Poverty and Humility Lead to Heaven
There
was once a King's son who went out into the world, and he was
full of thought and sad. He looked at the sky, which was so beautifully
pure and blue, then he sighed, and said, "How well must all be with one
up there in heaven!" Then he saw a poor gray-haired man who was coming
along the road towards him, and he spoke to him, and asked, "How can I
get to heaven?" The man answered, "By poverty and humility. Put on my
ragged clothes, wander about the world for seven years, and get to know
what misery is, take no money, but if thou art hungry ask compassionate
hearts for a bit of bread; in this way thou wilt reach heaven."
Then the King's son took off his magnificent coat, and wore in its place
the beggar's garment, went out into the wide world, and suffered great
misery. He took nothing
but a little food, said nothing, but prayed to
the Lord to take him into his heaven. When the seven years were over,
he returned to his father's palace, but no one recognized him. He said to
the servants, "Go and tell my parents that I have come back again." But
the servants did not believe it, and laughed and left him standing
there. Then said he, "Go and tell it to my brothers that they may come
down, for I should so like to see them again." The servants would not
do that either, but at last one of them went, and told it to the King's
children, but these did not believe it, and did not trouble themselves
about it. Then he wrote a letter to his mother, and described to her
all his misery, but he did not say that he was her son. So, out of pity,
the Queen had a place under the stairs assigned to him, and food taken
to him daily by two servants. But one of them was ill-natured and said,
"Why should the beggar have the good food?" and kept it for himself, or
gave it to the dogs, and took the weak, wasted-away beggar nothing but
water; the other, however, was honest, and took the beggar what was sent
to him. It was little, but he could live on it for a while, and all the
time he was quite patient, but he grew continually weaker. As, however,
his illness increased, he desired to receive the last sacrament. When
the host was being elevated down below, all the bells in the town and
neighbourhood began to ring. After mass the priest went to the poor man
under the stairs, and there he lay dead. In one hand he had a rose, in the
other a lily, and beside him was a paper in which was written his history.
When he was buried, a rose grew on one side of his grave, and a lily on
the other.
|