And
Now And Then One Happens Upon A Building That Creates The Same
Impression.
Such a building is this church.
It is known and recorded
that more than a thousand years ago it had a patriarch whose name was
Shenuti; but it is supposed to have been built long before that time,
and parts of it look as if they had been set up at the very beginning
of things. The walls are dingy and whitewashed. The wooden roof is
peaked, with many cross-beams. High up on the walls are several small
square lattices of wood. The floor is of discolored stone. Everywhere
one sees wood wrought into lattices, crumbling carpets that look
almost as frail and brittle and fatigued as wrappings of mummies, and
worn-out matting that would surely become as the dust if one set his
feet hard upon it. The structure of the building is basilican, and it
contains some strange carvings of the Last Supper, the Nativity, and
St. Demetrius. Around the nave there are monolithic columns of white
marble, and one column of the red and shining granite that is found in
such quantities at Assuan. There are three altars in three chapels
facing toward the East. Coptic monks and nuns are renowned for their
austerity of life, and their almost fierce zeal in fasting and in
prayer, and in Coptic churches the services are sometimes so long that
the worshippers, who are almost perpetually standing, use crutches for
their support. In their churches there always seems to me to be a cold
and austere atmosphere, far different from the atmosphere of the
mosques or of any Roman Catholic church. It sometimes rather repels
me, and generally make me feel either dull or sad. But in this
immensely old church of Abu Sargah the atmosphere of melancholy aids
the imagination.
In Coptic churches there is generally a great deal of woodwork made
into lattices, and into the screens which mark the divisions, usually
four, but occasionally five, which each church contains, and, which
are set apart for the altar, for the priests, singers, and
ministrants, for the male portion of the congregation, and for the
women, who sit by themselves. These divisions, so different from the
wide spaciousness and airiness of the mosques, where only pillars and
columns partly break up the perspective, give to Coptic buildings an
air of secrecy and of mystery, which, however, is often rather
repellent than alluring. In the high wooden lattices there are narrow
doors, and in the division which contains the altar the door is
concealed by a curtain embroidered with a large cross. The Mohammedans
who created the mosques showed marvellous taste. Copts are often
lacking in taste, as they have proved here and there in Abu Sargah.
Above one curious and unlatticed screen, near to a matted dais, droops
a hideous banner, red, purple, and yellow, with a white cross. Peeping
in, through an oblong aperture, one sees a sort of minute circus, in
the form of a half-moon, containing a table with an ugly red-and-white
striped cloth.
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