“I have heard it said that Aristotle did not really write that work,” William
remarked, “just as he was not the author of the De causis, it has been
discovered.”
“In any event it is a great book,” Severinus observed, and my
master agreed most readily, not asking whether the herbalist was speaking of the
De plantis or of the De causu, both works that I did not know but which, from
that conversation, I deduced must be very great.
“I shall be happy,”
Severinus concluded, “to have some frank conversation with you about
herbs.”
“I shall be still happier,” William said, “but would we not be
breaking the rule of silence, which I believe obtains in your order?”
“The
Rule,” Severinus said, “has been adapted over the centuries to the requirements
of the different communities. The Rule prescribed the lectio divina but not
study, and yet you know how much our order has developed inquiry into divine and
human affairs. Also, the Rule prescribes a common dormitory, but at times it is
right that the monks have, as we do here, chances to meditate also during the
night, and so each of them is given his own cell. The Rule is very rigid on the
question of silence, and here with us, not only the monk who performs manual
labor but also those who write or read must not converse with their brothers.
But the abbey is first and foremost a community of scholars, and often it is
useful for monks to exchange the accumulated treasures of their learning. All
conver?sation regarding our studies is considered legitimate and profitable,
provided it does not take place in the refectory or during the hours of the holy
offices.”
“Had you much occasion to talk with Adelmo of Otranto?” William
asked abruptly.
Severinus did not seem surprised. “I see the abbot has
already spoken with you,” he said. “No. I did not converse with him often. He
spent his time illuminating. I did hear him on occasion talking with other
monks, Venantius of Salvemec, or Jorge of Burgos, about the nature of his work.
Besides, I don’t spend my day in the scriptorium, but in my laboratory.” And he
nodded toward the infirmary building.
“I understand,” William said. “So you
don’t know whether Adelmo had visions.”
“Visions?”
“Like the ones your
herbs induce, for example.”
Severinus stiffened. “I told you: I store the
danger?ous herbs with great care.”
“That is not what I meant,” William
hastened to clarify. “I was speaking of visions in general.”
“I don’t
understand,” Severinus insisted.
“I was thinking that a monk who wanders at
night about the Aedificium, where, by the abbot’s admission ... terrible things
can happen … to those who enter during forbidden hours—well, as I say, I was
thinking he might have had diabolical visions that drove him to the
precipice.”
“I told you: I don’t visit the scriptorium, except when I need a
book; but as a rule I have my own herbaria, which I keep in the infirmary. As I
said, Adelmo was very close to Jorge, Venantius, and ... naturally,
Beren?gar.”
Even I sensed the slight hesitation in Severinus’s voice. Nor did
it escape my master. “Berengar? And why ‘naturally’?”
“Berengar of Arundel,
the assistant librarian. They were of an age, they had been novices together, it
was normal for them to have things to talk about. That is what I meant.”
“Ah,
that is what you meant,” William repeated. And to my surprise he did not pursue
the matter. In fact, he promptly changed the subject. “But perhaps it is time
for us to visit the Aedificium. Will you act as our guide?”
“Gladly,”
Severinus said, with all-too-evident relief. He led us along the side of the
garden and brought us to the west fa?ade of the Aedificium.
“Facing the
garden is the door leading to the kitchen,” he said, “but the kitchen occupies
only the western half of the ground floor; in the other half is the refectory.
And at the south entrance, which you reach from behind the choir in the church,
there are two other doors leading to the kitchen and the refectory. But we can
go in here, because from the kitchen we can then go on through to the
refectory.”
As I entered the vast kitchen, I realized that the entire height
of the Aedificium enclosed an octagonal court; I understood later that this was
a kind of huge well, without any access, onto which, at each floor, opened broad
windows, like the ones on the exterior. The kitchen was a vast smoke-filled
entrance hall, where many servants were already busy preparing the food for
supper. On a great table two of them were making a pie of greens, barley, oats,
and rye, chopping turnips, cress, radishes, and carrots. Nearby, another cook
had just finished poaching some fish in a mixture of wine and water, and was
covering them with a sauce of sage, parsley, thyme, garlic, pepper, and
salt.
Beneath the west tower an enormous oven opened, for baking bread; it
was already flashing with reddish flames. In the south tower there was an
immense fireplace, where great pots were boiling and spits were turning. Through
the door that opened onto the barn?yard behind the church, the swineherds were
entering at that, moment, carrying the meat of the slaughtered pigs. We went out
through that same door and found ourselves in the yard, at the far eastern end
of the plain, against the walls, where there were many buildings. Severinus
explained to me that the first was the series of barns, then there stood the
horses’ stables, then those for the oxen, and then chicken coops, and the
covered yard for the sheep. Outside the pigpens, swine?herds were stirring a
great jarful of the blood of the freshly slaughtered pigs, to keep it from
coagulating. If it was stirred properly and promptly, it would remain liquid for
the next few days, thanks to the cold climate, and then they would make blood
puddings from it.
We re-entered the Aedificium and cast a quick glance at the
refectory as we crossed it, heading toward the east tower. Of the two towers
between which the refecto?ry extended, the northern one housed a fireplace, the
other a circular staircase that led to the scriptorium, on the floor above. By
this staircase the monks went up to their work every day, or else they used the
other two staircases, less comfortable but well heated, which rose in spirals
inside the fireplace here and inside the oven in the kitchen.
William asked
whether we would find anyone in the scriptorium, since it was Sunday. Severinus
smiled and said that work, for the Benedictine monk, is prayer. On Sunday
offices lasted longer, but the monks assigned to work on books still spent some
hours up there, usually engaged in fruitful exchanges of learned observations,
counsel, reflections on Holy Scripture.
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