[Veranilda by George Gissing]@TWC D-Link bookVeranilda CHAPTER XXIV 11/26
The face which looked in seemed not quite unknown to him, though he could not recall where he had seen it. 'You have slept long, dear brother,' said Marcus, with a happy smile. 'Is all well with you ?' 'Well, God be thanked,' was the clear but faint reply. The poet-physician, a small, nervous, bright-eyed man of some forty years, sat down on a stool by the bedside and began talking cheerfully. He had just come from matins, and was this morning excused from lauds because it behoved him to gather certain herbs, to be used medicinally in the case of a brother who had fallen sick yesterday.
Touching a little gold locket which Basil wore round his neck on a gold thread he asked what this contained, and being told that it was a morsel of the Crown of Thorns, he nodded with satisfaction. 'We questioned whether to leave it on you or not, for we could not open it, and there was a fear lest it might contain something'-- he smiled and shook his bead and sighed--'much less sacred.
The lord abbot, doubtless'-- here his voice sank--'after a vision, though of this he spoke not, decided that it should be left.
There was no harm, for all that'-- his eyes twinked merrily--'in tying this upon the place where you suffered so grievously.' From amid Basil's long hair he detached what looked like a tiny skein of hemp, which, with an air singularly blended of shrewdness and reverence, he declared to be a portion of a garb of penitence worn by the Holy Martin, to whom the oratory here was dedicated.
Presently Basil found strength to ask whether the abbot had been beside him. 'Many times,' was the answer.
<<Back Index Next>> D-Link book Top TWC mobile books
|