Short Story Adaptation
“The Accidental Light”
an adaptation of an excerpt from his novel, “The Light of Occitania.”
By David Mampel
Master David walked faster than usual returning from his lecture on
Aristotle’s Natural Philosophy at the University of Arts in Paris. His exposed
scalp at the top of his head’s clerical tonsure started tingling, but not from
the cool air. The warm, September rain blew sideways in the wind as he rounded
the corner leading to his flat near the Seine River. Throwing the dark hood of his
instructor’s robe over his head, he crossed the cobblestone street sparing no
more than half a glance at market-goers. A clip clop of horse hooves echoed in
his ears. He stopped abruptly, skidding
on loose stones, as a pack-horse sidestepped around him.
“Hey! Watch yourself, Father!” the harried merchant scolded,
riding on.
“Pardon.” Master David muttered, looking down at his leather
satchel to make sure his quires had not slipped out. Shaking himself, he
crossed the street and nodded to his innkeeper,
Claire de Lunaire, beating a rug draped over the wooden fence on the side of
the residences.
“Will you be eating here this evening, Master?” she called out.
"Non. Merci, Mademoiselle. I’ll be dining in my room tonight.”
David hurried into his flat and closed the door. Despite the blowing rain, the
last vestiges of sunlight were intermittently filtering in through fast-moving
clouds on the horizon and the foggy windowpane
near his bed. A soft citrine glow radiated in
the sultry air and danced on the chiseled beams of his ceiling. Master David stood mesmerized by the ever-changing hues
of orange, pink, and purple to the west. He pulled out his quires and a wax
tablet and set it down on a small table in front of the windows
announcing the cool air of sunset. Picking up a
stylus, he quickly sat down and etched out his ideas:
Light actualizes the diaphanous environment…
He sat up with a start and put down the stylus.
“Yes, yes,” he
whispered, gazing outside the window at the final setting of sun on the
horizon. “Light is only a colour among others. It is an accident of the air! The eternal substance of light, our accidental eyes do not see. The light we
do see is merely a temporary manifesting of the eternal light within every
accidental form.”
“Ah, but perhaps I am
missing something? Translating Aristotle on my travels to Constantinople
certainly helped more than the Arabic translations. My students have been very
encouraging. But, the Archbishop—”
A loud knock
interrupted his rumination. He quickly got up and opened the door.
“Master David!” the
twenty-two-year-old scholar at the door exclaimed.
“Theophilus! I was just thinking about my students. How
fortunate my prized pupil should manifest before me. Come in!” Master David
waved Theo inside. David’s heart warmed with gratitude when he considered Theo.
Theo was not like so many of the other students who cared less about learning
and more about pinching the bottoms of tavern wenches, drinking too many bowls
of wine, and brawling with other students outside of The Croix de fer or Les Trois
Chandeliers. Then again, David admired how those raucous students protested
the high cost of wine which eventually led to the formation of the universitas guild of scholars in Paris.
It was this very guild who threatened to leave the city if King Philip refused
to support them as they were being attacked by merchants. Indeed, the king
decreed the privilegium canonis
granting scholars bodily protection and the privilegium
fori which granted them immunity from secular courts.
Theophilus blushed,
tossing back his hood as he crossed the threshold. He rubbed his recently
re-shaved head in disbelief. Theo had received his clerical status as a scholar
when he enrolled as a student of philosophy at the illustrious Paris university
as a tender youth, but now found himself unconsciously touching his tonsure in
hopes that he would feel his hair again.
“Thank you Master. I
am delighted you perceive me that way.”
Master David smiled. “What
brings you here this evening, Theo? Come! Sit.” The master pointed to a second
chair by the table and the two sat across from each other. Theophilus
immediately noticed the quires and wax tablet on the table. He sprang up.
“Have you been
working, Master? I’m sorry. I didn’t mean to interrupt you.”
“Not to worry, Theo.
Sit down. Sit down. I’m delighted you
are here. I need to discuss something with you.”
Theophilus exhaled and
sat down again. “Master, I came to tell you
they are finishing the alchemy engravings on the front porch of Notre Dame.”
“Oh? Have you seen
them?”
“Yes. And you were
right about how odd they are, Master. What do they mean?”
“I am not certain, but
my studies of Aristotle’s ideas on the imagination are leading me to something
greater inside of the substantial form of the human, that is to say, the soul;
which, as I’ve stated in my quires, are all one with the body, the senses, and
God or eternal substance. Human reason and the intellect can only take us so
far, Theo!” Master David stood and began pacing the floor. “Though, it is
nevertheless a veritable phenomenon that this greater intelligence filtering
through our imagination—like sunlight through this windowpane—Ah! Look at how
beautiful the sun shines through those clouds, my dear Theo.”
Theo
stared out the window at the setting sun, quickly returning his gaze on Master
David.
“Light actualizes the
diaphanous air, does it not? Ah, but it is all one, Theophilus! The mens, the passive intellect, interprets the light, but it is all
unified in God, since God is the creator of it all. What we see, what we sense,
must be interpreted by the faculty of reason. The intellect serves as the
handmaiden to faith, which itself, springs forth from the imagination. So,
reason is ultimately the handmaiden of the imagination. That is why I’ve become
strangely attracted to symbols, to images; images which, of course the
imagination creates, allows…God as one with all, with the imagination, comes
through it all, the senses, the diaphanous air, my mouth speaking now, these
symbols, these images…”
Master David stood
still. Rubbing his chin, he smiled at Theo.
Theo looked at his
instructor with humble courage. “Master, could we compare this tripartite
reality to water?”
Master David’s
eyebrows raised. His tentative smile blossomed. “Perfect, Theophilus! An
analogy. Please go on.”
Theo’s face beamed
with excitement. “Well, Master, perhaps the eternal, or God, can be expressed
three ways just as water can be expressed in three accidental ways as liquid,
solid, and vapor. But, all three are of the same essence, water.”
Master David’s eyes
continued to shine with pride in his student. “Brilliant my son! Yes, yes! That
is a perfect analogy. And, as you know, this is why I am accused of being a
material pantheist. Which, of course, I am, but the Archbishop and others are
very upset with these ideas, Theo.”
Master David resumed
pacing the room. “They think I misunderstand Aristotle and worse, that my ideas
contradict Christian doctrine which espouses a distinct eternal God outside of
creation. This is not true. I do not contradict the faith in my view. I have
stated that the eternal manifests in all things, but only as accidental
expressions and therefore is still distinct and not a contradiction to the holy
church doctrine of a distinct God. I think perhaps my view negates a more
personal, immanent God, but that is still a matter of interpretation.”
Master David’s smile
darkened to a worried frown. He pulled out his chair and sat down. Across from
him, Theo looked out the window at the tawny clouds casting a spell of gloom on
the last vestiges of sunset. He turned and studied his master’s consternation.
Master David
continued: “They think I am advocating the Amalrician philosophy and, by
extension, the Brethren of the Free Spirit who advocate free sexual love, among
other things.” The master’s face reddened with a nervous twitch in his eyelids.
He knew he was telling Theo too much and might be putting him in danger, but he
needed someone to talk to, someone he trusted and admired. Theo’s intelligence
and savvy discretion impressed David since Theo first arrived at the university
in his teens. Theo was a young adult now and the master needed to confess his
pent up anger to someone he could count on. David stomped his foot and pounded
his fist in his hand. “I do think Amalrician insistence on personal
responsibility with matters of love and sexuality between adults should at
least be considered and disputed. I mean, why should the church dictate such
personal matters?”
A stunned shadow moved
across Theo’s face. His eyes darted from side to side as he wrestled for
answers.
“I suppose it was my visit to Constantinople
that inspired my latest ideas, Theo,” the master reflected, staring out the
window. “Translating Aristotle from the original Greek opened my eyes to so
much that has been hidden from us. Those ideas of the three parts of the soul…
they came through Aristotle. They
came through the imagination…from
God. There’s something I can’t explain in my desire to apprehend images,
however. Something has opened inside of me. This desire, itself, seems to be
evidence of the distinct nature of the soul, and yet, it is one with God.
Distinct, but unified. Reason is merely the interpreter of what this higher
understanding allows, this, this…what is it? It is what comes to us in dreams,
perhaps… in ideas that come when we are not even thinking about the very ideas
that suddenly emerge! These images, unexpected ideas, this desire to know
more…this desire is greater than my love for Aristotle! It is my…my…love for
God! The eternal center of all reality. God is in it all. Though, of course,
Aristotle inspires it too since God is in Aristotle. I must find out more,
Theo. I must visit Notre Dame tomorrow morning and contemplate those alchemical
images. If I consider each image as an analogy for something else, perhaps my
imagination will work with reason to comprehend their meanings, to comprehend
all symbols.”
Theophilus sat stunned
as if a bright light had blinded his eyes. He needed time to adjust to the new
level of illumination. Master David was lost in thought. After a dreamy silence,
Theo looked cautiously at his master. “Master?” Theo gently implored.
“Yes Theo?” Master David gazed out the window
at the twilight, then softened his gaze and turned to Theo.
“There is something I
do not understand about the tripartite reality,” Theo said.
Master David leaned
back in his chair and narrowed his eyes.
“If everything is
divided into three forms, but all is one essence in God, how does free will fit
into this?” Theo continued. Master David bit his lip. “That is to say, if we
are created in the image of God, and we choose evil actions, does this mean God
is evil too?”
Master David shook his
head slowly. He rubbed his chin and took a deep breath. “I don’t know, Theo.
This is something I haven’t resolved either, my son.”
The sounds of hunger
gurgled from the master’s stomach. Theo heard the sounds and rubbed his own
belly. Master David shook his head vigorously, stood, and patted Theo on the
shoulder. “Let’s go to The Pannier,
Theo. Perhaps the answer will come when we are not thinking about it.”
Theo laughed and stood
up. “How odd to think we find the answers when we stop thinking.”
Master David laughed.
“Yes, it is true. I do all my best non-thinking when I’m drinking a bowl of
wine and laughing at the jongleurs at The Pannier.”
David Mampel is a former minister, semi-retired clown
and artist. He writes fiction and poetry to bring a little sun to the cold,
rainy darkness of the Pacific Northwest. His work has appeared in Copperfield
Review Quarterly (Winter 2022), CommuterLit.com (January 2022), The
Aurora Journal (Winter 2022), and The
Remington Review (July 2022).
Good work!
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