CHAPTER I.
Of the vigils which we endured.
WHEN then the previous Conference was ended, and the intervening silence of night as well, as we had been conducted by the
holy Abbot Joseph to a separate cell for the sake of quiet, but had passed the whole night without sleep (since owing to his
words a fire was raging in our hearts), we came forth from the cell and retired about a hundred yards from it and sat down
in a secluded spot. And so as an opportunity was given by the shades of night for secret and familiar
converse together, as we sat there Abbot Germanus groaned heavily.