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Return to "Being Saint Francis" (August 2000), by Valerie Martin
An excerpt from Salvation: Scenes from the Life of St. Francis, by Valerie Martin, forthcoming from Knopf in the spring of 2001
So he is happy here, in the place they have made for him. Despite his illness, his blindness, the constant pain in his head, he is singing as cheerfully as a morning lark. Masseo steps forward and pushes the curtain aside. Light floods the dark hovel. He lets out a soft cry of dismay and backs away, holding the cloth so that the others looking past him can see what he has seen. Francesco lies upon his back, his arms folded over his chest, his hands partly hidden in his beard. His eyes are open, and though he cannot see, he appears to be looking right at them. He has not stopped singing; his beautiful voice pours out to them, framing the praises he has passed the night in composing. The mice are everywhere. They cover the floor, squirm into the cracks in the walls, leap frantically from the table, trying to escape the light. Two dive into the sleeves of the singer, one jumps from his chest to his forehead, then rushes out the door past the four horrified friars, who step gingerly out of his path. "Francesco," Angelo exclaims. Francesco breaks off his singing and with difficulty raises himself onto his elbows. A mouse darts across his hand. "Angelo," he calls out cheerfully. "At last you are here. I want to send for Brother Pacifico at once. I have composed a wonderful new song and I want him to write it down for us all."
Valerie Martin is the author of two collections of short fiction and six novels, including Italian Fever (1999). Her article in this issue is taken from her biography Salvation: Scenes From the Life of St. Francis, to be published by Knopf next spring. Copyright © 2000 by The Atlantic Monthly Company. All rights reserved. |
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