=The Lord is my shepherd; I shall not want.
He maketh me to lie
down in green pastures; he leadeth me
beside the still waters.
He restoreth my soul;
he leadeth me in the paths of
righteousness for his
name’s sake.
Yea, though I walk through
the valley of the shadow of
death, I will fear no
evil: for thou art with me; thy rod
and thy staff they comfort
me.
Thou preparest a table
before me in the presence of mine
enemies: thou anointest
my head with oil; my cup runneth
over.
Surely goodness and
mercy shall follow me all the days of my
life; and I will dwell
in the house of the Lord for ever.=
THE HIDDEN SERVANTS[35]
This is a legend about a hermit who lived long ago. He lived high up on the mountainside in a tiny cave; his food was roots and acorns, a bit of bread given by a peasant, or a cheese brought by a woman who wanted his prayers; his work was praying, and thinking about God. For forty years he lived so, preaching to the people, praying for them, comforting them in trouble, and, most of all, worshipping in his heart. There was just one thing he cared about: it was to make his soul so pure and perfect that it could be one of the stones in God’s great Temple of Heaven.
One day, after the forty years, he had a great longing to know how far along he had got with his work,—how it looked to the Heavenly Father. And he prayed that he might be shown a man—
“Whose soul in
the heavenly grace had grown
To the selfsame
measure as his own;
Whose treasure
on the celestial shore
Could neither
be less than his nor more.”
As he looked up from his prayer, a white-robed angel stood in the path before him. The hermit bowed before the messenger with great gladness, for he knew that his wish was answered. “Go to the nearest town,” the angel said, “and there, in the public square, you will find a mountebank (a clown) making the people laugh for money. He is the man you seek; his soul has grown to the selfsame stature as your own; his treasure on the celestial shore is neither less than yours nor more.”
When the angel had faded from sight, the hermit bowed his head again, but this time with great sorrow and fear. Had his forty years of prayer been a terrible mistake, and was his soul indeed like a clown, fooling in the market-place? He knew not what to think. Almost he hoped he should not find the man, and could believe that he had dreamed the angel vision. But when he came, after a long, tiring walk to the village, and the square, alas! there was the clown, doing his silly tricks for the crowd.
The hermit stood and looked at him with terror and sadness, for he felt that he was looking at his own soul. The face he saw was thin and tired, and though it kept a smile or a grin for the people, it seemed very sad to the hermit. Soon the man felt the hermit’s eyes; he could not go on with his tricks. And when he had stopped and the crowd had left, the hermit went and drew the man aside to a place where they could rest; for he wanted more than anything else on earth to know what the man’s soul was like, because what it was, his was.