Page 552 - the-brothers-karamazov
P. 552

official from the town, known to be a man of great piety.
       But he only repeated aloud what the monks had long been
       whispering. They had long before formulated this damning
       conclusion, and the worst of it was that a sort of triumphant
       satisfaction at that conclusion became more and more ap-
       parent every moment. Soon they began to lay aside even
       external decorum and almost seemed to feel they had a sort
       of right to discard it.
         ‘And for what reason can this have happened,’ some of
       the monks said, at first with a show of regret; ‘he had a small
       frame and his flesh was dried up on his bones, what was
       there to decay?’
         ‘It must be a sign from heaven,’ others hastened to add,
       and their opinion was adopted at once without protest. For
       it was pointed out, too, that if the decomposition had been
       natural, as in the case of every dead sinner, it would have
       been  apparent  later,  after  a  lapse  of  at  least  twenty-four
       hours, but this premature corruption ‘was in excess of na-
       ture,’ and so the finger of God was evident. It was meant for
       a sign. This conclusion seemed irresistible.
          Gentle  Father  Iosif,  the  librarian,  a  great  favourite  of
       the dead man’s, tried to reply to some of the evil speakers
       that ‘this is not held everywhere alike,’ and that the incor-
       ruptibility of the bodies of the just was not a dogma of the
       Orthodox Church, but only an opinion, and that even in the
       most Orthodox regions, at Athos for instance, they were not
       greatly confounded by the smell of corruption, and there
       the chief sign of the glorification of the saved was not bodily
       incorruptibility, but the colour of the bones when the bod-

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