Page:A book of the Cevennes (-1907-).djvu/252

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been validated.
176
THE CEVENNES

they have shown the peasantry of the High Cevennes how to improve the quality of the land by the use of lime and artificial manures, and they have also improved the breed of the sheep and cattle.

But these are side products of monachism, and they are benefits that might just as well be rendered by laymen; and, in fact, the examination of the silkworm moths is carried out in laboratories established for the purpose in some of the large towns of Languedoc.

The Trappist Order is the severest of all. The members are condemned never to speak, never to eat meat or fish, are denied even butter and oil. They have but two meals a day, and these of vegetables only. They never take off their garments to wash or to sleep,and do not wear linen. They go to bed at 8 p.m. in the summer, at 7 p.m. in winter, and rise at 2 a.m., but have no meal of any sort till midday. Every day part of their duty is to dig a portion of their future grave.

In Quarles' Hieroglyphics of the Life of Man, published in 1635, is an emblem of a dark lantern placed on a coffin and the sun in total eclipse, and this is above a poem, of which I give two stanzas:—

 
"Was it for this, the breath of Heav'n was blown
       Into the nostrils of this heavenly creature?
 Was it for this, that the sacred Three in One
       Conspired to make this quintessence of Nature?
             Did heav'nly Providence intend
             So rare a fabric for so poor an end?

"Tell me, recluse monastre, can it be
       A disadvantage to thy beams to shine?
A thousand tapers may gain light from thee:
       Is thy light less or worse for light'ning mine?
             If wanting light I stumble, shall
             Thy darkness not be guilty of my fall?