not. She insisted, too, that I should cross myself before partaking
of anything that she had brought me or prepared, lest some evil come to me
because of the ban upon her; but this I would not consent to do. While I
ate she culled flowers from among the rocks, and, making a wreath, hung it
upon the cross in front of the cabin; after which, when I had finished,
she employed herself in cleansing the dishes and arranging everything in
order as it should be, so that I imagined myself far more comfortable than
before, even in merely looking about me. When there was nothing more to be
done, and my conscience would not permit me to invent reasons for
detaining her, she went away, and O my Saviour! how dismal and dreary
seemed the day when she was gone. Ah, Benedicta, Benedicta, what is this
that thou hast done to me?—making that sole service of the Lord to
which I am dedicated seem less happy and less holy than a herdsman's
humble life here in the wilderness with thee!</p>
<p>27</p>
<p>Life up here is less disagreeable than I thought. What seemed to me a
dreary solitude seems now less dismal and desolate. This mountain
wilderness, which at first filled me with awe, gradually reveals its
benign character. It is marvellously beautiful in its grandeur, with a
beauty which purifies and elevates the soul. One can read in it, as in a
book, the praises of its Creator. Daily, while digging gentiana roots, I
do not fail to listen to the voice of the wilderness and to compose and
chasten my soul more and more.</p>
<p>In these mountains are no feathered songsters. The birds here utter only
shrill cries. The flowers, too, are without fragrance, but wondrously
beautiful, shining with the fire and gold of stars. I have seen slopes and
heights here which doubtless were never trodden by any human foot. They
seem to me sacred, the touch of the Creator still visible upon them, as
when they came from His hand.</p>
<p>Game is in great abundance. Chamois are sometimes seen in such droves that
the very hillsides seem to move. There are steinbocks, veritable monsters,
but as yet, thank Heaven, I have seen no bears. Marmots play about me like
kittens, and eagles, the grandest creatures in this high world, nest in
the cliffs to be as near the sky as they can get.</p>
<p>When fatigued, I stretch myself on the Alpine grass, which is as fragrant
as the most precious spices. I close my eyes and hear the wind whisper
through the tall stems, and in my heart is peace. Blessed be the Lord!</p>
<p>28</p>
<p>Every morning the dairy women come to my cabin, their merry shouts ringing
in the air and echoed from the hills. They bring fresh milk, butter and
cheese, chat a little while and go away. Each day they relate something
new that has occurred in the mountains or been reported from the villages
below. They are joyous and happy, and look forward with delight to Sunday,
when there will be divine service in the morning and a dance in the
evening.</p>
<p>Alas, these happy people are not free of the sin of bearing false witness
against their neighbour. They have spoken to me of Benedicta—called
her a disgraceful wench, a hangman's daughter and (my heart rebels against
its utterance) the mistress of Rochus! The pillory, they said, was made
for such as she.</p>
<p>Hearing these maidens talk so bitterly and falsely of one whom they so
little knew, it was with difficulty that I mastered my indignation. But in
pity of their ignorance I reprimanded them gently and kindly. It was
wrong, I said, to condemn a fellow-being unheard. It was unchristian to
speak ill of any one.</p>
<p>They do not understand. It surprises them that I defend a person like
Benedicta—one who, as they truly say, has been publicly disgraced
and has not a friend in the world.</p>
<p>29</p>
<p>This morning I visited the Black Lake. It is indeed an awful and accursed
place, fit for the habitation of the damned. And there lives the poor
forsaken child! Approaching the cabin, I could see a fire burning on the
hearth, and over it was suspended a kettle. Benedicta was seated on a low
stool, looking into the flames. Her face was illuminated with a crimson
glow, and I could observe heavy tear-drops on her cheeks.</p>
<p>Not wishing to see her secret sorrow, I hastened to make known my
presence, and addressed her as gently as I could. She was startled, but
when she saw who it was, smiled and blushed. She rose and came to greet
me, and I began speaking to her almost at random, in order that she might
recover her composure. I spoke as a brother might speak to his sister, yet
earnestly, for my heart was full of compassion.</p>
<p>'O Benedicta,' I said, I know your heart, and it has more love for that
wild youth Rochus than for our dear and blessed Saviour. I know how
willingly you bore infamy and disgrace, sustained by the thought that he
knew you innocent. Far be it from me to condemn you, for what is holier or
purer than a maiden's love? I would only warn and save you from the
consequence of having given it to one so unworthy.'</p>
<p>She listened with her head bowed, and said nothing, but I could hear her
sighs. I saw, too, that she trembled. I continued: 'Benedicta, the passion
which fills your heart may prove your destruction in this life and
hereafter. Young Rochus is not one who will make you his wife in the sight
of God and Man. Why did he not stand forth and defend you when you were
falsely accused?'</p>
<p>'He was not there,' she said, lifting her eyes to mine; 'he and his father
were at Salzburg. He knew nothing till they told him.'</p>
<p>May God forgive me if at this I felt no joy in another's acquittal of the
heavy sin with which I had charged him. I stood a moment irresolute, with
my head bowed, silent.</p>
<p>'But, Benedicta,' I resumed, 'will he take for a wife one whose good name
has been blackened in the sight of his family and his neighbours? No, he
does not seek you with an honourable purpose. O Benedicta, confide in me.
Is it not as I say?'</p>
<p>But she remained silent, nor could I draw from her a single word. She
would only sigh and tremble; she seemed unable to speak. I saw that she
was too weak to resist the temptation to love young Rochus; nay, I saw
that her whole heart was bound up in him, and my soul melted with pity and
sorrow—pity for her and sorrow for myself, for I felt that my power
was unequal to the command that had been laid upon me. My agony was so
keen that I could hardly refrain from crying out.</p>
<p>I went from her cabin, but did not return to my own. I wandered about the
haunted shore of the Black Lake for hours, without aim or purpose.</p>
<p>Reflecting bitterly upon my failure, and beseeching God for greater grace
and strength, it was revealed to me that I was an unworthy disciple of the
Lord and a faithless son of the Church. I became more keenly conscious
than I ever had been before of the earthly nature of my love for
Benedicta, and of its sinfulness. I felt that I had not given my whole
heart to God, but was clinging to a temporal and human hope. It was plain
to me that unless my love for the sweet child should be changed to a
purely spiritual affection, purified from all the dross of passion, I
could never receive holy orders, but should remain always a monk and
always a sinner. These reflections caused me great torment, and in my
despair I cast myself down upon the earth, calling aloud to my Saviour. In
this my greatest trial I clung to the Cross. 'Save me, O Lord!' I cried.
'I am engulfed in a great passion—save me, oh, save me, or I perish
forever!'</p>
<p>All that night I struggled and prayed and fought against the evil spirits
in my soul, with their suggestions of recreancy to the dear Church whose
child I am.</p>
<p>'The Church,' they whispered, 'has servants enough. You are not as yet
irrevocably bound to celibacy. You can procure a dispensation from your
monastic vows and remain here in the mountains, a layman. You can learn
the craft of the hunter or the herdsman, and be ever near Benedicta to
guard and guide her—perhaps in time to win her love from Rochus and
take her for your wife.'</p>
<p>To these temptations I opposed my feeble strength and such aid as the
blessed Saint gave me in my great trial. The contest was long and
agonising, and more than once, there in the darkness and the wilderness,
which rang with my cries, I was near surrender; but at the dawning of the
day I became more tranquil, and peace once more filled my heart, even as
the golden light filled the great gorges of the mountain where but a few
moments before were the darkness and the mist. I thought then of the
suffering and death of our Saviour, who died for the redemption of the
world, and most fervently I prayed that Heaven would grant me the great
boon to die likewise, in a humbler way, even though it were for but one
suffering being—Benedicta.</p>
<p>May the Lord hear my prayer!</p>
<p>30</p>
<p>The night before the Sunday on which I was to hold divine service great
fires were kindled on the cliffs—a signal for the young men in the
valley to come up to the mountain dairies. They came in great numbers,
shouting and screaming, and were greeted with songs and shrill cries by
the dairy maidens, who swung flaming torches that lit up the faces of the
great rocks and sent gigantic shadows across them. It was a beautiful
sight. These are indeed a happy people.</p>
<p>The monastery boy came in with the rest. He will remain over Sunday, and,
returning, will take back the roots that I have dug. He gave me much news
from the monastery. The reverend Superior is living at Saint Bartholom�,
fishing and hunting. Another thing—one which gives me great alarm—is
that the Saltmaster's son, young Rochus, is in the mountains not far from
the Black Lake. It seems he has a hunting-lodge on the upper cliff, and a
path leads from it directly to the lake. The boy told me this, but did not
observe how I trembled when hearing it. Would that an angel with a flaming
sword might guard the path to the lake, and to Benedicta!</p>
<p>The shouting and singing continued during the whole night, and between
this and the agitation in my soul I did not close my eyes. Early the next
morning the boys and girls arrived in crowds from all directions. The
maidens wore silken kerchiefs twisted prettily about their heads, and had
decorated themselves and their escorts with flowers.</p>
<p>Not being an ordained priest, it was not permitted me either to read mass
or to preach a sermon, but I prayed with them and spoke to them whatever
my aching heart found to say. I spoke to them of our sinfulness and God's
great mercy; of our harshness to one another and the Saviour's love for us
all; of His infinite compassion. As my words echoed from the abyss below
and the heights above I felt as if I were lifted out of this world of
suffering and sin and borne away on angel's wings to the radiant spheres
beyond the sky! It was a solemn service, and my little congregation was
awed into devotion and seemed to feel as if it stood in the Holy of
Holies.</p>
<p>The service being concluded, I blessed the people and they quietly went
away. They had not been long gone before I heard the lads send forth
ringing shouts, but this did not displease me. Why should they not
rejoice? Is not cheerfulness the purest praise a human heart can give?</p>
<p>In the afternoon I went down to Benedicta's cabin and found her at the
door, making a wreath of edelweiss for the image of the Blessed Virgin,
intertwining the snowy flowers with a purple blossom that looked like
blood.</p>
<p>Seating myself beside her, I looked on at her beautiful work in silence,
but in my soul was a wild tumult of emotion and a voice that cried:
'Benedicta, my love, my soul, I love you more than life! I love you above
all things on earth and in Heaven!'</p>
<p>31</p>
<p>The Superior sent for me, and with a strange foreboding I followed his
messenger down the difficult way to the lake and embarked in the boat.
Occupied with gloomy reflections and presentiments of impending evil, I
hardly observed that we had left the shore before the sound of merry
voices apprised me of our arrival at St. Bartholom�. On the beautiful
meadow surrounding the dwelling of the Superior were a great number of
people—priests, friars, mountaineers and hunters. Many were there
who had come from afar with large retinues of servants and boys. In the
house was a great bustle—a confusion and a hurrying to and fro, as
during a fair. The doors stood wide open, and people ran in and out,
clamouring noisily. The dogs yelped and howled as loud as they could. On a
stand under the oak was a great cask of beer, and many of the people were
gathered about it, drinking. Inside the house, too, there seemed to be
much drinking, for I saw many men near the windows with mighty cups in
their hands. On entering, I encountered throngs of servants carrying
dishes of fish and game. I asked one of them when I could see the
Superior. He answered that His Reverence would be down immediately after
the meal, and I concluded to wait in the hall. The walls were hung with
pictures of some large fish which had been caught in the lake. Below each
picture the weight of the monster and the date of its capture, together
with the name of the person taking it, were inscribed in large letters. I
could not help interpreting these records—perhaps uncharitably—as
intimations to all good Christians to pray for the souls of those whose
names were inscribed.</p>
<p>After more than an hour the Superior descended the stairs. I stepped
forward, saluting him humbly, as became my position. He nodded, eyed me
sharply, and directed me to go to his apartment immediately after supper.
This I did.</p>
<p>'How about your soul, my son Ambrosius?' he asked me, solemnly. 'Has the
Lord shown you grace? Have you endured the probation?' Humbly, with my
head bowed, I answered: 'Most reverend Father, God in my solitude has
given me knowledge.'</p>
<p>'Of what? Of your guilt?' This I affirmed.</p>
<p>'Praise be to God!' exclaimed the Superior. 'I knew, my son, that solitude
would speak to your soul with the tongue of an angel. I have good tidings
for you. I have written in your behalf to the Bishop of Salzburg. He
summons you to his palace. He will consecrate you and give you holy orders
in person, and you will remain in his city. Prepare yourself, for in three
days you are to leave us.'</p>
<p>The Superior looked sharply into my face again, but I did not permit him
to see into my heart. I asked for his benediction, bowed and left him. Ah,
then, it was for this that I was summoned! I am to go away forever. I must
leave my very life behind me; I must renounce my care and protection of
Benedicta. God help her and me!</p>
<p>32</p>
<p>I am once more in my mountain home, but tomorrow I leave it forever. But
why am I sad? Does not a great blessing await me? Have I not ever looked
forward to the moment of my consecration with longing, believing it would
bring me the supreme happiness of my life? And now that this great joy is
almost within my grasp, I am sad beyond measure.</p>
<p>Can I approach the altar of the Lord with a lie on my lips? Can I receive
the holy sacrament as an impostor? The holy oil upon my forehead would
turn to fire and burn into my brain, and I should be for ever damned.</p>
<p>I might fall upon my knees before the Bishop and say: 'Expel me, for I do
not seek after the love of Christ, nor after holy and heavenly things, but
after the things of this world.'</p>
<p>If I so spoke, I should be punished, but I could endure that without a
murmur.</p>
<p>If only I were sinless and could rightly become a priest, I could be of
great service to the poor child. I should be able to give her infinite
blessings and consolations. I could be her confessor and absolve her from
sin, and, if I should outlive her—which God forbid!—might by
my prayers even redeem her soul from Purgatory. I could read masses for
the souls of her poor dead parents, already in torment.</p>
<p>Above all, if I succeeded in preserving her from that one great and
destructive sin for which she secretly longs; if I could take her with me
and place her under thy protection, O Blessed Virgin, that would be
happiness indeed.</p>
<p>But where is the sanctuary that would receive the hangman's daughter? I
know it but too well: when I am gone from here, the Evil One, in the
winning shape he has assumed, will prevail, and she will be lost in time
and in eternity.</p>
<p>33</p>
<p>I have been at Benedicta's cabin.</p>
<p>'Benedicta,' I said, 'I am going away from here—away from the
mountains—away from you.'</p>
<p>She grew pale, but said nothing. For a moment I was overcome with emotion;
I seemed to choke, and could not continue. Presently I said: 'Poor child,
what will become of you? I know that your love for Rochus is strong and,
love is like a torrent which nothing can stay. There is no safety for you
but in clinging to the cross of our Saviour. Promise me that you will do
so—do not let me go away in misery, Benedicta.'</p>
<p>'Am I, then, so wicked?' she said, without lifting her eyes from the
ground. 'Can I not be trusted?'</p>
<p>'Ah, but, Benedicta, the enemy is strong, and you have a traitor to unbar
the gates. Your own heart, poor child, will at last betray you.'</p>
<p>'He will not harm me,' she murmured. 'You wrong him, sir, indeed you do.'</p>
<p>But I knew that I did not, and was all the more concerned to judge that
the wolf would use the arts of the fox. Before the sacred purity of this
maiden the base passions of the youth had not dared to declare themselves.
But none the less I knew that an hour would come when she would have need
of all her strength, and it would fail her. I grasped her arm and demanded
that she take an oath that she would throw herself into the waters of the
Black Lake rather than into the arms of Rochus. But she would not reply.
She remained silent, her eyes fixed upon mine with a look of sadness and
reproach which filled my mind with the most melancholy thoughts, and,
turning away, I left her.</p>
<p>34</p>
<p>Lord, Saviour of my soul, whither hast Thou led me? Here am I in the
culprit's tower, a condemned murderer, and to-morrow at sunrise I shall be
taken to the gallows and hanged! For who so slays a fellow being, he shall
be slain; that is the law of God and man.</p>
<p>On this the last day of my life I have asked that I be permitted to write,
and my prayer is granted. In the name of God and in the truth I shall now
set down all that occurred.</p>
<p>Leaving Benedicta, I returned to my cabin, and, having packed everything,
waited for the boy. But he did not come: I should have to remain in the
mountains another night. I grew restless. The cabin seemed too narrow to
hold me; the air was too heavy and hot to sustain life. Going outside, I
lay upon a rock and looked up at the sky, dark and glittering with stars.
But my soul was not in the heavens; it was at the cabin by the Black Lake.</p>
<p>Suddenly I heard a faint, distant cry, like a human voice. I sat upright
and listened, but all was still. It may have been, I thought, the note of
some night-bird. I was about to lie down again, when the cry was repeated,
but it seemed to come from another direction. It was the voice of
Benedicta! It sounded again, and now it seemed to come from the air—from
the sky above my head, and distinctly it called my name; but, O Mother of
God, what anguish was in those tones!</p>
<p>I leapt from the rock. 'Benedicta, Benedicta!' I cried aloud. There was no
reply.</p>
<p>'Benedicta, I am coming to thee, child!'</p>
<p>I sprang away in the darkness, along the path to the Black Lake. I ran and
leapt, stumbling and falling over rocks and stumps of trees. My limbs were
bruised, my clothing was torn, but I gave no heed; Benedicta was in
distress, and I alone could save and guard her. I rushed on until I
reached the Black Lake. But at the cabin all was quiet; there was neither
light nor sound; everything was as peaceful as a house of God.</p>
<p>After waiting a long time I left. The voice that I had heard calling me
could not have been Benedicta's, but must have been that of some evil
spirit mocking me in my great sorrow. I meant to return to my cabin, but
an invisible hand directed my steps another way; and although it led me to
my death, I know it to have been the hand of the Lord.</p>
<p>Walking on, hardly knowing whither, and unable to find the path by which I
had descended, I found myself at the foot of a precipice. Here was a
narrow path leading steeply upward along the face of the cliff, and I
began ascending it. After I had gone up some distance I looked above, and
saw outlined against the starry sky a cabin perched upon the very verge.
It flashed through my mind that this was the hunting-lodge of the
Saltmaster's son, and this the path by which he visited Benedicta.
Merciful Father! he, Rochus, was certain to come this way; there could be
no other. I would wait for him here.</p>
<p>I crouched in the shadow and waited, thinking what to say to him and
imploring the Lord for inspiration to change his heart and turn him from
his evil purpose.</p>
<p>Before long I heard him approaching from above. I heard the stones
displaced by his foot roll down the steep slopes and leap into the lake
far below. Then I prayed God that if I should be unable to soften the
youth's heart he might miss his footing and fall, too, like the stones;
for it would be better that he should meet a sudden and impenitent death,
and his soul be lost, than that he should live to destroy the soul of an
innocent girl.</p>
<p>Turning at an angle of the rock, he stood directly before me as, rising, I
stepped into the faint light of the new moon. He knew me at once, and in a
haughty tone asked me what I wanted.</p>
<p>I replied mildly, explaining why I had barred his way, and begging him to
go back. He insulted and derided me.</p>
<p>'You miserable towler,' he said, 'will you never cease meddling in my
affairs? Because the mountain maids are so foolish as to praise your white
teeth and your big black eyes, must you fancy yourself a man, and not a
monk? You are no more to women than a goat!'</p>
<p>I begged him to desist and to listen to me. I threw myself on my knees and
implored him, however he might despise me and my humble though holy
station, to respect Benedicta and spare her. But he pushed me from him
with his foot upon my breast. No longer master of myself, I sprang erect,
and called him an assassin and a villain.</p>
<p>At this he pulled a dagger from his belt, saying: 'I will send you to
Hell!'</p>
<p>Quick as a flash of lightning my hand was upon his wrist. I wrested the
knife from him and flung it behind me, crying: 'Not with weapons, but
unarmed and equal, we will fight to the death, and the Lord shall decide!'</p>
<p>We sprang upon each other with the fury of wild animals, and were
instantly locked together with arms and hands. We struggled upward and
downward along the path, with the great wall of rock on one side, and on
the other the precipice, the abyss, the waters of the Black Lake! We
writhed and strained for the advantage; but the Lord was against me for He
permited my enemy to overcome me and throw me down on the edge of the
precipice. I was in the grasp of a strong enemy, whose eyes glowed like
coals of fire. His knee was on my breast and my head hung over the edge—my
life was in his hands. I thought he would push me over, but he made no
attempt to do so. He held me there between life and death for a dreadful
time, then said, in a low, hissing voice: 'You see, monk, if I but move I
can hurl you down the abyss like a stone. But I care not to take your
life, for it is no impediment to me. The girl belongs to me, and to me you
shall leave her; do you understand?'</p>
<p>With that he rose and left me, going down the path toward the lake. His
footfalls had long died away in the silent night before I was able to move
hand or foot. Great God! I surely did not deserve such defeat, humiliation
and pain. I had but wished to save a soul, yet Heaven permitted me to be
conquered by him who would destroy it!</p>
<p>Finally I was able to rise, although in great pain, for I was bruised by
my fall, and could still feel the fierce youth's knee upon my breast and
his fingers about my throat. I walked with difficulty back along the path,
downward toward the lake. Wounded as I was, I would return to Benedicta's
cabin and interpose my body between her and harm. But my progress was
slow, and I had frequently to rest; yet it was near dawn before I gave up
the effort, convinced that I should be too late to do the poor child the
small service of yielding up my remnant of life in her defence.</p>
<p>At early dawn I heard Rochus returning, with a merry song upon his lips. I
concealed myself behind a rock, though not in fear, and he passed without
seeing me.</p>
<p>At this point there was a break in the wall of the cliff, the path
crossing a great crevice that clove the mountain as by a sword-stroke from
the arm of a Titan. The bottom was strewn with loose boulders and
overgrown with brambles and shrubs, through which trickled a slender
stream of water fed by the melting snows above. Here I remained for three
days and two nights. I heard the boy from the monastery calling my name as
he traversed the path searching for me, but I made no answer. Not once did
I quench my burning thirst at the brook nor appease my hunger with
blackberries that grew abundantly on every side. Thus I mortified the
sinful flesh, killed rebellious nature and subdued my spirit to the Lord
until at last I felt myself delivered from all evil, freed from the
bondage of an earthly love and prepared to devote my heart and soul and
life to no woman but thee, O Blessed Virgin!</p>
<p>The Lord having wrought this miracle, my soul felt as light and free as if
wings were lifting me to the skies. I praised the Lord in a loud voice,
shouting and rejoicing till the rocks rang with the sound. I cried:
'Hosanna! Hosanna! I was now prepared to go before the altar and receive
the holy oil upon my head. I was no longer myself. Ambrosius, the poor
erring monk, was dead; I was an instrument in the right hand of God to
execute His holy will. I prayed for the delivery of the soul of the
beautiful maiden, and as I prayed, behold! there appeared to me in the
splendour and glory of Heaven the Lord Himself, attended by innumerable
angels, filling half the sky! A great rapture enthralled my senses; I was
dumb with happiness. With a smile of ineffable benignity God spake to me:</p>
<p>'Because that thou hast been faithful to thy trust, and through all the
trials that I have sent upon thee hast not faltered, the salvation of the
sinless maiden's soul is now indeed given into thy hand.'</p>
<p>'Thou, Lord, knowest,' I replied, 'that I am without the means to do this
work, nor know I how it is to be done.'</p>
<p>The Lord commanded me to rise and walk on, and, turning my face away from
the glorious Presence, which filled the heart of the cloven mountain with
light, I obeyed, leaving the scene of my purgation and regaining the path
that led up the face of the cliff. I began the ascent, walking on and on
in the splendour of the sunset, reflected from crimson clouds.</p>
<p>Suddenly I felt impelled to stop and look down, and there at my feet,
shining red in the cloudlight, as if stained with blood, lay the sharp
knife of Rochus. Now I understood why the Lord had permitted that wicked
youth to conquer me, yet had moved him to spare my life. I had been
reserved for a more glorious purpose. And so was placed in my hands the
means to that sacred end. My God, my God, how mysterious are Thy ways!</p>
<p>35</p>
<p>'You shall leave her to me.' So had spoken the wicked youth while holding
me between life and death at the precipice. He permitted me to live, not
from Christian mercy, but because he despised my life, a trivial thing to
him, not worth taking. He was sure of his prey; it did not matter if I
were living or dead.</p>
<p>'You shall leave her to me.' Oh, arrogant fool! Do you not know that the
Lord holds His hand over the flowers of the field and the young birds in
the nest? Leave Benedicta to you?—permit you to destroy her body and
her soul? Ah, you shall see how the hand of God shall be spread above her
to guard and save. There is yet time—that soul is still spotless and
undefiled. Forward, then, to fulfil the command of the Most High God!</p>
<p>I knelt upon the spot where God had given into my hand the means of her
deliverance. My soul was wholly absorbed in the mission entrusted to me.
My heart was in ecstasy, and I saw plainly, as in a vision, the triumphant
completion of the act which I had still to do.</p>
<p>I arose, and, concealing the knife in my robe, retraced my steps, going
downward toward the Black Lake. The new moon looked like a divine wound in
the sky, as if some hand had plunged a dagger into Heaven's holy breast.</p>
<p>Benedicta's door was ajar, and I stood outside a long time, gazing upon
the beautiful picture presented to my eyes. A bright fire on the hearth
lit up the room. Opposite the fire sat Benedicta, combing her long golden
hair. Unlike what it was the last time I had stood before her cabin and
gazed upon it, her face was full of happiness and had a glory that I had
never imagined in it. A sensuous smile played about her lips while she
sang in a low, sweet voice the air of a love song of the people. Ah me!
she was beautiful; she looked like a bride of Heaven. But though her voice
was that of an angel, it angered me, and I called out to her: 'What are
you doing, Benedicta, so late in the evening? You sing as if you expected
your lover, and arrange your hair as for a dance. It is but three days
since I, your brother and only friend, left you, in sorrow and despair.
And now you are as happy as a bride.'</p>
<p>She sprang up and manifested great joy at seeing me again, and hastened to
kiss my hands. But she had no sooner glanced into my face than she uttered
a scream of terror and recoiled from me as if I had been a fiend from
Hell!</p>
<p>But I approached her and asked: 'Why do you adorn yourself so late in the
night?—why are you so happy? Have the three days been long enough
for you to fall? Are you the mistress of Rochus?' She stood staring at me
in horror. She asked: 'Where have you been and why do you come? You look
so ill! Sit, sir, I pray you, and rest. You are pale and you shake with
cold. I will make you a warm drink and you will feel better.'</p>
<p>She was silenced by my stern gaze. 'I have not come to rest and be nursed
by you,' I said. 'I am here because the Lord commands. Tell me why you
sang.'</p>
<p>She looked up at me with the innocent expression of a babe, and replied:
'Because I had for the moment forgotten that you were going away, and I
was happy.'</p>
<p>'Happy?'</p>
<p>'Yes—he has been here.'</p>
<p>'Who? Rochus?'</p>
<p>She nodded. 'He was so good,' she said. 'He will ask his father to consent
to see me, and perhaps take me to his great house and persuade the
Reverend Superior to remove the curse from my life. Would not that be
fine? But then.' she added, with a sudden change of voice and manner,
lowering her eyes, 'perhaps you would no longer care for me. It is because
I am poor and friendless.'</p>
<p>'What! he will persuade his father to befriend you?—to take you to
his home?—you, the hangman's daughter? He, this reckless youth, at
war with God and God's ministers, will move the Church! Oh, lie, lie, lie!
O Benedicta—lost, betrayed Benedicta! By your smiles and by your
tears I know that you believe the monstrous promises of this infamous
villain.'</p>
<p>'Yes,' she said, inclining her head as if she were making a confession of
faith before the altar of the Lord, 'I believe him.'</p>
<p>'Kneel, then,' I cried, 'and praise the Lord for sending one of His chosen
to save your soul from temporal and eternal perdition!'</p>
<p>At these words she trembled as in great fear.</p>
<p>'What do you wish me to do?' she exclaimed.</p>
<p>'To pray that your sins may be forgiven.'</p>
<p>A sudden rapturous impulse seized my soul. 'I am a priest,' I cried,
'anointed and ordained by God Himself, and in the name of the Father, and
of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit, I forgive you your only sin, which is
your love. I give you absolution without repentance. I free your soul from
the taint of sin because you will atone for it with your blood and life.'</p>
<p>With these words, I seized her and forced her down upon her knees. But she
wanted to live; she cried and wailed. She clung to my knees and entreated
and implored in the name of God and the Blessed Virgin. Then she sprang to
her feet and attempted to run away. I seized her again, but she broke away
from my grasp and ran to the open door, crying: 'Rochus! Rochus! help, oh
help!'</p>
<p>Springing after her, I grasped her by the shoulder, turned her half-round
and plunged the knife into her breast.</p>
<p>I held her in my arms, pressed her against my heart and felt her warm
blood upon my body. She opened her eyes and fixed upon me a look of
reproach, as if I had robbed her of a life of happiness. Then her eyes
slowly closed, she gave a long, shuddering sigh, her little head turned
upon her shoulder, and so she died.</p>
<p>I wrapped the beautiful body in a white sheet, leaving the face uncovered,
and laid it upon the floor. But the blood tinged the linen, so I parted
her long golden hair, spreading it over the crimson roses upon her breast.
As I had made her a bride of Heaven, I took from the image of the Virgin
the wreath of edelweiss and placed it on Benedicta's brow; and now I
remembered the edelweiss which she had once brought me to comfort me in my
penance.</p>
<p>Then I stirred the fire, which cast upon the shrouded figure and the
beautiful face a rich red light, as if God's glory had descended there to
enfold her. It was caught and tangled in the golden tresses that lay upon
her breast, so that they looked a mass of curling flame.</p>
<p>And so I left her.</p>
<p>36</p>
<p>I descended the mountain by precipitous paths, but the Lord guided my
steps so that I neither stumbled nor fell into the abyss. At the dawning
of the day I arrived at the monastery, rang the bell and waited until the
gate was opened. The brother porter evidently thought me a fiend, for he
raised a howl that aroused the whole monastery. I went straight to the
room of the Superior, stood before him in my bloodstained garments, and,
telling him for what deed the Lord had chosen me, informed him that I was
now an ordained priest. At this they seized me, put me into the tower,
and, holding court upon me, condemned me to death as if I were a murderer.
Oh, the fools, the poor demented fools!</p>
<p>One person has come to me to-day in my dungeon, who fell upon her knees
before me, kissed my hands and adored me as God's chosen instrument—Amula,
the brown maiden. She alone has discovered that I have done a great and
glorious deed.</p>
<p>I have asked Amula to chase away the vultures from my body, for Benedicta
is in Heaven.</p>
<p>I shall soon be with her. Praise be to God! Hosanna! Amen.</p>
<p><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><br/></p>
<p>[To this old manuscript are added the following lines in another hand: 'On
the fifteenth day of October, in the year of our Lord, 1680, in this
place, Brother Ambrosius was hanged, and on the following day his body was
buried under the gallows, close to that of the girl Benedicta, whom he
killed. This Benedicta, though called the hangman's daughter, was (as is
now known through declarations of the youth Rochus) the bastard child of
the Saltmaster by the hangman's wife. It is also veritably attested by the
same youth that the maiden cherished a secret and forbidden love for him
who slew her in ignorance of her passion. In all else Brother Ambrosius
was a faithful servant of the Lord. Pray for him, pray for him!]</p>
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