Remember Me

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Remember Me Page 21

by Penelope Wilcock


  He liked the silence of this house empty of all but the two of them. He thought silence was something like water, the place where things—the words of God maybe—could at last become clear.

  He looked at the gradual dove colours of dawn leavening the darkness of their chamber, and he watched the rising sun fill the room with light. He reflected that, for the first time in his whole life he could ever remember, he felt free of wretched guilt. The perpetual hunger and restlessness at the core of him had been brought to peace, as though he had been healed of a wound he had only half known was there, had been made whole. He just felt peaceful, everything in him satisfied. No despair. Nothing to hide and lie about. No horrible sick feeling in the pit of his stomach. Even the persistent tic in his face had gone away. The struggle he’d been through had about torn him apart, but this morning he knew that he had been put back together again—“remembered,” as John had said. And he didn’t feel afraid anymore.

  Glossary of Terms

  Ambulatory – a passage curving round from behind the choir and its sanctuary, linking the north and south transepts and giving access to various small side chapels and the sacristy

  Cardinal office – Lauds and Vespers are the cardinal offices of the monastic day. The word cardinal comes from the Latin word cardo, meaning “hinge”, for these offices open and close the day

  Cellarer – monk responsible for oversight of all provisions; a key role in the community

  Chapter – daily meeting governing practical matters, where a chapter of St Benedict’s Rule was read and expounded by the abbot

  Checker – a small, separate building, in the part of the monastery accessible to laypeople, where all the documents of trade (receipts, account books, etc.) were kept, and where tradespeople could be received. The word exchequer comes from this

  Choir – the part of the church where the community sits

  Cloister – covered way giving access to main buildings of a monastery

  Cordwainer – leatherworker

  Corrody – purchased right to food/clothing/housing from a monastery for an agreed period, which could be for life

  Dorter – sleeping quarters

  Frater – refectory

  Grand Silence – the silence kept by the whole community from after

  Compline when they retired for the night until after first Mass in the morning

  Keeping custody of the eyes – refraining from looking around

  Morrow Mass – the first of two daily celebrations of the Mass, this one being smaller and more intimate than the later one open to the wider public

  Mortifying his eyes – looking down, not glancing about

  Nave – the body of the church occupied by the public in worship

  Nipperkin (or pipkin) – very small liquid measure (no longer in common use), less than a fluid ounce – perhaps about 25 millilitres

  Night stairs – from the sleeping quarters of a monastery, a staircase led down directly into the church to allow easy access for the devotions taking place in the middle of every night

  Obedientiary – monk assigned to a specific role in his community

  Office – the set worship taking place at regular intervals through the day

  Palfrey – high-bred riding horse

  Postulant – person aspiring to join the community, living in the monastery in the stage of commitment preceding entry into the novitiate

  Transept – area between the apse (the part of the church where the choir and its sanctuary are) and the nave (the main body of the church where the congregation from the parish sits). The south transept and north transept meet in the square “crossing” the junction of all four arms of the cruciform church

  Viaticum – literally, “food for the journey”; name given to the bread and wine of the last rites for the dying

  Warming room – the place in a medieval monastery that served as a common room. It had a big fireplace

  Wes hal – Old English greeting meaning “Be thou whole”; origin of “Hallo/ hello/hail!”

  Wick – alive; full of vitality

  Monastic Day

  There may be slight variations from place to place and at different times from the Dark Ages through the Middle Ages and onward – e.g. Vespers may be after supper rather than before. This gives a rough outline. Slight liberties are taken in my novels to allow human interactions to play out.

  Winter Schedule (from Michaelmas)

  2:30am Preparation for the nocturns of matins – psalms etc.

  3:00am Matins, with prayers for the royal family and for the dead

  5:00am Reading in preparation for

  6:00am Lauds at daybreak and Prime; wash and break fast (just bread and water, standing)

  8.30am Terce, Morrow Mass, Chapter

  12:00 noon Sext, Sung Mass, midday meal

  2.00pm None

  4:15pm Vespers, Supper, Collatio

  6:15pm Compline The Grand Silence begins

  Summer Schedule

  1:30am Preparation for the nocturns of matins – psalms etc.

  2:00am Matins

  3:30am Lauds at daybreak, wash and break fast

  6:00am Prime, Morrow Mass, Chapter

  8:00am Terce, Sung Mass

  11:30am Sext, midday meal

  2:30pm None

  5:30pm Vespers, Supper, Collatio

  8:00pm Compline

  The Grand Silence begins

  Liturgical Calendar

  I have included the main feasts and fasts in the cycle of the church’s year, plus one or two other dates that are mentioned (e.g. Michaelmas and Lady Day when rents were traditionally collected) in these stories.

  Advent – begins four Sundays before Christmas

  Christmas – December 25th

  Holy Innocents – December 28th

  Epiphany – January 6th

  Baptism of our Lord concludes Christmastide, Sunday after January 6th

  Candlemas – February 2 (Purification of Blessed Virgin Mary, Presentation of Christ in the temple)

  Lent – Ash Wednesday to Holy Thursday – start date varies with phases of moon

  Holy Week – last week of Lent and the Easter Triduum

  Lady Day – March 25th

  Easter Triduum (three days) of Good Friday, Holy Saturday, Easter Sunday

  Ascension – forty days after Easter

  Whitsun (Pentecost) – fifty days after Easter

  Trinity Sunday – Sunday after Pentecost

  Corpus Christi – Thursday after Trinity

  Sacred Heart of Jesus – Friday of the following week

  Feast of John the Baptist – June 24th

  Lammas (literally ‘loaf-mass’; grain harvest) – August 1st

  Michaelmas – feast of St Michael and All Angels, September 29th

  All Saints – November 1st

  All Souls – November 2nd

  Martinmas – November 11th

 

 

 


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