The episode with Makovkina had occurred after five years of his hermit4 life. That occurrence soon became generally known—her nocturnal visit, the change she underwent, and her entry into a convent. From that time Father Sergius’s fame increased. More and more visitors came to see him, other monks5 settled down near his cell, and a church was erected6 there and also a hostelry. His fame, as usual exaggerating his feats7, spread ever more and more widely. People began to come to him from a distance, and began bringing invalids8 to him whom they declared he cured.
His first cure occurred in the eighth year of his life as a hermit. It was the healing of a fourteen-year-old boy, whose mother brought him to Father Sergius insisting that he should lay his hand on the child’s head. It had never occurred to Father Sergius that he could cure the sick. He would have regarded such a thought as a great sin of pride; but the mother who brought the boy implored9 him
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