78 lines
4.8 KiB
Text
78 lines
4.8 KiB
Text
The Three Green Twigs
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There was once on a time a hermit who lived in a forest at the foot of
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a mountain, and passed his time in prayer and good works, and every
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evening he carried, to the glory of God, two pails of water up the
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mountain. Many a beast drank of it, and many a plant was refreshed by
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it, for on the heights above, a strong wind blew continually, which
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dried the air and the ground, and the wild birds which dread mankind
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wheel about there, and with their sharp eyes search for a drink. And
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because the hermit was so pious, an angel of God, visible to his eyes,
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went up with him, counted his steps, and when the work was completed,
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brought him his food, even as the prophet of old was by God's command
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fed by the raven. When the hermit in his piety had already reached a
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great age, it happened that he once saw from afar a poor sinner being
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taken to the gallows. He said carelessly to himself, "There, that one
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is getting his deserts!" In the evening, when he was carrying the water
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up the mountain, the angel who usually accompanied him did not appear,
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and also brought him no food. Then he was terrified, and searched his
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heart, and tried to think how he could have sinned, as God was so
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angry, but he did not discover it. Then he neither ate nor drank, threw
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himself down on the ground, and prayed day and night. And as he was one
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day thus bitterly weeping in the forest, he heard a little bird singing
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beautifully and delightfully, and then he was still more troubled and
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said, "How joyously thou singest, the Lord is not angry with thee. Ah,
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if thou couldst but tell me how I can have offended him, that I might
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do penance, and then my heart also would be glad again." Then the bird
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began to speak and said, "Thou hast done injustice, in that thou hast
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condemned a poor sinner who was being led to the gallows, and for that
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the Lord is angry with thee. He alone sits in judgement. However, if
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thou wilt do penance and repent thy sins, he will forgive thee." Then
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the angel stood beside him with a dry branch in his hand and said,
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"Thou shalt carry this dry branch until three green twigs sprout out of
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it, but at night when thou wilt sleep, thou shalt lay it under thy
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head. Thou shalt beg thy bread from door to door, and not tarry more
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than one night in the same house. That is the penance which the Lord
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lays on thee."
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Then the hermit took the piece of wood, and went back into the world,
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which he had not seen for so long. He ate and drank nothing but what
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was given him at the doors; many petitions were, however, not listened
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to, and many doors remained shut to him, so that he often did not get a
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crumb of bread.
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Once when he had gone from door to door from morning till night, and no
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one had given him anything, and no one would shelter him for the night,
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he went forth into a forest, and at last found a cave which someone had
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made, and an old woman was sitting in it. Then said he, "Good woman,
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keep me with you in your house for this night;" but she said, "No, I
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dare not, even if I wished, I have three sons who are wicked and wild,
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if they come home from their robbing expedition, and find you, they
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would kill us both." The hermit said, "Let me stay, they will do no
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injury either to you or to me." and the woman was compassionate, and
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let herself be persuaded. Then the man lay down beneath the stairs, and
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put the bit of wood under his head. When the old woman saw him do that,
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she asked the reason of it, on which he told her that he carried the
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bit of wood about with him for a penance, and used it at night for a
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pillow, and that he had offended the Lord, because, when he had seen a
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poor sinner on the way to the gallows, he had said he was getting his
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deserts. Then the woman began to weep and cried, "If the Lord thus
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punishes one single word, how will it fare with my sons when they
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appear before him in judgment?"
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At midnight the robbers came home and blustered and stormed. They made
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a fire, and when it had lighted up the cave and they saw a man lying
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under the stairs, they fell in a rage and cried to their mother, "Who
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is the man? Have we not forbidden any one whatsoever to be taken in?"
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Then said the mother, "Let him alone, it is a poor sinner who is
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expiating his crime." The robbers asked, "What has he done?" "Old man,"
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cried they, "tell us thy sins." The old man raised himself and told
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them how he, by one single word, had so sinned that God was angry with
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him, and how he was now expiating this crime. The robbers were so
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powerfully touched in their hearts by this story, that they were
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shocked with their life up to this time, reflected, and began with
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hearty repentance to do penance for it. The hermit, after he had
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converted the three sinners, lay down to sleep again under the stairs.
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In the morning, however, they found him dead, and out of the dry wood
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on which his head lay, three green twigs had grown up on high. Thus the
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Lord had once more received him into his favour.
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