The Chronicle of the Canons Regular of Mount St. Agnes
CONTENTS TRANSLATOR'S NOTE PREFACE THE CHRONICLE OF THE CANONS REGULAR OF MOUNT ST AGNES I. Of the first founders of the Monastery at Mount St. Agnes, and how Master Gerard Groote first pointed out this place to them. II. Of the building of the first House on Mount St. Agnes. III. Concerning the names of the first Brothers and their labours. IV. Of the scanty food and raiment of the Brothers, and how wondrously God did provide for them. V. Of the consecration of the first chapel and altar at Mount St. Agnes.
With every gasping breath beginning to rip from his poor lungs like a
knifed stitch, the roan still faltered on each new ledge to whinny
desperately to his mate. Equally futilely from time to time, Barton,
with his hands cupped to his mouth, holloed--holloed--holloed--into
the thunderous darkness.
Then at a sharp turn in the trail, magically, in a pale, transient
flicker of light, loomed little Eve Edgarton's boyish figure, drenched
to the skin apparently, wind-driven, rain-battered, but with hands in
her pockets, slouch hat rakishly askew, strolling as nonchalantly down
that ghastly trail as a child might come strolling down a
stained-glassed, Persian-carpeted stairway to meet an expected guest.
In vaguely silhouetted greeting for one fleet instant a little khaki
arm lifted itself full length into the air.
Then more precipitately than any rational thing could happen, more
precipitately than any rational thing could even begin to happen,
could even begin to begin to happen, without shock, without noise,
without pain, without terror or turmoil, or any time at all to fight
or pray--a slice of living flame came scaling through the
darkness--and cut Barton's consciousness clean in two!
CONTENTS TRANSLATOR'S NOTE PREFACE THE CHRONICLE OF THE CANONS REGULAR OF MOUNT ST AGNES I. Of the first founders of the Monastery at Mount St. Agnes, and how Master Gerard Groote first pointed out this place to them. II. Of the building of the first House on Mount St. Agnes. III. Concerning the names of the first Brothers and their labours. IV. Of the scanty food and raiment of the Brothers, and how wondrously God did provide for them. V. Of the consecration of the first chapel and altar at Mount St. Agnes.