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The Little Flowers of Saint Francis of Assisi by Brother Ugolino
CHAPTER X HOW BROTHER JUNIPER ONCE COOKED FOR THE BRETHREN ENOUGH TO LAST FOR A FORTNIGHT
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It happened once, when Brother Juniper was in a house of the brethren,
that, for some reasonable cause all the friars were obliged to go out,
and Brother Juniper alone remained at home. Then the guardian said to
him: "Brother Juniper, we are all going out, therefore, by the time we
come back, I wish thee to prepare a little food for the refreshment of
thy brethren." "Most willingly," replied Brother Juniper; "leave it to
me." When all the brethren, as has been said, were gone out, Brother
Juniper said to himself: "What superfluous carefulness is this, that a
brother should be lost in the kitchen, and deprived of all opportunity
for prayer! Of a surety, as I am now left in this charge, I will cook
enough to serve the brethren, were they as many more, for a fortnight
to come." So he went to the town and borrowed some large pots for
cooking; then he got fresh meat and salt, chickens, eggs, and
vegetables; he begged wood also, and made a great fire, upon which he
set everything together to boil: the fowls in their feathers, the eggs
in their shells, and the rest in like manner. Meanwhile one of the
friars, to whom Brother Juniper's simplicity was well known, returned
to the house; and seeing these great cauldrons on such an enormous
fire, he sat down in amazement to watch with what care and diligence
Brother Juniper proceeded in his cookery. And having observed him for
some time to his great recreation, this friar went out of the kitchen,
and told the other brethren that Brother Juniper was certainly
preparing a wedding banquet. The brethren took it for a jest; but
presently Brother Juniper took his cauldrons off the fire, and bade
them ring the bell for dinner. Then the brethren took their places at
the table, and he came into the refectory, all rubicund with his toil
and with the heat of the fire, and said to the brethren: "Eat a good
dinner now, and then we will go to prayer: and let no one thing of
cooking for a long time to come, for I have cooked more than enough to
last us all for more than a fortnight." And so saying, he set down his
hotch-potch before them; but there was never a hog in the Campagna of
Rome so hungry that he could have eaten it. Brother Juniper praised his
way of cooking because it was so great a saving of time; and seeing
that the other friars ate none of it, he said: "These fowls are good
for the head; and this food will keep the body in health, so wholesome
is it."; so that the brethren were all in admiration at the devotion
and simplicity of Brother Juniper. But the guardian, being angry at
such folly, and grieved at the waste of so much good food, reproved
Brother Juniper severely. Then Brother Juniper fell on his knees before
the guardian, and humbly confessed his fault to him and all the
brethren saying: "I am a very wicked man. Such a one committed such a
sin, for which he was condemned to lose his eyes. Such another was
hanged for his crimes. But I deserve far worse for my evil deeds. And
now I have wasted so much of the gifts of God and the substance of the
Order." And thus lamenting he departed; nor would he come into the
presence of any one of the brethren for the rest of that day. Then said
the father guardian: "My dearest brethren, I would that every day this
brother might spoil as much of our substance, if we had it, as he has
done to-day, were it only for the edification he has given us by the
simplicity and charity with which he has done this thing."
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