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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Thais, by Anatole France
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Thais
+
+Author: Anatole France
+
+Translator: Robert B. Douglas
+
+Release Date: March 21, 2006 [EBook #2078]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THAIS ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Dagny; and John Bickers
+
+
+
+
+
+THAIS
+
+by Anatole France
+
+
+
+Translated By Robert B. Douglas
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+ PART I. THE LOTUS
+ PART II. THE PAPYRUS
+ THE BANQUET
+ THE PAPYRUS (resumed)
+ PART III. THE EUPHORBIA
+
+
+
+
+
+THAIS
+
+
+
+
+PART THE FIRST -- THE LOTUS
+
+In those days there were many hermits living in the desert. On both
+banks of the Nile numerous huts, built by these solitary dwellers, of
+branches held together by clay, were scattered at a little distance from
+each other, so that the inhabitants could live alone, and yet help one
+another in case of need. Churches, each surmounted by a cross, stood
+here and there amongst the huts, and the monks flocked to them at each
+festival to celebrate the services or to partake of the Communion. There
+were also, here and there on the banks of the river, monasteries, where
+the cenobites lived in separate cells, and only met together that they
+might the better enjoy their solitude.
+
+Both hermits and cenobites led abstemious lives, taking no food till
+after sunset, and eating nothing but bread with a little salt and
+hyssop. Some retired into the desert, and led a still more strange life
+in some cave or tomb.
+
+All lived in temperance and chastity; they wore a hair shirt and a hood,
+slept on the bare ground after long watching, prayed, sang psalms, and,
+in short, spent their days in works of penitence. As an atonement
+for original sin, they refused their body not only all pleasures and
+satisfactions, but even that care and attention which in this age are
+deemed indispensable. They believed that the diseases of our members
+purify our souls, and the flesh could put on no adornment more glorious
+than wounds and ulcers. Thus, they thought they fulfilled the words of
+the prophet, "The desert shall rejoice and blossom as the rose."
+
+Amongst the inhabitants of the holy Thebaid, there were some who
+passed their days in asceticism and contemplation; others gained their
+livelihood by plaiting palm fibre, or by working at harvest-time for
+the neighbouring farmers. The Gentiles wrongly suspected some of them
+of living by brigandage, and allying themselves to the nomadic Arabs
+who robbed the caravans. But, as a matter of fact, the monks despised
+riches, and the odour of their sanctity rose to heaven.
+
+Angels in the likeness of young men, came, staff in hand, as travellers,
+to visit the hermitages; whilst demons--having assumed the form of
+Ethiopians or of animals--wandered round the habitations of the hermits
+in order to lead them into temptation. When the monks went in the
+morning to fill their pitcher at the spring, they saw the footprints
+of Satyrs and Aigipans in the sand. The Thebaid was, really and
+spiritually, a battlefield, where, at all times, and more especially at
+night, there were terrible conflicts between heaven and hell.
+
+The ascetics, furiously assailed by legions of the damned, defended
+themselves--with the help of God and the angels--by fasting, prayer,
+and penance. Sometimes carnal desires pricked them so cruelly that
+they cried aloud with pain, and their lamentations rose to the starlit
+heavens mingled with the howls of the hungry hyaenas. Then it was that
+the demons appeared in delightful forms. For though the demons are, in
+reality, hideous, they sometimes assume an appearance of beauty which
+prevents their real nature from being recognised. The ascetics of the
+Thebaid were amazed to see in their cells phantasms of delights unknown
+even to the voluptuaries of the age. But, as they were under the sign
+of the Cross, they did not succumb to these temptations, and the unclean
+spirits, assuming again their true character, fled at daybreak, filled
+with rage and shame. It was not unusual to meet at dawn one of these
+beings, flying away and weeping, and replying to those who questioned
+it, "I weep and groan because one of the Christians who live here has
+beaten me with rods, and driven me away in ignominy."
+
+The power of the old saints of the desert extended over all sinners and
+unbelievers. Their goodness was sometimes terrible. They derived from
+the Apostles authority to punish all offences against the true and only
+God, and no earthly power could save those they condemned. Strange tales
+were told in the cities, and even as far as Alexandria, how the earth
+had opened and swallowed up certain wicked persons whom one of these
+saints struck with his staff. Therefore they were feared by all
+evil-doers, and particularly by mimes, mountebanks, married priests, and
+prostitutes.
+
+Such was the sanctity of these holy men that even wild beasts felt their
+power. When a hermit was about to die, a lion came and dug a grave with
+its claws. The saint knew by this that God had called him, and he went
+and kissed all his brethren on the cheek. Then he lay down joyfully, and
+slept in the Lord.
+
+Now that Anthony, who was more than a hundred years old, had retired
+to Mount Colzin with his well-beloved disciples, Macarius and Amathas,
+there was no monk in the Thebaid more renowned for good works than
+Paphnutius, the Abbot of Antinoe. Ephrem and Serapion had a greater
+number of followers, and in the spiritual and temporal management
+of their monasteries surpassed him. But Paphnutius observed the most
+rigorous fasts, and often went for three entire days without taking
+food. He wore a very rough hair shirt, he flogged himself night and
+morning, and lay for hours with his face to the earth.
+
+His twenty-four disciples had built their huts near his, and imitated
+his austerities. He loved them all dearly in Jesus Christ, and
+unceasingly exhorted them to good works. Amongst his spiritual children
+were men who had been robbers for many years, and had been persuaded by
+the exhortations of the holy abbot to embrace the monastic life, and who
+now edified their companions by the purity of their lives. One, who had
+been cook to the Queen of Abyssinia, and was converted by the Abbot of
+Antinoe, never ceased to weep. There was also Flavian, the deacon, who
+knew the Scriptures, and spoke well; but the disciple of Paphnutius who
+surpassed all the others in holiness was a young peasant named Paul, and
+surnamed the Fool, because of his extreme simplicity. Men laughed at his
+childishness, but God favoured him with visions, and by bestowing upon
+him the gift of prophecy.
+
+Paphnutius passed his life in teaching his disciples, and in ascetic
+practices. Often did he meditate upon the Holy Scriptures in order to
+find allegories in them. Therefore he abounded in good works, though
+still young. The devils, who so rudely assailed the good hermits, did
+not dare to approach him. At night, seven little jackals sat in the
+moonlight in front of his cell, silent and motionless, and with their
+ears pricked up. It was believed that they were seven devils, who, owing
+to his sanctity, could not cross his threshold.
+
+Paphnutius was born at Alexandria of noble parents, who had instructed
+him in all profane learning. He had even been allured by the falsehoods
+of the poets, and in his early youth had been misguided enough to
+believe that the human race had all been drowned by a deluge in the days
+of Deucalion, and had argued with his fellow-scholars concerning the
+nature, the attributes, and even the existence of God. He then led a
+life of dissipation, after the manner of the Gentiles, and he recalled
+the memory of those days with shame and horror.
+
+"At that time," he used to say to the brethren, "I seethed in the
+cauldron of false delights."
+
+He meant by that that he had eaten food properly dressed, and frequented
+the public baths. In fact, until his twentieth year he had continued
+to lead the ordinary existence of those times, which now seemed to
+him rather death than life; but, owing to the lessons of the priest
+Macrinus, he then became a new man.
+
+The truth penetrated him through and through, and--as he used to
+say--entered his soul like a sword. He embraced the faith of Calvary,
+and worshipped Christ crucified. After his baptism he remained yet a
+year amongst the Gentiles, unable to cast off the bonds of old habits.
+But one day he entered a church, and heard a deacon read from the Bible,
+the verse, "If thou wilt be perfect, go and sell that thou hast, and
+give to the poor." Thereupon he sold all that he had, gave away the
+money in alms, and embraced the monastic life.
+
+During the ten years that he had lived remote from men, he no longer
+seethed in the cauldron of false delights, but more profitably macerated
+his flesh in the balms of penitence.
+
+One day when, according to his pious custom, he was recalling to mind
+the hours he had lived apart from God, and examining his sins one by
+one, that he might the better ponder on their enormity, he remembered
+that he had seen at the theatre at Alexandria a very beautiful actress
+named Thais. This woman showed herself in the public games, and did not
+scruple to perform dances, the movements of which, arranged only too
+cleverly, brought to mind the most horrible passions. Sometimes she
+imitated the horrible deeds which the Pagan fables ascribe to Venus,
+Leda, or Pasiphae. Thus she fired all the spectators with lust, and when
+handsome young men, or rich old ones, came, inspired with love, to hang
+wreaths of flowers round her door, she welcomed them, and gave herself
+up to them. So that, whilst she lost her own soul, she also ruined the
+souls of many others.
+
+She had almost led Paphnutius himself into the sins of the flesh. She
+had awakened desire in him, and he had once approached the house of
+Thais. But he stopped on the threshold of the courtesan's house, partly
+restrained by the natural timidity of extreme youth--he was then but
+fifteen years old--and partly by the fear of being refused on account
+of his want of money, for his parents took care that he should commit no
+great extravagances.
+
+God, in His mercy, had used these two means to prevent him from
+committing a great sin. But Paphnutius had not been grateful to Him for
+that, because at that time he was blind to his own interests, and did
+not know that he was lusting after false delights. Now, kneeling in
+his cell, before the image of that holy cross on which hung, as in a
+balance, the ransom of the world, Paphnutius began to think of Thais,
+because Thais was a sin to him, and he meditated long, according to
+ascetic rules, on the fearful hideousness of the carnal delights with
+which this woman had inspired him in the days of his sin and ignorance.
+After some hours of meditation the image of Thais appeared to him
+clearly and distinctly. He saw her again, as he had seen her when she
+tempted him, in all the beauty of the flesh. At first she showed herself
+like a Leda, softly lying upon a bed of hyacinths, her head bowed, her
+eyes humid and filled with a strange light, her nostrils quivering, her
+mouth half open, her breasts like two flowers, and her arms smooth and
+fresh as two brooks. At this sight Paphnutius struck his breast and
+said--
+
+"I call Thee to witness, my God, that I have considered how heinous has
+been my sin."
+
+Gradually the face of the image changed its expression. Little by little
+the lips of Thais, by lowering at the corners of the mouth, expressed a
+mysterious suffering. Her large eyes were filled with tears and lights;
+her breast heaved with sighs, like the sighing of a wind that precedes
+a tempest. At this sight Paphnutius was troubled to the bottom of his
+soul. Prostrating himself on the floor, he uttered this prayer--
+
+"Thou who hast put pity in our hearts, like the morning dew upon the
+fields, O just and merciful God, be Thou blessed! Praise! praise be unto
+Thee! Put away from Thy servant that false tenderness which tempts to
+concupiscence, and grant that I may only love Thy creatures in Thee, for
+they pass away, but Thou endurest for ever. If I care for this woman,
+it is only because she is Thy handiwork. The angels themselves feel
+pity for her. Is she not, O Lord, the breath of Thy mouth? Let her not
+continue to sin with many citizens and strangers. There is great pity
+for her in my heart. Her wickednesses are abominable, and but to think
+of them makes my flesh creep. But the more wicked she is, the more do I
+lament for her. I weep when I think that the devils will torment her to
+all eternity."
+
+As he was meditating in this way, he saw a little jackal lying at his
+feet. He felt much surprised, for the door of his cell had been closed
+since the morning. The animal seemed to read the Abbot's thoughts, and
+wagged its tail like a dog. Paphnutius made the sign of the cross and
+the beast vanished. He knew then that, for the first time, the devil had
+entered his cell, and he uttered a short prayer; then he thought again
+about Thais.
+
+"With God's help," he said to himself, "I must save her." And he slept.
+
+The next morning, when he had said his prayers, he went to see the
+sainted Palemon, a holy hermit who lived some distance away. He found
+him smiling quietly as he dug the ground, as was his custom. Palemon
+was an old man, and cultivated a little garden; the wild beasts came and
+licked his hands, and the devils never tormented him.
+
+"May God be praised, brother Paphnutius," he said, as he leaned upon his
+spade.
+
+"God be praised!" replied Paphnutius. "And peace be unto my brother."
+
+"The like peace be unto thee, brother Paphnutius," said Palemon; and he
+wiped the sweat from his forehead with his sleeve.
+
+"Brother Palemon, all our discourse ought to be solely the praise of Him
+who has promised to be wheresoever two or three are gathered together in
+His Name. That is why I come to you concerning a design I have formed to
+glorify the Lord."
+
+"May the Lord bless thy design, Paphnutius, as He has blessed my
+lettuces. Every morning He spreads His grace with the dew on my garden,
+and His goodness causes me to glorify Him in the cucumbers and melons
+which He gives me. Let us pray that He may keep us in His peace. For
+nothing is more to be feared than those unruly passions which trouble
+our hearts. When these passions disturb us we are like drunken men,
+and we stagger from right to left unceasingly, and are like to fall
+miserably. Sometimes these passions plunge us into a turbulent joy, and
+he who gives way to such, sullies the air with brutish laughter. Such
+false joy drags the sinner into all sorts of excess. But sometimes also
+the troubles of the soul and of the senses throw us into an impious
+sadness which is a thousand times worse than the joy. Brother
+Paphnutius, I am but a miserable sinner, but I have found, in my long
+life, that the cenobite has no foe worse than sadness. I mean by that
+the obstinate melancholy which envelopes the soul as in a mist, and
+hides from us the light of God. Nothing is more contrary to salvation,
+and the devil's greatest triumph is to sow black and bitter thoughts in
+the heart of a good man. If he sent us only pleasurable temptations,
+he would not be half so much to be feared. Alas! he excels in making
+us sad. Did he not show to our father Anthony a black child of such
+surpassing beauty that the very sight of it drew tears? With God's help,
+our father Anthony avoided the snares of the demon. I knew him when he
+lived amongst us; he was cheerful with his disciples, and never gave
+way to melancholy. But did you not come, my brother, to talk to me of
+a design you had formed in your mind? Let me know what it is--if, at
+least, this design has for its object the glory of God."
+
+"Brother Palemon, what I propose is really to the glory of God.
+Strengthen me with your counsel, for you know many things, and sin has
+never darkened the clearness of your mind."
+
+"Brother Paphnutius, I am not worthy to unloose the latchet of thy
+sandals, and my sins are as countless as the sands of the desert. But I
+am old, and I will never refuse the help of my experience."
+
+"I will confide in you, then, brother Palemon, that I am stricken with
+grief at the thought that there is, in Alexandria, a courtesan named
+Thais, who lives in sin, and is a subject of reproach unto the people."
+
+"Brother Paphnutius, that is, in truth, an abomination which we do well
+to deplore. There are many women amongst the Gentiles who lead lives of
+that kind. Have you thought of any remedy for this great evil?"
+
+"Brother Palemon, I will go to Alexandria and find this woman, and, with
+God's help, I will convert her; that is my intention; do you approve of
+it, brother?"
+
+"Brother Paphnutius, I am but a miserable sinner, but our father Anthony
+used to say, 'In whatsoever place thou art, hasten not to leave it to go
+elsewhere.'"
+
+"Brother Palemon, do you disapprove of my project?"
+
+"Dear Paphnutius, God forbid that I should suspect my brother of bad
+intentions. But our father Anthony also said, 'Fishes die on dry land,
+and so is it with those monks who leave their cells and mingle with the
+men of this world, amongst whom no good thing is to be found.'"
+
+Having thus spoken, the old man pressed his foot on the spade, and began
+to dig energetically round a fig tree laden with fruit. As he was thus
+engaged, there was a rustling in the bushes, and an antelope leaped
+over the hedge which surrounded the garden; it stopped, surprised and
+frightened, its delicate legs trembling, then ran up to the old man, and
+laid its pretty head on the breast of its friend.
+
+"God be praised in the gazelle of the desert," said Palemon.
+
+He went to his hut, the light-footed little animal trotting after him,
+and brought out some black bread, which the antelope ate out of his
+hand.
+
+Paphnutius remained thoughtful for some time, his eyes fixed upon the
+stones at his feet. Then he slowly walked back to his cell, pondering on
+what he had heard. A great struggle was going on in his mind.
+
+"The hermit gives good advice," he said to himself; "the spirit of
+prudence is in him. And he doubts the wisdom of my intention. Yet it
+would be cruel to leave Thais any longer in the power of the demon who
+possesses her. May God advise and conduct me."
+
+As he was walking along, he saw a plover, caught in the net that a
+hunter had laid on the sand, and he knew that it was a hen bird, for
+he saw the male fly to the net, and tear the meshes one by one with its
+beak, until it had made an opening by which its mate could escape. The
+holy man watched this incident, and as, by virtue of his holiness, he
+easily comprehended the mystic sense of all occurrences, he knew that
+the captive bird was no other than Thais, caught in the snares of sin,
+and that--like the plover that had cut the hempen threads with its
+beak--he could, by pronouncing the word of power, break the invisible
+bonds by which Thais was held in sin. Therefore he praised God, and was
+confirmed in his first resolution. But then seeing the plover caught
+by the feet, and hampered by the net it had broken, he fell into
+uncertainty again.
+
+He did not sleep all night, and before dawn he had a vision. Thais
+appeared to him again. There was no expression of guilty pleasure on her
+face, nor was she dressed according to custom in transparent drapery.
+She was enveloped in a shroud, which hid even a part of her face, so
+that the Abbot could see nothing but the two eyes, from which flowed
+white and heavy tears.
+
+At this sight he began to weep, and believing that this vision came from
+God, he no longer hesitated. He rose, seized a knotted stick, the symbol
+of the Christian faith, and left his cell, carefully closing the door,
+lest the animals of the desert and the birds of the air should enter,
+and befoul the copy of the Holy Scriptures which stood at the head of
+his bed. He called Flavian, the deacon, and gave him authority over the
+other twenty-three disciples during his absence; and then, clad only in
+a long cassock, he bent his steps towards the Nile, intending to follow
+the Libyan bank to the city founded by the Macedonian monarch. He walked
+from dawn to eve, indifferent to fatigue, hunger, and thirst; the sun
+was already low on the horizon when he saw the dreadful river, the
+blood-red waters of which rolled between the rocks of gold and fire.
+
+He kept along the shore, begging his bread at the door of solitary
+huts for the love of God, and joyfully receiving insults, refusals, or
+threats. He feared neither robbers nor wild beasts, but he took great
+care to avoid all the towns and villages he came near. He was afraid
+lest he should see children playing at knuckle-bones before their
+father's house, or meet, by the side of the well, women in blue smocks,
+who might put down their pitcher and smile at him. All things are
+dangerous for the hermit; it is sometimes a danger for him to read in
+the Scriptures that the Divine Master journeyed from town to town and
+supped with His disciples. The virtues that the anchorites embroider so
+carefully on the tissue of faith, are as fragile as they are beautiful;
+a breath of ordinary life may tarnish their pleasant colours. For that
+reason, Paphnutius avoided the towns, fearing lest his heart should
+soften at the sight of his fellow men.
+
+He journeyed along lonely roads. When evening came, the murmuring of the
+breeze amidst the tamarisk trees made him shiver, and he pulled his hood
+over his eyes that he might not see how beautiful all things were. After
+walking six days, he came to a place called Silsile. There the
+river runs in a narrow valley, bordered by a double chain of granite
+mountains. It was there that the Egyptians, in the days when they
+worshipped demons, carved their idols. Paphnutius saw an enormous sphinx
+carved in the solid rock. Fearing that it might still possess some
+diabolical properties, he made the sign of the cross, and pronounced the
+name of Jesus; he immediately saw a bat fly out of one of the monster's
+ears, and Paphnutius knew that he had driven out the evil spirits which
+had been for centuries in the figure. His zeal increased, and picking up
+a large stone, he threw it in the idol's face. Then the mysterious face
+of the sphinx expressed such profound sadness that Paphnutius was moved.
+In fact, the expression of superhuman grief on the stone visage would
+have touched even the most unfeeling man. Therefore Paphnutius said to
+the sphinx--
+
+"O monster, be like the satyrs and centaurs our father Anthony saw in
+the desert, and confess the divinity of Jesus Christ, and I will bless
+thee in the name of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost."
+
+When he had spoken a rosy light gleamed in the eyes of the sphinx; the
+heavy eyelids of the monster quivered and the granite lips painfully
+murmured, as though in echo to the man's voice, the holy name of Jesus
+Christ; therefore Paphnutius stretched out his right hand, and blessed
+the sphinx of Silsile.
+
+That being done, he resumed his journey, and the valley having grown
+wider, he saw the ruins of an immense city. The temples, which still
+remained standing, were supported by idols which served as columns,
+and--by the permission of God--these figures with women's heads and
+cow's horns, threw on Paphnutius a long look which made him turn pale.
+He walked thus seventeen days, his only food a few raw herbs, and
+he slept at night in some ruined palace, amongst the wild cats and
+Pharaoh's rats, with which mingled sometimes, women whose bodies ended
+in a scaly tail. But Paphnutius knew that these women came from hell,
+and he drove them away by making the sign of the cross.
+
+On the eighteenth day, he found, far from any village, a wretched hut
+made of palm leaves, and half buried under the sand which had been
+driven by the desert wind. He approached it, hoping that the hut was
+inhabited by some pious anchorite. He saw inside the hovel--for there
+was no door--a pitcher, a bunch of onions, and a bed of dried leaves.
+
+"This must be the habitation of a hermit," he said to himself. "Hermits
+are generally to be found near their hut, and I shall not fail to meet
+this one. I will give him the kiss of peace, even as the holy Anthony
+did when he came to the hermit Paul, and kissed him three times. We will
+discourse of things eternal, and perhaps our Lord will send us, by one
+of His ravens, a crust of bread, which my host will willingly invite me
+to share with him."
+
+Whilst he was thus speaking to himself, he walked round the hut to see
+if he could find any one. He had not walked a hundred paces when he saw
+a man seated, with his legs crossed, by the side of the river. The man
+was naked; his hair and beard were quite white, and his body redder than
+brick. Paphnutius felt sure this must be the hermit. He saluted him with
+the words the monks are accustomed to use when they meet each other.
+
+"Peace be with you, brother! May you some day taste the sweet joys of
+paradise."
+
+The man did not reply. He remained motionless, and appeared not to have
+heard. Paphnutius supposed this was due to one of those rhapsodies to
+which the saints are accustomed. He knelt down, with his hands joined,
+by the side of the unknown, and remained thus in prayer till sunset.
+Then, seeing that his companion had not moved, he said to him--
+
+"Father, if you are now out of the ecstasy in which you were lost, give
+me your blessing in our Lord Jesus Christ."
+
+The other replied without turning his head--
+
+"Stranger, I understand you not, and I know not the Lord Jesus Christ."
+
+"What!" cried Paphnutius. "The prophets have announced Him; legions of
+martyrs have confessed His name; Caesar himself has worshipped Him, and,
+but just now, I made the sphinx of Silsile proclaim His glory. Is it
+possible that you do not know Him?"
+
+"Friend," replied the other, "it is possible. It would even be certain,
+if anything in this world were certain."
+
+Paphnutius was surprised and saddened by the incredible ignorance of the
+man.
+
+"If you know not Jesus Christ," he said, "all your works serve no
+purpose, and you will never rise to life immortal."
+
+The old man replied--
+
+"It is useless to act, or to abstain from acting. It matters not whether
+we live or die."
+
+"Eh, what?" asked Paphnutius. "Do you not desire to live through all
+eternity? But, tell me, do you not live in a hut in the desert as the
+hermits do?"
+
+"It seems so."
+
+"Do I not see you naked, and lacking all things?"
+
+"It seems so."
+
+"Do you not feed on roots, and live in chastity?"
+
+"It seems so."
+
+"Have you not renounced all the vanities of this world?"
+
+"I have truly renounced all those vain things for which men commonly
+care."
+
+"Then you are like me, poor, chaste, and solitary. And you are
+not so--as I am--for the love of God, and with a hope of celestial
+happiness! That I cannot understand. Why are you virtuous if you do not
+believe in Jesus Christ? Why deprive yourself of the good things of this
+world if you do not hope to gain eternal riches in heaven?"
+
+"Stranger, I deprive myself of nothing which is good, and I flatter
+myself that I have found a life which is satisfactory enough, though--to
+speak more precisely--there is no such thing as a good or evil life.
+Nothing is itself, either virtuous or shameful, just or unjust, pleasant
+or painful, good or bad. It is our opinion which gives those qualities
+to things, as salt gives savour to meats."
+
+"So then, according to you there is no certainty. You deny the truth
+which the idolaters themselves have sought. You lie in ignorance--like a
+tired dog sleeping in the mud."
+
+"Stranger, it is equally useless to abuse either dogs or philosophers.
+We know not what dogs are or what we are. We know nothing."
+
+"Old man, do you belong, then, to the absurd sect of sceptics? Are you
+one of those miserable fools who alike deny movement and rest, and who
+know not how to distinguish between the light of the sun and the shadows
+of night?"
+
+"Friend, I am truly a sceptic, and of a sect which appears praiseworthy
+to me, though it seems ridiculous to you. For the same things often
+assume different appearances. The pyramids of Memphis seem at sunrise to
+be cones of pink light. At sunset they look like black triangles against
+the illuminated sky. But who shall solve the problem of their true
+nature? You reproach me with denying appearances, when, in fact,
+appearances are the only realities I recognise. The sun seems to me
+illuminous, but its nature is unknown to me. I feel that fire burns--but
+I know not how or why. My friend, you understand me badly. Besides, it
+is indifferent to me whether I am understood one way or the other."
+
+"Once more. Why do you live on dates and onions in the desert? Why do
+you endure great hardships? I endure hardships equally great, and, like
+you, I live in abstinence and solitude. But then it is to please God,
+and to earn eternal happiness. And that is a reasonable object, for
+it is wise to suffer now for a future gain. It is senseless, on the
+contrary, to expose yourself voluntarily to useless fatigue and vain
+sufferings. If I did not believe--pardon my blasphemy, O uncreated
+Light!--if I did not believe in the truth of that which God has taught
+us by the voice of the prophets, by the example of His Son, by the acts
+of the Apostles, by the authority of councils, and by the testimony
+of the martyrs,--if I did not know that the sufferings of the body are
+necessary for the salvation of the soul--if I were, like thee, lost in
+ignorance of sacred mysteries--I would return at once amongst the men of
+this day, I would strive to acquire riches, that I might live in ease,
+like those who are happy in this world, and I would say to the votaries
+of pleasure, 'Come, my daughters, come, my servants, come and pour out
+for me your wines, your philtres, your perfumes.' But you, foolish old
+man! you deprive yourself of all these advantages; you lose without
+hope of any gain; you give without hope of any return, and you imitate
+foolishly the noble deeds of us anchorites, as an impudent monkey
+thinks, by smearing a wall, to copy the picture of a clever artist.
+What, then, are your reasons, O most besotted of men?"
+
+Paphnutius spoke with violence and indignation, but the old man remained
+unmoved.
+
+"Friend," he replied, gently, "what matter the reasons of a dog sleeping
+in the dirt or a mischievous ape?"
+
+Paphnutius' only aim was the glory of God. His anger vanished, and he
+apologised with noble humility.
+
+"Pardon me, old man, my brother," he said, "if zeal for the truth has
+carried me beyond proper bounds. God is my witness, that it is thy
+errors and not thyself that I hate. I suffer to see thee in darkness,
+for I love thee in Jesus Christ, and care for thy salvation fills my
+heart. Speak! give me your reasons. I long to know them that I may
+refute them."
+
+The old man replied quietly--
+
+"It is the same to me whether I speak or remain silent. I will give my
+reasons without asking yours in return, for I have no interest in you
+at all. I care neither for your happiness nor your misfortune, and it
+matters not to me whether you think one way or another. Why should I
+love you, or hate you? Aversion and sympathy are equally unworthy of the
+wise man. But since you question me, know then that I am named Timocles,
+and that I was born at Cos, of parents made rich by commerce. My father
+was a shipowner. In intelligence he much resembled Alexander, who is
+surnamed the Great. But he was not so gross. In short, he was a man of
+no great parts. I had two brothers, who, like him, were shipowners. As
+for me, I followed wisdom. My eldest brother was compelled by my father
+to marry a Carian woman, named Timaessa, who displeased him so greatly
+that he could not live with her without falling into a deep melancholy.
+However, Timaessa inspired our younger brother with a criminal passion,
+and this passion soon turned to a furious madness. The Carian woman
+hated them both equally; but she loved a flute-player, and received him
+at night in her chamber. One morning he left there the wreath which he
+usually wore at feasts. My two brothers, having found this wreath, swore
+to kill the flute-player, and the next day they caused him to perish
+under the lash, in spite of his tears and prayers. My sister-in-law
+felt such grief that she lost her reason, and these three poor wretches
+became beasts rather than human beings, and wandered insane along the
+shores of Cos, howling like wolves and foaming at the mouth, and hooted
+at by the children, who threw shells and stones at them. They died, and
+my father buried them with his own hands. A little later his stomach
+refused all nourishment, and he died of hunger, though he was rich
+enough to have bought all the meats and fruits in the markets of Asia.
+He was deeply grieved at having to leave me his fortune. I used it in
+travels. I visited Italy, Greece, and Africa without meeting a single
+person who was either wise or happy. I studied philosophy at Athens and
+Alexandria, and was deafened by noisy arguments. At last I wandered as
+far as India, and I saw on the banks of the Ganges a naked man, who had
+sat there motionless with his legs crossed for more than thirty years.
+Climbing plants twined round his dried up body, and the birds built
+their nests in his hair. Yet he lived. At the sight of him I called to
+mind Timaessa, the flute-player, my two brothers, and my father, and
+I realised that this Indian was a wise man. 'Men,' I said to myself,
+'suffer because they are deprived of that which they believe to be good;
+or because, possessing it they fear to lose it; or because they endure
+that which they believe to be an evil. Put an end to all beliefs of this
+kind, and the evils would disappear.' That is why I resolved henceforth
+to deem nothing an advantage, to tear myself entirely from the good
+things of this world, and to live silent and motionless, like the
+Indian."
+
+Paphnutius had listened attentively to the old man's story.
+
+"Timocles of Cos," he replied, "I own that your discourse is not wholly
+devoid of sense. It is, in truth, wise to despise the riches of this
+world. But it would be absurd to despise also your eternal welfare, and
+render yourself liable to be visited by the wrath of God. I grieve at
+your ignorance, Timocles, and I will instruct you in the truth, in order
+that knowing that there really exists a God in three hypostases, you may
+obey this God as a child obeys its father."
+
+Timocles interrupted him.
+
+"Refrain, stranger, from showing me your doctrines, and do not imagine
+that you will persuade me to share your opinions. All discussions are
+useless. My opinion is to have no opinion. My life is devoid of trouble
+because I have no preferences. Go thy ways, and strive not to withdraw
+me from the beneficent apathy in which I am plunged, as though in a
+delicious bath, after the hardships of my past days."
+
+Paphnutius was profoundly instructed in all things relating to the
+faith. By his knowledge of the human heart, he was aware that the grace
+of God had not fallen on old Timocles, and the day of salvation for this
+soul so obstinately resolved to ruin itself had not yet come. He did not
+reply, lest the power given for edification should turn to destruction.
+For it sometimes happens, in disputing with infidels, that the means
+used for their conversion may steep them still farther in sin. Therefore
+they who possess the truth should take care how they spread it.
+
+"Farewell, then, unhappy Timocles," he said; and heaving a deep sigh, he
+resumed his pious pilgrimage through the night.
+
+In the morning, he saw the ibises motionless on one leg at the edge of
+the water, which reflected their pale pink necks. The willows stretched
+their soft grey foliage to the bank, cranes flew in a triangle in the
+clear sky, and the cry of unseen herons was heard from the sedges. Far
+as the eye could reach, the river rolled its broad green waters o'er
+which white sails, like the wings of birds, glided, and here and there
+on the shores, a white house shone out. A light mist floated along the
+banks, and from out the shadow of the islands, which were laden
+with palms, flowers, and fruits, came noisy flocks of ducks, geese,
+flamingoes, and teal. To the left, the grassy valley extended to the
+desert its fields and orchards in joyful abundance; the sun shone on
+the yellow wheat, and the earth exhaled forth its fecundity in odorous
+wafts. At this sight, Paphnutius fell on his knees, and cried--
+
+"Blessed be the Lord, who has given a happy issue to my journey. O God,
+who spreadest Thy dew upon the fig trees of the Arsiniote, pour Thy
+grace upon Thais, whom Thou hast formed with Thy love, as Thou hast the
+flowers and trees of the field. May she, by Thy loving care, flourish
+like a sweet-scented rose in the heavenly Jerusalem."
+
+And every time that he saw a tree covered with blossom, or a bird of
+brilliant plumage, he thought of Thais. Keeping along the left arm of
+the river and through a fertile and populous district, he reached, in
+a few days, the city of Alexandria, which the Greeks have surnamed the
+Beautiful and the Golden. The sun had risen an hour, when he beheld,
+from the top of a hill, the vast city, the roofs of which glittered in
+the rosy light. He stopped, and folded his arms on his breast.
+
+"There, then," he said, "is the delightful spot where I was born in sin;
+the bright air where I breathed poisonous perfumes; the sea of pleasure
+where I heard the songs of the sirens. There is my cradle, after the
+flesh; my native land--in the parlance of the men of these days! A rich
+cradle, an illustrious country, in the judgment of men! It is natural
+that thy children should reverence thee like a mother, Alexandria, and
+I was begotten in thy magnificently adorned breast. But the ascetic
+despises nature, the mystic scorns appearances, the Christian regards
+his native land as a place of exile, the monk is not of this earth. I
+have turned away my heart from loving thee, Alexandria. I hate thee! I
+hate thee for thy riches, thy science, thy pleasures, and thy beauty. Be
+accursed, temple of demons! Lewd couch of the Gentiles, tainted pulpit
+of Arian heresy, be thou accursed! And thou, winged son of heaven who
+led the holy hermit Anthony, our father, when he came from the depths of
+the desert, and entered into the citadel of idolatry to strengthen the
+faith of believers and the confidence of martyrs, beautiful angel of
+the Lord, invisible child, first breath of God, fly thou before me, and
+cleanse, by the beating of thy wings, the corrupted air I am about to
+breathe amongst the princes of darkness of this world!"
+
+Having thus spoken, he resumed his journey. He entered the city by the
+Gate of the Sun. This gate was a handsome structure of stone. In the
+shadow of its arch, crowded some poor wretches, who offered lemons
+and figs for sale, or with many groans and lamentations, begged for an
+obolus.
+
+An old woman in rags, who was kneeling there, seized the monk's cassock,
+kissed it, and said--
+
+"Man of the Lord, bless me, that God may bless me. I have suffered many
+things in this world that I may have joys in the world to come. You
+come from God, O holy man, and that is why the dust of your feet is more
+precious than gold."
+
+"The Lord be praised!" said Paphnutius, and with his half-closed hand he
+made the sign of redemption on the old woman's head.
+
+But hardly had he gone twenty paces down the street, than a band of
+children began to jeer at him, and throw stones, crying--
+
+"Oh, the wicked monk! He is blacker than an ape, and more bearded than
+a goat! He is a skulker! Why not hang him in an orchard, like a wooden
+Priapus, to frighten the birds? But no; he would draw down the hail on
+the apple-blossom. He brings bad luck. To the ravens with the monk! to
+the ravens!" and stones mingled with the cries.
+
+"My God, bless these poor children!" murmured Paphnutius.
+
+And he pursued his way, thinking.
+
+"I was worshipped by the old woman, and hated and despised by these
+children. Thus the same object is appreciated differently by men who are
+uncertain in their judgment and liable to error. It must be owned that,
+for a Gentile, old Timocles was not devoid of sense. Though blind, he
+knew he was deprived of light. His reasoning was much better than that
+of these idolaters, who cry from the depths of their thick darkness, 'I
+see the day!' Everything in this world is mirage and moving sand. God
+alone is steadfast."
+
+He passed through the city with rapid steps. After ten years of absence
+he would still recognise every stone, and every stone was to him a stone
+of reproach that recalled a sin. For that reason he struck his naked
+feet roughly against the kerb-stones of the wide street, and rejoiced
+to see the bloody marks of his wounded feet. Leaving on his left the
+magnificent portico of the Temple of Serapis, he entered a road lined
+with splendid mansions, which seemed to be drowsy with perfumes. Pines,
+maples, and larches raised their heads above the red cornices and golden
+acroteria. Through the half-open doors could be seen bronze statues
+in marble vestibules, and fountains playing amidst foliage. No noise
+troubled the stillness of these quiet retreats. Only the distant strains
+of a flute could be heard. The monk stopped before a house, rather
+small, but of noble proportions, and supported by columns as graceful as
+young girls. It was ornamented with bronze busts of the most celebrated
+Greek philosophers.
+
+He recognised Plato, Socrates, Aristotle, Epicurus, and Zeno, and
+having knocked with the hammer against the door, he waited, wrapped in
+meditation.
+
+"It is vanity to glorify in metal these false sages; their lies are
+confounded, their souls are lost in hell, and even the famous Plato
+himself, who filled the earth with his eloquence, now disputes with the
+devils."
+
+A slave opened the door, and seeing a man with bare feet standing on the
+mosaic threshold, said to him roughly--
+
+"Go and beg elsewhere, stupid monk, or I will drive you away with a
+stick."
+
+"Brother," replied the Abbott of Antinoe, "all that I ask is that you
+conduct me to your master, Nicias."
+
+The slave replied, more angrily than before--
+
+"My master does not see dogs like you."
+
+"My son," said Paphnutius, "will you please do what I ask, and tell your
+master that I desire to see him.
+
+"Get out, vile beggar!" cried the porter furiously; and he raised his
+stick and struck the holy man, who, with his arms crossed upon his
+breast, received unmovedly the blow, which fell full in his face, and
+then repeated gently--
+
+"Do as I ask you, my son, I beg."
+
+The porter tremblingly murmured--
+
+"Who is this man who is not afraid of suffering?"
+
+And he ran and told his master.
+
+Nicias had just left the bath. Two pretty slave girls were scraping him
+with strigils. He was a pleasant-looking man, with a kind smile. There
+was an expression of gentle satire in his face. On seeing the monk, he
+rose and advanced with open arms.
+
+"It is you!" he cried, "Paphnutius, my fellow-scholar, my friend my
+brother! Oh, I knew you again, though, to say the truth, you look more
+like a wild animal than a man. Embrace me. Do you remember the time when
+we studied grammar, rhetoric, and philosophy together? You were, even
+then, of a morose and wild character, but I liked you because of your
+complete sincerity. We used to say that you looked at the universe with
+the eyes of a wild horse, and it was not surprising you were dull and
+moody. You needed a pinch of Attic salt, but your liberality knew no
+bounds. You cared nothing for either your money or your life. And you
+had the eccentricity of genius, and a strange character which interested
+me deeply. You are welcome, my dear Paphnutius, after ten years of
+absence. You have quitted the desert; you have renounced all Christian
+superstitions, and now return to your old life. I will mark this day
+with a white stone."
+
+"Crobyle and Myrtale," he added, turning towards the girls, "perfume the
+feet, hands, and beard of my dear guest."
+
+They smiled, and had already brought the basin, the phials, and the
+metal mirror. But Paphnutius stopped them with an imperious gesture, and
+lowered his eyes that he might not look upon them, for they were naked.
+Nicias brought cushions for him, and offered him various meats and
+drinks, which Paphnutius scornfully refused.
+
+"Nicias," he said, "I have not renounced what you falsely call the
+Christian superstition, which is the truth of truths. 'In the beginning
+was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. All
+things were made by Him, and without Him was not anything made that was
+made. In Him was the life, and the life was the light of men.'"
+
+"My dear Paphnutius," replied Nicias, who had now put on a perfumed
+tunic, "do you expect to astonish me by reciting a lot of words jumbled
+together without skill, which are no more than a vain murmur? Have you
+forgotten that I am a bit of a philosopher myself? And do you think to
+satisfy me with some rags, torn by ignorant men from the purple garment
+of AEmilius, when AEmilius, Porphyry, and Plato, in all their glory, did
+not satisfy me! The systems devised by the sages are but tales imagined
+to amuse the eternal childishness of men. We divert ourselves with them,
+as we do with the stories of _The Ass_, _The Tub_, and _The Ephesian
+Matron_, or any other Milesian fable."
+
+And, taking his guest by the arm, he led him into a room where thousands
+of papyri were rolled up and lay in baskets.
+
+"This is my library," he said. "It contains a small part of the various
+systems which the philosophers have constructed to explain the world.
+The Serapeium itself, with all its riches, does not contain them all.
+Alas! they are but the dreams of sick men."
+
+He compelled his guest to sit down in an ivory chair, and sat down
+himself. Paphnutius scowled gloomily at all the books in the library,
+and said--
+
+"They ought all to be burned."
+
+"Oh, my dear guest, that would be a pity!" replied Nicias. "For the
+dreams of sick men are sometimes amusing. Besides, if we should destroy
+all the dreams and visions of men, the earth would lose its form and
+colours, and we should all sleep in a dull stupidity."
+
+Paphnutius continued in the same strain as before--
+
+"It is certain that the doctrines of the pagans are but vain lies. But
+God, who is the truth, revealed Himself to men by miracles, and He was
+made flesh, and lived among us."
+
+Nicias replied--
+
+"You speak well, my dear Paphnutius, when you say that he was made
+flesh. A God who thinks, acts, speaks, who wanders through nature, like
+Ulysses of old on the glaucous sea, is altogether a man. How do you
+expect that we should believe in this new Jupiter, when the urchins of
+Athens, in the time of Pericles, no longer believed in the old one?
+
+"But let us leave all that. You did not come here; I suppose, to
+argue about the three hypostases. What can I do for you, my dear
+fellow-scholar?"
+
+"A good deed," replied the Abbot of Antinoe. "Lend me a perfumed tunic,
+like the one you have just put on. Be kind enough to add to the tunic,
+gilt sandals, and a vial of oil to anoint my beard and hair. It is
+needful also, that you should give me a purse with a thousand drachmae
+in it. That, O Nicias, is what I came to ask of you, for the love of
+God, and in remembrance of our old friendship."
+
+Nicias made Crobyle and Myrtale bring his richest tunic; it was
+embroidered, after the Asiatic fashion, with flowers and animals. The
+two girls held it open, and skilfully showed its bright colours, waiting
+till Paphnutius should have taken off the cassock which covered him down
+to his feet. But the monk having declared that they should rather tear
+off his flesh than this garment, they put on the tunic over it. As the
+two girls were pretty, they were not afraid of men, although they were
+slaves. They laughed at the strange appearance of the monk thus clad.
+Crobyle called him her dear satrap, as she presented him with the
+mirror, and Myrtale pulled his beard. But Paphnutius prayed to the Lord,
+and did not look at them. Having tied on the gilt sandals, and fastened
+the purse to his belt, he said to Nicias, who was looking at him with an
+amused expression--
+
+"O Nicias, let not these things be an offence in your eyes. For know
+that I shall make pious use of this tunic, this purse, and these
+sandals."
+
+"My dear friend," replied Nicias, "I suspect no evil, for I believe that
+men are equally incapable of doing evil or doing good. Good and evil
+exist only in the opinion. The wise man has only custom and usage to
+guide him in his acts. I conform with all the prejudices which prevail
+at Alexandria. That is why I pass for an honest man. Go, friend, and
+enjoy yourself."
+
+But Paphnutius thought that it was needful to inform his host of his
+intention.
+
+"Do you know Thais," he said, "who acts in the games at the theatre?"
+
+"She is beautiful," replied Nicias, "and there was a time when she was
+dear to me. For her sake, I sold a mill and two fields of corn, and I
+composed in her honour three books full of detestably bad verses. Surely
+beauty is the most powerful force in the world, and were we so made that
+we could possess it always, we should care as little as may be for
+the demiurgos, the logos, the aeons, and all the other reveries of the
+philosophers. But I am surprised, my good Paphnutius, that you should
+have come from the depths of the Thebaid to talk about Thais."
+
+Having said this, he sighed gently. And Paphnutius gazed at him with
+horror, not conceiving it possible that a man should so calmly avow such
+a sin. He expected to see the earth open, and Nicias swallowed up in
+flames. But the earth remained solid, and the Alexandrian silent, his
+forehead resting on his hand, and he smiling sadly at the memories of
+his past youth. The monk rose, and continued in solemn tones--
+
+"Know then, O Nicias, that, with the aid of God, I will snatch this
+woman Thais from the unclean affections of the world, and give her as
+a spouse to Jesus Christ. If the Holy Spirit does not forsake me, Thais
+will leave this city and enter a nunnery."
+
+"Beware of offending Venus," replied Nicias. "She is a powerful goddess,
+she will be angry with you if you take away her chief minister."
+
+"God will protect me," said Paphnutius. "May He also illumine thy heart,
+O Nicias, and draw thee out of the abyss in which thou art plunged."
+
+And he stalked out of the room. But Nicias followed him, and overtook
+him on the threshold, and placing his hand on his shoulder whispered
+into his ear the same words--
+
+"Beware of offending Venus; her vengeance is terrible."
+
+Paphnutius, disdainful of these trivial words, left without turning his
+head. He felt only contempt for Nicias; but what he could not bear was
+the idea that his former friend had received the caresses of Thais. It
+seemed to him that to sin with that woman was more detestable than to
+sin with any other. To him this appeared the height of iniquity, and he
+henceforth looked upon Nicias as an object of execration. He had always
+hated impurity, but never before had this vice appeared so heinous to
+him; never before had it so seemed to merit the anger of Jesus Christ
+and the sorrow of the angels.
+
+He felt only a more ardent desire to save Thais from the Gentiles,
+and that he must hasten to see the actress in order to save her.
+Nevertheless, before he could enter her house, he must wait till the
+heat of the day was over, and now the morning had hardly finished.
+Paphnutius wandered through the most frequented streets. He had resolved
+to take no food that day, in order to be the less unworthy of the
+favours he had asked of the Lord. To the great grief of his soul, he
+dared not enter any of the churches in the city, because he knew they
+were profaned by the Arians, who had overturned the Lord's table. For,
+in fact, these heretics, supported by the Emperor of the East, had
+driven the patriarch Athanasius from his episcopate, and sown trouble
+and confusion among the Christians of Alexandria.
+
+He therefore wandered about aimlessly, sometimes with his eyes fixed on
+the ground in humility, and sometimes raised to heaven in ecstasy. After
+some time, he found himself on the quay. Before him lay the harbour,
+in which were sheltered innumerable ships and galleys, and beyond them,
+smiling in blue and silver, lay the perfidious sea. A galley, which bore
+a Nereid at its prow, had just weighed anchor. The rowers sang as the
+oars struck the water; and already the white daughter of the waters,
+covered with humid pearls, showed no more than a flying profile to the
+monk. Steered by her pilot, she cleared the passage leading from the
+basin of the Eunostos, and gained the high seas, leaving a glittering
+trail behind her.
+
+"I also," thought Paphnutius, "once desired to embark singing on the
+ocean of the world. But I soon saw my folly, and the Nereid did not
+carry me away."
+
+Lost in his thoughts, he sat down upon a coil of rope, and went to
+sleep. During his sleep, he had a vision. He seemed to hear the sound of
+a clanging trumpet, and the sky became blood red, and he knew that the
+day of judgment had come. Whilst he was fervently praying to God, he saw
+an enormous monster coming towards him, bearing on its forehead a cross
+of light, and he recognised the sphinx of Silsile. The monster seized
+him between its teeth, without hurting him, and carried him in its
+mouth, as a cat carries a kitten. Paphnutius was thus conveyed across
+many countries, crossing rivers and traversing mountains, and came at
+last to a desert place, covered with scowling rocks and hot cinders. The
+ground was rent in many places, and through these openings came a hot
+air. The monster gently put Paphnutius down on the ground, and said--
+
+"Look!"
+
+And Paphnutius, leaning over the edge of the abyss, saw a river of fire
+which flowed in the interior of the earth, between two cliffs of black
+rocks. There, in a livid light, the demons tormented the souls of the
+damned. The souls preserved the appearance of the bodies which had held
+them, and even wore some rags of clothing. These souls seemed peaceful
+in the midst of their torments. One of them, tall and white, his eyes
+closed, a white fillet across his forehead, and a sceptre in his hand,
+sang; his voice filled the desert shores with harmony; he sang of gods
+and heroes. Little green devils pierced his lips and throat with red-hot
+irons. And the shade of Homer still sang. Near by, old Anaxagoras, bald
+and hoary, traced figures in the dust with a compass. A demon poured
+boiling oil into his ear, yet failed, however, to disturb the sage's
+meditations. And the monk saw many other persons, who, on the dark
+shore by the side of the burning river, read, or quietly meditated, or
+conversed with other spirits while walking,--like the sages and pupils
+under the shadow of the sycamore trees of Academe. Old Timocles alone
+had withdrawn from the others, and shook his head like a man who denies.
+One of the demons of the abyss shook a torch before his eyes, but
+Timocles would see neither the demon nor the torch.
+
+Mute with surprise at this spectacle, Paphnutius turned to the monster.
+It had disappeared, and, in place of the sphinx, the monk saw a veiled
+woman, who said--
+
+"Look and understand. Such is the obstinacy of these infidels, that,
+even in hell, they remain victims of the illusions which deluded them
+when on earth. Death has not undeceived them; for it is very plain that
+it does not suffice merely to die in order to see God. Those who are
+ignorant of the truth whilst living, will be ignorant of it always. The
+demons which are busy torturing these souls, what are they but agents of
+divine justice? That is why these souls neither see them nor feel them.
+They were ignorant of the truth, and therefore unaware of their own
+condemnation, and God Himself cannot compel them to suffer.
+
+"God can do all things," said the Abbot of Antinoe.
+
+"He cannot do that which is absurd," replied the veiled woman. "To
+punish them, they must first be enlightened, and if they possessed the
+truth, they would be like unto the elect."
+
+Vexed and horrified, Paphnutius again bent over the edge of the abyss.
+He saw the shade of Nicias smiling, with a wreath of flowers on his
+head, sitting under a burnt myrtle tree. By his side was Aspasia of
+Miletus, gracefully draped in a woollen cloak, and they seemed to talk
+together of love and philosophy; the expression of her face was sweet
+and noble. The rain of fire which fell on them was as a refreshing dew,
+and their feet pressed the burning soil as though it had been tender
+grass. At this sight Paphnutius was filled with fury.
+
+"Strike him, O God! strike him!" he cried. "It is Nicias! Let him weep!
+let him groan! let him grind his teeth! He sinned with Thais!"
+
+And Paphnutius woke in the arms of a sailor, as strong as Hercules, who
+cried--
+
+"Quietly! quietly! my friend! By Proteus, the old shepherd of the seals,
+you slumber uneasily. If I had not caught hold of you, you would have
+tumbled into the Eunostos. It is as true as that my mother sold salt
+fish, that I saved your life."
+
+"I thank God," replied Paphnutius.
+
+And, rising to his feet, he walked straight before him, meditating on
+the vision which had come to him whilst he was asleep.
+
+"This vision," he said to himself, "is plainly an evil one; it is an
+insult to divine goodness to imagine hell is unreal. The dream certainly
+came from the devil."
+
+He reasoned thus because he knew how to distinguish between the dreams
+sent by God and those produced by evil angels. Such discernment is
+useful to the hermit, who lives surrounded by apparitions, and who,
+in avoiding men, is sure to meet with spirits. The deserts are full of
+phantoms. When the pilgrims drew near the ruined castle, to which the
+holy hermit, Anthony, had retired, they heard a noise like that which
+goes up from the public square of a large city at a great festival. The
+noise was made by the devils, who were tempting the holy man.
+
+Paphnutius remembered this memorable example. He also called to mind
+St. John the Egyptian, who for sixty years was tempted by the devil.
+But John saw through all the tricks of the demon. One day, however, the
+devil, having assumed the appearance of a man, entered the grotto of the
+venerable John, and said to him, "John, you must continue to fast until
+to-morrow evening." And John, believing that it was an angel who spoke,
+obeyed the voice of the demon, and fasted the next day until the vesper
+hour. That was the only victory that the Prince of Darkness ever gained
+over St. John the Egyptian, and that was but a trifling one. It was
+therefore not astonishing that Paphnutius knew at once that the vision
+which had visited him in his sleep was an evil one.
+
+Whilst he was gently remonstrating with God for having given him into
+the power of the demons, he felt himself pushed and dragged amidst a
+crowd of people who were all hurrying in the same direction. As he was
+unaccustomed to walk in the streets of a city, he was shoved and knocked
+from one passer to another like an inert mass; and being embarrassed by
+the folds of his tunic, he was more than once on the point of falling.
+Desirous of knowing where all these people could be going, he asked one
+of them the cause of this hurry.
+
+"Do you not know, stranger," replied he, "that the games are about to
+begin, and that Thais will appear on the stage? All the citizens are
+going to the theatre, and I also am going. Would you like to accompany
+me?"
+
+It occurred to him at once that it would further his design to see Thais
+in the games, and Paphnutius followed the stranger. In front of them
+stood the theatre, its portico ornamented with shining masks, and its
+huge circular wall covered with innumerable statues. Following the
+crowd, they entered a narrow passage, at the end of which lay the
+amphitheatre, glittering with light. They took their places on one of
+the seats, which descended in steps to the stage, which was empty but
+magnificently decorated. There was no curtain to hide the view, and on
+the stage was a mound, such as used to be erected in old times to the
+shades of heroes. This mound stood in the midst of a camp. Lances were
+stacked in front of the tents, and golden shields hung from masts,
+amidst boughs of laurel and wreaths of oak. On the stage all was
+silence, but a murmur like the humming of bees in a hive rose from the
+vast hemicycle filled with spectators. All their faces, reddened by the
+reflection from the purple awning which waved above them, turned with
+attentive curiosity towards the large, silent stage, with its tomb and
+tents. The women laughed and ate lemons, and the regular theatre-goers
+called gaily to one another from their seats.
+
+Paphnutius prayed inwardly, and refrained from uttering any vain words,
+but his neighbour began to complain of the decline of the drama.
+
+"Formerly," he said, "clever actors used to declaim, under a mask, the
+verses of Euripides and Menander. Now they no longer recite dramas, they
+act in dumb show; and of the divine spectacles with which Bacchus
+was honoured in Athens, we have kept nothing but what a barbarian--a
+Scythian even--could understand--attitude and gesture. The tragic mask,
+the mouth of which was provided with metal tongues that increased the
+sound of the voice; the cothurnus, which raised the actors to the height
+of gods; the tragic majesty and the splendid verses that used to be
+sung, have all gone. Pantomimists, and dancing girls with bare faces,
+have replaced Paulus and Roscius. What would the Athenians of the days
+of Pericles have said if they had seen a woman on the stage? It is
+indecent for a woman to appear in public. We must be very degenerate to
+permit it. It is as certain as that my name is Dorion, that woman is the
+natural enemy of man, and a disgrace to human kind."
+
+"You speak wisely," replied Paphnutius; "woman is our worst enemy. She
+gives us pleasure, and is to be feared on that account."
+
+"By the immovable gods," cried Dorion, "it is not pleasure that woman
+gives to man, but sadness, trouble, and black cares. Love is the cause
+of our most biting evils. Listen, stranger. When I was a young man
+I visited Troezene, in Argolis, and I saw there a myrtle of a most
+prodigious size, the leaves of which were covered with innumerable
+pinholes. And this is what the Troezenians say about that myrtle. Queen
+Phaedra, when she was in love with Hippolytos, used to recline idly all
+day long under this same tree. To beguile the tedium of her weary life
+she used to draw out the golden pin which held her fair locks, and
+pierce with it the leaves of the sweet-scented bush. All the leaves were
+riddled with holes. After she had ruined the poor young man whom
+she pursued with her incestuous love, Phaedra, as you know, perished
+miserably. She locked herself up in her bridal chamber, and hanged
+herself by her golden girdle from an ivory peg. The gods willed that the
+myrtle, the witness of her bitter misery, should continue to bear, in
+its fresh leaves, the marks of the pin-holes. I picked one of these
+leaves, and placed it at the head of my bed, that by the sight of it
+I might take warning against the folly of love, and conform to the
+doctrine of the divine Epicurus, my master, who taught that all lust is
+to be feared. But, properly speaking, love is a disease of the liver,
+and one is never sure of not catching the malady."
+
+Paphnutius asked--
+
+"Dorion, what are your pleasures?"
+
+Dorion replied sadly--
+
+"I have only one pleasure, and, it must be confessed, that it is not a
+very exciting one; it is meditation. When a man has a bad digestion, he
+must not look for any others."
+
+Taking advantage of these words, Paphnutius proceeded to initiate the
+Epicurean into those spiritual joys which the contemplation of God
+procures. He began--
+
+"Hear the truth, Dorion, and receive the light."
+
+But he saw then that all heads were turned towards him, and everybody
+was making signs for him to be quiet. Dead silence prevailed in the
+theatre, broken at last by the strains of heroic music.
+
+The play began. The soldiers left their tents, and were preparing to
+depart, when a prodigy occurred--a cloud covered the summit of the
+funeral pile. Then the cloud rolled away, and the ghost of Achilles
+appeared, clad in golden armour. Extending his arms towards the
+warriors, he seemed to say to them, "What! do you depart, children of
+Danaos? do you return to the land I shall never behold again, and leave
+my tomb without any offerings?" Already the principal Greek chieftains
+pressed to the foot of the pile. Acamas, the son of Theseus, old Nestor,
+Agamemnon, bearing a sceptre and with a fillet on his brow, gazed at the
+prodigy. Pyrrhus, the young son of Achilles, was prostrate in the dust.
+Ulysses, recognisable by the cap which covered his curly hair, showed
+by his gestures that he acquiesced in the demand of the hero's shade. He
+argued with Agamemnon, and their words might be easily guessed--
+
+"Achilles," said the King of Ithaca, "is worthy to be honoured by us,
+for he died gloriously for Hellas. He demands that the daughter of
+Priam, the virgin Polyxena, should be immolated on his tomb. Greeks!
+appease the manes of the hero, and let the son of Peleus rejoice in
+Hades."
+
+But the king of kings replied--
+
+"Spare the Trojan virgins we have torn from the altars. Sufficient
+misfortunes have already fallen on the illustrious race of Priam."
+
+He spoke thus because he shared the couch of the sister of Polyxena, and
+the wise Ulysses reproached him for preferring the couch of Cassandra to
+the lance of Achilles.
+
+The Greeks showed they shared the opinion of Ulysses, by loudly clashing
+their weapons. The death of Polyxena was resolved on, and the appeased
+shade of Achilles vanished. The music--sometimes wild and sometimes
+plaintive--followed the thoughts of the personages in the drama. The
+spectators burst into applause.
+
+Paphnutius, who applied divine truth to everything murmured--
+
+"This fable shows how cruel the worshippers of false gods were."
+
+"All religions breed crimes," replied the Epicurean. "Happily, a
+Greek, who was divinely wise, has freed men from foolish terrors of the
+unknown--"
+
+Just at that moment, Hecuba, her white hair dishevelled, her robe
+tattered, came out of the tent in which she was kept captive. A long
+sigh went up from the audience, when her woeful figure appeared. Hecuba
+had been warned by a prophetic dream, and lamented her daughter's fate
+and her own. Ulysses approached her, and asked her to give up Polyxena.
+The old mother tore her hair, dug her nails into her cheeks, and kissed
+the hands of the cruel chieftain, who, with unpitying calmness, seemed
+to say--
+
+"Be wise, Hecuba, and yield to necessity. There are amongst us many old
+mothers who weep for their children, now sleeping under the pines of
+Ida."
+
+And Hecuba, formerly queen of the most flourishing city in Asia, and now
+a slave, bowed her unhappy head in the dust.
+
+Then the curtain in front of one of the tents was raised, and the virgin
+Polyxena appeared. A tremor passed through all the spectators. They had
+recognised Thais. Paphnutius saw again the woman he had come to seek.
+With her white arm she held above her head the heavy curtain. Motionless
+as a splendid statue, she stood, with a look of pride and resignation
+in her violet eyes, and her resplendent beauty made a shudder of
+commiseration pass through all who beheld her.
+
+A murmur of applause uprose, and Paphnutius, his soul agitated, and
+pressing both hands to his heart, sighed--
+
+"Why, O my God, hast thou given this power to one of Thy creatures?"
+
+Dorion was not so disturbed. He said--
+
+"Certainly the atoms, which have momentarily met together to form this
+woman, present a combination which is agreeable to the eye. But that is
+but a freak of nature, and the atoms know not what they do. They will
+some day separate with the same indifference as they came together.
+Where are now the atoms which formed Lais or Cleopatra? I must confess
+that women are sometimes beautiful. But they are liable to grievous
+afflictions, and disgusting inconveniences. That is patent to all
+thinking men, though the vulgar pay no attention to it. And women
+inspire love, though it is absurd and ridiculous to love them."
+
+Such were the thoughts of the philosopher and the ascetic as they
+gazed on Thais. They neither of them noticed Hecuba, who turned to her
+daughter, and seemed to say by her gestures--
+
+"Try to soften the cruel Ulysses. Employ your tears, your beauty, and
+your youth."
+
+Thais--or rather Polyxena herself--let fall the curtain of the tent. She
+made a step forward, and all hearts were conquered. And when, with firm
+but light steps, she advanced towards Ulysses, her rhythmic movements,
+which were accompanied by the sound of flutes, created in all present
+such happy visions, that it seemed as though she were the divine centre
+of all the harmonies of the world. All eyes were bent on her; the other
+actors were obscured by her effulgence, and were not noticed. The play
+continued, however.
+
+The prudent son of Laertes turned away his head, and hid his hand under
+his mantle, in order to avoid the looks and kisses of the suppliant. The
+virgin made a sign to him to fear nothing. Her tranquil gaze said--
+
+"I follow you, Ulysses, and bow to necessity--because I wish to die.
+Daughter of Priam, and sister of Hector, my couch, which was once worthy
+of Kings, shall never receive a foreign master. Freely do I quit the
+light of day."
+
+Hecuba, lying motionless in the dust, suddenly rose and enfolded her
+daughter in a last despairing embrace. Polyxena gently, but resolutely,
+removed the old arms which held her. She seemed to say--
+
+"Do not expose yourself, mother, to the fury of your master. Do not wait
+until he drags you ignominiously on the ground in tearing me from your
+arms. Better, O well-beloved mother, to give me your wrinkled hand, and
+bend your hollow cheeks to my lips."
+
+The face of Thais looked beautiful in its grief. The crowd felt grateful
+to her for showing them the forms and passions of life endowed with
+superhuman grace, and Paphnutius pardoned her present splendour on
+account of her coming humility, and glorified himself in advance for the
+saint he was about to give to heaven.
+
+The drama neared its end. Hecuba fell as though dead, and Polyxena, led
+by Ulysses, advanced towards the tomb, which was surrounded by the
+chief warriors. A dirge was sung as she mounted the funeral pile, on the
+summit of which the son of Achilles poured out libations from a gold
+cup to the manes of the hero. When the sacrificing priests stretched out
+their arms to seize her, she made a sign that she wished to die free and
+unbound, as befitted the daughter of so many kings. Then, tearing aside
+her robe, she bared her bosom to the blow. Pyrrhus, turning away his
+head, plunged his sword into her heart, and by a skilful trick, the
+blood gushed forth over the dazzling white breast of the virgin, who,
+with head thrown back, and her eyes swimming in the horrors of death,
+fell with grace and modesty.
+
+Whilst the warriors enshrouded the victim with a veil, and covered her
+with lilies and anemones, terrified screams and groans rent the air, and
+Paphnutius, rising from his seat, prophesied in a loud voice.
+
+"Gentiles? vile worshippers of demons! And you Arians more infamous than
+the idolaters!--learn! That which you have just seen is an image and a
+symbol. There is a mystic meaning in this fable, and very soon the woman
+you see there will be offered, a willing and happy sacrifice, to the
+risen God."
+
+But already the crowd was surging in dark waves towards the exits. The
+Abbot of Antinoe, escaping from the astonished Dorion, gained the door,
+still prophesying.
+
+An hour later he knocked at the door of the house of Thais.
+
+The actress then lived in the rich Racotis quarter, near the tomb of
+Alexander, in a house surrounded by shady gardens, in which a brook,
+bordered with poplars, flowed amidst artificial rocks. An old black
+slave woman, loaded with rings, opened the door, and asked what he
+wanted.
+
+"I wish to see Thais," he replied. "God is my witness that I came here
+for no other purpose."
+
+As he wore a rich tunic, and spoke in an imperious manner, the slave
+allowed him to enter.
+
+"You will find Thais," she said, "in the Grotto of Nymphs."
+
+
+
+
+PART THE SECOND -- THE PAPYRUS
+
+Thais was born of free, but poor, parents, who were idolaters. When she
+was a very little girl, her father kept, at Alexandria, near the Gate
+of the Moon, an inn, which was frequented by sailors. She still
+retained some vivid, but disconnected, memories of her early youth. She
+remembered her father, seated at the corner of the hearth with his legs
+crossed--tall, formidable, and quiet, like one of those old Pharaohs who
+are celebrated in the ballads sung by blind men at the street corners.
+She remembered also her thin, wretched mother, wandering like a hungry
+cat about the house, which she filled with the tones of her sharp
+voice, and the glitter of her phosphorescent eyes. They said in the
+neighbourhood that she was a witch, and changed into an owl at night,
+and flew to see her lovers. It was a lie. Thais knew well, having often
+watched her, that her mother practised no magic arts, but that she was
+eaten up with avarice, and counted all night the gains of the day. The
+idle father and the greedy mother let the child live as best it could,
+like one of the fowls in the poultry-yard. She became very clever in
+extracting, one by one, the oboli from the belt of some drunken sailor,
+and in amusing the drinkers with artless songs and obscene words, the
+meaning of which she did not know. She passed from knee to knee, in a
+room reeking with the odours of fermented drinks and resiny wine-skins;
+then, her cheeks sticky with beer and pricked by rough beards, she
+escaped, clutching the oboli in her little hand, and ran to buy
+honey-cakes from an old woman who crouched behind her baskets under the
+Gate of the Moon. Every day the same scenes were repeated, the
+sailors relating their perilous adventures, then playing at dice or
+knuckle-bones, and blaspheming the gods, amid their shouting for the
+best beer of Cilicia.
+
+Every night the child was awakened by the quarrels of the drunkards.
+Oyster-shells would fly across the tables, cutting the heads of those
+they hit, and the uproar was terrible. Sometimes she saw, by the light
+of the smoky lamps, the knives glitter, and the blood flow.
+
+It humiliated her to think that the only person who showed her any human
+kindness in her young days was the mild and gentle Ahmes. Ahmes, the
+house-slave, a Nubian blacker than the pot he gravely skimmed, was as
+good as a long night's sleep. Often he would take Thais on his knee,
+and tell her old tales about underground treasure-houses constructed for
+avaricious kings, who put to death the masons and architects. There
+were also tales about clever thieves who married kings' daughters, and
+courtesans who built pyramids. Little Thais loved Ahmes like a father,
+like a mother, like a nurse, and like a dog. She followed the slave into
+the cellar when he went to fill the amphorae, and into the poultry-yard
+amongst the scraggy and ragged fowls, all beak, claws, and feathers, who
+flew swifter than eagles before the knife of the black cook. Often at
+night, on the straw, instead of sleeping, he built for Thais little
+water-mills, and ships no bigger than his hand, with all their rigging.
+
+He had been badly treated by his masters; one of his ears was torn,
+and his body covered with scars. Yet his features always wore an air of
+joyous peace. And no one ever asked him whence he drew the consolation
+in his soul, and the peace in his heart. He was as simple as a child.
+As he performed his heavy tasks, he sang, in a harsh voice, hymns which
+made the child tremble and dream. He murmured, in a gravely joyous
+tone--
+
+ "Tell us, Mary, what thou hast seen where thou hast been?
+ I saw the shroud and the linen cloths, and the angels
+ seated on the tomb.
+ And I saw the glory of the Risen One."
+
+She asked him--
+
+"Father, why do you sing about angels seated on a tomb?"
+
+And he replied--
+
+"Little light of my eyes, I sing of the angels because Jesus, our Lord,
+is risen to heaven."
+
+Ahmes was a Christian. He had been baptised, and was known as Theodore
+at the meetings of the faithful, to which he went secretly during the
+hours allowed him for sleep.
+
+At that time the Church was suffering the severest trials. By order of
+the Emperor, the churches had been thrown down, the holy books burned,
+the sacred vessels and candlesticks melted. The Christians had been
+deprived of all their honours, and expected nothing but death. Terror
+reigned over all the community at Alexandria, and the prisons were
+crammed with victims. It was whispered with horror amongst the faithful,
+that in Syria, in Arabia, in Mesopotamia, in Cappadocia, in all the
+empire, bishops and virgins had been flogged, tortured, crucified or
+thrown to wild beasts. Then Anthony, already celebrated for his visions
+and his solitary life, a prophet, and the head of all the Egyptian
+believers, descended like an eagle from his desert rock on the city of
+Alexandria, and, flying from church to church, fired the whole community
+with his holy ardour. Invisible to the pagans, he was present at the
+same time at all the meetings of Christians, endowing all with the
+spirit of strength and prudence by which he was animated. Slaves, in
+particular, were persecuted with singular severity. Many of them, seized
+with fright, denied the faith. Others, and by far the greater number,
+fled to the desert, hoping to live there, either as hermits or robbers.
+Ahmes, however, frequented the meetings as usual, visited the prisoners,
+buried the martyrs, and joyfully professed the religion of Christ. The
+great Anthony, who saw his unshaken zeal, before he returned into the
+desert, pressed the black slave in his arms, and gave him the kiss of
+peace.
+
+When Thais was seven years old, Ahmes began to talk to her of God.
+
+"The good Lord God," he said, "lived in heaven like a Pharaoh, under
+the tents of His harem, and under the trees of His gardens. He was the
+Ancient of Ancients, and older than the world; and He had but one Son,
+the Prince Jesus, whom He loved with all His heart, and who surpassed in
+beauty the virgins and the angels. And the good Lord God said to Prince
+Jesus--
+
+"'Leave My harem and My palace, and My date trees and My running
+waters. Descend to earth for the welfare of men. There Thou shalt
+be like a little child, and Thou shalt live poor amongst the poor.
+Suffering shall be Thy daily bread, and Thou shalt weep so profusely
+that Thy tears shall form rivers, in which the tired slave shall bathe
+with delight. Go, My Son!'
+
+"Prince Jesus obeyed the good Lord, and He came down to earth, to a
+place named Bethlehem of Judaea. And He walked in fields, amidst the
+flowering anemones, saying to His companion--
+
+"'Blessed are they who hunger, for I will lead them to My Father's
+table! Blessed are they who thirst, for they shall drink of the
+fountains of heaven! Blessed are they who weep, for I will dry their
+tears with veils finer than those of the almehs!'
+
+"That is why the poor loved Him, and believed in Him. But the rich hated
+Him; fearing that He should raise the poor above them. At that time,
+Cleopatra and Caesar were powerful on the earth. They both hated Jesus,
+and they ordered the judges and priests to put Him to death. To obey the
+Queen of Egypt, the princes of Syria erected a cross on a high mountain,
+and they caused Jesus to die on this cross. But women washed His corpse,
+and buried it; and Prince Jesus, having broken the door of His tomb,
+rose again to the good Lord, His Father.
+
+"And, from that time, all those who believed in Him go to heaven.
+
+"The Lord God opens His arms, and says to them--
+
+"'Ye are welcome, because ye love the Prince, My Son. Wash, and then
+eat.'
+
+"They bathe to the sound of beautiful music, and, all the time they are
+eating, they see almehs dancing, and they listen to tales that never
+end. They are dearer to the good Lord God than the light of His eyes,
+because they are His guests, and they shall have for their portion the
+carpets of His house, and the pomegranates of His gardens."
+
+Ahmes often spoke in this strain, and thus taught the truth to Thais.
+She wondered, and said--
+
+"I should like to eat the pomegranates of the good Lord."
+
+Ahmes replied--
+
+"Only those who are baptised may taste the fruits of heaven."
+
+And Thais asked to be baptised. Seeing by this that she believed in
+Jesus, the slave resolved to instruct her more fully, so that, being
+baptised, she might enter the Church; and he loved her as his spiritual
+daughter.
+
+The child, unloved and uncared for by its selfish parents, had no bed
+in the house. She slept in a corner of the stable amongst the domestic
+animals, and there Ahmes came to her every night secretly.
+
+He gently approached the mat on which she lay, and sat down on his
+heels, his legs bent and his body straight--a position hereditary to his
+race. His face and his body, which was clothed in black, were invisible
+in the darkness; but his big white eyes shone out, and there came from
+them a light like a ray of dawn through the chinks of a door. He spoke
+in a husky, monotonous tone, with a slight nasal twang that gave it
+the soft melody of music heard at night in the streets. Sometimes the
+breathing of an ass, or the soft lowing of an ox, accompanied, like a
+chorus of invisible spirits, the voice of the slave as he recited the
+gospels. His words flowed gently in the darkness, which they filled
+with zeal, mercy, and hope; and the neophyte, her hand in that of Ahmes,
+lulled by the monotonous sounds, and the vague visions in her mind,
+slept calm and smiling, amid the harmonies of the dark night and the
+holy mysteries, gazed down on by a star, which twinkled between the
+joists of the stable-roof.
+
+The initiation lasted a whole year, till the time when the Christians
+joyfully celebrate the festival of Easter. One night in the holy week,
+Thais, who was already asleep on her mat, felt herself lifted by the
+slave, whose eyes gleamed with a strange light. He was clad, not as
+usual in a pair of torn drawers, but in a long white cloak, beneath
+which he pressed the child, whispering to her--
+
+"Come, my soul! Come, light of my eyes! Come, little sweetheart! Come
+and be clad in the baptismal robes!"
+
+He carried the child pressed to his breast. Frightened and yet curious,
+Thais, her head out of the cloak, threw her arms round her friend's
+neck, and he ran with her through the darkness. They went down narrow,
+black alleys; they passed through the Jews' quarter; they skirted a
+cemetery, where the osprey uttered its dismal cry; they traversed an
+open space, passing under crosses on which hung the bodies of victims,
+and on the arms of the crosses the ravens clacked their beaks. Thais
+hid her head in the slave's breast. She did not dare to peep out all
+the rest of the way. Soon it seemed to her that she was going down under
+ground. When she reopened her eyes she found herself in a narrow cave,
+lighted by resin torches, on the walls of which were painted standing
+figures, which seemed to move and live in the flickering glare of the
+torches. They were men clad in long tunics and carrying branches of
+palm, and around them were lambs, doves, and tendrils of vine.
+
+Amongst these figures, Thais recognised Jesus of Nazareth, by the
+anemones flowering at his feet. In the centre of the cave, near a
+large stone font filled with water, stood an old man clad in a scarlet
+dalmatic embroidered with gold, and on his head a low mitre. His thin
+face ended in a long beard. He looked gentle and humble, in spite of
+his rich costume. This was Bishop Vivantius, an exiled dignitary of the
+Church of Cyrene, who now gained his livelihood by weaving common stuffs
+of goats' hair. Two poor children stood by his side. Close by, an old
+negress unfolded a little white robe. Ahmes set the child down on the
+ground, and kneeling before the Bishop, said--
+
+"Father, this is the little soul, the child of my soul. I have brought
+her that you may, according to your promise, and if it please your
+holiness, bestow on her the baptism of life."
+
+At these words the Bishop opened his arms, and showed his mutilated
+hands. His nails had been torn out because he had maintained the faith
+in the days of persecution. Thais was frightened, and threw herself into
+the arms of Ahmes. But the kind words of the priest reassured her.
+
+"Fear nothing, dearly beloved little one. Thou hast here a spiritual
+father, Ahmes, who is called Theodore amongst the faithful, and a kind
+mother in grace, who has prepared for thee, with her own hands, a white
+robe."
+
+And turning towards the negress--
+
+"She is called Nitida," he added, "and is a slave in this world, but in
+heaven she will be a spouse of Jesus."
+
+Then he said to the child neophyte--
+
+"Thais, dost thou believe in God, the Father Almighty; and in His only
+Son, who died for our salvation; and in all that the apostles taught?"
+
+"Yes," replied together the negro and negress, who held her by each
+hand.
+
+By the Bishop's orders, Nitida knelt down and undressed Thais. The child
+was quite naked; round her neck was an amulet. The Pontiff plunged her
+three times into the baptismal font. The acolytes brought the oil, with
+which Vivantius anointed the catechumen, and the salt, a morsel of
+which he placed on her tongue. Then, having dried that body which was
+destined, after many trials, to life immortal, the slave Nitida put on
+Thais the white robe she had woven.
+
+The Bishop gave to each and all the kiss of peace, and, the ceremony
+being terminated, took off his sacerdotal insignia.
+
+When they had left the crypt, Ahmes said--
+
+"We ought to rejoice that we have this day brought a soul to the good
+Lord God; let us go to the house of your Holiness and spend the rest of
+the night in rejoicing."
+
+"Thou hast well said, Theodore," replied the Bishop, and he led the
+little band to his house, which was quite near. It consisted of a single
+room, furnished with a couple of looms, a heavy table, and a worn-out
+carpet. As soon as they had entered,
+
+"Nitida," cried the Nubian, "bring hither the stove and the jar of oil,
+and we will have a good supper."
+
+Saying thus, he drew from under his cloak some little fish which he had
+kept concealed, and lighted a fire and fried them. The Bishop, the girl,
+the two boys, and the two slaves sat in a ring on the carpet, ate the
+fried fish, and blessed the Lord. Vivantius spoke of the torture he had
+undergone, and prophesied the speedy triumph of the Church. His language
+was grotesque, and full of word-play and rhetorical tropes. He compared
+the life of the just to a tissue of purple, and to explain the mystery
+of baptism, he said--
+
+"The Divine Spirit floated on the waters, and that is why Christians
+receive the baptism of water. But demons also inhabit the brooks;
+springs consecrated to nymphs are especially dangerous, and there are
+certain waters which cause various maladies, both of the soul and of the
+body."
+
+Sometimes he spoke enigmatically, and the child listened to him with
+profound awe and wonder. At the end of the repast he offered his guests
+a little wine, and this unloosed their tongues, and they began to sing
+lamentations and hymns. Ahmes and Nitida then rose, and danced a Nubian
+dance which they had learned as children, and which, no doubt, had been
+danced by their tribe since the early ages of the world. It was a love
+dance; waving their arms, and moving their bodies in rhythmic measure,
+they feigned, in turn, to fly from and to pursue each other. Their big
+eyes rolled, and they showed their gleaming teeth in broad grins.
+
+In this strange manner did Thais receive the holy rite of baptism.
+
+She loved amusements, and, as she grew, vague desires were created in
+her mind. All day long she danced and sang with the children in the
+streets, and when at night she returned to her father's house, she was
+still singing--
+
+"Crooked twist, why do you stay in the house? I comb the wool, and the
+Miletan threads. Crooked twist, what did your son die of? He fell from
+the white horses into the sea."
+
+She now began to prefer the company of boys and girls to that of the
+gentle and quiet Ahmes. She did not notice that her friend was not so
+often with her. The persecution having relented, the Christians were
+able to assemble more regularly, and the Nubian frequented these
+meetings assiduously. His zeal increased, and he sometimes uttered
+mysterious threats. He said that the rich would not keep their wealth.
+He went to the public places to which the poorer Christians used to
+resort, and assembling together all the poor wretches who were lying in
+the shade of the old walls, he announced to them that all slaves would
+soon be free, and that the day of justice was at hand.
+
+"In the kingdom of God," he said, "the slaves will drink new wine and
+eat delicious fruits; whilst the rich, crouching at their feet like
+dogs, will devour the crumbs from their table."
+
+These sayings were noised abroad through all that quarter of the city,
+and the masters feared that Ahmes might incite the slaves to revolt.
+The innkeeper hated him intensely, though he carefully concealed his
+rancour.
+
+One day, a silver salt-cellar, reserved for the table of the gods,
+disappeared from the inn. Ahmes was accused of having stolen it--out of
+hate to his master and to the gods of the empire. There was no proof
+of the accusation, and the slave vehemently denied the charge.
+Nevertheless, he was dragged before the tribunal, and as he had the
+reputation of being a bad servant, the judge condemned him to death.
+
+"As you did not know how to make a good use of your hands," he said,
+"they will be nailed to the cross."
+
+Ahmes heard the verdict quietly, bowed to the judge most respectfully,
+and was taken to the public prison. During the three days that remained
+to him, he did not cease to preach the gospel to the prisoners, and
+it was related afterwards that the criminals, and the gaoler himself,
+touched by his words, believed in Jesus crucified.
+
+He was taken to the very place which one night, less than two years
+before, he had crossed so joyfully, carrying in his cloak little Thais,
+the daughter of his soul, his darling flower. When his hands were nailed
+to the cross, he uttered no complaint, but many times he sighed and
+murmured, "I thirst."
+
+His agony lasted three days and three nights. It seemed hardly possible
+that human flesh could have endured such prolonged torture. Many times
+it was thought he was dead; the flies clustered on his eyelids, but
+suddenly he would reopen his bloodshot eyes. On the morning of the
+fourth day, he sang, in a voice clearer and purer than that of a child--
+
+"Tell us, Mary, what thou hast seen where thou hast been?"
+
+Then he smiled and said--
+
+"They come, the angels of the good Lord. They bring me wine and fruit.
+How refreshing is the fanning of their wings!"
+
+And he expired.
+
+His features preserved in death an expression of ecstatic happiness.
+Even the soldiers who guarded the cross were struck with wonder.
+Vivantius, accompanied by some of the Christian brethren, claimed the
+body, and buried it with the remains of the other martyrs in the crypt
+of St. John the Baptist, and the Church venerated the memory of Saint
+Theodore the Nubian.
+
+Three years later, Constantine, the conquerer of Maxentius, issued an
+edict which granted toleration to the Christians, and the believers were
+not henceforth persecuted, except by heretics.
+
+Thais had completed her eleventh year when her friend was tortured
+to death, and she felt deeply saddened and shocked. Her soul was not
+sufficiently pure to allow her to understand that the slave Ahmes was
+blessed both in his life and his death. The idea sprang up in her little
+mind that no one can be good in this world except at the cost of
+the most terrible sufferings. And she was afraid to be good, for her
+delicate flesh could not bear pain.
+
+At an early age, she had given herself to the lads about the port, and
+she followed the old men who wandered about the quarter in the evening,
+and with what she received from them she bought cakes and trinkets.
+
+As she did not take home any of the money she gained, her mother
+continually ill-treated her. To get out of reach of her mother's arm,
+she often ran, bare-footed, to the city walls, and hid with the lizards.
+There she thought with envy of the ladies she had seen pass her, richly
+dressed, and in a litter surrounded by slaves.
+
+One day, when she had been beaten more brutally than usual, she was
+crouching down beside the gate, motionless and sulky, when an old woman
+stopped in front of her, looked at her for some moments in silence, and
+then cried--
+
+"Oh, the pretty flower! the beautiful child! Happy is the father who
+begot thee, and the mother who brought thee into the world!"
+
+Thais remained silent, with her eyes fixed on the ground. Her eyelids
+were red, and it was evident she had been weeping.
+
+"My white violet," continued the old woman, "is not your mother happy to
+have nourished a little goddess like you, and does not your father, when
+he sees you, rejoice from the bottom of his heart?"
+
+To which the child replied, as though talking to herself--
+
+"My father is a wine-skin swollen with wine, and my mother a greedy
+horse-leech."
+
+The old woman glanced to right and left, to see if she were observed.
+Then, in a fawning voice--
+
+"Sweet flowering hyacinth, beautiful drinker of light, come with me,
+and you shall have nothing to do but dance and smile. I will feed you on
+honey cakes, and my son--my own son--will love you as his eyes. My son
+is handsome and young; he has but little beard on his chin; his skin is
+soft, and he is, as they say, a little Acharnian pig."
+
+Thais replied--
+
+"I am quite willing to go with you."
+
+And she rose and followed the old woman out of the city.
+
+The old woman, who was named Moeroe, went from city to city with a
+troupe of girls and boys, whom she taught to dance, and then hired out
+to rich people to appear at feasts.
+
+Guessing that Thais would soon develop into a most beautiful woman, she
+taught her--with the help of a whip--music and prosody, and she flogged
+with leather thongs those beautiful legs, when they did not move in time
+to the strains of the cithara. Her son--a decrepit abortion, of no age
+and no sex--ill-treated the child, on whom he vented the hate he had for
+all womankind. Like the dancing-girls whose grace he affected, he knew,
+and taught Thais, the art of pantomime, and how to mimic, by expression,
+gesture, and attitude, all human passions, and more especially the
+passions of love. He was a clever master, though he disliked his work;
+but he was jealous of his pupil, and as soon as he discovered that she
+was born to give men pleasure, he scratched her cheeks, pinched her
+arms, or pricked her legs, as a spiteful girl would have done. Thanks,
+however, to his lessons, she quickly became an excellent musician,
+pantomimist, and dancer. The brutality of her master did not at all
+surprise her; it seemed natural to her to be badly treated. She even
+felt some respect for the old woman, who knew music and drank Greek
+wine. Moeroe, when she came to Antioch, praised her pupil to the
+rich merchants of the city who gave banquets, both as a dancer and
+a flute-player. Thais danced and pleased. She accompanied the rich
+bankers, when they left the table, into the shady groves on the banks of
+the Orontes. She gave herself to all, for she knew nothing of the price
+of love. But one night that she had danced before the most fashionable
+young men of the city, the son of the pro-consul came to her, radiant
+with youth and pleasure, and said, in a voice that seemed redolent of
+kisses--
+
+"Why am I not, Thais, the wreath which crowns your hair, the tunic which
+enfolds your beautiful form, the sandal on your pretty foot? I wish you
+to tread me under foot as a sandal; I wish my caresses to be your tunic
+and your wreath. Come, sweet girl! come to my house, and let us forget
+the world."
+
+She looked at him whilst he was speaking, and saw that he was handsome.
+Suddenly she felt a cold sweat on her face. She turned green as grass;
+she reeled; a cloud descended before her eyes. He again implored her to
+come with him, but she refused. His ardent looks, his burning words were
+vain, and when he took her in his arms to try and drag her away, she
+pushed him off rudely. Then he implored her, and shed tears. But a
+new, unknown, and invincible passion dominated her heart, and she still
+resisted.
+
+"What madness!" said the guests. "Lollius is noble, handsome, and rich,
+and a dancing-girl treats him with scorn!"
+
+Lollius returned home alone that night, quite love-sick. He came in the
+morning, pale and red-eyed, and hung flowers at the dancing-girl's door.
+
+But Thais was frightened and troubled; she avoided Lollius, and yet
+he was continually in her mind. She suffered, and she did not know the
+cause of her complaint. She wondered why she had thus changed, and why
+she was melancholy. She recoiled from all her lovers; they were hateful
+to her. She loathed the light of day, and lay on her bed all day,
+sobbing, and with her head buried in the pillows. Lollius contrived to
+gain admittance, and came many times, but neither his pleadings nor his
+execrations had any effect on the obdurate girl. In his presence, she
+was as timid as a virgin, and would say nothing but--
+
+"I will not! I will not!"
+
+But at the end of a fortnight she gave in, for she knew that she loved
+him; she went to his house and lived with him. They were supremely
+happy. They passed their days shut up together, gazing into each other's
+eyes, and babbling a childish jargon. In the evening, they walked on the
+lonely banks of the Orontes, and lost themselves in the laurel woods.
+Sometimes they rose at dawn, to go and gather hyacinths on the slopes of
+Sulpicus. They drank from the same cup, and he would take a grape from
+between her lips with his mouth.
+
+Moeroe came to Lollius, and cried and shrieked that Thais should be
+restored to her.
+
+"She is my daughter," she said, "my daughter, who has been torn from me.
+My perfumed flower--my own bowels--!"
+
+Lollius gave her a large sum of money, and sent her away. But, as she
+came back to demand some more gold staters, the young man had her put
+in prison, and the magistrates having discovered that she was guilty of
+many crimes, she was condemned to death, and thrown to the wild beasts.
+
+Thais loved Lollius with all the passion of her mind, and the
+bewilderment of innocence. She told him, and told him truly from the
+bottom of her heart--
+
+"I have never loved any one but you."
+
+Lollius replied--
+
+"You are not like any other woman."
+
+The spell lasted six months, but it broke at last. Thais suddenly felt
+that her heart was empty and lonely. Lollius no longer seemed the same
+to her. She thought--
+
+"What can have thus changed me in an instant? How is it that he is now
+like any other man, and no longer like himself?"
+
+She left him, not without a secret desire to find Lollius again in
+another, as she no longer found him in himself. She thought it would be
+less dull to live with someone she had never loved, than with one she
+had ceased to love. She appeared, in the company of rich debauchees, at
+those sacred feasts at which naked virgins danced in the temples, and
+troops of courtesans swam across the Orontes. She took part in all the
+pleasures of the fashionable and depraved city; and she assiduously
+frequented the theatres, at which clever mimes from all countries
+performed amidst the applause of a crowd greedy for excitement.
+
+She carefully observed the mimes, dancers, comedians, and especially the
+women, who in tragedies represented goddesses in love with young men, or
+mortals loved by the gods. Having discovered the secrets by which they
+pleased the audience, she thought to herself that she was more beautiful
+and could act better. She went to the manager, and asked to be admitted
+into the troupe. Thanks to her beauty, and to the lessons she had
+received from old Moeroe, she was received, and appeared on the stage in
+the part of Dirce.
+
+She met with but indifferent success, for she was inexperienced, and the
+admiration of the spectators had not been aroused by hearing her praises
+sung. But after she had played small parts for a few months, the power
+of her beauty burst forth with such effect that all the city was moved.
+All Antioch crowded to the theatre. The imperial magistrates and the
+chief citizens were compelled, by the force of public opinion, to show
+themselves there. The porters, sweepers, and dock labourers went without
+bread and garlic, that they might pay for their places. Poets composed
+epigrams in her honour. Bearded philosophers inveighed against her in
+the baths and gymnasia; when her litter passed, Christian priests turned
+away their heads. The threshold of her door was wreathed with flowers,
+and sprinkled with blood. She received so much money from her lovers
+that it was no longer counted, but measured by the medimnus, and all the
+treasure hoarded by miserly old men was poured out at her feet. But
+she was placid and unmoved. She rejoiced, with quiet pride, in the
+admiration of the public and the favour of the gods, and was so much
+loved that she loved herself.
+
+After she had several years enjoyed the admiration and affection of the
+Antiochians, she was taken with a desire to revisit Alexandria, and show
+her glory in that city in which, as a child, she had wandered in want
+and shame, hungry and lean as a grasshopper in the middle of a dusty
+road. The golden city joyfully welcomed her, and loaded her with fresh
+riches; when she appeared in the games it was a triumph. Countless
+admirers and lovers came to her. She received them with indifference,
+for she at last despaired of meeting another Lollius.
+
+Amongst many others, she met the philosopher Nicias, who desired to
+possess her, although he professed to have no desires. In spite of
+his riches, he was intelligent and modest. But his delicate wit and
+beautiful sentiments failed to charm her. She did not love him and
+sometimes his refined irony even irritated her. His perpetual doubts
+hurt her, for he believed in nothing, and she believed in everything.
+She believed in divine providence, in the omnipotence of evil spirits,
+in spells, exorcisms, and eternal justice; she believed in Jesus Christ,
+and in the goddess of good of the Syrians; she believed also that
+bitches barked when black Hecate passed through the streets, and that a
+woman could inspire love by pouring a philtre into a cup wrapped in the
+bleeding skin of a sheep. She thirsted for the unknown; she called on
+nameless gods, and lived in perpetual expectation. The future frightened
+her, and yet she wished to know it. She surrounded herself with priests
+of Isis, Chaldean magi, pharmacopolists, and professors of the black
+arts, who invariably deceived her, though she never tired of being
+deceived. She feared death, and she saw it everywhere. When she yielded
+to pleasure, it seemed to her that an icy finger would suddenly touch
+her on the bare shoulder, and she turned pale, and cried with terror, in
+the arms which embraced her.
+
+Nicias said to her--
+
+"What does it matter, O my Thais, whether we descend to eternal night
+with white locks and hollow cheeks, or, whether this very day, now
+laughing to the vast sky, shall be our last? Let us enjoy life; we
+shall have greatly lived if we have greatly loved. There is no knowledge
+except that of the senses; to love is to understand. That which we
+do not know does not exist. What good is it to worry ourselves about
+nothing?"
+
+She replied angrily--
+
+"I despise men like you, who hope for nothing and fear nothing. I wish
+to know! I wish to know!"
+
+In order to understand the secret of life, she set to work to read the
+books of the philosophers, but she did not understand them. The further
+the years of her childhood receded from her, the more anxious she was
+to recall them. She loved to traverse at night, in disguise, the alleys,
+squares, and places where she had grown up so miserably. She was sorry
+she had lost her parents, and especially that she had not been able
+to love them. When she met any Christian priest, she thought of her
+baptism, and felt troubled. One night, when enveloped in a long
+cloak, and her fair hair hidden under a black hood, she was wandering,
+according to custom, about the suburbs of the city, she found
+herself--without knowing how she came there--before the poor little
+church of St. John the Baptist. They were singing inside the church,
+and a bright light glimmered through the chinks of the door. There was
+nothing strange in that, as, for the past twenty years, the Christians,
+protected by the conqueror of Maxentius, had publicly solemnised their
+festivals. But these hymns seemed more like an ardent appeal to the
+soul. As if she had been invited to the mysteries, she pushed the
+door open with her arm, and entered the building. She found a numerous
+assembly of women, children, and old men, on their knees before a tomb,
+which stood against the wall. The tomb was nothing but a stone coffer,
+roughly sculptured with vine tendrils and bunches of grapes; yet it had
+received great honours, and was covered with green palms and wreaths
+of red roses. All round, innumerable lights gleamed out of the heavy
+shadow, in which the smoke of Arabian gums seemed like the folds of
+angels' robes, and the paintings on the walls visions of Paradise.
+Priests, clad in white, were prostrate at the foot of the sarcophagus.
+The hymns they sang with the people expressed the delight of suffering,
+and mingled, in a triumphal mourning, so much joy with so much grief,
+that Thais, in listening to them, felt the pleasures of life and the
+terrors of death flowing, at the same time, through her re-awakened
+senses.
+
+When they had finished singing, the believers rose, and walked in single
+file to the tomb, the side of which they kissed. They were common men,
+accustomed to work with their hands. They advanced with a heavy step,
+the eyes fixed, the jaw dropped, but they had an air of sincerity. They
+knelt down, each in turn, before the sarcophagus, and put their lips
+to it. The women lifted their little children in their arms, and gently
+placed their cheek to the stone.
+
+Thais, surprised and troubled, asked a deacon why they did so.
+
+"Do you not know, woman," replied the deacon, "that we celebrate to-day
+the blessed memory of St. Theodore the Nubian, who suffered for the
+faith in the days of the Emperor Diocletian? He lived virtuously and
+died a martyr, and that is why, robed in white, we bear red roses to his
+glorious tomb."
+
+On hearing these words, Thais fell on her knees, and burst into tears.
+Half-forgotten recollections of Ahmes returned to her mind. On the
+memory of this obscure, gentle, and unfortunate man, the blaze of
+candles, the perfume of roses, the clouds of incense, the music of
+hymns, the piety of souls, threw all the charms of glory. Thais thought
+in the dazzling glare--
+
+"He was good, and now he has become great and glorious. Why is it that
+he is elevated above other men? What is this unknown thing which is more
+than riches or pleasure?"
+
+She rose slowly, and turned towards the tomb of the saint who had loved
+her, those violet eyes, now filled with tears which glittered in the
+candle-light; then, with bowed head, humble, slow, and the last, with
+those lips on which so many desires hung, she kissed the stone of the
+slave's tomb.
+
+When she returned to her house, she found Nicias, who, with his hair
+perfumed, and his tunic thrown open, was reading a treatise on morals
+whilst waiting for her. He advanced with open arms.
+
+"Naughty Thais," he said, in a laughing voice, "whilst I was waiting for
+you to come, do you know what I saw in this manuscript, written by the
+gravest of Stoics? Precepts of virtue and noble maxims: No! On the staid
+papyrus, I saw dance thousands and thousands of little Thaises. Each was
+no bigger than my finger, and yet their grace was infinite, and all were
+the only Thais. There were some who flaunted in mantles of purple and
+gold; others, like a white cloud, floated in the air in transparent
+drapery. Others again, motionless and divinely nude, the better to
+inspire pleasure, expressed no thought. Lastly, there were two, hand in
+hand; two so alike that it was impossible to distinguish one from
+the other. Both smiled. The first said, 'I am love.' The other, 'I am
+death.'"
+
+Thus speaking, he pressed Thais in his arms, and not noticing the
+sullen look in her downcast eyes, he went on adding thought to thought,
+heedless of the fact that they were all lost upon her.
+
+"Yes, when I had before my eyes the line in which it was written,
+'Nothing should deter you from improving your mind,' I read, 'The kisses
+of Thais are warmer than fire, and sweeter than honey.' That is how
+a philosopher reads the books of other philosophers--and that is your
+fault, you naughty child. It is true that, as long as we are what we
+are, we shall never find anything but our own thoughts in the thoughts
+of others, and that all of us are somewhat inclined to read books as I
+have read this one."
+
+She did not hear him; her soul was still before the Nubian's tomb. As he
+heard her sigh, he kissed her on the neck, and said--
+
+"Do not be sad, my child. We are never happy in this world, except when
+we forget the world.
+
+"Come, let us cheat life--it is sure to take its revenge. Come, let us
+love!"
+
+But she pushed him away.
+
+"_We_ love!" she cried bitterly. "_You_ never loved any one. And _I_
+do not love _you_! No! I do not love you! I hate you! Go! I hate you!
+I curse and despise all who are happy, and all who are rich! Go! Go!
+Goodness is only found amongst the unfortunate. When I was a child I
+knew a black slave who died on the cross. He was good; he was filled
+with love, and he knew the secret of life. You are not worthy to wash
+his feet. Go! I never wish to see you again!"
+
+She threw herself on her face on the carpet, and passed the night
+sobbing and weeping, and forming resolutions to live, in future, like
+Saint Theodore, in poverty and humbleness.
+
+The next day, she devoted herself again to those pleasures to which she
+was addicted. As she knew that her beauty, though still intact, would
+not last very long, she hastened to derive all the enjoyment and all the
+fame she could from it. At the theatre, where she acted and studied more
+than ever, she gave life to the imagination of sculptors, painters, and
+poets. Recognising that there was in the attitudes, movements, and walk
+of the actress, an idea of the divine harmony which rules the spheres,
+wise men and philosophers considered that such perfect grace was
+a virtue in itself, and said, "Thais also is a geometrician!" The
+ignorant, the poor, the humble, and the timid before whom she consented
+to appear, regarded her as a blessing from heaven. Yet she was sad
+amidst all the praise she received, and dreaded death more than ever.
+Nothing was able to set her mind at rest, not even her house and
+gardens, which were celebrated, and a proverb throughout the city.
+
+The gardens were planted with trees, brought at great expense from India
+and Persia. They were watered by a running brook, and colonnades in
+ruins, and imitation rocks, arranged by a skilful artist, were reflected
+in a lake, which also mirrored the statues that stood round it. In the
+middle of the garden was the Grotto of Nymphs, which owed its name to
+three life-size figures of women, which stood on the threshold. They
+were represented as divesting themselves of their garments, and about to
+bathe. They anxiously turned their heads, fearing to be seen, and looked
+as though they were alive. The only light which entered the building
+came, tempered and iridescent, through thin sheets of water. All the
+walls were hung--as in the sacred grottoes--with wreaths, garlands, and
+votive pictures, in which the beauty of Thais was celebrated. There
+were also tragic and comic masks, bright with colours; and paintings
+representing theatrical scenes or grotesque figures, or fabulous
+animals. On a stele in the centre stood a little ivory Eros of wonderful
+antique workmanship. It was a gift from Nicias. In one of the bays was a
+figure of a goat in black marble, with shining agate eyes. Six alabaster
+kids crowded round its teats; but, raising its cloven hoofs and its ugly
+head, it seemed impatient to climb the rocks. The floor was covered with
+Byzantine carpets, pillows embroidered by the yellow men of Cathay, and
+the skins of Libyan lions. Perfumed smoke arose from golden censers.
+Flowering plants grew in large onyx vases. And at the far end, in the
+purple shadow, gleamed the gold nails on the shell of a huge Indian
+tortoise turned upside down, which served as the bed of the actress. It
+was here that every day, to the murmur of the water, and amid perfumes
+and flowers, Thais reclined softly, and conversed with her friends,
+while awaiting the hour of supper, or meditated in solitude on
+theatrical art, or on the flight of years.
+
+On the afternoon after the games, Thais was reposing in the Grotto of
+Nymphs. She had noticed in her mirror the first signs of the decay of
+her beauty, and she was frightened to think that white hair and wrinkles
+would at last come. She vainly tried to comfort herself with the
+assurance that she could recover her fresh complexion by burning certain
+herbs and pronouncing a few magic words. A pitiless voice cried, "You
+will grow old Thais; you will grow old." And a cold sweat of terror
+bedewed her forehead. Then, on looking at herself again in the mirror
+with infinite tenderness, she found that she was still beautiful and
+worthy to be loved. She smiled to herself, and murmured, "There is not a
+woman in Alexandria who can rival me in suppleness or grace or movement,
+or in splendour of arms, and the arms, my mirror, are the real chains of
+love!"
+
+While she was thus thinking she saw an unknown man--thin, with burning
+eyes and unkempt beard, and clad in a richly embroidered robe--standing
+before her. She let fall her mirror, and uttered a cry of fright.
+
+Paphnutius stood motionless, and seeing how beautiful she was, he
+murmured this prayer from the bottom of his heart--
+
+"Grant, my God, that the face of this woman may not be a temptation, but
+may prove salutary to Thy servant."
+
+Then, forcing himself to speak, he said--
+
+"Thais, I live in a far country, and the fame of thy beauty has led me
+to thee. It is said that thou art the most clever of actresses and the
+most irresistible of women. That which is related of thy riches and thy
+love affairs seems fabulous, and calls to mind the old story of Rhodope,
+whose marvellous history is known by heart to all the boatmen on the
+Nile. Therefore I was seized with a desire to know thee, and I see that
+the truth surpasses the rumour. Thou art a thousand times more clever
+and more beautiful than is reported. And now that I see thee, I say
+to myself, 'It is impossible to approach her without staggering like a
+drunken man.'"
+
+The words were feigned; but the monk, animated by pious zeal, uttered
+them with real warmth. Thais gazed, without displeasure, at this strange
+being who had frightened her. The rough, wild aspect, and the fiery
+glances of his eyes, astonished her. She was curious to learn the state
+of life of a man so different from all others she had met. She replied,
+with gentle raillery--
+
+"You seem prompt to admire, stranger. Beware that my looks do not
+consume you to the bones! Beware of loving me!"
+
+He said--
+
+"I love thee, O Thais! I love thee more than my life, and more than
+myself. For thee I have quitted the desert; for thee my lips--vowed
+to silence--have pronounced profane words; for thee I have seen what I
+ought not to have seen, and heard what it was forbidden to me to hear;
+for thee my soul is troubled, my heart is open, and the thoughts gush
+out like the running springs at which the pigeons drink; for thee I
+have walked day and night across sandy deserts teeming with reptiles and
+vampires; for thee I have placed my bare foot on vipers and scorpions!
+Yes, I love thee! I love thee, but not like those men who, burning with
+the lusts of the flesh, come to thee like devouring wolves or furious
+bulls. Thou art dear to them as is the gazelle to the lion. Their
+ravening lusts will consume thee to the soul, O woman! I love thee in
+spirit and in truth; I love thee in God, and for ever and ever; that
+which is in my breast is named true zeal and divine charity. I promise
+thee better things than drunkenness crowned with flowers or the dreams
+of a brief night. I promise thee holy feasts and celestial suppers.
+The happiness that I bring thee will never end; it is unheard-of, it
+is ineffable, and such that if the happy of this world could only see a
+shadow of it they would die of wonder."
+
+Thais laughed mischievously.
+
+"Friend," she said, "show me this wonderful love. Make haste! Long
+speeches would be an insult to my beauty; let us not lose a moment. I am
+impatient to taste the felicity you announce; but, to say the truth, I
+fear that I shall always remain ignorant of it, and that all you have
+promised me will vanish in words. It is easier to promise a great
+happiness than to give it. Everyone has a talent of some sort. I fancy
+that yours is to make long speeches. You speak of an unknown love. It
+is so long since kisses were first exchanged that it would be very
+extraordinary if there still remained secrets in love. On this subject
+lovers know more than philosophers."
+
+"Do not jest, Thais. I bring thee the unknown love."
+
+"Friend, you come too late. I know every kind of love."
+
+"The love that I bring thee abounds with glory, whilst the loves that
+thou knowest breed only shame."
+
+Thais looked at him with an angry eye, a frown gathered on her beautiful
+face.
+
+"You are very bold, stranger, to offend your hostess. Look at me, and
+say if I resemble a creature crushed down with shame. No, I am not
+ashamed, and all others who live like me are not ashamed either,
+although they are not so beautiful or so rich as I am. I have sown
+pleasure in my footsteps, and I am celebrated for that all over the
+world. I am more powerful than the masters of the world. I have seen
+them at my feet. Look at me, look at these little feet; thousands of men
+would pay with their blood for the happiness of kissing them. I am not
+very big, and I do not occupy much space on the earth. To those who look
+at me from the top of the Serapeium, when I pass in the street, I look
+like a grain of rice; but that grain of rice has caused among men,
+griefs, despairs, hates, and crimes enough to have filled Tartarus. Are
+you not mad to talk to me of shame when all around proclaims my glory?"
+
+"That which is glory in the eyes of men, is infamy before God. O
+woman, we have been nourished in countries so different, that it is not
+surprising we have neither the same language nor the same thoughts! Yet
+Heaven is my witness that I wish to agree with thee, and that it is my
+intention not to leave thee until we share the same sentiments. Who will
+inspire me with burning words that will melt thee like wax in my breath,
+O woman, that the fingers of my desires may mould thee as they wish?
+What virtue will deliver thee to me, O dearest of souls, that the spirit
+which animates me, creating thee a second time, may imprint on thee a
+fresh beauty, and that thou mayest cry, weeping for joy, 'It is only now
+that I am born'? Who will cause to gush in my heart a fount of Siloam,
+in which thou mayest bathe and recover thy first purity? Who will change
+me into a Jordan, the waves of which sprinkled on thee, will give thee
+life eternal?"
+
+Thais was no longer angry.
+
+"This man," she thought, "talks of life eternal and all that he says
+seems written on a talisman. No doubt he is a mage, and knows secret
+charms against old age and death," and she resolved to offer herself to
+him. Therefore, pretending to be afraid of him, she retired a few steps
+to the end of the grotto, and sitting down on the edge of the bed,
+artfully pulled her tunic across her breast; then, motionless and mute
+and her eyes cast down, she waited. Her long eyelashes made a soft
+shadow on her cheeks. Her entire attitude expressed modesty; her naked
+feet swung gently, and she looked like a child sitting thinking on the
+bank of a brook. But Paphnutius looked at her, and did not move. His
+trembling knees hardly supported him, his tongue dried in his mouth, a
+terrible buzzing rang in his ears. But all at once his sight failed, and
+he could see nothing before him but a thick cloud. He thought that the
+hand of Jesus had been laid on his eyes, to hide this woman from them.
+Reassured by such succour, strengthened and fortified, he said with a
+gravity worthy of an old hermit of the desert--
+
+"If thou givest thyself to me, thinkest thou it is hidden from God?"
+
+She shook her head.
+
+"God? Who forces Him to keep His eye always upon the Grotto of Nymphs?
+Let Him go away if we offend Him! But why should we offend Him? Since
+He has created us, He can be neither angry nor surprised to see us as He
+made us, and acting according to the nature He has given us. A good deal
+too much is said on His behalf, and He is often credited with ideas He
+never had. You yourself, stranger, do you know His true character? Who
+are you that you should speak to me in His name?"
+
+At this question the monk, opening his borrowed robe, showed the
+cassock, and said--
+
+"I am Paphnutius, Abbot of Antinoe, and I come from the holy desert. The
+hand that drew Abraham from Chaldaea and Lot from Sodom has separated me
+from the present age. I no longer existed for the men of this century.
+But thy image appeared to me in my sandy Jerusalem, and I knew that
+thou wert full of corruption, and death was in thee. And now I am before
+thee, woman, as before a grave, and I cry unto thee, 'Thais, arise!'"
+
+At the words, Paphnutius, monk, and abbot, she had turned pale with
+fright. And now, with dishevelled hair and joined hands, weeping and
+groaning, she dragged herself to the feet of the saint.
+
+"Do not hurt me! Why have you come? What do you want of me? Do not hurt
+me! I know that the saints of the desert hate women who, like me, are
+made to please. I am afraid that you hate me, and want to hurt me. Go!
+I do not doubt your power. But know, Paphnutius, that you should neither
+despise me nor hate me. I have never, like many of the men I know,
+laughed at your voluntary poverty. In your turn, do not make a crime
+of my riches. I am beautiful, and clever in acting. I no more chose my
+condition than my nature. I was made for that which I do. I was born to
+charm men. And you yourself, did you not say just now that you loved me?
+Do not use your science against me. Do not pronounce magic words which
+would destroy my beauty, or change me into a statue of salt. Do not
+terrify me! I am already too frightened. Do not kill me! I am so afraid
+of death."
+
+He made a sign to her to rise, and said--
+
+"Child, have no fear. I will utter no word of shame or scorn. I come on
+behalf of Him who sat on the edge of the well, and drank of the pitcher
+which the woman of Samaria offered to Him; and who, also, when He supped
+at the house of Simon, received the perfumes of Mary. I am not without
+sin that I should throw the first stone. I have often badly employed
+the abundant grace which God has bestowed upon me. It was not anger,
+but pity, which took me by the hand to conduct me here. I can, without
+deceit, address thee in words of love, for it is the zeal in my heart
+which has brought me to thee. I burn with the fire of charity, and if
+thy eyes, accustomed only to the gross sights of the flesh, could see
+things in their mystic aspect, I should appear unto thee as a branch
+broken off the burning bush which the Lord showed on the mountain to
+Moses of old, that he might understand true love--that which envelops
+us, and which, so far from leaving behind it mere coals and ashes,
+purifies and perfumes for ever that which it penetrates."
+
+"I believe you, monk, and no longer fear either deceit or ill-will from
+you. I have often heard talk of the hermits of the Thebaid. Marvellous
+things have been told concerning Anthony and Paul. Your name is not
+unknown to me, and I have heard say that, though you are still young,
+you equal in virtue the oldest anchorites. As soon as I saw you, and
+without knowing who you were, I felt that you were no ordinary man. Tell
+me! can you do for me that which neither the priests of Isis, nor of
+Hermes, nor of the celestial Juno, nor the Chaldean soothsayers, nor the
+Babylonian magi have been able to effect? Monk, if you love me, can you
+prevent me from dying?"
+
+"Woman, whosoever wishes to live shall live. Flee from the abominable
+delights in which thou diest for ever. Snatch from the devils, who will
+burn it most horribly, that body which God kneaded with His spittle and
+animated with his own breath. Thou art consumed with weariness; come,
+and refresh thyself at the blessed springs of solitude; come and drink
+of those fountains which are hidden in the desert, and which gush forth
+to heaven. Careworn soul, come, and possess that which thou desirest!
+Heart greedy for joy, come and taste true joys--poverty, retirement,
+self-forgetfulness, seclusion in the bosom of God. Enemy of Christ now,
+and to-morrow His well-beloved, come to Him! Come, thou whom I have
+sought, and thou wilt say, 'I have found love!'"
+
+Thais seemed lost in meditation on things afar.
+
+"Monk," she asked, "if I adjure all pleasures and do penance, is it true
+that I shall be born again in heaven, my body intact in all its beauty?"
+
+"Thais, I bring thee eternal life. Believe me, for that which I announce
+to thee is the truth."
+
+"Who will assure me that it is the truth?"
+
+"David and the prophets, the Scriptures, and the wonders that thou shalt
+behold."
+
+"Monk, I should like to believe you, for I must confess that I have not
+found happiness in this world. My lot in life is better than that of
+a queen, and yet I have many bitternesses and misfortunes, and I am
+infinitely weary of my existence. All women envy me, and yet sometimes
+I have envied the lot of a toothless old woman who, when I was a child,
+sold honey-cakes under one of the city gates. Often has the idea flashed
+across my mind that only the poor are good, happy, and blessed, and that
+there must be great gladness in living humble and obscure. Monk, you
+have agitated a storm in my soul, and brought to the surface that which
+lay at the bottom. Who am I to believe, alas! and what is to become of
+me--and what is life?"
+
+Whilst she thus spoke, Paphnutius was transfigured; celestial joy beamed
+in his face.
+
+"Listen!" he said. "I was not alone when I entered this house. Another
+accompanied me, another who stands by my side. Him thou canst not see,
+because thy eyes are yet unworthy to behold Him; but soon thou shalt see
+Him in all His glorious splendour, and thou wilt say, 'He alone is to be
+adored.' But now, if He had not placed His gentle hands before my eyes,
+O Thais, I should perhaps have fallen into sin with thee, for of myself
+I am but weak and sinful. But He saved us both. He is as good as He is
+powerful, and His name is the Saviour. He was promised to the world, by
+David and the prophets, worshipped in His cradle by the shepherds and
+the magi, crucified by the Pharisees, buried by the holy women, revealed
+to the world by the apostles, testified to by the martyrs. And now,
+having learned that thou fearest death, O woman, He has come to thy
+house to prevent thee from dying. Art Thou not here present with me,
+Jesus, at this moment, as Thou didst appear to the men of Galilee, in
+those wonderful days when the stars, which came down with thee from
+heaven, were so near the earth that the holy innocents could take them
+in their hands, when they played in their mothers' arms on the terraces
+of Bethlehem? Is it not true, Jesus, that Thou art here present, and
+that Thou showest me in reality Thy precious body? Is not Thy face here,
+and that tear which flows down Thy cheek a real tear? Yes, the angel of
+eternal justice shall receive it, and it shall be the ransom of the soul
+of Thais. Art Thou not here, Jesus? Jesus, Thy loving lips open. Thou
+canst speak; speak, I hear Thee! And thee, Thais, happy Thais! listen
+to what the Saviour Himself says to thee; it is He who speaks, not I.
+He says, 'I have sought thee long, O My lost sheep! I have found thee
+at last! Fly from Me no more. Let Me take thee by the hands, poor little
+one, and I will bear thee on My shoulders to the heavenly fold. Come, My
+Thais! come, My chosen one! come, and weep with Me!'"
+
+And Paphnutius fell on his knees, his eyes filled with ecstasy. And then
+Thais saw in his face the likeness of the living Christ.
+
+"O vanished days of my childhood!" she sobbed. "O sweet father Ahmes!
+good Saint Theodore, why did I not die in thy white mantle whilst thou
+didst bear me, in the first dawn of day, yet fresh from the waters of
+baptism!"
+
+Paphnutius advanced towards her, crying--
+
+"Thou art baptised! O divine wisdom! O Providence! O great God! I know
+now the power which drew me to thee. I know what rendered thee so dear
+and so beautiful in my eyes. It was the virtue of the baptismal water,
+which made me leave the shadow of God, where I lived, to seek thee in
+the poisoned air where men dwell. A drop--a drop, no doubt, of the water
+which washed thy body--has been sprinkled in my face. Come, O my sister,
+and receive from thy brother the kiss of peace."
+
+And the monk touched with his lips the forehead of the courtesan.
+
+Then he was silent, letting God speak, and nothing was heard in the
+Grotto of Nymphs but the sobs of Thais, mingled with the rippling of the
+running water.
+
+She wept without trying to stop her tears, when two black slaves
+appeared, loaded with stuffs, perfumes, and garlands.
+
+"It was hardly the right time to weep," she said, trying to smile.
+"Tears redden the eyes and spoil the complexion, and I must sup tonight
+with some friends, and want to be beautiful, for there will be women
+there quick to spy out marks of care on my face. These slaves come to
+dress me. Withdraw, my father, and allow them to do their work. They are
+clever and experienced, and I pay them well for their services. You see
+that one who wears thick rings of gold, and shows such white teeth. I
+took her from the wife of the pro-consul."
+
+Paphnutius had at first a thought of dissuading Thais, as earnestly as
+he could, from going to this supper. But he determined to act prudently,
+and asked what persons she would meet there.
+
+She replied that there would be the host, old Cotta, the Prefect of the
+Fleet, Nicias, and several other philosophers who loved an argument, the
+poet Callicrates, the high priest of Serapis, some young men whose chief
+amusement was training horses, and lastly some women, of whom there was
+little to be said except that they were young. Then, by a supernatural
+inspiration--
+
+"Go amongst them, Thais," said the monk. "Go! But I will not leave thee.
+I will go with thee to this banquet, and will remain by thy side without
+saying a word."
+
+She burst out laughing. And whilst her two black slaves were busy
+dressing her, she cried--
+
+"What will they say when they see that I have a monk of the Thebaid for
+my lover?"
+
+
+
+
+THE BANQUET
+
+When, followed by Paphnutius, Thais entered the banqueting-room, the
+guests were already, for the most part, assembled, and reclining
+on their couches before the horseshoe table, which was covered with
+glittering vessels. In the centre of the table stood a silver basin,
+surmounted by four figures of satyrs, who poured out from wine-skins
+on the boiled fish a kind of pickle in which they floated. When Thais
+appeared, acclamations arose from all sides.
+
+Greetings to the sister of the Graces!
+
+To the silent Melpomene, who can express all things with her looks!
+
+Salutation to the well-beloved of gods and men!
+
+To the much desired!
+
+To her who gives suffering and its cure!
+
+To the pearl of Racotis!
+
+To the rose of Alexandria!
+
+She waited impatiently till this torrent of praise had passed, and then
+said to Cotta, the host--
+
+"Lucius, I have brought you a monk of the desert, Paphnutius, the Abbot
+of Antinoe. He is a great saint, whose words burn like fire."
+
+Lucius Aurelius Cotta, the Prefect of the Fleet, rose, and replied--
+
+"You are welcome, Paphnutius, you who profess the Christian faith. I
+myself have some respect of a religion that has now become imperial. The
+divine Constantine has placed your co-religionists in the front rank of
+the friends of the empire. Latin wisdom ought, in fact, to admit your
+Christ into our pantheon. It was a maxim of our forefathers that there
+was something divine in every god. But no more of that. Let us drink and
+enjoy ourselves while there is yet time."
+
+Old Cotta spoke tranquilly. He had just studied a new model for
+a galley, and had finished the sixth book of his history of the
+Carthaginians. He felt sure he had not lost his day, and was satisfied
+with himself and the gods.
+
+"Paphnutius," he added, "you see here several men who are worthy to be
+loved--Hermodorus, the High Priest of Serapis; the philosophers Dorion,
+Nicias, and Zenothemis; the poet Callicrates; young Chereas and young
+Aristobulus, both sons of dear old comrades; and near them Philina and
+Drosea, who deserve to be praised for their beauty."
+
+Nicias embraced Paphnutius, and whispered in his ear--
+
+"I warned you, brother, that Venus was powerful. It is her gentle force
+that has brought you here in spite of yourself. Listen: you are a man
+full of piety, but if you do not confess that she is the mother of the
+gods, your ruin is certain. Do you know that the old mathematician,
+Melanthes, used to say, 'I cannot demonstrate the properties of a
+triangle without the aid of Venus'?"
+
+Dorion, who had for some seconds been looking at the new-comer, suddenly
+clapped his hands and uttered a cry of surprise.
+
+"It is he, friends! His look, his beard, his tunic--it is he himself!
+I met him at the theatre whilst our Thais was acting. He was furiously
+excited, and spoke with violence, as I can testify. He is an honest man,
+but he will abuse us all; his eloquence is terrible. If Marcus is the
+Plato of the Christians, Paphnutius is the Demosthenes. Epicurus, in his
+little garden, never heard the like."
+
+Philina and Drosea, however, devoured Thais with their eyes. She wore on
+her fair hair a wreath of pale violets, each flower of which recalled,
+in a paler hue, the colour of her eyes, so that the flowers looked
+like softened glances, and the eyes like sparkling flowers. It was the
+peculiar gift of this woman; on her everything lived, and was soul and
+harmony. Her robe, which was of mauve spangled with silver, trailed in
+long folds with a grace that was almost melancholy and was not relieved
+by either bracelets or necklaces. The chief charm of her appearance
+was her beautiful bare arms. The two friends were obliged to admire, in
+spite of themselves the robe and head-dress of Thais, though they said
+nothing to her on the subject.
+
+"How beautiful you are!" said Philina. "You could not have been more
+so when you came to Alexandria. Yet my mother, who remembers seeing
+you then, says there were few women who were worthy to be compared with
+you."
+
+"Who is the new lover you have brought?" asked Drosea. "He has a
+strange, wild appearance. If there are shepherds of elephants, assuredly
+he must resemble one. Where did you find such a wild-looking friend,
+Thais? Was it amongst the troglodytes who live under the earth, and are
+grimy with the smoke of Hades?"
+
+But Philina put her finger on Drosea's lips.
+
+"Hush! the mysteries of love must remain secret, and it is forbidden to
+know them. For my own part, certainly, I would rather be kissed by the
+mouth of smoking Etna than by the lips of that man. But our dear
+Thais, who is beautiful and adorable as the goddesses, should, like
+the goddesses, grant all requests, and not, like us, only those of nice
+young men."
+
+"Take care, both of you!" replied Thais. "He is a mage and an enchanter.
+He hears words that are whispered, and even thoughts. He will tear out
+your heart while you are asleep, and put a sponge in its place, and the
+next day, when you drink water, you will be choked to death."
+
+She watched them grow pale, then she turned away from them, and sat on a
+couch by the side of Paphnutius. The voice of Cotta, kind but imperious,
+was suddenly heard above the murmur of conversation.
+
+"Friends, let each take his place! Slaves, pour out the honeyed wine!"
+
+Then, the host raising his cup--
+
+"Let us first drink to the divine Constantine and the genius of the
+empire. The country should be put first of all, even above the gods, for
+it contains them all."
+
+All the guests raised their full cups to their lips. Paphnutius alone
+did not drink, because Constantine had persecuted the Nicaean faith, and
+because the country of the Christian is not of this world.
+
+Dorion, having drunk, murmured--
+
+"What is one's country? A flowing river. The shores change, and the
+waves are incessantly renewed."
+
+"I know, Dorion," replied the Prefect of the Fleet, "that you care
+little for the civic virtues, and you think that the sage ought to hold
+himself aloof from all affairs. I think, on the contrary, that an honest
+man should desire nothing better than to fill a responsible post in the
+State. The State is a noble thing."
+
+Hermodorus, the High Priest of Serapis, spoke next--
+
+"Dorion has asked, 'What is one's country?' I will reply that the altars
+of the gods and the tombs of ancestors make one's country. A man is a
+fellow-citizen by association of memories and hopes."
+
+Young Aristobulus interrupted Hermodorus.
+
+"By Castor! I saw a splendid horse to-day. It belonged to Demophoon.
+It has a fine head, small jaw, and strong forelegs. It carries its neck
+high and proud, like a cock."
+
+But young Chereas shook his head.
+
+"It is not such a good horse as you say, Aristobulus. Its hoofs are
+thin, and the pasterns are too low; the animal will soon go lame."
+
+They were continuing their dispute, when Drosea uttered a piercing
+shriek.
+
+"Oh! I nearly swallowed a fish-bone, as long and much sharper than a
+style. Luckily, I was able to get it out of my throat in time! The gods
+love me!"
+
+"Did you say, Drosea, that the gods loved you?" asked Nicias, smiling.
+"Then they must share the same infirmities as men. Love presupposes
+unhappiness on the part of whoever suffers from it, and is a proof of
+weakness. The affection they feel for Drosea is a great proof of the
+imperfection of the gods."
+
+At these words Drosea flew into a great rage.
+
+"Nicias, your remarks are foolish and not to the point. But that is your
+character--you never understand what is said, and reply in words devoid
+of sense."
+
+Nicias smiled again.
+
+"Talk away, talk away, Drosea. Whatever you say, we are glad every time
+you open your mouth. Your teeth are so pretty!"
+
+At that moment, a grave-looking old man, negligently dressed, walking
+slowly, with his head high, entered the room, and gazed at the guests
+quietly. Cotta made a sign to him to take a place by his side, on the
+same couch.
+
+"Eucrites," he said, "you are welcome. Have you composed a new treatise
+on philosophy this month? That would make, if I calculate correctly, the
+ninety-second that has proceeded from the Nile reed you direct with an
+Attic hand."
+
+Eucrites replied, stroking his silver beard--
+
+"The nightingale was created to sing, and I was created to praise the
+immortal gods."
+
+DORION. Let us respectfully salute, in Eucrites, the last of the stoics.
+Grave and white, he stands in the midst of us like the image of an
+ancestor. He is solitary amidst a crowd of men, and the words he utters
+are not heard.
+
+EUCRITES. You deceive yourself, Dorion. The philosophy of virtue is not
+dead. I have numerous disciples in Alexandria, Rome, and Constantinople.
+Many of the slaves, and some of the nephews of Caesar, now know how to
+govern themselves, to live independently, and being unconcerned with all
+affairs, they enjoy boundless happiness. Many of them have revived, in
+their own person, Epictetus and Marcus Aurelius. But if it were true
+that virtue were for ever extinguished upon the earth, in what way
+would the loss of it affect my happiness, since it did not depend on
+me whether it existed or perished? Only fools, Dorion, place their
+happiness out of their own power. I desire nothing that the gods do not
+wish, and I desire all that they do wish. By that means I render myself
+like unto them, and share their infallible content. If virtue perishes,
+I consent that it should perish, and that consent fills me with joy, as
+the supreme effort of my reason or my courage. In all things my wisdom
+will copy the divine wisdom, and the copy will be more valuable than the
+model; it will have cost greater care and more work.
+
+NICIAS. I understand. You put yourself on the same level as divine
+providence. But if virtue consists only in effort, Eucrites, and in that
+intense application by which the disciples of Zeno pretend to render
+themselves equal to the gods, the frog, which swelled itself out to try
+and become as big as the ox, accomplished a masterpiece of stoicism.
+
+EUCRITES. You jest, Nicias, and, as usual, you excel in ridicule. But
+if the ox of which you speak is really a god, like Apis, or like that
+subterranean ox whose high priest I see here, and if the frog, being
+wisely inspired, succeed in equalling it, would it not be, in fact,
+more virtuous than the ox, and could you refrain from admiring such a
+courageous little animal!
+
+Four servants placed on the table a wild pig, still covered with its
+bristles. Little pigs, made of pastry, surrounded the animal, as though
+they would suckle, to show that it was a sow.
+
+Zenothemis, turning towards the monk, said--
+
+"Friends, a guest has come hither to join us. The illustrious
+Paphnutius, who leads such an extraordinary life of solitude, is our
+unexpected guest."
+
+COTTA. You may even add, Zenothemis, that the place of honour is due to
+him, because he came without being invited.
+
+ZENOTHEMIS. Therefore, we ought, my dear Lucius, to make him the more
+welcome, and strive to do that which would be most agreeable to him. Now
+it is certain that such a man cares less for the perfumes of meat than
+for the perfumes of fine thoughts. We shall, doubtless, please him by
+discussing the doctrine he professes, which is that of Jesus crucified.
+For my own part, I shall the more willingly discuss this doctrine,
+because it keenly interests me, on account of the number and the
+diversity of the allegories it contains. If one may guess at the
+spirit by the letter, it is filled with truths, and I consider that
+the Christian books abound in divine revelations. But I should not,
+Paphnutius, grant equal merit to the Jewish books. They were inspired
+not, as it was said, by the Spirit of God, but by an evil genius. Iaveh,
+who dictated them, was one of those spirits who people the lower air,
+and cause the greater part of the evils, from which we suffer; but he
+surpassed all the others in ignorance and ferocity. On the contrary, the
+serpent with golden wings, which twined its azure coils round the tree
+of knowledge, was made up of light and love. A combat between these
+two powers--the one of light and the other of darkness--was, therefore,
+inevitable. It occurred soon after the creation of the world. God had
+hardly begun to rest after His labors; Adam and Eve, the first man and
+the first woman, lived happy and naked in the Garden of Eden, when Iaveh
+conceived--to their misfortune--the design of governing them and all
+the generations which Eve already bore in her splendid loins. As he
+possessed neither the compass nor the lyre, and was equally ignorant of
+the science which commands and the art which persuades, he frightened
+these two poor children by hideous apparitions, capricious threats,
+and thunder-bolts. Adam and Eve, feeling his shadow upon them, pressed
+closer to one another, and their love waxed stronger in fear. The
+serpent took pity on them, and determined to instruct them, in order
+that, possessing knowledge, they might no longer be misled by lies. Such
+an undertaking required extreme prudence, and the frailty of the first
+human couple rendered it almost hopeless. The well-intentioned demon
+essayed it, however. Without the knowledge of Iaveh--who pretended
+to see everything, but, in reality, was not very sharp-sighted--he
+approached these two beings, and charmed their eyes by the splendour of
+his coat and the brilliancy of his wings. Then he interested their minds
+by forming before them, with his body, definite figures, such as the
+circle, the ellipse, and the spiral, the wonderful properties of which
+have since been recognised by the Greeks. Adam meditated on these
+figures more than Eve did. But when the serpent began to speak, and
+taught the most sublime truths--those which cannot be demonstrated--he
+found that Adam being made of red earth, was of too dull a nature to
+understand these subtle distinctions, but that Eve, on the contrary,
+being more tender and more sensitive, was easily impressed. Therefore
+he conversed with her alone, in the absence of her husband, in order to
+initiate her first--
+
+DORION. Permit me, Zenothemis, to interrupt you. I speedily recognised
+in the myth you have explained to us an episode in the war of Pallas
+Athene against the giants. Iaveh much resembles Typhoon, and Pallas is
+represented by the Athenians with a serpent at her side. But what you
+have said causes me considerable doubt as to the intelligence or good
+faith of the serpent of whom you have spoken. If he had really possessed
+knowledge, would he have entrusted it to a woman's little head, which
+was incapable of containing it? I should rather consider that he was
+like Iaveh, ignorant and a liar, and that he chose Eve because she was
+easily seduced, and he imagined that Adam would have more intelligence
+and perception.
+
+ZENOTHEMIS. Learn, Dorion, that it is not by perception and
+intelligence, but by sensibility, that the highest and purest truths are
+reached. That is why women, who, generally, are less reflective but more
+sensitive than men, rise more easily to the knowledge of things divine.
+In them is the gift of prophecy, and it is not without reason that
+Apollo Citharedes, and Jesus of Nazareth, are sometimes represented
+clad, like women, in flowing robes. The initiator was therefore
+wise--whatever you may say to the contrary, Dorion--in bestowing light,
+not on the duller Adam, but on Eve, who was whiter than milk or the
+stars. She freely listened to him, and allowed herself to be led to the
+tree of knowledge, the branches of which rose to heaven, and which was
+bathed with the divine spirit as with a dew. This tree was covered with
+leaves which spoke all the languages of future races of men, and their
+united voices formed a perfect harmony. Its abundant fruit gave to the
+initiated who tasted it the knowledge of metals, stones, and plants, and
+also of physical and moral laws; but this fruit was like fire, and those
+who feared suffering and death did not dare to put it to their lips.
+Now, as she had listened attentively to the lessons of the serpent, Eve
+despised these empty terrors, and wished to taste the fruit which gave
+the knowledge of God. But, as she loved Adam, and did not wish him to be
+inferior to her, she took him by the hand and led him to the wonderful
+tree. Then she picked one of the burning apples, bit it, and proffered
+it to her companion. Unfortunately, Iaveh, who was by chance walking
+in the garden, surprised them, and seeing that they had become wise, he
+fell into a most ungovernable rage. It is in his jealous fits that he is
+most to be feared. Assembling all his forces, he created such a turmoil
+in the lower air that these two weak beings were terrified. The fruit
+fell from the man's hand, and the woman, clinging to the neck of her
+luckless husband, said, "I too will be ignorant and suffer with him."
+The triumphant Iaveh kept Adam and Eve and all their seed in a condition
+of hebetude and terror. His art, which consisted only in being able to
+make huge meteors, triumphed over the science of the serpent, who was a
+musician and geometrician. He made men unjust, ignorant, and cruel,
+and caused evil to reign in the earth. He persecuted Cain and his sons
+because they were skilful workmen; he exterminated the Philistines
+because they composed Orphic poems, and fables like those of AEsop. He
+was the implacable enemy of science and beauty, and for long ages
+the human race expiated, in blood and tears, the defeat of the winged
+serpent. Fortunately, there arose among the Greeks learned men, such as
+Pythagoras, and Plato, who recovered by the force of genius, the figures
+and the ideas which the enemy of Iaveh had vainly tried to teach the
+first woman. The soul of the serpent was in them; and that is why the
+serpent, as Dorion has said, is honoured by the Athenians. Finally, in
+these latter days, there appeared, under human form, three celestial
+spirits--Jesus of Galilee, Basilides, and Valentinus--to whom it was
+given to pluck the finest fruits of that tree of knowledge, whose roots
+pass through all the earth, and whose top reaches to the highest heaven.
+I have said all this in vindication of the Christians, to whom the
+errors of the Jews are too often imputed.
+
+DORION. If I understood you aright, Zenothemis, you said that three
+wonderful men--Jesus, Basilides, and Valentinus--had discovered secrets
+which had remained hidden from Pythagoras and Plato, and all the
+philosophers of Greece, and even from the divine Epicurus, who, however,
+has freed men from the dread of empty terrors. You would greatly oblige
+me by telling me by what means these three mortals acquired knowledge
+which had eluded the most contemplative sages.
+
+ZENOTHEMIS. Must I repeat to you, Dorion, that science and cogitation
+are but the first steps to knowledge, and that ecstasy alone leads to
+eternal truth?
+
+HERMODORUS. It is true, Zenothemis, that the soul is nourished on
+ecstasy, as the cicada is nourished on dew. But we may even say more:
+the mind alone is capable of perfect rapture. For man is of a threefold
+nature, composed of material body, of a soul which is more subtle, but
+also material, and of an incorruptible mind. When, emerging from the
+body as from a palace suddenly given over to silence and solitude and
+flying through the gardens of the soul, the mind diffuses itself in God,
+it tastes the delights of an anticipated death, or rather of a future
+life, for to die is to live; and in that condition, partaking of divine
+purity, it possesses both infinite joy and complete knowledge. It enters
+into the unity which is All. It is perfected.
+
+NICIAS. That is very fine; but, to say the truth, Hermodorus, I do not
+see much difference between All and Nothing. Words even seem to fail to
+make the distinction. Infinity is terribly like nothingness--they are
+both inconceivable to the mind. In my opinion perfection costs too dear;
+we pay for it with all our being, and to possess it must cease to
+exist. That is a calamity from which God Himself is not free, for the
+philosophers are doing their best to perfect Him. After all, if we do
+not know what it is _not_ to be, we are equally ignorant what it is to
+_be_. We know nothing. It is said that it is impossible for men to agree
+on this question. I believe--in spite of our noisy disputes--that it is,
+on the contrary, impossible for men not to become some day all at unity
+buried under the mass of contradictions, a Pelion on Ossa, which they
+themselves have raised.
+
+COTTA. I am very fond of philosophy, and study it in my leisure time.
+But I never understand it well, except in Cicero's books. Slaves, pour
+out the honeyed wine!
+
+CALLICRATES. It is a singular thing, but when I am hungry I think of
+the time when the tragic poets sat at the boards of good tyrants, and my
+mouth waters. But when I have tasted the excellent wine that you give
+us so abundantly, generous Lucius, I dream of nothing but civil wars and
+heroic combats. I blush to live in such inglorious times; I invoke the
+goddess of Liberty; and I pour out my blood--in imagination--with the
+last Romans on the field of Philippi.
+
+COTTA. In the days of the decline of the Republic my ancestors died with
+Brutus--for liberty. But there is reason to suspect that what the
+Roman people called liberty was only in reality the right to govern
+themselves. I do not deny that liberty is the greatest boon a nation can
+have. But the longer I live the more I am persuaded that only a strong
+government can bestow it on the citizens. For forty years I have filled
+high positions in the State, and my long experience has shown me
+that when the ruling power is weak the people are oppressed. Those,
+therefore, who--like the great majority of rhetoricians--try to weaken
+the government, commit an abominable crime. An autocrat, who governs by
+his single will, may sometimes cause most deplorable results; but if
+he governs by popular consent there is no remedy possible. Before the
+majesty of the Roman arms had bestowed peace upon all the world, the
+only nations which were happy were those which were ruled over by
+intelligent despots.
+
+HERMODORUS. For my part, Lucius, I believe that there is no such thing
+as a good form of government, and that we shall never discover one,
+because the Greeks, who had so many excellent ideas, were never able to
+find one. In that respect, therefore, all hope of ultimate success is
+taken from us. Unmistakable signs show that the world is about to fall
+into ignorance and barbarism. It has been our lot, Lucius, to witness
+terrible events. Of all the mental satisfactions which intelligence,
+learning, and virtue can give, all that remains is the cruel pleasure of
+watching ourselves die.
+
+COTTA. It is true that the rapacity of the people, and the boldness of
+the barbarians, are threatening evils. But with a good fleet, a good
+army, and plenty of money----
+
+HERMODORUS. What is the use of deceiving ourselves? The dying empire
+will become an easy prey to the barbarians. Cities which were built
+by Hellenic genius, or Latin patience, will soon be sacked by drunken
+savages. Neither art nor philosophy will exist any longer on the earth.
+The statues of the gods will be overturned in the temples, and in men's
+hearts as well. Darkness will overcome all minds, and the world will
+die. Can we believe that the Sarmatians will ever devote themselves to
+intelligent work, that the Germani will cultivate music and philosophy,
+and that the Quadi and the Marcomani will adore the immortal gods? No!
+we are sliding toward the abyss. Our old Egypt, which was the cradle
+of the world, will be its burial vault; Serapis, the god of Death, will
+receive the last adoration of mortals, and I shall have been the last
+priest of the last god.
+
+At this moment a strange figure raised the tapestry, and the guests saw
+before them a little hunchback, whose bald skull rose in a point. He was
+clad, in the Asiatic fashion, in a blue tunic, and wore round his legs,
+like the barbarians, red breeches, spangled with gold stars. On
+seeing him, Paphnutius recognised Marcus the Arian, and fearing lest a
+thunderbolt should fall from heaven, he covered his head with his arms,
+and grew pale with fright. At this banquet of the demons, neither the
+blasphemies of the pagans, nor the horrible errors of the philosophers,
+had had any effect on him, but the mere presence of the heretic quenched
+his courage. He would have fled, but his eyes met those of Thais, and
+he felt at once strengthened. He read in her soul that she, who was
+predestined to become a saint, already protected him. He seized the
+skirt of her long, flowing robe, and inwardly prayed to the Saviour
+Jesus.
+
+A murmur of acclamation welcomed the arrival of the personage who had
+been called the Christian Plato. Hermodorus was the first to speak.
+
+"Most illustrious Marcus, we rejoice to see you amongst us, and it
+may be said that you come at the right moment. We know nothing of the
+Christian doctrine, beyond what is publicly taught. Now, it is certain
+that a philosopher, like you, cannot think as the vulgar think, and
+we are curious to know your opinion of the principal mysteries of the
+religion you profess. Our dear friend, Zenothemis, who, as you know,
+is always hunting for symbolic meanings, just now questioned the
+illustrious Paphnutius concerning the Jewish books. But Paphnutius made
+no reply, and we should not be surprised at that, as our guest has made
+a vow of silence, and God has sealed his tongue in the desert. But
+you Marcus, who have spoken at the Christian synods, and even at
+the councils of the divine Constantine, can if you wish, satisfy our
+curiosity by revealing to us the philosophic truths which are wrapped up
+in the Christian fables. Is not the first of these truths the existence
+of an only God--in whom, for my part, I fervently believe?"
+
+MARCUS. Yes, venerable brethren, I believe in an only God, not
+begotten--the only Eternal, the origin of all things.
+
+NICIAS. We know, Marcus, that your God created the world. That must
+certainly have been a great crisis in His existence. He had already
+existed an eternity before He could make up His mind to it. But I must,
+in justice, confess that His situation was a most difficult one. He must
+continue inactive if He would remain perfect, and must act if He would
+prove to Himself His own existence. You assure me that He decided
+to act. I am willing to believe you, although it was an unpardonable
+imprudence on the part of a perfect God. But tell us, Marcus, how He set
+about making the world.
+
+MARCUS. Those who, without being Christians, possess, like Hermodorus
+and Zenothemis, the principles of knowledge, are aware that God did not
+create the world personally without an intermediary. He gave birth to an
+only Son, by whom all things were made.
+
+HERMODORUS. That is quite true, Marcus; and this Son is worshipped under
+the various names of Hermes, Mithra, Adonis, Apollo, and Jesus.
+
+MARCUS. I should not be a Christian if I gave Him any other names than
+those of Jesus Christ, and Saviour. He is the true Son of God. But He
+is not eternal, since He had a beginning; as to thinking that He existed
+before He was begotten, we must leave that absurdity to the Nicaean
+mules, and the obstinate ass who too long governed the Church of
+Alexandria under the accursed name of Athanasius.
+
+At these words Paphnutius, white with horror and his face bedewed with
+the sweat of agony made the sign of the cross, but maintained a sublime
+silence.
+
+Marcus continued--
+
+"It is clear that the foolish Nicene Creed is a treason against the
+majesty of the only God, by compelling Him to share His indivisible
+attributes with His own emanation--the Mediator by whom all things were
+made. Cease jesting at the true God of the Christians, Nicias, and learn
+that, like the lilies of the field, He toils not, neither does He spin.
+It was not He who was the worker, it was His only Son, Jesus, who,
+having created the world, came afterwards to repair His handiwork. For
+the creation could not be perfect, and evil was necessarily mingled with
+good."
+
+NICIAS. What is "good," and what is "evil"?
+
+There was a moment's silence, during which Hermodorus, his arm extended
+on the cloth, pointed to a little ass in Corinthian metal which bore two
+baskets--the one containing white olives, the other black olives.
+
+"You see these olives," he said. "The contrast between the colours is
+pleasant to the eye, and we are content that these should be light
+and those should be dark. But, if they were endowed with thought and
+knowledge, the white would say, It is good for an olive to be white,
+it is bad for it to be black; and the black olives would hate the white
+olives. We judge better, for we are as much above them as the gods are
+above us. For man, who only sees a part of things, evil is an evil; for
+God, who understands all things, evil is a good. Doubtless ugliness is
+ugly, and not beautiful; but if all were beautiful, the whole would not
+be beautiful. It is, then, well that there should be evil, as the second
+Plato, far greater than the first, has demonstrated."
+
+EUCRITES. Let us talk more morally. Evil is an evil--not for the world,
+of which it cannot destroy the indestructible harmony but for the sinner
+who does it, and cannot help doing it.
+
+COTTA. By Jupiter? that is a good argument.
+
+EUCRITES. The world is a tragedy by an excellent poet. God, who composed
+it, has intended each of us to play a part in it. If he wills that you
+shall be a beggar, a prince, or a cripple, make the best of the part
+assigned you.
+
+NICIAS. Assuredly it would be well that the cripple should limp like
+Hephaistos: it would be well that the madman should indulge in all the
+fury of Ajax, that the incestuous woman should repeat the crimes of
+Phaedra, that the traitor should betray, that the rascal should lie, and
+the murderer kill, and when the piece was played, all the actor--kings,
+just men, bloody tyrants, pious virgins, immodest wives, noble-minded
+citizens, and cowardly assassins--should receive from the poet an equal
+share in the felicitations.
+
+EUCRITES. You distort my thought, Nicias, and change a beautiful young
+girl into a hideous Gorgon. I am sorry for you, if you are so ignorant
+of the nature of the gods, of justice, and of the eternal laws.
+
+ZENOTHEMIS. For my part, friends, I believe in the reality of good and
+evil. But I am convinced that there is not a single human action--were
+it even the kiss of Judas--which does not bear within itself the germ of
+redemption. Evil contributes to the ultimate salvation of men, and, in
+that respect issues from Good, and shares the merits belonging to
+Good. This has been admirably expressed by the Christians, in the myth
+concerning the man with red hair, who, in order to betray his master,
+gave him the kiss of peace, and by such act assured the salvation of
+men. Therefore, nothing is, in my opinion, more unjust and absurd than
+the hate with which certain disciples of Paul, the tentmaker, pursue
+the most unfortunate of the apostles of Jesus without realising that the
+kiss of Iscariot--prophesied by Jesus Himself--was necessary, according
+to their own doctrine, for the redemption of men, and that if Judas
+had not received the thirty pieces, the divine wisdom would have been
+impugned, Providence frustrated, its designs upset, and the world given
+over to evil, ignorance, and death.
+
+MARCUS. Divine wisdom foresaw that Judas, though he was not obliged
+to give the traitor's kiss, would give it, notwithstanding. It thus
+employed the sin of Iscariot as a stone in the marvellous edifice of the
+redemption.
+
+ZENOTHEMIS. I spoke just now, Marcus, as though I believed that the
+redemption of men had been accomplished by Jesus crucified, because I
+know that such is the belief of the Christians, and I borrowed their
+opinion that I might the better show the mistake of those who believe in
+the eternal damnation of Judas. But, in reality, Jesus was, in my eyes,
+but the precursor of Basilides and Valentinus. As to the mystery of the
+redemption, I will tell you, my dear friends--if you are at all curious
+to hear it--how it was really accomplished on earth.
+
+The guests made a sign of assent. Like the Athenian virgins with the
+baskets sacred to Ceres, twelve young girls, bearing on their heads
+baskets filled with pomegranates and apples, entered the room with a
+light step, in time to the music of an invisible flute. They placed
+the baskets on the table, the flute ceased, and Zenothemis spoke as
+follows--
+
+"When Eunoia, 'the thought of God,' had created the world, she confided
+the government of the earth to the angels. But they did not preserve
+the dispassion befitting masters. Seeing that the daughters of men were
+fair, they surprised them in the evening by the wellside, and united
+themselves to them. From these unions sprang a turbulent race, who
+covered the earth with injustice and cruelty, and the dust of the roads
+drank up the blood of the innocent. The sight of this caused Eunoia
+infinite grief.
+
+"'See what I have done!' she sighed, leaning towards the world. 'My
+poor children are plunged in misery, and by my fault. Their suffering
+is my crime, and I will expiate it. God Himself, who only thinks through
+me, would be powerless to restore them to their pristine purity. That
+which is done is done, and the creation will remain for ever imperfect.
+But, at least, I will not forsake my creatures. If I cannot make them
+happy, like me, I can make myself unhappy, like them. Since I committed
+the mistake of giving them bodies which dishonour them, I will myself
+assume a body like unto theirs, and will go and live amongst them.'
+
+"Having thus spoken, Eunoia descended to the earth, and was incarnate
+in the breast of a woman of Argos. She was born small and feeble, and
+received the name of Helen. She submitted to all the labours of this
+life, but soon grew in grace and beauty, and became the most desired
+of women, as she had determined, in order that her mortal body might be
+tried by the most supreme defilements. An inert prey to lascivious and
+violent men, she suffered rape and adultery, in expiation of all the
+adulteries, all the violences, all the iniquities, and caused, by her
+beauty, the ruin of nations, that God might pardon the sins of the
+universe. And never was the celestial thought, never was Eunoia, so
+adorable as in those days when, as a woman, she prostituted herself to
+heroes and shepherds. The poets surmised her divinity when they painted
+her so peaceful, superb, and fatal, and when they addressed that
+invocation to her, 'A soul as serene as a calm upon the waters.'
+
+"Thus was Eunoia led by pity into evil and suffering. She died, and the
+Argives still show her tomb--for it was necessary that she should know
+death after lust, and taste the bitter fruit she had sown. But, emerging
+from the decomposed flesh of Helen, she became incarnate again as
+a woman, and again suffered every form of insult and outrage. Thus,
+passing from body to body, throughout all the evil ages, she takes upon
+her the sins of the world. Her sacrifice will not be in vain. Joined to
+us by the bonds of the flesh, loving us, and weeping with us, she will
+effect her redemption and ours, and will carry us, clinging to her white
+breast, into the peace of the regained paradise."
+
+HERMODORUS. This myth was not unknown to me. I remembered having heard
+that, in one of her metamorphoses, the divine Helen lived with the
+magician, Simon, in the reign of the Emperor Tiberius. I thought,
+however, that her perdition was involuntary, and that she was dragged
+down by the angels in their fall.
+
+ZENOTHEMIS. It is true, Hermodorus, that men who were not properly
+initiated in the mysteries have imagined that the sad Eunoia was not a
+party to her own downfall. But if it were as they assert Eunoia would
+not be the expiating courtesan, the victim covered with stains of
+all sorts, the bread steeped in the wine of our shame, the pleasant
+offering, the meritorious sacrifice, the holocaust, the smoke of which
+rises to God. If they were not voluntary, there would be no merit in her
+sins.
+
+CALLICRATES. Does anyone know, Zenothemis in what country, under what
+name, in what adorable form, this ever-renascent Helen is living now?
+
+ZENOTHEMIS. A man would have to be very wise indeed to discover such a
+secret. And wisdom, Callicrates, is not given to poets, who live in the
+rude world of forms and amuse themselves, like children, with sounds and
+empty shows.
+
+CALLICRATES. Beware of offending the gods, impious Zenothemis; the poets
+are dear to them. The first laws were dictated in verse by the immortals
+themselves, and the oracles of the gods are poems. Hymns have a pleasant
+sound to celestial ears. Who does not know that the poets are prophets,
+and that nothing is hidden from them? Being a poet myself, and crowned
+with Apollo's laurel, I will make known to all the last incarnation of
+Eunoia. The eternal Helen is close to us; she is looking at us, and we
+are looking at her. You see that woman reclining on the cushions of her
+couch--so beautiful and so contemplative--whose eyes shed tears, and
+whose lips abound with kisses! It is she! Lovely as in the time of Priam
+and the halcyon days of Asia, Eunoia is now called Thais.
+
+PHILINA. What do you say, Callicrates? Our dear Thais knew Paris,
+Menelaus, and the Achaians who fought before Ilion! Was the Trojan horse
+big, Thais?
+
+ARISTOBULUS. Who speaks of a horse?
+
+"I have drunk like a Thracian!" cried Chereas and he rolled under the
+table.
+
+Callicrates, raising his cup, cried--
+
+"If we drink like desperate men, we die unavenged!"
+
+Old Cotta was asleep, and his bald head nodded slowly above his broad
+shoulders.
+
+For some time past Dorion had seemed to be greatly excited under his
+philosophic cloak. He reeled up to the couch of Thais.
+
+"Thais, I love you, although it is unseemly in me to love a woman."
+
+THAIS. Why did you not love me before?
+
+DORION. Because I had not supped.
+
+THAIS. But I, my poor friend, have drunk nothing but water; therefore
+you must excuse me if I do not love you.
+
+Dorion did not wait to hear more, but made towards Drosea, who had made
+a sign to him in order to get him away from her friend. Zenothemis took
+the place he had left, and gave Thais a kiss on the mouth.
+
+THAIS. I thought you more virtuous.
+
+ZENOTHEMIS. I am perfect, and the perfect are subject to no laws.
+
+THAIS. But are you not afraid of sullying your soul in a woman's arms?
+
+ZENOTHEMIS. The body may yield to lust without the soul being concerned.
+
+THAIS. Go away! I wish to be loved with body and soul. All these
+philosophers are old goats.
+
+The lamps died out one by one. The pale rays of dawn, which entered
+between the openings of the hangings, shone on the livid faces and
+swollen eyes of the guests. Aristobulus was sleeping soundly by the side
+of Chereas, and, in his dreams, devoting all his grooms to the ravens.
+Zenothemis pressed in his arms the yielding Philina; Dorion poured on
+the naked bosom of Drosea drops of wine, which rolled like rubies on the
+white breast, which was shaking with laughter, and the philosopher
+tried to catch these drops with his lips, as they rolled on the slippery
+flesh. Eucrites rose, and placing his arm on the shoulder of Nicias, led
+him to the end of the hall.
+
+"Friend," he said, smiling, "if you can still think at all--of what are
+you thinking?"
+
+"I think that the love of women is like a garden of Adonis."
+
+"What do you mean by that?"
+
+"Do you not know, Eucrites, that women make little gardens on the
+terraces, in which they plant boughs in clay pots in honour of the lover
+of Venus? These boughs flourish a little time, and then fade."
+
+"What does that signify, Nicias? That it is foolish to attach importance
+to that which fades?"
+
+"If beauty is but a shadow, desire is but a lightning flash. What
+madness it is, then, to desire beauty! Is it not rational, on the
+contrary, that that which passes should go with that which does not
+endure, and that the lightning should devour the gliding shadow?"
+
+"Nicias, you seem to me like a child playing at knuckle-bones. Take my
+advice--be free! By liberty only can you become a man."
+
+"How can a man be free, Eucrites, when he has a body?"
+
+"You shall see presently, my son. Presently you will say, 'Eucrites was
+free.'"
+
+The old man spoke, leaning against a porphyry pillar, his face lighted
+by the first rays of dawn. Hermodorus and Marcus had approached, and
+stood before him by the side of Nicias; and all four, regardless of the
+laughter and cries of the drinkers, conversed on things divine. Eucrites
+expresses himself so wisely and eloquently, that Marcus said--
+
+"You are worthy to know the true God."
+
+Eucrites replied--
+
+"The true God is in the heart of the wise man."
+
+Then they spoke of death.
+
+"I wish," said Eucrites, "that it may find me occupied in correcting
+my faults, and attentive to all my duties. In the face of death I will
+raise my pure hands to heaven, and I will say to the gods, 'Your
+images, gods, that you have placed in the temple of my soul, I have not
+profaned; I have hung there my thoughts, as well as garlands, fillets,
+and wreaths. I have lived according to your providence. I have lived
+enough.'"
+
+Thus speaking, he raised his arms to heaven, and he remained thoughtful
+a moment. Then he continued, with extreme joy--
+
+"Separate thyself from life, Eucrites, like the ripe olive which falls;
+returning thanks to the tree which bore thee, and blessing the earth,
+thy nurse."
+
+At these words, drawing from the folds of his robe a naked dagger, he
+plunged it into his breast.
+
+Those who listened to him sprang forward to seize his hand, but the
+steel point had already penetrated the heart of the sage. Eucrites had
+already entered into his rest. Hermodorus and Nicias bore the pale and
+bleeding body to one of the couches, amidst the shrill shrieks of the
+women, the grunts of the guests disturbed in their sleep, and the heavy
+breathing of the couples hidden in the shadow of the tapestry. Cotta,
+an old soldier, who slept lightly, woke, approached the corpse, examined
+the wound, and cried--
+
+"Call Aristaeus, my physician!"
+
+Nicias shook his head.
+
+"Eucrites is no more," he said. "He wished to die as others wish to
+love. He has, like all of us, obeyed his inexpressible desire. And, lo,
+now he is like unto the gods, who desire nothing."
+
+Cotta struck his forehead.
+
+"Die! To want to die when he might still serve the State! What
+nonsense!"
+
+Paphnutius and Thais remained motionless and mute, side by side, their
+souls overflowing with disgust, horror, and hope.
+
+Suddenly the monk seized the hand of the actress, and stepping over the
+drunkards, who had fallen close to the lascivious couples, and treading
+in the wine and blood spilt upon the floor, he led her out of the house.
+
+
+
+The sun had risen over the city. Long colonnades stretched on both sides
+of the deserted street, and at the end shone the dome of Alexander's
+tomb. Here and there on the pavement lay broken wreaths and extinguished
+torches. Fresh wafts of the sea could be felt in the air. Paphnutius,
+with a look of disgust, tore off his rich robe and trampled the
+fragments under his feet.
+
+"Thou hast heard them, my Thais!" he cried. "They have spat forth every
+sort of folly and abomination. They dragged the Divine Creator of all
+things down the gemonies(*) of the devils of hell, impudently denied the
+existence of Good and Evil, blasphemed Jesus, and exalted Judas. And the
+most infamous of all, the jackal of darkness, the stinking beast, the
+Arian full of corruption and death, opened his mouth like a yawning
+sepulchre. My Thais, thou hast seen these filthy snails crawling towards
+thee and defiling thee with their sticky sweat; thou hast seen others,
+like brutes, sleeping under the heels of their slaves; thou hast seen
+them coupling like beasts on the carpet they had fouled with their
+vomit; thou hast seen a foolish old man shed a blood yet viler than
+the wine which flowed at his debauch, and at the end of the orgie throw
+himself in the face of the unforeseen Christ. Praise be to God! Thou
+hast seen error and recognised how hideous it was. Thais, Thais, Thais,
+recall to mind the follies of these philosophers, and say if thou wilt
+go mad with them! Remember the looks, the gestures, the laughs of their
+fitting companions, those two lascivious and malicious strumpets, and
+say if thou wilt remain like unto them."
+
+ (*) Steps on the Aventine Hill, leading to the Tiber, to
+ which the bodies of executed criminals were dragged to be
+ thrown into the river. The word is now obsolete, but was
+ employed by Ben Jonson (Sejanus) and Massinger (The Roman
+ Actor).--TRANS.
+
+Thais, her heart stirred with horror and disgust at all she had seen
+and heard that night, and feeling the indifference and brutality, the
+malicious jealousy of women, the heavy weight of useless hours, sighed.
+
+"I am weary to death, O my father! Where shall I find rest? I feel
+that my face is burning, my head empty, and my arms are so tired that I
+should not have the strength to seize happiness were it within reach of
+my hand."
+
+Paphnutius gazed at her with loving pity.
+
+"Courage, O my sister! The hour of rest rises for thee, white and pure
+as the vapours thou seest rise from the gardens and waters."
+
+They were near the house of Thais, and could see, above the wall, the
+tops of the sycamore and fir trees, which surrounded the Grotto of
+Nymphs, tremble in the morning breeze. In front of them was a public
+square, deserted, and surrounded with steles and votive statues, and
+having at each end a semicircular marble seat, supported by figures of
+monsters. Thais fell on one of these seats. Then, looking anxiously at
+the monk, she asked--
+
+"What must I do?"
+
+"Thou must," replied the monk, "follow Him who has come to seek thee. He
+will separate thee from this present life, as the vintager gathers
+the cluster that would have rotted on the tree, and bears it to the
+wine-press to change it into perfumed wine. Listen! there is, a dozen
+hours from Alexandria, towards the west, not far from the sea, a
+nunnery, the rules of which, a masterpiece of wisdom, deserve to be put
+in lyric verse and sung to the sound of the theorbo and tambourines.
+It may truly be said that the women who are there, submissive to these
+rules, have their feet upon earth and their faces in heaven. They desire
+to be poor, that Jesus may love them, modest, that He may gaze upon
+them; chaste that He may wed them. He visits them every day in the
+guise of a gardener, His feet bare, His beautiful hands open--even as He
+showed Himself to Mary at the entrance of the tomb. I will conduct thee
+this very day to this nunnery, my Thais, and soon, commingling with
+these holy women, thou wilt share in their heavenly conversation. They
+await thee as a sister. On the threshold of the convent, their mother,
+the pious Albina, will give thee the kiss of peace and will say, 'My
+daughter, thou art welcome!'"
+
+The courtesan uttered a cry of amazement.
+
+"Albina! a daughter of the Caesars! The great niece of the Emperor
+Carus!"
+
+"She herself! Albina, who, born in the purple, has donned the serge,
+and a daughter of the masters of this world, has risen to the rank of
+servant of Jesus Christ. She will be thy mother."
+
+Thais rose and said--
+
+"Take me to the house of Albina."
+
+And Paphnutius, completing his victory--
+
+"Surely I will conduct thee thither, and there I will place thee in a
+cell, where thou shalt weep for thy sins. For it is not fitting that
+thou shouldst mingle with the daughters of Albina until thou art
+cleansed from thy sins. I will seal the door, and there, a happy
+prisoner, thou wilt wait in tears till Jesus Himself come, as a sign of
+pardon, to break the seal that I have placed. And doubt not that He will
+come, Thais, and how the flesh of thy soul will tremble when thou shalt
+feel the fingers of Light placed upon thy eyes to dry thy tears!"
+
+Thais said a second time--
+
+"Take me, my father, to the house of Albina."
+
+His heart filled with joy, Paphnutius gazed around him, and tasted,
+almost without fear, the pleasure of contemplating the works of
+creation; his eyes drank in with joy God's light, and unknown breezes
+fanned his cheeks. Suddenly, seeing at one of the corners of the public
+square the little door which led to Thais' house, and remembering that
+the trees, whose foliage he had been admiring, shaded the courtesan's
+garden, he thought of all the impurities which there sullied the air,
+to-day so light and pure, and his soul was so grieved that bitter tears
+sprang to his eyes.
+
+"Thais," he said, "we must fly without looking back. But we must not
+leave behind us the instruments, the witnesses, the accomplices of thy
+past crimes; those heavy hangings, those beds, carpets, perfume censers
+and lamps, which would proclaim thy infamy! Dost thou wish that,
+animated by the demons, and carried by the evil spirit that is in them,
+those accursed belongings should pursue thee even to the desert? It is
+but too true that there are tables which bring ruin, seats which serve
+as the instruments of devils, which act, speak, strike the ground, and
+pass through the air. Let all perish which has seen thy shame! Hasten,
+Thais, and, whilst the city is yet asleep, order thy slaves to make,
+in the centre of this place, a pile, upon which we will burn all the
+abominable riches thy dwelling contains."
+
+Thais consented.
+
+"Do as you will, my father," she said. "I know that spirits often dwell
+in inanimate objects. At night some articles of furniture talk, either
+by giving knocks at regular intervals or by emitting little flashes of
+light as signals. And even more. Have you remarked, my father, at the
+entrance to the Grotto of Nymphs, on the right, a statue of a naked
+woman about to bathe? One day I saw, with my own eyes, that statue turn
+its head like a living person, and then return to its ordinary attitude.
+I was terrified. Nicias, to whom I related this prodigy, laughed at
+me; yet there must be some magic in that statue, for it inspired with
+violent desires a certain Dalmatian, who was insensible to my beauty.
+It is certain that I have lived amongst enchanted things, and that I
+was exposed to the greatest perils, for men have been strangled by the
+embraces of a bronze statue. Yet it would be a pity to destroy valuable
+works made with rare skill, and to burn my carpets and tapestry would be
+a great loss. The beautiful colours of some of them are truly wonderful,
+and they cost much money to those who gave them to me. I also possess
+cups, statues, and pictures of great price. I do not think they ought to
+perish. But you know what is necessary. Do as you will, my father."
+
+Thus saying, she followed the monk to the little door at which so many
+garlands and wreaths had been hung, and, when it was opened, she told
+the porter to call together all the slaves in the house. Four Indians,
+who were employed in the kitchen, were the first to appear. They were
+all four yellow men, and each had but one eye. It had cost Thais much
+trouble, and given her amusement, to get together these four slaves
+of the same race, and all afflicted with the same infirmity. When they
+attended at table they excited the curiosity of the guests, and Thais
+made them relate the story of their lives. These four waited in silence.
+Their assistants followed them. Then came the stablemen, the huntsmen,
+the litter-bearers, and the running footmen with muscles like iron, two
+gardeners hirsute as Priapus, six ferocious looking negroes, three Greek
+slaves--one a grammarian, another a poet, and the third a singer. They
+all stood, ranged in order, on the public square, and were presently
+joined by the negresses--curious, suspicious, rolling big round eyes,
+and each with a huge mouth slit to her earrings. Lastly, adjusting their
+veils and languidly dragging their feet, which were shackled with light
+gold chains, appeared six sulky-looking, beautiful white slave-girls.
+When they were all assembled, Thais, pointing to Paphnutius, said--
+
+"Do whatever this man commands you; for the spirit of God is in him, and
+if you disobey him you will fall dead."
+
+For she had heard, and really believed, that the earth would open and
+swallow up in flames and smoke any impious wretch whom a saint of the
+desert struck with his staff.
+
+Paphnutius sent away the women and the Greek men-slaves, and said to the
+others--
+
+"Bring wood to the middle of this place, make a huge fire, and throw
+into it pell-mell all that there is in the house and grotto."
+
+They were astonished, and stood motionless, looking at their mistress.
+And they still stood inactive and silent, and pressed against each
+other, elbow to elbow, suspecting that the order was a joke.
+
+"Obey!" said the monk.
+
+Several of them were Christians. They understood the command, and went
+to the house to fetch wood and torches. The others were not indisposed
+to imitate them, for, being poor, they hated riches and had a natural
+instinct for destruction. Whilst they were building the pile, Paphnutius
+said to Thais--
+
+"I thought at one time of fetching the treasurer of one of the churches
+of Alexandria (if there still remain one worthy of the name of church,
+and that is not defiled by the Arian beasts) and giving him thy goods,
+woman, that he might distribute them to widows, and change the proceeds
+of crime into the treasure of justice. But such a thought did not come
+from God, and I cast it from me, for assuredly it would be a great
+offence to the well-beloved of Jesus Christ to offer them the spoils
+of thy lust. Thais, all that thou hast touched must be devoured by
+the fire, even to its very soul. Thanks be to Heaven, these tunics and
+veils, which have seen kisses more innumerable than the waves of the
+sea, will only feel now the lips and tongues of the flames. Hasten,
+slaves! More wood! More links and torches! And thou, woman, return to
+thy house, strip thyself of thy shameful robes, and ask of the most
+humble of thy slaves, as an undeserving favour, the tunic that she puts
+on when she scrubs the floors."
+
+Thais obeyed. Whilst the Indians knelt down and blew the embers, the
+negroes threw on the pile coffers of ivory, ebony, or cedar, which broke
+open and let out wreaths, garlands, and necklaces. The smoke rose in a
+dark column, as in the holocausts of the old religion. Then the fire,
+which had been smouldering, burst out suddenly with a roar as of some
+monstrous animal, and the almost invisible flames began to devour their
+valuable prey. The slaves worked more eagerly; they joyfully dragged out
+rich carpets, veils embroidered with silver, and flowered tapestry. They
+staggered under the weight of tables, couches, thick cushions, and
+beds with gold nails. Three strong Ethiopians came hugging the coloured
+statues of the nymphs, one of which had been loved as though it were a
+mortal; and they looked like huge apes carrying off women. And when the
+beautiful naked forms fell from the arms of these monsters, and were
+broken on the stones, a deep groan was heard.
+
+At that moment Thais appeared, her hair unloosed and streaming over her
+shoulders, barefooted, and clad in a clumsy coarse garment which seemed
+redolent with divine voluptuousness merely from having touched her body.
+Behind her came a gardener, carrying, half hidden in his long beard, an
+ivory Eros.
+
+She made a sign to the man to stop, and approaching Paphnutius, showed
+him the little god.
+
+"My father," she asked, "should this also be thrown into the flames? It
+is of marvellous antique work, and is worth a hundred times its weight
+in gold. Its loss would be irreparable, for there is not a sculptor in
+the world capable of making such a beautiful Eros. Remember also, my
+father, that this child is Love, and he should not be harshly treated.
+Believe me, Love is a virtue, and if I have sinned, it is not through
+him, my father, but against him. Never shall I regret aught that he has
+caused me to do, and I deplore only those things I have done contrary to
+his commands. He does not allow women to give themselves to those who
+do not come in his name. For that reason he ought to be honoured. Look,
+Paphnutius, how pretty this little Eros is! With what grace he hides
+himself in the gardener's beard! One day Nicias, who loved me then,
+brought it to me and said, 'It will remind you of me.' But the roguish
+boy did not remind me of Nicias, but of a young man I knew at Antioch.
+Enough riches have been destroyed upon this pile, my father! Preserve
+this Eros, and place it in some monastery. Those who see it will
+turn their hearts towards God, for love leads naturally to heavenly
+thoughts."
+
+The gardener, already believing that the little Eros was saved, smiled
+on it as though it had been a child, when Paphnutius, snatching the god
+from the arms which held it, threw it into the flames, crying--
+
+"It is enough that Nicias has touched it to make it replete with every
+sort of poison!"
+
+Then, seizing by armfuls the sparkling robes, the purple mantles, the
+golden sandals, the combs, strigils, mirrors, lamps, theorbos, and
+lyres, he threw them into this furnace, more costly than the funeral
+pile of Sardanapalus, whilst, drunken with the rage of destruction, the
+slaves danced round, uttering wild yells amid a shower of sparks and
+ashes.
+
+One by one, the neighbours, awakened by the noise, opened the windows,
+and rubbing their eyes, looked out to see whence the smoke came. Then
+they came down, half dressed, and drew near the fire.
+
+"What does it mean?" they wondered.
+
+Amongst them were merchants from whom Thais had often bought perfumes
+and stuffs, and they looked on anxiously with long, yellow faces, unable
+to comprehend what was going on. Some young debauchees, who, returning
+from a supper, passed by there, preceded by their slaves, stopped, their
+heads crowned with flowers, their tunics floating, and uttered loud
+cries. Attracted by curiosity, the crowd increased unceasingly, and soon
+it was known that Thais had been persuaded by the Abbot of Antinoe to
+burn her riches and retire to a nunnery.
+
+The shopkeepers thought to themselves--
+
+"Thais is going to leave the city; we shall sell no more to her; it is
+dreadful to think of. What will become of us without her? This monk has
+driven her mad. He is ruining us. Why let him do it? What is the use of
+the laws? Are there no magistrates in Alexandria? Thais does not think
+about us and our wives and our poor children. It is a public scandal.
+She ought to be compelled to stay in the city."
+
+The young men, on their part, also thought--
+
+"If Thais is going to renounce acting and love, our chief amusements
+will be taken from us. She was the glory, delight, and honour of the
+stage. She was the joy even of those who had never possessed her. The
+women we loved, we loved in her. There were no kisses given in which she
+was altogether absent, for she was the joy of all voluptuaries, and the
+mere thought that she breathed amongst us excited us to pleasure."
+
+Thus thought the young men, and one of them, named Cerons, who had held
+her in his arms, cried out upon the abduction, and blasphemed against
+Christ. In every group the conduct of Thais was severely criticised.
+
+"It is a shameful flight!"
+
+"A cowardly desertion!"
+
+"She is taking the bread out of our mouths."
+
+"She is robbing our children."
+
+"She ought at least to pay for the wreaths I have sold to her."
+
+"And the sixty robes she has ordered of me."
+
+"She owes money to everybody."
+
+"Who will represent Iphigenia, Electra, and Polyxena when she is gone?
+The handsome Polybia herself will not make such a success as she has
+done."
+
+"Life will be dull when her door is closed."
+
+"She was the bright star, the soft moon of the Alexandrian sky."
+
+All the most notorious mendicants of the city--cripples, blind men,
+and paralytics--had by this time assembled in the place; and crawling
+through the remnants of the riches, they groaned--
+
+"How shall we live when Thais is no longer here to feed us? Every day
+the fragments from her table fed two hundred poor wretches, and her
+lovers, when they quitted her, threw us as they passed handfuls of
+silver pieces."
+
+Some thieves, too, also mingled with the crowd, and created a deafening
+clamour, and pushed their neighbours, to increase disorder, and take
+advantage of the tumult to filch some valuable object.
+
+Old Taddeus, who sold Miletan wool and Tarentan linen, and to whom Thais
+owed a large sum of money, alone remained calm and silent in the
+midst of the uproar. He listened and watched, and gently stroking his
+goat-beard, seemed thoughtful. At last he approached young Cerons, and
+pulling him by the sleeve, whispered--
+
+"You are the favoured lover of Thais, handsome youth; show yourself, and
+do not allow this monk to carry her off."
+
+"By Pollux and his sister, he shall not!" cried Cerons. "I will speak
+to Thais, and without flattering myself, I think she will listen to me
+rather than to that sooty-faced Lapithan. Place! Place, dogs!"
+
+And striking with his fist the men, upsetting the old women and treading
+on the young children, he reached Thais, and taking her aside--
+
+"Dearest girl," he said, "look at me, remember, and tell me truly if you
+renounce love."
+
+But Paphnutius threw himself between Thais and Cerons.
+
+"Impious wretch!" he cried, "beware and touch her not; she is
+sacred--she belongs to God."
+
+"Get away, baboon!" replied the young man furiously. "Let me speak to my
+sweetheart, or if not I will drag your obscene carcase by the beard to
+the fire, and roast you like a sausage."
+
+And he put his hand on Thais. But, pushed away by the monk with
+unexpected force, he staggered back four paces and fell at the foot of
+the pile amongst the scattered ashes.
+
+Old Taddeus, meanwhile, had been going from one to the other, pulling
+the ears of the slaves and kissing the hands of the masters, inciting
+each and all against Paphnutius, and had already formed a little band
+resolutely determined to oppose the monk who would steal Thais from
+them.
+
+Cerons rose, his face black, his hair singed, and choking with smoke
+and rage. He blasphemed against the gods, and threw himself amongst the
+assailants, behind whom the beggars crawled, shaking their crutches.
+Paphnutius was soon enclosed in a circle of menacing fists, raised
+sticks, and cries of death.
+
+"To the ravens with the monk! to the ravens!"
+
+"No; throw him in the fire! Burn him alive!"
+
+Seizing his fair prey, he pressed her to his heart.
+
+"Impious men," he cried in a voice of thunder, "strive not to tear the
+dove from the eagle of the Lord. But rather copy this woman, and like
+she turn your filth into gold. Imitate her example, and renounce the
+false wealth which you think you hold and which holds you. Hasten!
+the day is at hand, and divine patience begins to grow weary. Repent,
+confess your sins, weep and pray. Walk in the footsteps of Thais. Hate
+your offenses, which are as great as hers. Which of you, poor or rich,
+merchants, soldiers, slaves or eminent citizens, would dare to say,
+before God, that he was better than a prostitute? You are all nothing
+but living filth, and it is by a miracle of divine goodness that you do
+not suddenly turn into streams of mire."
+
+Whilst he spoke flames shot from his eyes; an it seemed as though live
+coals came from his lips and those who surrounded him were obliged to
+hear him in spite of themselves.
+
+But old Taddeus did not remain idle. He picked up stones and oyster
+shells, which he hid in the skirt of his tunic, and not daring to throw
+them himself slipped them into the hands of the beggars. Soon the stones
+began to fly, and a well-directed shell cut Paphnutius' face. The blood,
+which flowed down the dark face of the martyr, dropped in a new baptism
+on the head of the penitent, and Thais, half stifled in the monk's
+embrace and her delicate skin scratched by the coarse cassock, felt a
+thrill of horror and fright.
+
+At that moment a man elegantly dressed, and with a wreath of wild celery
+on his head, opened a road for himself through the furious crowd, and
+cried--
+
+"Stop! Stop! This monk is my brother!"
+
+It was Nicias, who, having closed the eyes of the philosopher Eucrites,
+was passing through the square to return to his house, and saw, without
+very much surprise (for nothing astonished him), the smoking pile, Thais
+clad an a serge cassock, and Paphnutius being stoned.
+
+He repeated--
+
+"Stop, I tell you; spare my old fellow-scholar; respect the beloved head
+of Paphnutius!"
+
+But, being only used to subtle disquisitions with philosophers, he did
+not possess that imperious energy which commands vulgar minds. He was
+not listened to. A shower of stones and shells fell on the monk, who,
+protecting Thais with his body, praised the Lord whose goodness turned
+his wounds into caresses. Despairing of making himself heard, and
+feeling but too sure that he could not save his friend either by force
+or persuasion, Nicias resigned himself to the will of the gods--in
+whom he had little confidence--when the idea occurred to him to use a
+stratagem which his contempt for men had suddenly suggested to him. He
+took from his girdle his purse, which was full of gold and silver, for
+he was a pleasure-loving and charitable man, and running up to the men
+who were throwing the stones, he chinked the money in their ears. At
+first they paid no attention to him, their fury being too great; but
+little by little their looks turned towards the chinking gold, and soon
+their arms dropped and no longer menaced their victim. Seeing that he
+had attracted their eyes and minds, Nicias opened his purse and threw
+some pieces of gold and silver amongst the crowd. The more greedy
+of them stooped to pick it up. The philosopher, pleased at his first
+success, adroitly threw deniers and drachmas here and there. At the
+sound of the pieces of money rattling on the pavement, the persecutors
+of Paphnutius threw themselves on the ground. Beggars, slaves, and
+tradespeople scrambled after the money, whilst, grouped round Cerons,
+the patricians watched the struggle and laughed heartily. Cerons
+himself quite forgot his wrath. His friends encouraged the rivals, chose
+competitors, and made bets, and urged on the miserable wretches as they
+would have done fighting dogs. A cripple without legs having succeeded
+in seizing a drachma, the applause was frenetic. The young men
+themselves began to throw money, and nothing was to be seen in the
+square but a multitude of backs, rising and falling like waves of the
+sea, under a shower of coins. Paphnutius was forgotten.
+
+Nicias ran up to him, covered him with his cloak, and dragged him and
+Thais into by-streets where they were safe from pursuit. They ran for
+some time in silence, and when they thought they were out of reach
+of their enemies, they ceased running, and Nicias said, in a tone of
+raillery in which a little sadness was mingled--
+
+"It is finished then! Pluto ravishes Proserpine, and Thais will follow
+my fierce-looking friend whithersoever he will lead her."
+
+"It is true, Nicias," replied Thais, "that I am tired of living with men
+like you, smiling, perfumed, kindly egoists. I am weary of all I know,
+and I am, therefore, going to seek the unknown. I have experienced joy
+that was not joy, and here is a man who teaches me that sorrow is true
+joy. I believe him, for he knows the truth."
+
+"And I, sweetheart," replied Nicias, smiling, "I know the truths. He
+knows but one, I know them all. I am superior to him in that respect,
+but to tell the truth, it doesn't make me any the prouder nor any the
+happier."
+
+Then, seeing that the monk was glaring fiercely at him--
+
+"My dear Paphnutius, do not imagine that I think you extremely absurd,
+or even altogether unreasonable. And if I were to compare your life with
+mine, I could not say which is preferable in itself. I shall presently
+go and take the bath which Crobyle and Myrtale have prepared for me;
+I shall eat the wing of a Phasian pheasant; then I shall read--for the
+hundredth time--some fable by Apuleius or some treatise by Porphyry.
+You will return to your cell, where, leaning like a tame camel, you will
+ruminate on--I know not what--formulas of incarnations you have long
+chewed and rechewed, and in the evening you will swallow some radishes
+without any oil. Well, my dear friend, in accomplishing these acts, so
+different apparently, we are both obeying the same sentiment, the only
+motive for all human actions; we are both seeking our own pleasure, and
+striving to attain the same end--happiness, the impossible happiness.
+It would be folly on my part to say you were wrong, dear friend, even
+though I think myself in the right.
+
+"And you, my Thais, go and enjoy yourself, and be more happy still, if
+it be possible, in abstinence and austerity than you have been in riches
+and pleasure. On the whole, I should say you were to be envied. For
+if in our whole lives, Paphnutius and I have pursued but one kind of
+pleasurable satisfaction, you in your life, dear Thais, have tasted
+diverse joys such as it is rarely given to the same person to know.
+I should really like to be for one hour, a saint like our dear friend
+Paphnutius. But that is not possible. Farewell, then, Thais! Go where
+the secret forces of nature and your destiny conduct you! Go, and take
+with you, whithersoever you go, the good wishes of Nicias! I know
+that is mere foolishness, but can I give you anything more than barren
+regrets and vain wishes in payment for the delicious illusions which
+once enveloped me when I was in your arms, and of which only the shadow
+now remains to me? Farewell, my benefactress! Farewell, goodness that is
+ignorant of its own existence, mysterious virtue, joy of men! Farewell
+to the most adorable of the images that nature has ever thrown--for some
+unknown reasons--on the face of this deceptive world!"
+
+Whilst he spoke, deep wrath had been brewing in the monk's heart, and it
+now broke forth in imprecations.
+
+"Avaunt, cursed wretch! I scorn thee and hate thee. Go, child of hell, a
+thousand times worse than those poor lost ones who just now threw stones
+and insults at me! They knew not what they did, and the grace of God,
+which I implored for them, may some day descend into their hearts. But
+thou, detestable Nicias, thou art but a perfidious venom and a bitter
+poison. Thy mouth breathes despair and death. One of thy smiles contains
+more blasphemy than issues in a century from the smoking lips of Satan.
+Avaunt, backslider!"
+
+Nicias looked at him.
+
+"Farewell, my brother," he said, "and may you preserve until your life's
+end your store of faith, hate, and love. Farewell, Thais! It is in vain
+that you will forget me, because I shall ever remember you."
+
+On quitting them he walked thoughtfully through the winding streets in
+the vicinity of the great cemetery of Alexandria, which are peopled
+by the makers of funeral urns. Their shops were full of clay figures
+painted in bright colours and representing gods and goddesses, mimes,
+women, winged sprites, &c., such as were usually buried with the dead.
+He fancied that perhaps some of the little images which he saw there
+might be the companions of his eternal sleep; and it seemed to him that
+a little Eros, with its tunic tucked up, laughed at him mockingly. He
+looked forward to his death, and the idea was painful to him. To cure
+his sadness he tried to philosophise, and reasoned thus--
+
+"Assuredly," he said to himself, "time has no reality. It is a simple
+illusion of our minds. Then, if it does not exist, how can it bring
+death to me? Does that mean that I shall live for ever? No, but I
+conclude therefrom that my death is, always has been, as it always will
+be. I do not feel it yet, but it is in me, and I ought not to fear it,
+for it would be folly to dread the coming of that which has arrived. It
+exists, like the last page of a book I read and have not finished."
+
+This argument occupied him all the rest of the way, but without making
+him more cheerful; and his mind was filled with dismal thoughts when he
+arrived at the door of his house and heard the merry laughter of Crobyle
+and Myrtale, who were playing at tennis whilst they were waiting for
+him.
+
+Paphnutius and Thais left the city by the Gate of the Moon, and followed
+the coast.
+
+"Woman," said the monk, "all that great blue sea could not wash away thy
+pollutions."
+
+He spoke with scorn and anger.
+
+"More filthy than a bitch or a sow, thou hast prostituted to pagans and
+infidels a body which the Eternal had intended for a tabernacle, and thy
+impurities are such that, now that thou knowest the truth, thou canst
+not unite thy lips or join thy hands without a horror of thyself rising
+in thy heart."
+
+She followed him meekly, over stony roads, under a burning sun. Her
+knees ached from fatigue, and her throat was parched with thirst.
+But, far from feeling any of the pity which softens the hearts of the
+profane, Paphnutius rejoiced at these propitiatory sufferings of the
+flesh which had so sinned. So infuriated was he with holy zeal that he
+would have liked to cut with rods the body that had preserved its beauty
+as a shining witness to its infamy. His meditations augmented his pious
+fury, and remembering that Thais had received Nicias in her bed, that
+idea seemed so horrible to him that his blood all flowed back to his
+heart, and his breast felt ready to burst. His curses were stifled in
+his throat, and he could only grind his teeth. He sprang forward
+and stood before her, pale, terrible, and filled with the Spirit of
+God--looked into her very soul, and then spat in her face.
+
+She calmly wiped her face and continued to walk on. He followed, glaring
+at her in pious anger, as if she had been hell itself. He was thinking
+how he could avenge Christ in order that Christ should not avenge
+Himself, when he saw a drop of blood that had dripped from the foot of
+Thais on the sand. Then a hitherto unknown influence entered his opened
+heart, sobs rose to his lips, he wept, he ran and knelt before her,
+called her his sister, and kissed her bleeding feet. He murmured a
+hundred times, "My sister, my sister, my mother, O most holy!"
+
+He prayed--
+
+"Angels of heaven, receive carefully this drop of blood, and bear it
+before the throne of the Lord. And may a miraculous anemone blossom
+on the sand sprinkled with the blood of Thais, that those who see the
+flower may recover purity of heart and feeling. O holy, holy, most holy
+Thais!"
+
+As he prayed and prophesied thus, a lad passed on an ass. Paphnutius
+ordered him to descend, seated Thais on the ass, and led it by the
+bridle. Towards evening they came to a canal shaded by fine trees; he
+tied the ass to the trunk of a date palm, and sitting on a mossy stone
+he shared with Thais a loaf, which they ate with salt and hyssop. They
+drank fresh water in their hands, and talked of things eternal. She
+said--
+
+"I have never drunk water so pure nor breathed an air so light, and I
+feel that God floats in the breezes that pass."
+
+"Look! it is the evening, O my sister. The blue shadows of night cover
+the hills. But soon thou wilt see shining in the dawn the tabernacles
+of Light; soon thou wilt behold shine forth the roses of the eternal
+morning."
+
+They journeyed all night, and, while the crescent moon gleamed on the
+silver crests of the waves, they sang psalms and hymns. When the sun
+rose, the Libyan desert stretched before them like a huge lion-skin. At
+the edge of the desert, and close to a few palm-trees, some white huts
+shimmered in the morning light.
+
+"Are those the tabernacles of Light, father?" asked Thais.
+
+"Even so, my daughter and my sister. Yonder is the House of Salvation,
+where I will confine you with my own hands."
+
+Soon they saw a number of women busy around the buildings, like
+bees round their hives. There were some who baked bread, or prepared
+vegetables; many were spinning wool, and the light of heaven shone upon
+them like a smile of God. Others meditated in the shade of the tamarisk
+trees; their white hands hung by their sides, for, being filled with
+love, they had chosen the part of Magdalen, and performed no work but
+prayer, contemplation, and ecstasy. They were, therefore, called the
+Marys, and were clad in white. Those who worked with their hands were
+called the Marthas, and wore blue robes. All wore the hood,
+but the younger ones allowed a few curls to show on their
+foreheads--unintentionally, it is to be presumed, since it was forbidden
+by the rules. A very old lady, tall and white, walked from cell to cell,
+leaning on a staff of hard wood. Paphnutius approached her respectfully,
+kissed the hem of her veil, and said--
+
+"The peace of the Lord be with thee, venerable Albina. I have brought
+to the hive, of which thou art queen, a bee I found lost on a flowerless
+road. I took it in the palm of my hand, and revived it with my breath. I
+give it to thee."
+
+And he pointed to the actress, who knelt down before the daughter of the
+Caesars.
+
+Albina cast a piercing glance on Thais, ordered her to rise, kissed her
+on the forehead, and then, turning to the monk--
+
+"We will place her," she said, "amongst the Marys."
+
+Paphnutius then related how Thais had been brought to the House of
+Salvation, and asked that she should be at once confined in a cell.
+The abbess consented, and led the penitent to a hut, which had remained
+empty since the death of the virgin Laeta, who had sanctified it. In
+this narrow chamber there was but a bed, a table, and a pitcher, and
+Thais when she crossed the threshold, felt filled with ineffable joy.
+
+"I wish to close the door myself," said Paphnutius, "and put thereon a
+seal, which Jesus will come and break with His own hands."
+
+He went to the side of the spring, and took a handful of wet clay, mixed
+with it a little spittle and a hair from his head, and plastered it
+across the chink of the door. Then, approaching the window, near which
+Thais stood peaceful and happy, he fell on his knees and praised the
+Lord three times.
+
+"How beautiful are the feet of her who walketh in the paths of
+righteousness! How beautiful are her feet, and how resplendent her
+face!"
+
+He rose, lowered his hood over his eyes, and walked away slowly.
+
+Albina called one of her virgins.
+
+"My daughter," she said, "take to Thais those things which are needful
+for her--bread, water, and a flute with three holes."
+
+
+
+
+PART THE THIRD -- THE EUPHORBIA
+
+Paphnutius had returned to the holy desert. He took, near Athribis,
+the boat which went up the Nile to carry food to the monastery of Abbot
+Serapion. When he disembarked, his disciples advanced to meet him with
+great demonstrations of joy. Some raised their arms to heaven; others,
+prostrate on the ground, kissed the Abbot's sandals. For they knew
+already what the saint had accomplished in Alexandria. The monks
+generally received, by rapid and unknown means, information concerning
+the safety or glory of the Church. News spread through the desert with
+the rapidity of the simoon.
+
+When Paphnutius strode across the sand, his disciples followed
+him, praising the Lord. Flavian, who was the oldest member of the
+brotherhood, was suddenly seized with a pious frenzy and began to sing
+an inspired hymn--
+
+ "O blessed day! Now is our father restored to us.
+ He has returned laden with fresh merits, of which we reap the
+ benefit.
+ For the virtues of the father are the wealth of the children, and
+ the sanctity of the Abbot illuminates every cell.
+ Paphnutius, our father, has given a new spouse to Jesus Christ.
+ By his wondrous art, he has changed a black sheep into a white
+ sheep.
+ And now, behold, he has returned to us, laden with fresh merits.
+ Like unto the bee of the Arsinoetid, heavy with the nectar of
+ flowers.
+ Even as the ram of Nubia, which could hardly bear the weight of its
+ abundant wool.
+ Let us celebrate this day by mingling oil with our food."
+
+When they came to the door of the Abbot's cell, they fell on their
+knees, and said--
+
+"Let our father bless us, and give each of us a measure of oil to
+celebrate his return."
+
+Paul the Fool, who alone had remained standing, asked, "Who is this
+man?" and did not recognise Paphnutius. But no one paid any attention
+to what he said, as he was known to be devoid of intelligence, though
+filled with piety.
+
+The Abbot of Antinoe, locked in his cell, thought--
+
+"I have at last regained the haven of my repose and happiness. I have
+returned to my fortress of contentment. But how is it that this roof of
+rushes, so dear to me, does not receive me as a friend, and the walls
+say not to me, 'Thou art welcome.' Nothing has changed, since my
+departure, in this abode I have chosen. There is my table and my bed.
+There is the mummy's head which has so often inspired me with salutary
+thoughts; and there is the book in which I have so often sought
+conceptions of God. And yet nothing that I left is here. The things
+appear grievously despoiled of their customary charm, and it seems to
+me as though I saw them to-day for the first time. When I look at that
+table and couch, that in former days I made with my own hands, that
+black, dried head, these rolls of papyrus filled with the sayings of
+God, I seem to see the belongings of a dead man. After having known them
+all so well, I know them no longer. Alas! since nothing around me has
+really changed, it is I who am no longer what I was. I am another. I am
+the dead man! What has happened, my God? What has been taken from me?
+What is left unto me? And who am I?"
+
+And it especially perplexed him to find, in spite of himself, that his
+cell was small, whereas, when viewed by the eye of faith, he ought to
+consider it immense, because the infinitude of God began there.
+
+He began to pray, with his face against the ground, and felt a little
+happier. He had hardly been an hour in prayer, when a vision of Thais
+passed before his eyes. He returned thanks to God--
+
+"Jesus! it is Thou who hast sent her. I acknowledge in that Thy
+wonderful goodness; Thou wouldst please me, reassure me and comfort me
+by the sight of her whom I have given to Thee. Thou; presentest her to
+my eyes with her smile now disarmed; her grace, now become innocent; her
+beauty from which I have extracted the sting. To please me, my God, thou
+showest her to me as I have prepared and purified her for Thy designs,
+as one friend pleasantly reminds another of the rich gift he has
+received from him. Therefore I see this woman with delight, being
+assured that the vision comes from Thee. Thou dost not forget that I
+have given her to Thee, Jesus. Keep her, since she pleases Thee, and
+suffer not her beauty to give joy to any but Thyself."
+
+He could not sleep all night, and he saw Thais more distinctly than he
+had seen her in the Grotto of Nymphs. He commended himself, saying--
+
+"What I have done, I have done to the glory of God."
+
+Yet, to his great surprise, his heart was not at ease. He sighed.
+
+"Why art thou sad, O my soul, and why dost thou trouble me?"
+
+And his mind was still perturbed. Thirty days he remained in that
+condition of sadness which precedes the sore trials of a solitary monk.
+The image of Thais never left him day or night. He did not try to banish
+it, because he still thought it came from God, and was the image of a
+saint. But one morning she visited him in a dream, her hair crowned with
+violets, and her very gentleness seemed so formidable, that he uttered a
+cry of fright, and woke in an icy sweat. His eyes were still heavy with
+sleep, when he felt a moist warm breath on his face. A little jackal,
+its two paws placed on the side of the bed, was panting its stinking
+breath in his face, and grinning at him.
+
+Paphnutius was greatly astonished, and it seemed to him as though a
+tower had given way under his feet. And, in fact, he had fallen, for his
+self-confidence had gone. For some time he was incapable of thought
+and when he did recover himself, his meditations only increased his
+perplexity.
+
+"It is one of two things," he said to himself; "either this vision, like
+the preceding ones, came from God, and was a good vision, and it is my
+natural perversity which has misrepresented it, as wine turns sour in
+a dirty cup. I have, by my unworthiness, changed instruction into
+reproach, of which this diabolical jackal immediately took advantage.
+Or else this vision came, not from God, but, on the contrary, from the
+devil, and was evil. In that case I should doubt whether the former ones
+had, as I thought, a celestial origin. I am therefore incapable of that
+discernment which is necessary for the ascetic. In either case it is
+plain that God is no longer with me,--of which I feel the effects,
+though I cannot explain the cause."
+
+He reasoned in this way, and anxiously asked--
+
+"Just God, what trials dost Thou appoint for Thy servants if the
+apparitions of Thy saints are a danger for them? Give me to discern, by
+an intelligible sign, that which comes from Thee, and that which comes
+from the other."
+
+And as God, whose designs are inscrutable, did not see fit to enlighten
+his servant, Paphnutius, lost in doubt, resolved not to think of Thais
+any more. But his resolutions were vain. Though absent, she was ever
+with him. She gazed at him whilst he read, or meditated, or prayed, or
+met his eyes wherever he looked. Her imaginary approach was heralded by
+a slight sound, such as is made by a woman's dress when she walks, and
+the visions had more verisimilitude than reality itself, which moves and
+is confused, whereas the phantoms which are caused by solitude are fixed
+and unchangeable. She came under various appearances--sometimes pensive,
+her head crowned with her last perishable wreath, clad as at the banquet
+at Alexandria, in a mauve robe spangled with silver flowers; sometimes
+voluptuously in a cloud of light veils, and bathed in the warm shadows
+of the Grotto of Nymphs; sometimes in a serge cassock, pious and radiant
+with celestial joy; sometimes tragic, her eyes swimming in the terrors
+of death, and showing her bare breast bedewed with the blood from her
+pierced heart. What disturbed him the most in these visions was that
+the wreaths, tunics, and veils, that he had burned with his own hands,
+should thus return; it became evident to him that these things had an
+imperishable soul, and he cried--
+
+"Lo, all the countless souls of the sins of Thais come upon me!"
+
+When he turned away his head, he felt that Thais was behind him, and
+that made him feel still more uneasy. His torture was cruel. But as
+his soul and body remained pure in the midst of all his temptations, he
+trusted in God, and gently complained to Him.
+
+"My God, if I went so far to seek her amongst the Gentiles, it was for
+Thy sake, and not for mine. It would not be just that I should suffer
+for what I have done in Thy behalf. Protect me, sweet Jesus! My Saviour,
+save me! Suffer not the phantom to accomplish that which the body
+could not. As I have triumphed over the flesh, suffer not the shadow
+to overthrow me. I know that I am now exposed to greater dangers than
+I ever ran. I feel and know that the dream has more power than the
+reality. And how could it be otherwise, since it is itself but a higher
+reality? It is the soul of things. Plato, though he was but an idolater,
+has testified to the real existence of ideas. At that banquet of demons
+to which Thou accompaniedst me, Lord, I heard men--sullied with crimes
+truly, but certainly not devoid of intelligence--agree to acknowledge
+that we see real objects in solitude, meditation, and ecstasy; and Thy
+Scriptures, my God, many times affirm the virtue of dreams, and the
+power of visions formed either by Thee, great God, or by Thy adversary."
+
+There was a new man in him and now he reasoned with God, but God did not
+choose to enlighten him. His nights were one long dream, and his days
+did not differ from his nights. One morning he awoke uttering sighs,
+such as issue, by moonlight, from the tombs of the victims of crimes.
+Thais had come, showing her bleeding feet, and whilst he wept, she had
+slipped into his couch. There was no longer any doubt; the image of
+Thais was an impure image.
+
+His heart filled with disgust, he leaped out of his profaned couch, and
+hid his face in his hands that he might not see the daylight. The hours
+passed, but they did not remove his shame. All was quiet in the cell.
+For the first time for many long days, Paphnutius was alone. The phantom
+had at last left him, and even its absence seemed dreadful. Nothing,
+nothing to distract his mind from the recollection of the dream. Full of
+horror, he thought--
+
+"Why did I not drive her away? Why did I not tear myself from her cold
+arms and burning knees?"
+
+He no longer dared to pronounce the name of God near that horrible
+couch, and he feared that his cell being profaned, the demons might
+freely enter at any hour. His fears did not deceive him. The seven
+little jackals, which had never crossed the threshold, entered in a
+file, and went and hid under the bed. At the vesper hour, there came an
+eighth, the stench of which was horrible. The next day, a ninth joined
+the others, and soon there were thirty, then sixty, then eighty. They
+became smaller as they multiplied, and being no bigger than rats, they
+covered the floor, the couch, and the stool. One of them jumped on the
+little table by the side of the bed, and standing with its four feet
+together on the death's head, looked at the monk with burning eyes. And
+every day fresh jackals came.
+
+To expiate the abominable sin of his dream, and flee from impure
+thoughts, Paphnutius determined to leave his cell, which had now become
+polluted, go far into the desert, and practise unheard-of austerities,
+strange labours, and fresh works of grace. But before putting his design
+into action, he went to see old Palemon and ask his advice.
+
+He found him in his garden watering his lettuces. It was the evening.
+The blue Nile flowed at the foot of violet hills. The good old man was
+walking slowly, in order not to frighten a pigeon that had perched on
+his shoulder.
+
+"The Lord be with thee, brother Paphnutius," he said. "Admire his
+goodness; He sends me the animals that He has created that I may
+converse with them of His works, and praise Him in the birds of the air.
+Look at this pigeon; note the changing hues of its neck, and say, is
+it not a beautiful work of God? But have you not come to talk with me,
+brother, on some pious subject? If so, I will put down my watering-pot,
+and listen to you."
+
+Paphnutius told the old man about his journey, his return, the visions
+of his days and the dreams of his nights,--without omitting the sinful
+one--and the pack of jackals.
+
+"Do you not think, father," he added, "that I ought to bury myself in
+the desert, and perform some extraordinary austerities that would even
+astonish the devil?"
+
+"I am but a poor sinner," replied Palemon, "and I know little about men,
+having passed all my life in this garden, with gazelles, little hares
+and pigeons. But it seems to me, brother, that your distemper comes
+from your having passed too suddenly from the noisy world to the calm of
+solitude. Such sudden transitions can but do harm to the health of the
+soul. You are, brother, like a man who exposes himself, almost at the
+same time, to great heat and great cold. A cough shakes him, and fever
+torments him. In your place, brother Paphnutius, instead of retiring
+at once into some awful desert, I should take such amusements as are
+fitting to a monk and a holy abbot. I should visit the monasteries in
+the neighbourhood. Some of them are wonderful, it is said. That of
+Abbot Serapion contains, I have been told, a thousand four hundred and
+thirty-two cells, and the monks are divided into as many legions as
+there are letters in the Greek alphabet. I am even informed that a
+certain analogy is observed between the character of the monks and the
+shape of the letter by which they are designated, and that, for example,
+those who are placed under Z have a tortuous character, whilst those
+under I have an upright mind. If I were you, brother, I should go and
+assure myself of this with my own eyes, and I should know no rest
+until I had seen such a wonderful thing. I should not fail to study the
+regulations of the various communities which are scattered along the
+banks of the Nile, so as to be able to compare one with another. Such
+study is befitting a religious man like yourself. You have heard say,
+no doubt, that Abbot Ephrem has drawn up for his monastery pious
+regulations of great beauty. With his permission, you might make a copy
+of them, as you are a skilful penman. I could not do so, for my hands,
+accustomed to wield the spade, are too awkward to direct the thin reed
+of the scribe over the papyrus. But you have the knowledge of letters,
+brother, and should thank God for it, for beautiful writing cannot be
+too much admired. The work of the copyist and the reader is a great
+safeguard against evil thoughts. Brother Paphnutius, why do you not
+write out the teachings of our fathers, Paul and Anthony? Little by
+little you would recover, in these pious works, peace of soul and mind;
+solitude would again become pleasant to your heart, and soon you would
+be in a condition to recommence those ascetic works which your journey
+has interrupted. But you must not expect much benefit from excessive
+penitence. When he was amongst us, our Father Anthony used to say,
+'Excessive fasting produces weakness, and weakness begets idleness.
+There are some monks who ruin their body by fasts improperly prolonged.
+Of them it may be said that they plunge a dagger into their own breast,
+and deliver themselves up unresistingly into the power of the devil.'
+So said the holy man, Anthony. I am but a foolish old man, but, by the
+grace of God, I have remembered what our father told us."
+
+Paphnutius thanked Palemon and promised to think over his advice. When
+he had passed the fence of reeds which enclosed the little garden,
+he turned round and saw the good old gardener engaged in watering his
+salads, whilst the pigeon walked about on his bent back, and at that
+sight Paphnutius felt ready to weep.
+
+On returning to his cell, he found there a strange turmoil, as though
+it were filled with grains of sand blown about by a strong wind, and
+on looking closer, he saw these moving bodies were myriads of little
+jackals. That night he saw in a dream, a high stone column surmounted by
+a human face, and he heard a voice which said--
+
+"Ascend this pillar!"
+
+On awaking, he felt confident that this dream had been sent from heaven.
+He called his disciples, and addressed them in these words--
+
+"My beloved sons, I must leave you, and go where God sends me. During my
+absence obey Flavian as you would me, and take care of our brother Paul.
+Bless you. Farewell."
+
+As he strode away, they remained prostrate on the ground, and when they
+raised their heads, they saw his tall dark figure on the sandy horizon.
+
+He walked day and night until he reached the ruins of the temple,
+formerly built by the idolaters, in which he had slept amongst the
+scorpions and sirens on his former strange journey. The walls, covered
+with magic signs, were still standing. Thirty immense columns, which
+terminated in human heads or lotus flowers, still supported a heavy
+stone entablature. But, at one end of the temple, a pillar had shaken
+off its old burden, and stood isolated. It had for its capital the head
+of a woman which smiled, with long eyes and rounded cheeks, and on her
+forehead cow's horns.
+
+Paphnutius, on seeing it, recognised the column which had been shown him
+in his dream, and he calculated that it was thirty-two cubits high. He
+went to the neighbouring village, and ordered a ladder of that height to
+be made; and when the ladder was placed against the pillar, he ascended,
+knelt down on the top, and said to the Lord--
+
+"Here, then, O God, is the abode Thou hast chosen for me. May I remain
+here, in Thy Grace, until the hour of my death."
+
+He had brought no provisions with him, trusting in divine providence,
+and expecting that charitable peasants would give him all that he
+needed. And, in fact, the next day, about the ninth hour, women came
+with their children, bringing bread, dates, and fresh water, which the
+boys carried to the top of the column.
+
+The top of the pillar was not large enough to allow the monk to lie at
+full length, so that he slept with his legs crossed and his head on
+his breast, and sleep was a more cruel torture to him than his wakeful
+hours. At dawn the ospreys brushed him with their wings, and he awoke
+filled with pain and terror.
+
+It happened that the carpenter who had made the ladder feared God.
+Disturbed at the thought that the saint was exposed to the sun and rain,
+and fearing that he might fall in his sleep, this pious man constructed
+a roof and a railing on the top of the column.
+
+Soon the report of this extraordinary existence spread from village to
+village, and the labourers of the valley came on Sundays, with their
+wives and children, to look at the stylite. The disciples of Paphnutius,
+having learned with surprise the place of this wonderful retreat, came
+to him, and obtained from him permission to build their huts at the foot
+of the column. Every morning they came and stood in a circle round the
+master, and received from him the words of instruction.
+
+"My sons," he said to them, "continue like those little children whom
+Jesus loved. That is the way of salvation. The sin of the flesh is the
+source and origin of all sins; they spring from it as from a parent.
+Pride, avarice, idleness, anger, and envy are its dearly beloved
+progeny. I have seen this in Alexandria; I have seen rich men carried
+away by the vice of lust, which, like a river with a turbid flood, swept
+them into the gulf of bitterness."
+
+The abbots Ephrem and Serapion, being informed of his strange
+proceeding, wished to behold him with their own eyes. Seeing from
+afar, on the river, the triangular sail which was bringing them to him,
+Paphnutius could not prevent himself from thinking that God had made him
+an example to all solitary monks. The two abbots, when they saw him, did
+not conceal their surprise; and, having consulted together, they agreed
+in condemning such an extraordinary penance, and exhorted Paphnutius to
+come down.
+
+"Such a mode of life is contrary to all usage," they said; "it is
+peculiar, and against all rules."
+
+But Paphnutius replied--
+
+"What is the monastic life if not peculiar? And ought not the deeds of
+a monk to be as eccentric as he is himself? It was a sign from God
+that caused me to ascend here; it is a sign from God that will make me
+descend."
+
+Every day religious men came to join the disciples of Paphnutius, and
+they built for themselves shelters round the aerial hermitage. Several
+of them, to imitate the saint, mounted the ruins of the temple; but,
+being reproved by their brethren, and conquered by fatigue, they soon
+gave up these attempts.
+
+Pilgrims flocked from all parts. There were some who had come long
+distances, and were hungry and thirsty. The idea occurred to a poor
+widow of selling fresh water and melons. Against the foot of the column,
+behind her bottles of red clay, her cups and her fruit under an awning
+of blue-and-white striped canvas, she cried, "Who wants to drink?"
+Following the example of this widow, a baker brought some bricks and
+made an oven close by, in the hope of selling loaves and cakes to
+visitors. As the crowd of visitors increased unceasingly, and the
+inhabitants of the large cities of Egypt began to come, some man, greedy
+of gain, built a caravanserai to lodge the guests and their servants,
+camels, and mules. Soon there was, in front of the column, a market to
+which the fishermen of the Nile brought their fish, and the gardeners
+their vegetables. A barber, who shaved people in the open air, amused
+the crowd with his jokes. The old temple, so long given over to silence
+and solitude was filled with countless sights and sounds of life. The
+innkeepers turned the subterranean vaults into cellars and nailed on the
+old pillars signs surmounted by the figure of the holy Paphnutius, and
+bearing this inscription in Greek and Egyptian--"_Pomegranate wine, fig
+wine, and genuine Cilician beer sold here_." On the walls, sculptured
+with pure and graceful carvings, the shop-keepers hung ropes of onions,
+and smoked fish, dead hares, and the carcases of sheep. In the evening,
+the old occupants of the ruins, the rats, scuttled in a long row to the
+river, whilst the ibises, suspiciously craning their necks, perched on
+the high cornices, to which rose the smoke of the kitchens, the shouts
+of the drinkers, and the cries of the tapsters. All around, builders
+laid out streets, and masons constructed convents, chapels, and
+churches. By the end of six months a city was established with a
+guardhouse, a tribunal, a prison, and a school, kept by an old blind
+scribe.
+
+The pilgrims were innumerable. Bishops and other Church dignitaries,
+came, full of admiration. The Patriarch of Antioch, who chanced to be in
+Egypt at that time, came with all his clergy. He highly approved of the
+extraordinary conduct of the stylite, and the heads of the Libyan Church
+followed, in the absence of Athanasius, the opinion of the Patriarch.
+Having learned which, Abbots Ephrem and Serapion came to the feet of
+Paphnutius to apologise for their former mistrust. Paphnutius replied--
+
+"Know, my brothers, that the penance I endure is barely equal to the
+temptations which are sent me, the number and force of which astound
+me. A man, viewed externally, is but small, and, from the height of the
+pillar to which God has called me, I see human beings moving about like
+ants. But, considered internally, man is immense; he is as large as
+the world, for he contains it. All that is spread before me--these
+monasteries, these inns, the boats on the river, the villages, and what
+I see in the distance of fields, canals, sand, and mountains--is nothing
+in respect to what is in me. I carry in my heart countless cities
+and illimitable deserts. And evil--evil and death--spread over this
+immensity, cover them all, as night covers the earth. I am, in myself
+alone, a universe of evil thoughts."
+
+He spoke thus because the desire for woman was in him.
+
+The seventh month, there came from Alexandria, Bubastis and Sais, women
+who had long been barren, hoping to obtain children by the intercession
+of the holy man and the virtues of his pillar. They rubbed their sterile
+bodies against the stone. There followed a procession, as far as the
+eye could reach, of chariots, palanquins, and litters, which stopped
+and pushed and jostled below the man of God. From them came sick people
+terrible to see. Mothers brought to Paphnutius young boys whose limbs
+were twisted, their eyes starting, their mouth foaming, their voices
+hoarse. He laid his hands upon them. Blind men approached, groping with
+their hands, and raising towards him a face pierced with two bleeding
+holes. Paralytics displayed before him the heavy immobility, the deadly
+emaciation, and the hideous contractions of their limbs; lame men showed
+him their club feet; women with cancer, holding their bosoms with both
+hands, uncovered before him their breasts devoured by the invisible
+vulture. Dropsical women, swollen like wine skins were placed on
+the ground before him. He blessed them. Nubians, afflicted with
+elephantiasis, advanced with heavy steps and looked at him with
+streaming eyes and expressionless countenances. He made the sign of the
+cross over them. A young girl of Aphroditopolis was brought to him on
+a litter; after having vomited blood, she had slept for three days. She
+looked like a waxen image, and her parents, who thought she was dead,
+had placed a palm leaf on her breast. Paphnutius having prayed to God,
+the young girl raised her head and opened her eyes.
+
+As the people reported everywhere the miracles which the saint had
+performed, unfortunate persons afflicted with that disease which
+the Greeks call "the divine malady," came from all parts of Egypt in
+incalculable legions. As soon as they saw the pillar, they were seized
+with convulsions, rolled on the ground, writhed, and twisted themselves
+into a ball. And--though it is hardly to be believed--the persons
+present were in their turn seized with a violent delirium, and imitated
+the contortions of the epileptics. Monks and pilgrims, men and women,
+wallowed and struggled pell-mell, their limbs twisted, foaming at the
+mouth, eating handfuls of earth and prophesying. And Paphnutius at the
+top of his pillar felt a thrill of horror pass through him, and cried to
+God--
+
+"I am the scapegoat, and I take upon me all the impurities of these
+people, and that is why, Lord, my body is filled with evil spirits."
+
+Every time that a sick person went away healed, the people applauded,
+carried him in triumph, and ceased not to repeat--
+
+"We behold another well of Siloam!"
+
+Hundreds of crutches already hung round the wonderful column; grateful
+women suspended wreaths and votive images there. Some of the Greeks
+inscribed distiches, and as every pilgrim carved his name, the stone
+was soon covered as high as a man could reach with an infinity of Latin,
+Greek, Coptic, Punic, Hebrew, Syrian, and magic characters.
+
+When the feast of Easter came there was such an affluence of people to
+this city of miracles that old men thought that the days of the ancient
+mysteries had returned. All sorts of people, in all sorts of costumes,
+were to be seen there; the striped robes of the Egyptians, the burnoose
+of the Arabs, the white drawers of the Nubians, the short cloak of
+the Greeks, the long toga of the Romans, the scarlet breeches of the
+barbarians, the gold-spangled robes of the courtesans. A veiled woman
+would pass on an ass, preceded by black eunuchs, who cleared a passage
+for her by the free use of their sticks. Acrobats, having spread a
+carpet on the ground, juggled and performed skilful tricks before
+a circle of silent spectators. Snake-charmers unrolled their living
+girdles. A glittering, dusty, noisy, chattering crowd! The curses of
+the camel-drivers beating the animals; the cries of the hawkers who
+sold amulets against leprosy and the evil eye; the psalmody of the
+monks reciting verses of the Bible; the shrieking of the women who were
+prophesying; the shouting of the beggars singing old songs of the harem;
+the bleating of sheep; the braying of asses; the sailors calling tardy
+passengers; all these confused noises caused a deafening uproar, over
+which dominated the strident voices of the little naked negro boys,
+running about everywhere selling fresh dates.
+
+And all these human beings stifled under the white sky, in a heavy
+atmosphere laden with the perfumes of women, the odour of negroes, the
+fumes of cooking and the smoke of gums, which the devotees bought of the
+shepherds to burn before the saint.
+
+When night came, fires, torches, and lanterns were lighted everywhere,
+and nothing was to be seen but red shadows and black shapes. Standing
+amidst a circle of squatting listeners, an old man, his face lighted
+by a smoky lamp, related how, formerly, Bitiou had enchanted his heart,
+torn it from his breast, placed it in an acacia, and then transformed
+himself into a tree. He made gestures, which his shadow repeated with
+absurd exaggerations, and the audience uttered cries of admiration. In
+the taverns, the drinkers, lying on couches, called for beer and wine.
+Dancing girls, with painted eyes and bare stomachs, performed before
+them religious or lascivious scenes. In retired corners, young men
+played dice or other games, and old men followed prostitutes. Above
+all these rose the solitary, unchanging column; the head with the cow's
+horns gazed into the shadow, and above it Paphnutius watched between
+heaven and earth. All at once the moon rose over the Nile, like the bare
+shoulder of a goddess. The hills gleamed with blue light, and Paphnutius
+thought he saw the body of Thais shinning in the glimmer of the waters
+amidst the sapphire night.
+
+The days passed, and the saint still lived on his pillar. When the rainy
+season came, the waters of heaven, filtering through the cracks in
+the roof, wetted his body; his stiff limbs were incapable of movement.
+Scorched by the sun, and reddened by the dew, his skin broke; large
+ulcers devoured his arms and legs. But the desire of Thais still
+consumed him inwardly, and he cried--
+
+"It is not enough, great God! More temptations! More unclean thoughts!
+More horrible desires! Lord, lay upon me all the lusts of men, that I
+may expiate them all! Though it is false that the Greek bitch took upon
+herself all the sins of the world, as I heard an impostor once declare,
+yet there is a hidden meaning in the fable, the truth of which I now
+recognise. For it is true that the sins of the people enter the soul of
+the saints, and are lost there as in a well. Thus it is that the souls
+of the just are polluted with more filth than is ever found in the soul
+of the sinner. And, for that reason, I praise Thee, O my God, for having
+made me the cesspool of the world."
+
+One day, a rumour ran through the holy city, and even reached the ears
+of the hermit: a very great personage, a man occupying a high position,
+the Prefect of the Alexandrian fleet, Lucius Aurelius Cotta, was about
+to visit the city--was, indeed, now on his way.
+
+The news was true. Old Cotta, who was inspecting the canals and the
+navigation of the Nile, had many times expressed a desire to see the
+stylite and the new city, to which the name of Stylopolis had been
+given. The Stylopolitans saw the river covered with sails one morning.
+Cotta appeared on board a golden galley hung with purple, and followed
+by all his fleet. He landed, and advanced, accompanied by a secretary
+carrying his tablets, and Aristaeus, his physician, with whom he liked
+to converse.
+
+A numerous suite walked behind him, and the shore was covered with
+_laticlaves_(*) and military uniforms. He stopped, some paces from the
+column, and began to examine the stylite, wiping his face meanwhile with
+the skirt of his toga. Being of a naturally curious disposition, he
+had observed many things in the course of his long voyages. He liked to
+remember them, and intended to write, after he had finished his Punic
+history, a book on the remarkable things he had witnessed. He seemed
+much interested by the spectacle before him.
+
+ (*) The _laticlave_ was a toga, with a broad purple band,
+ worn by Roman senators as the distinguishing mark of their
+ high office.
+
+"This is very curious!" he said, puffing and blowing. "And--which is a
+circumstance worthy of being recorded--this man was my guest. Yes, this
+monk supped with me last year, after which he carried off an actress."
+
+Turning to his secretary--
+
+"Note that, my son, on my tablets; also the dimensions of the column,
+not omitting the shape of the top of it."
+
+Then, wiping his face again--
+
+"Persons deserving of belief have assured me that this monk has not left
+his column for a single moment since he mounted it a year ago. Is that
+possible, Aristaeus?"
+
+"That which is possible to a lunatic or a sick man," replied Aristaeus,
+"would be impossible to a man sound in body and mind. Do you know,
+Lucius, that sometimes diseases of the mind or body give to those
+afflicted by them a strength which healthy men do not possess? For, as
+a matter of fact, there is no such thing as good health or bad health.
+There are only different conditions of the organs. Having studied what
+are called maladies, I have come to consider them as necessary forms of
+life. I take pleasure in studying them in order to be able to conquer
+them. Some of them are worthy of admiration, and conceal, under apparent
+disorder, profound harmonies; for instance, a quartan fever is certainly
+a very pretty thing! Sometimes certain affections of the body cause a
+rapid augmentation of the faculties of the mind. You know Creon? When he
+was a child, he stuttered and was stupid. But, having cracked his skull
+by tumbling off a ladder, he became an able lawyer, as you are aware.
+This monk must be affected in some hidden organ. Moreover, this kind of
+existence is not so extraordinary as it appears to you, Lucius. I may
+remind you that the gymnosophists of India can remain motionless, not
+merely for a year, but during twenty, thirty, or forty years."
+
+"By Jupiter!" cried Cotta, "that is a strange madness. For man was born
+to move and act, and idleness is an unpardonable crime, because it is
+an injury to the State. I do not know of any religion in which such an
+objectionable practice is permitted, though it possibly may be in some
+of the Asiatic creeds. When I was Governor of Syria, I found _phalli_
+erected in the porches at the city of Hera. A man ascended, twice a
+year, and remained there for a week. The people believed that this man
+talked with the gods, and interceded with them for the prosperity of
+Syria. The custom appeared senseless to me; nevertheless I did nothing
+to put it down. For I consider that a functionary ought not to interfere
+with the manners and customs of the people, but on the contrary, to see
+that they are preserved. It is not the business of the government to
+force a religion on a people, but to maintain that which exists, which,
+whether good or bad, has been regulated by the spirit of the time,
+the place, and the race. If it endeavours to put down a religion, it
+proclaims itself revolutionary in its spirit, and tyrannical in its
+acts, and is justly detested. Besides, how are you to raise yourself
+above the superstitions of the vulgar, except by understanding them and
+tolerating them? Aristaeus, I am of opinion that I should leave this
+nephelo-coccygian(*) in the air, exposed only to the indignities the
+birds shower on him. I should not gain anything by having him pulled
+down, but I should by taking note of his thoughts and beliefs."
+
+ (*) Nephelo-coccygia, the cloud-city built by the cuckoos,
+ in the _Birds_ of Aristophanes.
+
+He puffed, coughed, and placed his hand on the secretary's shoulder.
+
+"My child, note down that, amongst certain sects of Christians, it is
+considered praiseworthy to carry off courtesans and live upon columns.
+You may add that these customs are evidence of the worship of genetic
+divinities. But on this point we ought to question him himself."
+
+Then, raising his head, and shading his eyes with his hand, to keep off
+the sun, he shouted--
+
+"Hallo, Paphnutius! If you remember that you were once my guest, answer
+me. What are you doing up there? Why did you go up, and why do you stay
+there? Has this column any phallic signification in your mind?"
+
+Paphnutius, considering Cotta as nothing but an idolater, did not deign
+to reply. But his disciple, Flavian, approached, and said--
+
+"Illustrious Sir, this holy man takes the sins of the world upon him,
+and cures diseases."
+
+"By Jupiter! Do you hear, Aristaeus?" cried Cotta. "This
+nephelo-coccygian practises medicine, like you. What do you think of so
+high a rival?"
+
+Aristaeus shook his head.
+
+"It is very possible that he may cure certain diseases better than I
+can; such, for instance, as epilepsy, vulgarly called the divine malady,
+although all maladies are equally divine, for they all come from the
+gods. But the cause of this disease lies, partly, in the imagination,
+and you must confess, Lucius, that this monk, perched up on the head of
+a goddess, strikes the minds of the sick people more forcibly than I,
+bending over my mortars and phials in my laboratory, could ever do.
+There are forces, Lucius, infinitely more powerful than reason and
+science."
+
+"What are they?" asked Cotta.
+
+"Ignorance and folly," replied Aristaeus.
+
+"I have rarely seen a more curious sight," continued Cotta, "and I hope
+that some day an able writer will relate the foundation of Stylopolis.
+But even the most extraordinary spectacles should not keep, longer
+than is befitting, a serious and busy man from his work. Let us go and
+inspect the canals. Farewell, good Paphnutius! or rather, till our
+next meeting! If ever you should come down to earth again, and revisit
+Alexandria, do not fail to come and sup with me."
+
+These words, heard by all present, passed from mouth to mouth, and
+being repeated by the believers, added greatly to the reputation of
+Paphnutius. Pious minds amplified and transformed them, and it was
+stated that Paphnutius, from the top of his pillar, had converted
+the Prefect of the Fleet to the faith of the apostles and the Nicaean
+fathers. The believers found a figurative meaning in the last words
+uttered by Aurelius Cotta; to them, the supper to which this important
+personage had invited the ascetic, was a holy communion, a spiritual
+repast, a celestial banquet. The story of this meeting was embroidered
+with wonderful details, which those who invented were the first to
+believe. It was said that when Cotta, after a long argument, had
+embraced the truth, an angel had come from heaven to wipe the sweat from
+his brow. The physician and secretary of the Prefect of the Fleet had
+also, it was asserted, been converted at the same time. And, the miracle
+being public and notorious, the deacons of the principal churches of
+Libya recorded it amongst the authentic facts. After that, it could be
+said, without any exaggeration, that the whole world was seized with a
+desire to see Paphnutius, and that, in the West as well as the East, all
+Christians turned their astonished eyes towards him. The most celebrated
+cities of Italy sent deputations to him, and the Roman Caesar, the
+divine Constantine who favoured the Christian religion, wrote him a
+letter which the legates brought to him with great ceremony. But one
+night, whilst the budding city at his feet slept in the dew, he heard a
+voice, which said--
+
+"Paphnutius, thou art become celebrated by thy works and powerful by thy
+word. God has raised thee up for His glory. He has chosen thee to work
+miracles, heal the sick, convert the Pagans, enlighten sinners, confound
+the Arians, and establish peace in the Church."
+
+Paphnutius replied--
+
+"God's will be done!"
+
+The voice continued--
+
+"Arise, Paphnutius, and go seek in his palace the impious Constans, who,
+far from imitating the wisdom of his brother, Constantine, inclines
+to the errors of Arius and Marcus. Go! The bronze gates shall fly open
+before thee, and thy sandals shall resound on the golden floor of the
+basilica before the throne of the Caesars, and thy awe-inspiring voice
+shall change the heart of the son of Constantinus. Thou shalt reign over
+a peaceful and powerful Church. And, even as the soul directs the
+body, so shall the Church govern the empire. Thou shalt be placed above
+senators, comites, and patricians. Thou shalt repress the greed of the
+people, and check the boldness of the barbarians. Old Cotta, knowing
+that thou art the head of the government, will seek the honour of
+washing thy feet. At thy death thy _cilicium_ shall be taken to the
+patriarch of Alexandria, and the great Athanasius, white with glory,
+shall kiss it as the relic of a saint. Go!"
+
+Paphnutius replied--
+
+"Let the will of God be accomplished!"
+
+And making an effort to stand up, he prepared to descend. But the voice,
+divining his intention, said--
+
+"Above all, descend not by the ladder. That would be to act like an
+ordinary man, and to be unconscious of the gifts that are in thee. A
+great saint, like thee, ought to fly through the air. Leap! the angels
+are there to support thee. Leap, then!"
+
+Paphnutius replied--
+
+"The will of God be done, on earth as it is in heaven."
+
+Extending his long arms like the ragged wings of a huge sick bird, he
+was about to throw himself down, when, suddenly, a hideous mocking laugh
+rang in his ears. Terrified, he asked--
+
+"Who laughs thus?"
+
+"Ah? ah!" screamed the voice, "we are yet but at the beginning of our
+friendship; thou wilt some day be better acquainted with me. My friend,
+it was I who caused thee to ascend here, and I ought to be satisfied at
+the docility with which thou hast accomplished my wishes. Paphnutius, I
+am pleased with thee."
+
+Paphnutius murmured, in a voice stifled by fear--
+
+"Avaunt, avaunt! I know thee now; thou art he who carried Jesus to a
+pinnacle of the temple, and showed him all the kingdoms of this world."
+
+He fell, affrighted, on the stone.
+
+"Why did I not know this sooner?" he thought. "More wretched than the
+blind, deaf, and paralysed who trust in me, I have lost all knowledge of
+things supernatural, and am more depraved than the maniacs who eat
+earth and approach dead bodies. I can no longer distinguish between
+the clamours of hell and the voices of heaven. I have lost even the
+intuition of the new-born child, who cries when its nurse's breast is
+taken from it, of the dog that scents out its master's footsteps, of the
+plant that turns towards the sun. I am the laughing-stock of the devils.
+So, then, it is Satan who led me here. When he elevated me on this
+pedestal, lust and pride mounted with me. It is not the magnitude of my
+temptations which terrifies me. Anthony, on his mountain, suffers the
+same. I wish that all their swords may pierce my flesh, before the eyes
+of the angels. I have even learned to like my sufferings. But God does
+not speak to me, and His silence astonishes me. He has left me--and I
+had but Him to look to. He leaves me alone in the horror of His absence.
+He flies from me. I will follow after Him. This stone burns my feet. Let
+me leave quickly, and come up with God."
+
+With that he seized the ladder which stood against the column, put his
+feet on it, and having descended a rung, found himself face to face with
+the monster's head; she smiled strangely. He was certain then that what
+he had taken for the site of his rest and glory, was but the diabolical
+instrument of his trouble and damnation. He hastily descended and
+touched the soil. His feet had forgotten their use, and he reeled. But,
+feeling on him the shadow of the cursed column, he forced himself to
+run. All slept. He traversed, without being seen, the great square
+surrounded by wine-shops, inns, and caravanserias, and threw himself
+into a by-street which led towards the Libyan Hills. A dog pursued him,
+barking, and stopped only at the edge of the desert. Paphnutius went
+through a country where there was no road but the trail of wild beasts.
+Leaving behind him the huts abandoned by the coiners, he continued all
+night and all day his solitary flight.
+
+At last, almost ready to expire with hunger, thirst, and fatigue, and
+not knowing if God was still far from him, he came to a silent city
+which extended from right to left, and stretched away till it was lost
+in the blue horizon. The buildings, which were widely separated and like
+each other, resembled pyramids cut off at half their height. They were
+tombs. The doors were broken, and in the shadow of the chambers could
+be seen the gleaming eyes of hyaenas and wolves who brought forth their
+young there, whilst the dead bodies lay on the threshold, despoiled
+by robbers, and gnawed by the wild beasts. Having passed through this
+funeral city, Paphnutius fell exhausted before a tomb which stood near a
+spring surrounded by palm trees. This tomb was much ornamented, and, as
+there was no door to it, he saw inside it a painted chamber, in which
+serpents bred.
+
+"Here," he sighed, "is the abode I have chosen; the tabernacle of my
+repentance and penitence."
+
+He dragged himself to it, drove out the reptiles with his feet, and
+remained prostrate on the stone floor for eighteen hours, at the end
+of which time he went to the spring, and drank out of his hand. Then he
+plucked some dates and some stalks of lotus, the seeds of which he
+ate. Thinking this kind of life was good, he made it the rule of his
+existence. From morning to night he never lifted his forehead from the
+stone.
+
+One day, whilst he was thus prostrated, he heard a voice which said--
+
+"Look at these images, that thou mayest learn."
+
+Then, raising his head, he saw, on the walls of the chamber, paintings
+which represented lively and domestic scenes. They were of very old
+work, and marvellously lifelike. There were cooks who blew the fire,
+with their cheeks all puffed out; others plucked geese, or cooked
+quarters of sheep in stew-pans. A little farther, a hunter carried on
+his shoulders a gazelle pierced with arrows. In one place, peasants were
+sowing, reaping, or gathering. In another, women danced to the sounds
+of viols, flutes, and harp. A young girl played the theorbo. The lotus
+flower shone in her hair, which was neatly braided. Her transparent
+dress let the pure forms of her body be seen. Her bosom and mouth were
+perfect. The face was turned in profile, and the beautiful eye looked
+straight before her. The whole figure was exquisite. Paphnutius having
+examined it, lowered his eyes, and replied to the voice--
+
+"Why dost thou command me to look at these images? No doubt they
+represent the terrestrial life of the idolater whose body rests here,
+under my feet, at the bottom of a well, in a coffin of black basalt.
+They recall the life of a dead man, and are, despite their bright
+colours, the shadows of a shadow. The life of a dead man! O vanity!"
+
+"He is dead, but he lived," replied the voice; "and thou wilt die, and
+wilt not have lived."
+
+From that day, Paphnutius had not a moment's rest. The voice spoke to
+him incessantly. The girl with the theorbo looked fixedly at him from
+underneath the long lashes of her eye. At last she also spoke--
+
+"Look. I am mysterious and beautiful. Love me. Exhaust in my arms the
+love which torments you. What use is it to fear me? You cannot escape
+me; I am the beauty of woman. Whither do you think to fly from me,
+senseless fool? You will find my likeness in the radiancy of flowers,
+and in the grace of the palm trees, in the flight of pigeons, in the
+bounds of the gazelle, in the rippling of brooks, in the soft light of
+the moon, and if you close your eyes, you will find me within yourself.
+It is a thousand years since the man who sleeps here, swathed in linen,
+in a bed of black stone, pressed me to his heart. It is a thousand years
+since he received the last kiss from my mouth, and his sleep is yet
+redolent with it. You know me well, Paphnutius. How is it you have not
+recognised me? I am one of the innumerable incarnations of Thais. You
+are a learned monk, and well skilled in the knowledge of things. You
+have travelled, and it is by travel a man learns the most. Often a day
+passed abroad will show more novelties than ten years passed at home.
+You have heard that Thais lived formerly in Argos, under the name of
+Helen. She had another existence in Thebes Hecatompyle. And I was Thais
+of Thebes. How is it you have not guessed it? I took, when I was alive,
+a large share in the sins of this world, and now reduced here to the
+condition of a shadow, I am still quite capable of taking your sins
+upon me, beloved monk. Whence comes your surprise? It was certain that,
+wherever you went, you would find Thais again."
+
+He struck his forehead against the pavement, and uttered a cry of
+terror. And every night the player of the theorbo left the wall,
+approached him, and spoke in a clear voice mingled with soft breathing.
+And as the holy man resisted the temptations she gave him, she said to
+him--
+
+"Love me; yield, friend. As long as you resist me I shall torment you.
+You do not know what the patience of a dead woman is. I shall wait, if
+necessary, till you are dead. Being a sorceress, I shall put into your
+lifeless body a spirit who will reanimate it, and who will not refuse me
+what I have asked in vain of you. And think, Paphnutius, what a strange
+situation when your blessed soul sees, from the height of heaven, its
+own body given up to sin. God, who has promised to return you this body
+after the day of judgment and the end of time, will Himself be much
+puzzled. How can He place in celestial glory a human form inhabited by
+a devil, and guarded by a sorceress? You have not thought of that
+difficulty. Nor God either, perhaps. Between ourselves, He is not very
+knowing. Any ordinary magician can easily deceive Him, and if He had not
+His thunder, and the cataracts of heaven, the village urchins would pull
+His beard. He has certainly not as much sense as the old serpent, His
+adversary. He, indeed, is a wonderful artist. If I am so beautiful, it
+is because he adorned me with all my attractions. It was he who taught
+me how to braid my hair, and to make for myself rosy fingers with agate
+nails. You have misunderstood him. When you came to live in this tomb,
+you drove out with your feet the serpents which were here, without
+troubling yourself to know whether they were of his family, and you
+crushed their eggs. I am afraid, my poor friend, you will have a
+troublesome business on your hands. You were warned, however, that he
+was a musician and a lover. What have you done? You have quarrelled with
+science and beauty. You are altogether miserable, and Iaveh does not
+come to your help. It is not probable that he will come. Being as
+great as all things, he cannot move for want of space, and if, by an
+impossibility, he made the least movement, all creation would be pushed
+out of place. My handsome hermit, give me a kiss."
+
+Paphnutius was aware that great prodigies are performed by magic arts.
+He thought--not without much uneasiness--
+
+"Perhaps the dead man buried at my feet knows the words written in that
+mysterious book which exists hidden, not far from here, at the bottom of
+a royal tomb. By virtue of these words, the dead, taking the form which
+they had upon earth, see the light of the sun and the smiles of women."
+
+His chief fear was that the girl with the theorbo and the dead man might
+come together, as they did in their lifetime, and that he should see
+them unite. Sometimes he thought he heard the sound of kissing.
+
+He was troubled in his mind, and now, in the absence of God he feared
+to think as much as to feel. One evening, when he was kneeling prostrate
+according to his custom, an unknown voice said to him--
+
+"Paphnutius, there are on earth more people than you imagine, and if I
+were to show you what I have seen, you would die of astonishment. There
+are men with a single eye in the middle of their forehead. There are
+men who have but one leg, and advance by jumps. There are men who change
+their sex, and the females become males. There are men-trees, who shoot
+out roots in the ground. And there are men with no head, with two eyes,
+a nose, and a mouth in their breast. Can you honestly believe that Jesus
+Christ died for the salvation of these men?"
+
+Another time he had a vision. He saw, in a strong light, a broad road,
+rivulets, and gardens. On the road, Aristobulus and Chereas passed at
+a gallop on their Syrian horses, and the joyous ardour of the race
+reddened the cheeks of the two young men. Beneath a portico, Callicrates
+recited his verses; satisfied pride trembled in his voice and shone in
+his eyes. In the garden, Zenothemis picked apples of gold, and caressed
+a serpent with azure wings. Clad in white, and wearing a shining mitre,
+Hermodorus meditated beneath a sacred persea, which bore, instead
+of flowers, small heads of pure profile, wearing, like the Egyptian
+goddesses, vultures, hawks, or the shining disk of the moon; whilst
+in the background, by the side of a fountain, Nicias studied, on an
+armillary sphere, the harmonious movements of the stars.
+
+Then a veiled woman approached the monk, holding in her hand a branch of
+myrtle. She said to him--
+
+"Look! Some seek eternal beauty, and place their ephemeral life in
+the infinite. Others live without much thought. But by that alone they
+submit to fair Nature, and they are happy and beautiful in the joy of
+living only, and give glory to the supreme artist of all things; for man
+is a noble hymn to God. All think that happiness is innocent, and that
+pleasure is permitted to man. Paphnutius, if they are right, what a dupe
+you have been!"
+
+And the vision vanished.
+
+Thus was Paphnutius tempted unceasingly in body and mind. Satan never
+gave him a minute's repose. The solitude of the tomb was more peopled
+than the streets of a great city. The devils shouted with laughter, and
+millions of imps, evil genii, and phantoms imitated all the ordinary
+transactions of life. In the evening, when he went to the spring,
+satyrs and nymphs capered round him, and tried to drag him into their
+lascivious dances. The demons no longer feared him. They loaded him with
+insults, obscene jests, and blows. One day a devil, no longer than his
+arm, stole the cord he wore round his waist.
+
+He said to himself--
+
+"Thought, whither hast thou led me?"
+
+And he resolved to work with his hands, in order to give his mind that
+rest of which it had need. Near the spring, some banana trees, with
+large leaves, grew under the shade of the palms. He cut the stalks, and
+carried them to the tomb. He crushed them with a stone, and reduced them
+to fibres, as he had seen ropemakers do. For he intended to make a cord,
+to replace that which the devil had stolen. The demons were somewhat
+displeased at this; they ceased their clamour, and the girl with the
+theorbo no longer continued her magic arts, but remained quietly on the
+wall. The courage and faith of Paphnutius increased whilst he pounded
+the banana stems.
+
+"With Heaven's help," he said to himself, "I shall subdue the flesh. As
+to my soul, its confidence is still unshaken. In vain do the devils, and
+that accursed woman, try to instil into my mind doubts as to the nature
+of God. I will reply to them, by the mouth of the Apostle John, 'In the
+beginning was the Word, and the Word was God.' That I firmly believe,
+and that which I believe is absurd, I believe still more firmly. In fact
+it should be absurd. If it were not so, I should not believe; I should
+know. And it is not that which we know which gives eternal life; it is
+faith only that saves."
+
+He exposed the separated fibres to the sun and the dew, and every
+morning he took care to turn them, to prevent them rotting; and he
+rejoiced to find that he had become as simple as a child. When he had
+twisted his cord, he cut reeds to make mats and baskets. The sepulchral
+chamber resembled a basket-maker's workshop, and Paphnutius could pass
+without difficulty from work to prayer. Yet still God was not merciful
+to him, for one night he was awakened by a voice which froze him with
+horror, for he guessed that it was the voice of the dead man.
+
+The voice called quickly, in a light whisper--
+
+"Helen! Helen! come and bathe with me! come quickly!"
+
+A woman, whose mouth was close to the monk's ear, replied--
+
+"Friend, I cannot rise; a man is lying on me."
+
+Paphnutius suddenly perceived that his cheek rested on a woman's breast.
+He recognised the player of the theorbo, who, partly relieved of his
+weight, raised her breast. He clung tightly to the sweet, warm, perfumed
+body, and consumed with the desire of damnation, he cried--
+
+"Stay, stay, my heavenly one!"
+
+But she was already standing on the threshold. She laughed, and her
+smile gleamed in the silver rays of the moon.
+
+"Why should I stay?" she said. "The shadow of a shadow is enough for a
+lover endowed with such a lively imagination. Besides, you have sinned.
+What more was needed?"
+
+Paphnutius wept in the night, and when the dawn came, he murmured a
+prayer that was a meek complaint--
+
+"Jesus, my Jesus, why hast Thou forsaken me! Thou seest the danger in
+which I am. Come, and help me, sweet Saviour. Since Thy Father no longer
+loves me, and does not hear me, remember that I have but Thee. From Him
+nothing is to be hoped; I cannot comprehend Him, and He cannot pity me.
+But Thou was born of a woman, and that is why I trust in Thee. Remember
+that Thou wast a man. I pray to Thee, not because Thou art God of God,
+Light of light, very God of very God, but because Thou hast lived poor
+and humble on this earth where now I suffer, because Satan has tempted
+Thy flesh, because the sweat of agony has bedewed Thy face. It is to Thy
+humanity that I pray, Jesus, my brother Jesus!"
+
+When he had thus prayed, wringing his hands, a terrible peal of laughter
+shook the walls of the tomb, and the voice which rang in his ears on the
+top of the column, said jeeringly--
+
+"That is a prayer worthy of the breviary of Marcus, the heretic.
+Paphnutius is an Arian! Paphnutius is an Arian!"
+
+As though thunderstruck, the monk fell senseless.
+
+*****
+
+When he reopened his eyes, he saw around him monks wearing black hoods,
+who poured water on his temples, and recited exorcisms. Many others were
+standing outside, carrying palm leaves.
+
+"As we passed through the desert," said one of them, "we heard cries
+issuing from this tomb, and, having entered, we found you lying
+unconscious on the floor. Doubtless the devils had thrown you down, and
+had fled at our approach."
+
+Paphnutius, raising his head, asked in a feeble voice--
+
+"Who are you, my brothers? And why do you carry palms in your hands? Is
+it for my burial?"
+
+One of them replied--
+
+"Brother, do you not know that our father, Anthony, now a hundred and
+five years old, having been warned of his approaching end, has come
+down from Mount Colzin, to which he had retired, to bless his numerous
+spiritual children? We are going with palm leaves to greet our holy
+father. But how is it, brother, that you are ignorant of such a great
+event? Can it be possible that no angel came to this tomb to inform
+you?"
+
+"Alas!" replied Paphnutius, "I am not worthy of such a favour, and the
+only denizens of this abode are demons and vampires. Pray for me. I am
+Paphnutius, Abbot of Antinoe, the most wretched of the servants of God."
+
+At the name of Paphnutius, all waved their palm leaves and murmured his
+praises. The monk who had previously spoken, cried in surprise--
+
+"Can it be that thou art that holy Paphnutius, celebrated for so many
+works that it was supposed he would some day equal the great Anthony
+himself? Most venerable, it was thou who convertedst to God the
+courtesan, Thais, and who, raised upon a high column, was carried away
+by the seraphs. Those who watched by night, at the foot of the pillar,
+saw thy blessed assumption. The wings of the angels encircled thee in
+a white cloud, and with thy right hand extended thou didst bless the
+dwellings of man. The next day, when the people saw thou wert no longer
+there, a long groan rose to the summit of the discrowned pillar. But
+Flavian, thy disciple, reported the miracle, and took thy place as the
+head. But a foolish man, of the name of Paul, tried to contradict the
+general opinion. He asserted that he had seen thee, in a dream, carried
+away by the devils; the people wanted to stone him, and it was a miracle
+that he escaped death. I am Zozimus, abbot of these solitary monks whom
+thou seest prostrate at thy feet. Like them, I kneel before thee, that
+thou mayest bless the father with the children. Then thou shalt relate
+to us the marvels which God has deigned to accomplish by thy means."
+
+"Far from having favoured me as thou believest," replied Paphnutius,
+"the Lord has tried me with terrible temptations. I was not carried away
+by angels. But a shadowy wall is raised in front of my eyes, and moves
+before me. I have lived in a dream. Without God all is a dream. When I
+made my journey to Alexandria, I heard, in a short space of time, many
+discourses, and I learned that the army of errors was innumerable. It
+pursues me, and I am compassed about with swords."
+
+Zozimus replied--
+
+"Venerable father, we must remember that the saints, and especially the
+solitary saints, undergo terrible trials. If thou wast not carried to
+heaven by the seraphs, it is certain that the Lord granted that favour
+to thy image, for Flavian, the monks, and the people were witnesses of
+thy assumption."
+
+Paphnutius resolved to go and receive the blessing of Anthony.
+
+"Brother Zozimus," he said, "give me one of these palm leaves, and let
+us go and meet our father."
+
+"Let us go," replied Zozimus; "military order is most befitting for
+monks, who are God's soldiers. Thou and I, being abbots, will march in
+front, and the others shall follow us, singing psalms."
+
+They set out on their march, and Paphnutius said--
+
+"God is unity, for He is the truth, which is one. The world is many,
+because it is error. We should turn away from all the sights of nature,
+even those which appear the most innocent. Their diversity renders them
+pleasant, which is a sign that they are evil. For that reason, I cannot
+see a tuft of papyrus by the side of still waters without my soul
+being imbued with melancholy. All things that the senses perceive are
+detestable. The least grain of sand brings danger. Everything tempts us.
+Woman is but a combination of all the temptations scattered in the thin
+air, on the flowering earth, in the clear waters. Happy is he whose soul
+is a sealed vase! Happy is he who knows how to be deaf, dumb, and blind,
+and who knows nothing of the world, in order that he may know God!"
+
+Zozimus, having meditated upon these words, replied as follows--
+
+"Venerable father, it is fitting that I should avow my sins to thee,
+since thou hast shown me thy soul. Thus we shall confess to each
+other, according to the apostolic custom. Before I was a monk, I led
+an abominable life. At Madaura, a city celebrated for its courtesans,
+I sought out all kinds of worldly love. Every night I supped in company
+with young debauchees and female flute players, and I took home with me
+the one who pleased me the best. A saint like thee could never imagine
+to what a pitch the fury of my desires carried me. Suffice it to
+say that it spared neither matrons nor nuns, and spread adultery and
+sacrilege everywhere. I excited my senses with wine, and was justly
+known as the heaviest drinker in Madaura. Yet I was a Christian, and,
+in all my follies, kept my faith in Jesus crucified. Having devoured my
+substance in riotous living, I was beginning to feel the first attacks
+of poverty, when I saw one of my companions in pleasure suddenly struck
+with a terrible disease. His knees could not sustain him; his twitching
+hands refused to obey him; his glazed eyes closed. Only horrible groans
+came from his breast. His mind, heavier than his body, slumbered. To
+punish him for having lived like a beast, God had changed him into a
+beast. The loss of my property had already inspired me with salutary
+reflections, but the example of my friend was of yet greater efficacy;
+it made such an impression on my heart that I quitted the world and
+retired into the desert. There I have enjoyed for twenty years a peace
+that nothing has troubled. I work with my monks as weaver, architect,
+carpenter, and even as scribe, though, to say the truth, I have little
+taste for writing, having always preferred action to thought. My days
+are full of joy, and my nights without dreams, and I believe that the
+grace of the Lord is in me, because, even in the midst of the most
+frightful sins, I have never lost hope."
+
+On hearing these words, Paphnutius lifted his eyes to heaven and
+murmured--
+
+"Lord, Thou lookest with kindness upon this man polluted by adultery,
+sacrilege, and so many crimes, and Thou turnest away from me, who have
+always kept Thy commandments! How inscrutable is Thy justice, O my God!
+and how impenetrable are Thy ways!"
+
+Zozimus extended his arms.
+
+"Look, venerable father! On both sides of the horizon are long, black
+files that look like emigrant ants. They are our brothers, who, like us,
+are going to meet Anthony."
+
+When they came to the place of meeting, they saw a magnificent
+spectacle. The army of monks extended, in three ranks, in an immense
+semicircle. In the first rank stood the old hermits of the desert, cross
+in hand, and with long beards that almost touched the ground. The monks,
+governed by the abbots Ephrem and Serapion, and also all the cenobites
+of the Nile, formed the second line. Behind them appeared the ascetics,
+who had come from their distant rocks. Some wore, on their blackened
+and dried-up bodies, shapeless rags; others had for their only clothes,
+bundles of reeds held together by withies. Many of them were naked, but
+God had covered them with a fell of hair as thick as a sheep's fleece.
+All held branches of palm; they looked like an emerald rainbow, or they
+might have been also compared to the host of the elect--the living walls
+of the city of God.
+
+Such perfect order reigned in the assembly, that Paphnutius found,
+without difficulty, the monks he governed. He placed himself near them,
+after having taken care to hide his face under his hood, that he
+might remain unknown, and not disturb them in their pious expectation.
+Suddenly, an immense shout arose--
+
+"The saint!" they all cried. "The saint! Behold the great saint, against
+whom hell has not prevailed, the well-beloved of God! Our father,
+Anthony!"
+
+Then a great silence followed, and every forehead was lowered to the
+sand.
+
+From the summit of a dune, in the vast void space, Anthony advanced,
+supported by his beloved disciples, Macarius and Amathas. He walked
+slowly, but his figure was still upright, and showed the remains of a
+superhuman strength. His white beard spread over his broad chest, his
+polished skull reflected the rays of sunlight like the forehead of
+Moses. The keen gaze of the eagle was in his eyes; the smile of a child
+shone on his round cheek. To bless his people, he raised his arms, tired
+by a century of marvellous works, and his voice burst forth for the last
+time, with the words of love.
+
+"How goodly are thy tents, O Jacob, and thy tabernacles, O Israel!"
+
+Immediately, from one end to the other of the living wall, like a peal
+of harmonious thunder, the psalm, "Blessed is the man that feareth the
+Lord," broke forth.
+
+Accompanied by Macarius and Amathas, Anthony passed along the ranks of
+the old hermits, anchorites, and cenobites. This seer, who had beheld
+heaven and hell; this hermit, who from a cave in the rock, governed
+the Christian Church; this saint, who had sustained the faith of the
+martyrs; this scholar, whose eloquence had paralysed the heretics, spoke
+tenderly to each of his sons, and bade them a kindly farewell, on the
+eve of the blessed death, which God, who loved him, had at last promised
+him.
+
+He said to the abbots Ephrem and Serapion--
+
+"You command large armies, and you are both great generals. Therefore,
+you shall put on in heaven an armour of gold, and the Archangel Michael
+shall give you the title of kiliarchs of his hosts."
+
+Perceiving the old man Philemon, he embraced him, and said--
+
+"Behold, the kindest and best of all my children. His soul exhales a
+perfume as sweet as the flower of the beans he sows every year."
+
+To Abbot Zozimus he addressed these words--
+
+"Thou hast never mistrusted divine goodness, and therefore the peace
+of the Lord is in thee. The lily of thy virtues has flowered upon the
+dunghill of thy corruption."
+
+To all he spoke words of unerring wisdom.
+
+To the old hermits he said--
+
+"The apostle saw, round the throne of God, eighty old men seated, clad
+in white robes, and wearing crowns on their heads."
+
+To the young men--
+
+"Be joyful; leave sadness to the happy ones of this world."
+
+Thus he passed along the front of his filial army, exhorting and
+comforting. Paphnutius, seeing him approach, fell on his knees, his
+heart torn by fear and hope.
+
+"My father! my father!" he cried in his agony. "My father! come to my
+help, for I perish. I have given to God the soul of Thais; I have lived
+upon the top of a column, and in the chamber of a tomb. My forehead,
+unceasingly in the dust, has become horny as a camel's knee. And yet God
+has gone from me. Bless me, my father, and I shall be saved; shake the
+hyssop, and I shall be washed, and I shall shine as the snow."
+
+Anthony did not reply. He turned to the monks of Antinoe those eyes
+whose looks no man could sustain. He gazed for a long time at Paul,
+called the Fool; then he made a sign to him to approach. And, as all
+were astonished that the saint should address himself to a man who was
+not in his senses, Anthony said--
+
+"God has granted to him more grace than to any of you. Lift thy eyes, my
+son Paul, and tell me what thou seest in heaven."
+
+Paul the Fool raised his eyes; his face shone, and his tongue was
+unloosed.
+
+"I see in heaven," he said, "a bed adorned with hangings of purple
+and gold. Around it three virgins keep constant watch that no soul may
+approach it, except the chosen one for whom the bed is prepared."
+
+Believing that this bed was the symbol of his glorification, Paphnutius
+had already begun to return thanks to God. But Anthony made a sign
+to him to be silent, and to listen to the Fool, who murmured in his
+ecstasy--
+
+"The three virgins speak to me; they say unto me: 'A saint is about to
+quit the earth; Thais of Alexandria is dying. And we have prepared the
+bed of her glory, for we are her virtues--Faith, Fear, and Love.'"
+
+Anthony asked--
+
+"Sweet child, what else seest thou?"
+
+Paul gazed vacantly from the zenith to the nadir, and from west to east,
+when suddenly his eyes fell on the Abbot of Antinoe. His face grew pale
+with a holy terror, and his eyeballs reflected invisible flames.
+
+"I see," he murmured, "three demons, who, full of joy, prepare to seize
+that man. One of them is like unto a tower, one to a woman, and one to
+a mage. All three bear their name, marked with red-hot iron; the first
+on the forehead, the second on the belly, the third on the breast, and
+those names are--Pride, Lust, and Doubt. I have finished."
+
+Having spoken thus, Paul, with haggard eyes and hanging jaw, returned to
+his old simple ways.
+
+And, as the monks of Antinoe looked anxiously at Anthony, the saint
+pronounced these words--
+
+"God has made known His just judgment. Let us bow to Him and hold our
+peace."
+
+He passed. He bestowed blessings as he went. The sun, now descended to
+the horizon, enveloped him in its glory, and his shadow, immeasurably
+elongated by a miracle from heaven, unrolled itself behind him like an
+endless carpet, as a sign of the long remembrance this great saint would
+leave amongst men.
+
+Upright, but thunderstruck, Paphnutius saw and heard nothing more. One
+word alone rang in his ears, "Thais is dying!" The thought had never
+occurred to him. Twenty years had he contemplated a mummy's head, and
+yet the idea that death would close the eyes of Thais astonished him
+hopelessly.
+
+"Thais is dying!" An incomprehensible saying! "Thais is dying!" In those
+three words what a new and terrible sense! "Thais is dying!" Then why
+the sun, the flowers, the brooks, and all creation? "Thais is dying!"
+What good was all the universe? Suddenly he sprang forward. "To see her
+again, to see her once more!" He began to run. He knew not where he was,
+or whither he went, but instinct conducted him with unerring certainty;
+he went straight to the Nile. A swarm of sails covered the upper waters
+of the river. He sprang on board a barque manned by Nubians, and lying
+in the forepart of the boat, his eyes devouring space, he cried, in
+grief and rage--
+
+"Fool, fool, that I was, not to have possessed Thais whilst there was
+yet time! Fool to have believed that there was anything else in the
+world but her! Oh, madness! I dreamed of God, of the salvation of my
+soul, of life eternal--as if all that counted for anything when I had
+seen Thais! Why did I not feel that blessed eternity was in a single
+kiss of that woman, and that without her life was senseless, and no more
+than an evil dream? Oh, stupid fool! thou hast seen her, and thou hast
+desired the good things of the other world! Oh, coward! thou hast seen
+her, and thou hast feared God! God! heaven! what are they? And what have
+they to offer thee which are worth the least tittle of that which she
+would have given thee? Oh, miserable, senseless fool, who sought divine
+goodness elsewhere than on the lips of Thais! What hand was upon thy
+eyes? Cursed be he who blinded thee then! Thou couldst have bought, at
+the price of thy damnation, one moment of her love, and thou hast not
+done it! She opened to thee her arms--flesh mingled with the perfume of
+flowers--and thou wast not engulfed in the unspeakable enchantments of
+her unveiled breast. Thou hast listened to the jealous voice which
+said to thee, 'Refrain!' Dupe, dupe, miserable dupe! Oh, regrets! Oh,
+remorse! Oh, despair! Not to have the joy to carry to hell the memory of
+that never-to-be-forgotten hour, and to cry to God, 'Burn my flesh, dry
+up all the blood in my veins, break all my bones, thou canst not take
+from me the remembrance which sweetens and refreshes me for ever and
+ever!' . . . Thais is dying! Preposterous God, if thou knewest how I
+laugh at Thy hell! Thais is dying, and she will never be mine--never!
+never!"
+
+And as the boat came down the river with the current, he remained whole
+days lying on his face, and repeating--
+
+"Never! never! never!"
+
+Then, at the idea that she had given herself to others, and not to him;
+that she had poured forth an ocean of love, and he had not wetted his
+lips therein, he stood up, savagely wild, and howled with grief. He tore
+his breast with his nails, and bit the flesh of his arms. He thought--
+
+"If I could but kill all those she has loved!"
+
+The idea of these murders filled him with delicious fury. He dreamed of
+killing Nicias slowly and leisurely, looking him full in the eyes whilst
+he murdered him. Then suddenly his fury melted away. He wept, he sobbed.
+He became feeble and meek. An unknown tenderness softened his soul.
+He longed to throw his arms round the neck of the companion of his
+childhood and say to him, "Nicias, I love thee, because thou hast loved
+her. Talk to me about her. Tell me what she said to thee." And still,
+without ceasing, the iron of that phrase entered into his soul--"Thais
+is dying!"
+
+"Light of day, silvery shadows of night stars, heavens, trees with
+trembling crests, savage beasts, domestic animals, all the anxious
+souls of men, do you not hear? 'Thais is dying!' Disappear, ye lights,
+breezes, and perfumes! Hide yourselves, ye shapes and thoughts of the
+universe! 'Thais is dying!' She was the beauty of the world, and all
+that drew near to her grew fairer in the reflection of her grace. The
+old man and the sages who sat near her, at the banquet at Alexandria,
+how pleasant they were, and how fascinating was their conversation! A
+host of brilliant thoughts sprang to their lips, and all their ideas
+were steeped in pleasure. And it was because the breath of Thais was on
+them that all they said was love, beauty, truth. A delightful impiety
+lent its grace to their discourse. They thoroughly expressed all human
+splendour. Alas! all that is but a dream. Thais is dying! Oh, how easy
+it will be to me to die of her death! But canst thou only die, withered
+embryo, fetus steeped in gall and scalding tears? Miserable abortion,
+dost thou think thou canst taste death, thou who hast never known life?
+If only God exists, that he may damn me. I hope for it--I wish it. God,
+I hate Thee--dost Thou hear? Overwhelm me with Thy damnation. To compel
+Thee to, I spit in Thy face. I must find an eternal hell, to exhaust the
+eternity of rage which consumes me."
+
+*****
+
+The next day, at dawn, Albina received the Abbot of Antinoe at the
+nunnery.
+
+"Thou art welcome to our tabernacles of peace, venerable father, for no
+doubt, thou comest to bless the saint thou hast given us. Thou knowest
+that God, in his mercy, has called her to Him; how couldst thou fail to
+know tidings that the angels have carried from desert to desert? It
+is true that Thais is about to meet her blessed death. Her labours are
+accomplished, and I ought to inform thee, in a few words, as to her
+conduct whilst she was still amongst us. After thy departure, when she
+was confined in a cell sealed with thy seal, I sent her, with her
+food, a flute, similar to those which girls of her profession play at
+banquets. I did that to prevent her from falling into a melancholy mood,
+and that she should not show less skill and talent before God than she
+had shown before men. In this I showed prudence and foresight, for all
+day long Thais praised the Lord upon the flute, and the virgins, who
+were attracted by the sound of this invisible flute, said, 'We hear the
+nightingale of the heavenly groves, the dying swan of Jesus crucified.'
+Thus did Thais perform her penance, when, after sixty days, the door
+which thou hadst sealed opened of itself, and the clay seal was broken
+without being touched by any human hand. By that sign I knew that
+the trial thou hadst imposed upon her was at an end, and that God had
+pardoned the sins of the flute-player. From that time she has shared
+the ordinary life of my nuns, working and praying with them. She was an
+example to them by the modesty of her acts and words, and seemed like a
+statue of purity amongst them. Sometimes she was sad; but those clouds
+soon passed. When I saw that she was really drawn towards God by faith,
+hope, and love, I did not hesitate to employ her talent, and even her
+beauty, for the improvement of her sisters. I asked her to represent
+before us the actions of the famous women and wise virgins of the
+Scriptures. She acted Esther, Deborah, Judith, Mary, the sister of
+Lazarus, and Mary, the mother of Jesus. I know, venerable father, that
+thy austere mind is alarmed at the idea of these performances. But thou
+thyself wouldest have been touched if thou hadst seen her in these pious
+scenes, shedding real tears, and raising to heaven arms graceful as palm
+leaves. I have long governed a community of women, and I make it a rule
+never to oppose their nature. All seeds give not the same flowers. Not
+all souls are sanctified in the same way. It must also not be forgotten
+that Thais gave herself to God whilst she was still beautiful, and such
+a sacrifice is, if not unexampled, at least very rare. This beauty--her
+natural vesture--has not left her during the three months' fever of
+which she is dying. As, during her illness, she has incessantly asked to
+see the sky, I have her carried every morning into the courtyard, near
+the well, under the old fig tree, in the shade of which the abbesses of
+this convent are accustomed to hold their meetings. Thou wilt find her
+there, venerable father; but hasten, for God calls her, and this night
+a shroud will cover that face which God made both to shame and to edify
+this world."
+
+Paphnutius followed her into a courtyard flooded with the morning light.
+On the edge of the brick roofs, the pigeons formed a string of pearls.
+On a bed, in the shade of the fig tree, Thais lay quite white, her arms
+crossed. By her side stood veiled women, reciting the prayers for the
+dying.
+
+_"Have mercy, upon me, O God, according to Thy loving kindness:
+according unto the multitude of Thy tender mercies blot out my
+transgressions."_
+
+He called her--
+
+"Thais!"
+
+She raised her eyelids, and turned the whites of her eyes in the
+direction of the voice.
+
+Albina made a sign to the veiled women to retire a few paces.
+
+"Thais!" repeated the monk.
+
+She raised her head; a light breath came from her pale lips.
+
+"Is it thou, my father? . . . Dost thou remember the water of the
+spring, and the dates that we picked? . . . That day, my father, love
+was born in my heart--the love of life eternal."
+
+She was silent, and her head fell back.
+
+Death was upon her, and the sweat of the last agony bedewed her
+forehead. A pigeon broke the still silence with its plaintive cooing.
+Then the sobs of the monk mingled with the psalms of the virgins.
+
+_"Wash me thoroughly from mine iniquity, and cleanse me from my sin. For
+I acknowledge my transgressions: and my sin is ever before me."_
+
+Suddenly Thais sat up in the bed. Her violet eyes opened wide, and with
+a rapt gaze, her arms stretched towards the distant hills, she said in a
+clear, fresh voice--
+
+"Behold them--the roses of the eternal dawn!"
+
+Her eyes shone; a slight flush suffused her face. She had revived, more
+sweet and more beautiful than ever. Paphnutius knelt down, and threw his
+long black arms around her.
+
+"Do not die!" he cried, in a strange voice, which he himself did not
+recognise. "I love thee! Do not die! Listen, my Thais. I have deceived
+thee? I was but a wretched fool. God, heaven--all that is nothing. There
+is nothing true but this worldly life, and the love of human beings. I
+love thee! Do not die! That would be impossible--thou art too precious!
+Come, come with me! Let us fly? I will carry thee far away in my arms.
+Come, let us love! Hear me, O my beloved, and say, 'I will live; I wish
+to live.' Thais, Thais, arise!"
+
+She did not hear him. Her eyes gazed into infinity.
+
+She murmured--
+
+"Heaven opens. I see the angels, the prophets, and the saints. . . . The
+good Theodore is amongst them, his hands filled with flowers; he smiles
+on me and calls me. . . . Two angels come to me. They draw near. . . .
+How beautiful they are! I see God!"
+
+She uttered a joyful sigh, and her head fell back motionless on the
+pillow. Thais was dead.
+
+Paphnutius held her in a last despairing embrace; his eyes devoured her
+with desire, rage, and love.
+
+Albina cried to him--
+
+"Avaunt, accursed wretch!"
+
+And she gently placed her fingers on the eyelids of the dead girl.
+Paphnutius staggered back, his eyes burning with flames and feeling the
+earth open beneath his feet.
+
+The virgins chanted the song of Zacharias:
+
+_"Blessed be the Lord God of Israel."_
+
+Suddenly their voices stayed in their throat. They had seen the monk's
+face, and they fled in affright, crying--
+
+"A vampire! A vampire!"
+
+He had become so repulsive, that passing his hand over his face, he felt
+his own hideousness.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Thais, by Anatole France
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