Excerpted from
Her Hand in Marriage
by Doug Wilson
pages 93-95
The Garden
As my horse trotted wearily up the road, I could see the
walls of a beautiful garden ahead. Outside the gate was an equally beautiful
woman. At the sound of my greeting, she turned and dropped a curtsey. “Good
sir...good morning.”
I looked at her, and then at the garden walls
extending out to the right and left. Behind her was the garden gate.
I said, “I am very thirsty… for something
clean.”
She smiled, and her smile made me thirstier
still. But she said nothing.
“Is there water here?” I asked.
“There is a stream within my garden.” Her
statement was simply a statement of fact; there was no invitation at all in it.
I asked, “May I come in and drink?”
“No,” she said. “The lord of my mother’s garden
does not permit that.”
“Why is this? Other women have let me drink
from the gardens that they tend.” I glanced at the fruit-laden branches which
were visible over the top of the garden wall. “You have a lovely garden, but
those who let me drink had gardens just as beautiful.”
She laughed at this, and her laugh was merry
indeed.
“I have no doubt that you have been in some
lovely gardens. But was the water clean?”
“No,” I said, and in spite of myself, turned my
head and looked down. She continued with a question. “Is that why you are no
longer in the gardens tended by these women?”
I was ashamed so I did not answer her. Instead
I looked past her into the garden. The path through the gate disappeared after a
few feet, leaving the view of anyone on the road.
“It seems like a shame for such a garden to go
to waste.”
She seemed both puzzled and amused. “How does
it go to waste?”
“Does any man drink from your stream?”
“No, but no man fouls it either.”
“But isn’t that not a waste? Was not your
stream made to quench the thirst of travelers?”
“I’m afraid you are seriously mistaken. It was
made to quench the thirst, not of travelers, but of the lord of the garden.”
“Oh,” I said, “This garden has a lord?”
“No,” she said.
“Then I don’t understand. Are you speaking in
riddles?”
“She smiled. “No, I am not. The garden will one
day have a lord, although it does not yet. The stream is for him alone.”
“And who will your lord be?”
“When my mother’s lord gives a blessing, the
one whom I appoint.”
“How can the lesser appoint the greater?”
“How can it be so? When my lord comes, I will
grant to him my garden. But until I do, he is just another traveler.”
“And what do you look for? I am sure there are
many who knock at your gate.”
At this she blushed slightly but looked
straight at me. “I will not have a lord who does not have a lord himself – my
lord must have taken an oath of fealty to the Landlord.”
“The Landlord? Who is He?”
“He is the owner of all the gardens along this
road. In order to come into my garden, my lord must take an oath before the
Landlord to tend the garden well. He must also swear that he will enter no other
garden.”
I had never heard such words as these before.
“How long must he stay out of other gardens?”
“Forever.”
“But what if he is born to travel?”
“Then he is not born for my garden.”
“I see,” I said, becoming a little angry. “Then
why have I never heard of such an oath? I have been in many gardens.”
“Yes, you said that before. But was the water
clean? Were the gardens tended? That is what happens when there is no oath.”
“So that is all? If someone takes an oath
before the Landlord, you will make him your lord?”
“No.”
“Well, what else then?”
“There are many men who think they can tend my
garden well, and who would be willing to swear an oath before the Landlord
saying so. But that does not mean that my mother’s lord, or I, share their
confidence.”
“What do you mean?”
“I mean that I know the extent of the garden. I
have a knowledge of it that cannot be gained from the road. But no man can share
that knowledge until after I have made him my lord and husband. So I must have
the measure of the man before.”
“So what must a man do? It seems like much
work.”
She smiled once again. “There is much work.
There is also much fruit.”
“So what must a man do?”
“The first thing is to – “
“Yes, I know. He must swear to the Landlord.
But after?”
“He must return to me, and ask to see my
mother’s lord.”
“And what would he say?”
“That depends on the man.” At this parting comment, she turned and walked slowly
back in to the garden, pulling the gate closed behind her. I spurred my horse,
which began to trot down the road. I did not know what to think, but I needed to
find this Landlord.
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