"Here!" said several voices: "room for Magdalen, the handsomest amongst the handsomest!"
"The queen of us all!" said Oliba"s companion to her with a lofty air: "for indeed Magdalen is the queen of us all!"
"A sad royalty!" replied Oliba, sighing: "her shame is seen from the highest to the most distant!"
"But she is so rich! so rich!"
"To sell oneself for a penny, or a mountain of gold," replied the poor courtezan, "where is the difference? the ignominy is the same!"
"Oliba, you are getting completely mad!"
The young woman made no reply, but sighed. Genevieve, mounted, like her mistress, on a stool, raised herself on the points of her toes, and soon saw the celebrated courtezan enter the tavern.
Magdalen was possessed of a rare beauty; the chin-piece of her turban of white silk edged with gold, encased her pale and swarthy face of an admirable perfection; her long eye-brows, as black as ebony, like the bands of her hair, appeared as a dark line along the brow hitherto superb and brazen; but now, mournful and depressed, for she seemed completely heart-broken. The ends of her eye-lashes, stained with a blue color according to the oriental fashion, gave to her eyes, drowned in tears, something strange, and seemed to double the grandeur of her orbs, sparkling through her tears like two diamonds.
A long robe of Tyrian silk of shaded blue, edged with gold and embroidered with pearls, fell in a long train behind her, and round her waist she had a flowing scarf of cloth of gold covered with stones of many colors, like those of the double necklaces, ear-rings and bracelets, with which her bare and well-shaped arms were covered; and thus attired, holding in her hands an urn of pink alabaster from Chaldea, more precious than gold, she advanced quite slowly towards the young man of Nazareth.
"What a change in Magdalen"s traits," said Jane to Aurelia. "I have seen her pa.s.s a hundred times in her litter, carried by her attendants, dressed in rich liveries; the triumph of beauty, and the intoxication and joy of youth could be read in her countenance. And she is timidly approaching Jesus, humble, oppressed, weeping, and more sorrowful than the saddest of the poor women who hold in their arms their ill-clad infants.
"But what is she about?" inquired Aurelia, more and more attentive; "she stands before the young man of Nazareth; in one hand she holds her alabaster urn pressed against her agitated bosom, whilst with the other she detaches her rich turban. She throws it far from her. Her thick and glossy tresses fall over her breast and shoulders, unroll themselves like a velvet mantle and even trail on the ground."
"Oh! look! look! her tears redouble," said Jane; "her face is drowned in them."
"She kneels at the feet of Jesus," continued Aurelia, "and covers them with tears and kisses."
"What heart-rending sobs!"
"And the tears she sheds on the feet of Mary"s son she wipes away with her long hair."
"And now, still melting in tears, she takes her alabaster urn and empties over the feet of Jesus a delicious perfume, the scent of which reaches here."
"The young master endeavors to raise her; she resists; she cannot speak; her sobs break her voice; she bends down her lovely head to the very ground."
Then Jesus, who could scarcely restrain his emotion, turned towards Simon, one of his disciples, and addressing him: "Simon, I have something to say to you."
"Speak, master."
"A creditor had two debtors; the one owned him five hundred pence, the other fifty. As they had not wherewith to pay him, he remitted to both their debt; tell me, then, which of these two should love him most?"
Simon replied: "Master, I think it should be he to whom he forgave the most."
"Thou hast judged rightly, Simon." And, turning to the rich courtezan still kneeling, Jesus said to those present: "Do you see this woman? I declare to you that her many sins are forgiven her, because she loved much!" He then said to Magdalen, in a voice full of tenderness and pardon: "Thy sins are forgiven thee--thy faith hath saved thee; go in peace."
"Abomination of desolation!" said the emissary of the pharisees half aloud to his companion: "can audacity and demoralization go further?
Why, the Nazarene pardons all that is blameable, relieves all that is vile; after reinstating dissipation and prodigality, behold him now reinstating the most notorious courtezans."
"And why?" said the other emissary, "that he may still flatter the vices and detestable pa.s.sions of the wretches he draws round him, whom he will one day make his instruments."
"But patience," observed the first, "patience, Nazarene, thy hour approaches; thy still increasing audacity will soon draw down upon thee a terrible punishment!"
Whilst Genevieve listened to the two wicked men thus conversing, she saw Magdalen, after the affectionate words of Jesus, rise up radiant; the tears chased each other down her handsome face, but these tears no longer seemed bitter. She distributed to all the poor women who surrounded her, her precious stones and jewels, unfastened even to the magnificent robe she wore over her tunic of fine cloth from Sidonia, and put on the mantel of coa.r.s.e brown wool of a young woman to whom she gave in exchange a rich robe embroidered with pearls of great value. She then said to Simon, that she would not again quit these humble garments, and that on the morrow all her wealth should be distributed to poor families, and to the courtezans whom misery alone prevented returning to a better life.
At these words Oliba, joining her hands in a burst of grat.i.tude, threw herself at the feet of Magdalen, took her hands, kissed them whilst sobbing and said to her--
"Blessed be thou, Magdalen! oh, blessed be thou! Thy bounty hath saved me, me and so many of my poor companions of shame; but we repented at the voice of the son of Mary; that voice penetrated our hearts; we hoped for pardon. But, alas! the necessity of living retained us in wickedness and contempt. Blessed be thou, Magdalen, thou who renderest possible our return to good."
"Sister, it is not I you must bless," replied Magdalen; ""tis Jesus of Nazareth; his words inspired me."
And Magdalen mingled amongst the crowd to listen to the words of the young master.
Some of his disciples having said in speaking to him of Magdalen, that she had been seduced and then abandoned by a young doctor of the law, the figure of Jesus became grave, severe, and almost menacing, and he exclaimed---
"Woe to you, doctors of the law! Woe to you, hypocrites! You are like unto whitened sepulchres; the outside appears gay, but within all is bones and putridity. Thus, outwardly you appear just in the eyes of men, but inwardly you are full of iniquity and hypocrisy. Woe to you blind leaders who take great care as to what you drink, lest you should swallow a camel."
This familiar satire made several of the auditory smile, and Banaias exclaimed---
"Oh, but you are right, my friend. How many of these swallowers of camels we know. But such is the sharpness of their conscience that they digest these camels as the ostrich digests a stone, and nothing appears of it."
Fresh bursts of applause replied to the pleasantry of Banaias, and Jesus resumed:
"Woe to you, Pharisees! woe to you who cleanse the outside of the cup while within it is all rapine and impurity."
"It is true," replied several voices; "these hypocrites clean the outside because the outside alone is seen."
The son of Mary continued:
"Woe to you, Pharisees! who preach what you ought to do, but do it not!
Woe to you who make heavy and insupportable burthens, place them on the shoulders of men, but will not touch them with your finger."
This new comparison struck the mind of the auditors of the young master, and several voices again exclaimed:
"Yes, yes, these idle hypocrites say to the humble, "Work is holy; work, work, but we will not work. Yes, bear alone the burthen of the labor, but we rich will not touch it with the end of our finger.""
Jesus continued:--
"Woe to you who do all your actions that you might be seen of men. It is for this that you carry long bands of parchment, on which are written the words of the law, which you do not practice. Woe to you who say, "If a man swears by the temple it is nothing, but if he swears by the gold of the Temple, he is bound by his oath.""
"Because for these rich wicked ones," said a voice, "nothing is sound but gold. They swear by their gold as others swear by their soul or by their honor."
"So that if a man swears by the altar it is nothing," pursued Jesus; "but whoever swears by the offering that is on the altar, he is bound by his oath. Woe to you, hypocrites! who pay scrupulously the tenth, but who deny that which is more important in the law, justice, mercy, and good faith. These were the things you should practice, without omitting the others."
"By the two thumbs of Methusalem!" exclaimed Banaias, laughing, "you appear at ease, friend. As these hypocrites have in their coffers enough to pay the t.i.the without inconveniencing themselves, and they pay it; but where would you have them find this money of justice, of good faith, and of mercy, which you demand from these whitened sepulchres, from these swallowers of camels of iniquity, as you will so call them?"
"Alas! the young master says true," observed another; "for him who has no money justice is deaf. The doctors of the law do not say to you at their court, "What good grounds have you? but, how much money will you promise me?""
"I had confided a few savings to Jonas, a high priest," said a poor old woman; "he told me he had expended the money in offerings for my salvation. What could I do, a poor woman against so powerful a seigneur?
resign myself and beg for bread, which I do not find every day."
At this complaint, Jesus exclaimed with increased indignation, "Oh! woe to you hypocrites: because, under pretence of your long prayers you rob the widow of her mite. Woe to you, serpents, race of vipers! how will you escape being condemned to the fire of h.e.l.l? It is for this I will send to you prophets and sages to save you."