CHAPTER XIX.
The answer on the devil's illusion, because he promises us the peace of a vaster solitude.
ABRAHAM: Never to be resorted to by men at all is a sign of an unreasonable and ill-considered strictness, or rather of the
greatest coldness. For if a man walks in this way, on which he has entered, with too slow steps, and lives according to the
former man, it is right that none--I say not of the saints--but of any men should visit him. But you, if you are inflamed
with true and perfect love of our Lord, and follow God, who indeed is love, with entire fervour of
spirit, are sure to be resorted to by men, to whatever inaccessible spot you may flee, and, in proportion as the ardour
of divine love brings you nearer to God, so will a larger concourse of saintly brethren flock to you. For, as the Lord says,
"A city set on an hill cannot be hid,"12401240
because "them that love Me," saith the Lord, "will I honour, and they that despise Me shall be contemned."12411241
But you ought to know that this is the subtlest device of the devil, this is his best concealed pitfall, into which he precipitates
some wretched and heedless persons, so that, while he is promising them greater things, he takes away the requisite advantages
of their daily profit, by persuading them that more remote and vaster deserts should be sought, and by portraying them in
their heart as if they were sown with marvellous delights. And further some unknown and
non-existent spots, he feigns to be well-known and suitable and already given over to our power and able to be secured
without any difficulty. The men also of that country he feigns to be docile and followers of the way of salvation, that, while
he is promising richer fruits for the soul there, he may craftily destroy our present profits. For when owing to this vain
hope each one separates himself from living together with the Elders and has been deprived of all those things that he idly
imagined in his heart, he rises as it were from a most profound slumber, and when awake will find nothing of those things
of which he had dreamed. And so as he is hampered by larger requirements for this life and inextricable snares, the devil
will not even allow him to aspire to those things which he had once promised himself, and as he is liable no longer to those
rare and spiritual visits of the brethren which he had formerly avoided, but to daily interruptions from worldly folk, he
will
never suffer him to return even to the moderate quiet and system of the anchorite's life.