![]() They sang beautiful melodies at this time, but it is reported that their visits were infrequent afterward. Six months passed before the birds returned again, and this took place when a photograph of Father Paul de Moll was hung in the invalid’s drawing-room. Bird connections continued even after death Still, they were somewhat dejected and, with drooping wings, sang a melancholy song that the household members understood to be a presentiment of a tragic happening. On the eve of Father Paul’s death, the birds appeared once more. ![]() He then warned, “If during my lifetime you spread the news abroad, the birds will never come again.” When asked about the beautiful little birds, Father Paul de Moll replied with a smile, “They are messengers.” Father Paul then warned Theresa not to speak of the birds to anyone except an intimate friend of hers. Finally, she spoke of it to Father Paul, and he replied, “Oh! they won’t let themselves be caught!” The nurse repeatedly tried to catch one of the birds but in vain. Neither of them could tell where the birds came from any more than Theresa could.īut were the birds from the tropics? Of course, but in that case, these delicate little creatures would hardly have ventured into our climate in all seasons, for they came in winter, when it was snowing and very cold, as well as in summer. The servant, Theresa, sees the birds and the invalid lady and her nurse. Although the tune of the mysterious songsters never varied, they had at each successive visit a different plumage. They would also perch on the windowsill of the drawing-room, which looked out upon the garden and tap upon the windowpanes. In the year 1887, said the servant Theresa that she would know beforehand of his approaching visits.Īt his next visit, he asked, “Well, have the little birds announced my coming?” The intimate relationship with the feathery ‘tribe”Īs a matter of fact, on the eve of Father Paul de Moll’s visits to the lady, beautiful little birds, varying in number from two to twelve at a time, began to make their appearance in the garden, singing a joyful air which was always the same. ![]() We are told in his biography that whenever he visited Antwerp, he would call upon a certain invalid lady and her servant, Theresa. ![]() The saintly Father Paul of Moll, known as “The Benedictine Wonder-Worker of the Nineteenth Century,” also had a mysterious experience with birds. Today, February 24, we celebrate the blessed Soul of Father Paul de Moll. Father Paul of Moll and His Messenger Birds ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |