Chapter XIX.
“In the same
monastery, the fact which I am about to narrate was said to have
occurred within recent memory. A certain man had come to the same Abbot
in like manner with the former, in order to obtain admission. When the
first law of obedience was placed before him, and he promised an
unfailing patience for the endurance of all things however extreme, it
so happened that the Abbot was holding in his hand a twig of storax
already withered. This the Abbot fixed in the ground, and imposed this
work upon the visitor, that he should continue to water the twig, until
(what was against every natural result) that dry piece of wood should
grow green in the sandy soil. Well, the stranger, being placed under
the authority of unbending law, conveyed water every day on his own
shoulders—water which had to be taken from the river Nile, at
almost two miles’ distance. And now, after a year had run its
course, the labor of that workman had not yet ceased, but there could
be no hope of the good success of his undertaking. However, the grace
of obedience continued to be shown in his labor. The following year
also mocked the vain labor of the (by this time) weakened brother. At
length, as the third annual circle was gliding by, while the workman
ceased not, night or day, his labor in watering, the twig began to show
signs of life. I have myself seen a small tree sprung from that little
rod, which, standing at the present day with green branches in the
court of the monastery, as if for a witness of what has been stated,
shows what a reward obedience received, and what a power faith can
exert. But the day would fail me before I could fully enumerate the
many different miracles which have become known to me in connection
with the virtues of the saints.
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