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The daily cycle: a general outline
(8/14)
Much of the lay-brothers’ day
was spent working in the fields or in the workshops and courts
within the abbey precinct. The brethren also celebrated
the seven daily Offices and the night office of Vigils.
Their offices were shorter and simpler than the monks’ and essentially
consisted of a series of Our Fathers, the Credo in Deum and
the Miserere
Mei which were
learnt by heart, for lay-brothers were not allowed to learn from
books.(13) When and where the
lay-brothers celebrated the Hours depended on the time of year as well as
the occasion. For example, on Sundays and feast days
when the lay-brothers did not generally work, they celebrated all
the Offices in the church and attended Mass,
just like the monks. On normal workdays in winter they simply celebrated
Vigils and the last Office of Compline in
the church, and recited the other Offices at the workplace. In summer the
lay-brothers enjoyed a slightly longer lie in since they, unlike the
monks, did not have an afternoon siesta. They rose when the monks
were celebrating
Lauds, recited the Offices of Vigils,
Lauds and Prime one after the other
and then left the church to begin the day’s work. The other Offices
were celebrated at their workplace and the lay-brothers did not
return to the abbey until after Compline, by which point it was
time for bed. The
whole community followed a different routine during harvest when
everybody was required to work in the fields. After Prime the monks
and lay-brothers
picked up their tools, left for work and did not return until sunset.
They recited the Offices and ate their meals in the fields.
The lay-brothers generally returned to their refectory in the western
range for meals and were served the same food as the monks, at
the same time. Whereas the monks attended a daily chapter-meeting
the lay-brothers usually only met once a week, on a Sunday, but might
gather more
frequently
to receive a new recruit. In the following screens you can explore
these and other aspects of the lay-brothers ’ life in greater detail.
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