By Photios Kontoglou, from his book Mystical Flowers, Athens, 1977
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On Pascha Monday night, after midnight 
and before going to sleep, I went out into the little garden behind my house. 
The sky was dark and covered with stars. It was as if I was seeing it for the 
first time. A distant psalmody appeared to be descending from it. My lips 
murmured, very softly: “Exalt ye the Lord our God, and worship the footstool of 
His feet.” A holy man once told me that during these hours the heavens are 
opened. The air exhaled a fragrance of the flowers and herbs I had planted. 
“Heaven and earth are filled with the glory of the Lord,” I said.
I could have easily remained there 
alone until daybreak. I felt as if without a body and without any bond to the 
earth. Fearing, however, that my absence would disturb those within the house, I 
returned and lay down.
Sleep had not completely overtaken and 
I truly do not know whether I was awake or asleep, when suddenly a strange man 
rose up before me. He was as pale as a dead man. His eyes were wide open and he 
looked at me in terror. His face was like a mask, like a mummy’s. His 
glistening, dark yellow skin was stretched tight over his head, displaying the 
cavities of a dead person’s head. He did not look real – as if he was part of a 
painting. In one of his hands, he held some kind of a bizarre object which I 
could not make out; the other hand was clutching his breast as if he were 
suffering.
This creature filled me with great 
terror. I looked at him and he looked at me without speaking, as if he were 
waiting for me to recognize him, strange as he was. And a voice said to me: “It 
is so-and-so!” And I recognized him immediately. Then he opened his mouth and 
sighed. His voice came from far away; it came up as if from a deep well.
He was in great agony, and I felt pity 
for him. His hands, his feet, his eyes -- everything showed that he was 
suffering. In my despair, I was thinking of helping him, but he gave me a sign 
with his hand to stop. He began to groan in such a way that I froze. Then he 
said to me: “I have not come; I have been sent. I shake without stop; I am 
dizzy. Pray God to have pity on me. I want to die but I cannot. Alas! Everything 
you told me before is true. Do you remember how, several days before my death, 
you came to see me and spoke about religion? There were two other friends with 
me, unbelievers like myself. You spoke, and they mocked. When you left, they 
said: ‘What a pity! He is intelligent and he believes the stupid things old 
women believe!’”
“Another time, and other times too, I 
told you: ‘Dear Photios, save up money, or else you will die a pauper. Look at 
my riches, and I want more of them.’ You told me then: ‘Have you signed a pact 
with death, that you can live as many years as you want and enjoy a happy old 
age?’”
“And I replied: ‘You will see to what 
an age I will live. Now I am 75; 1 will live past a hundred. My children are 
free from any needs or wants. My son earns a lot of money, and I have married my 
daughter to a rich Ethiopian. My wife and I have more money than we need. I am 
not like you who listen to what the priests say: “A Christian ending to our life 
...” and the rest. What have you to gain from a Christian ending? Better a full 
pocket and no worries ... Give alms? Why did your so merciful God create 
paupers? Why should I feed them? And they ask you, in order to go to Paradise, 
to feed idlers! Do you want to talk about Paradise? You know that I am the son 
of a priest and that I know well all these tricks. That those who have no brains 
believe them is well enough, but you who have a mind have gone astray. If you 
continue to live as you are doing, you will die before me, and you will be 
responsible for those you have led astray. As a physician I tell you and affirm 
that I will live a hundred and ten years ...’”
After saying all this, he turned this 
way and that as if he were on a grill. I heard his groans: “Ah! Ouch! Oh! Oh!” 
He was silent for a moment, and then continued: “This is what I said, and in a 
few days I was dead! I was dead, and I lost the wager! I was the confused one 
and now the horror was upon me! Lost, I descended into the abyss. What suffering 
I have had up to now, what agony! Everything you told me was true. You, dear 
Photios, have won the wager!”
“When I was in the world where you are 
now, I was an intellectual, I was a physician. I had learned how to speak and to 
be listened to, to mock religion, to discuss whatever falls under the senses. 
And now I see that everything I called stories, myths, paper lanterns, well, I 
now know that it is all true. The agony which I am experiencing now, and this is 
the truth I live in, it is like a worm that never sleeps; this is the gnashing 
of teeth.”
After having spoken thus, he 
disappeared. I still heard his groans, which gradually faded away. Sleep had 
begun to take over me, when I felt an icy hand touch me. I opened my eyes and 
saw him again before me. This time he was even more horrible and smaller in 
body. He had become like a nursing infant, with a large old man’s head which he 
was shaking.
“In a short time the day will break, 
and those who have sent me will come to seek me!”
“Who are they?” I asked.
He spoke some confused words which I 
could not make out. Then he added: “Over there, where I am, there are also many 
who mocked you and your faith. Now they all understand that their spiritual 
darts have not gone beyond the cemetery. There are both those who have done good 
to you, as well as all those who have slandered you. The more you forgive them, 
the more they detest you. Man is evil. Instead of feeling rejoice, kindness 
makes him bitter because it makes him feel his defeat. The state of these latter 
people is worse than mine. They cannot leave their dark prison to come and find 
you as I have done. They are severely tormented, lashed by the whip of God’s 
love, as one of the Saints has said [St. Isaac the Syrian]. The world is 
something else entirely from what we see! Our intellect shows it to us in 
reverse. Now we understand that our intellect was only stupid, our conversations 
were spiteful meanness, our joys were lies and illusions.”
“You, who bear God in your hearts, 
Whose word is Truth, the only Truth, you have all won the great wager between 
believers and unbelievers. This wager I have lost. I tremble, I sigh, and I find 
no rest. In truth, there is no repentance in hell. Woe to those who walk as I 
did when I was on earth. Our flesh was drunk, and we mocked those who believed 
in God and eternal life; almost everyone applauded us. They treated you as mad, 
as imbeciles. And the more you accept our mockeries, the more our rage 
increases.”
“Now I see how much the conduct of evil 
men grieved you. How could you bear with such patience the poisoned darts which 
came from our lips and which called you all hypocrites, mockers of God, and 
deceivers of the people. If these evil men who are still on earth would see 
where I am, if only they were in my place, they would tremble for everything 
they are doing. I would like to appear to them and tell them to change their 
path, but I do not have the permission to do so, just as the rich man did not 
have it when he begged Abraham to send Lazarus the pauper. Lazarus was not sent, 
so that those who sinned may be punished and those who went on the ways of God 
might be worthy of salvation.”
“He that is unrighteous, let him do 
unrighteousness yet more; and he that is filthy, let him he made filthy yet 
more. And he that is righteous, let him do righteousness yet more; and he that 
is holy, let him be made holy yet more” (Rev. 22:11).”
With these words he disappeared.

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