Modoaldus

12 May · commentary

ON SAINT MODOALDUS

ARCHBISHOP OF TRIER.

ABOUT DCXL.

Preface

Modoaldus, Archbishop of Trier (St.)

G. H.

[1] There flourished in the Seventh of Christ Century S. Modoaldus,

Metropolitan of the Church of Trier,

of whom the first mention is made among the Bishops, who

with him were in the Council of Rheims under

Sonnatius the Bishop, He is present at the Council of Rheims, in the year DCXXIV or the following

held, as we deduced in book 4 of our Diatribe concerning

the three Dagoberts Kings of the Franks. There flourished in the same with

S. Modoaldus time S. Desiderius Bishop of Cahors,

under the same Kings of the Austrasians, Dagobert the first and his

son S. Sigebert. There are extant of this S. Desiderius epistles in volume

first of the Writers of the History of the Franks at Andrew du

Chesne: [he is praised by S. Desiderius Bishop of Cahors for benefits bestowed on this one.] among which epistle LIV he inscribes To his Lord always

Modoaldus the Pope, whom this S. Modoaldus

we judge to be: wherefore that excellent monument here

we set forth. If of thanks the rights for your benefits to recompense

I should wish, I should not be wise; on account of those namely

supereminent good things, which in the present year toward us

your largesse studied to sow abroad: on account of expenses

namely superfluous, on account of of travelers manifold

necessities. Nor only of those serving opportune

subsidies not few you sent, but also us ourselves

both with expenses and gifts you enlarged. Thou hast fulfilled, blessed

Father, of largesse the office, thou hast sustained the peregrination

ours, thou hast had compassion on our labors; and far from

our native soil placed so with paternal affection thou didst foster, that neither

the region's fertility, nor the parents' sweetness from

want did I desire. Our Lord Jesus Christ,

in whose love this thou hast expended, to thee for our extremity

a rewarder may exist. Now therefore of my service the

rights discharging, I supplicate, that whom then with benefits

thou consoledst, now with the benefit of prayer thou help. The bearer

besides of the present office, our common son,

Claudius the Abbot, receive in all things commended:

and the little gifts which from us he shall have brought, with a grateful

mind have. When of a messenger an opportunity

shall have offered itself, concerning your and the Lord King's, or your brothers and

sons' may we merit of their safety by a rescript's

series to be consoled. These things S. Desiderius, who died on the XIX of November

in the year XVII of S. Sigebert the King, of Christ DCXLVIII, when

he himself in the year XXIII of the Church of Cahors presided. But S. Modoaldus

is said everywhere for thirty years to have ruled the Church

of Trier. But because of this matter nothing certain among the ancients

is found; we judge him to have presided from the year about DCXXII,

unto the year DCXL: but without prejudice, until otherwise by

others proved we shall know.

[2] We edited on the day XXI of February the Acts of S. Germanus

Abbot of Grandval in the diocese of Basel, He institutes S. Germanus Abbot of Grandval. by the author

Bobolenus a contemporary, who these things at number 2 and 4 writes: When was

S. Germanus a little infant, he was delivered to B. Modoaldus,

who also himself in those days of the city of Trier the Cathedral

with the citadel of sanctity held: who when he had heard him elegant,

and of a sagacious ingenium perceived the boy, in letters

liberal him to instruct began… But when S. Germanus

was of years seventeen, with a panting mind

B. Modoaldus the Bishop to entreat began: O venerable

Father, permit me, that all things later being placed,

to a monastery, to which me shall order the Divine piety, I may go.

But indeed B. Modoaldus to wonder began at the youth's

mind, that so manfully he acted, that the desert

he should desire, he said to him: O youth, a great and high

thing to be open thou desirest, but to youths slippery is the way, through

which with a trembling foot to go thou hastenest. And he said to him:

I am not bold to thee to give permission on account of the royal

power, because it is written: For there is no power,

except from God. Rom. 13, 1 & 2 And again: He who power resists,

God's ordination resists. Thus far there. Nor other certain and

indubitate monuments concerning S. Modoaldus to be extant we know,

which through the barbarians' incursions and of the Trier city's overthrow

did not perish.

[3] Afterwards when in the year of Christ MCVII the body of S. Modoaldus

had been conveyed into the diocese of Paderborn and to the monastery

Helmwardenhuis, urged the Abbot Tietmar

at Stephen Abbot of S. James in the city of Liège, in the 12th century the Life written that

the deeds of S. Modoaldus he should write. He performed what was asked

the Abbot Stephen, prefacing that on account of the said overthrow of the city

of Trier himself an accurate relation to have not been able concerning

things by S. Modoaldus before years nearly six hundred done. It seems

therefore on every side his things from traditions popular and

Chronicles not always most certain to have collected. This Life is extant

in several Mss. and is edited by Laurentius Surius on this

XII of May, which we collated with a Ms. codex of Corsendonck

of the Canons Regular near Turnhout in

Brabant. and the History of the Translation. We add from the Ms. of Böddeken the History of the translated

body, by eye-witnesses and the actors of the matters written,

to the same Stephen's censure for correction subjected, as if

a work it needed by him to be polished. But this of religious modesty was,

it appears for from the Prologue, which other not is than an epistle

of the Abbot Tietmar to Stephen, nothing needed that in

that writing to be polished and adorned should labor Stephen,

of whom the author so elegantly shone with eloquence. This moreover not

we doubt the very Tietmar to say, under whose name as

written is the Prologue, so also under the same to be reckoned ought to be edited

to have been which follows the history.

[4] Whether he helped in founding the Theologium monastery? Trithemius, book I of the Compendium of Annals, in Clovis

II hands down, the Dologium, in others Theologium monastery,

by the counsel and help of B. Modoaldus to have been in the year

DCXXVII founded. Of that monastery we treated on the day

VIII of February before the Life of S. Paul Bishop of Verdun

number 9, and we said the same to be asserted by Brouwer, asserting

placed of that cloister the foundations in the first of Dagobert's

reign years, Modoaldus the Archbishop of Trier

zeal and patronage to that matter his conferring.

These things they: of which at Stephen the Abbot or

others more ancient, with mention of S. Modoaldus, we do not find

any vestige: whether moreover Trithemius some such thing

from the more ancient had, escapes us. Besides at the request

of S. Modoaldus is handed down S. Sigebert the King of the Church

of Trier the protection to have undertaken, to that end by a diploma

by Francis Rosieres divulged: which deservedly suspect

to be held we said in the Analects to the Life of S. Sigebert

number 13 & 14. James Masen, in his to Brouwer's

Annals Additions and Chronological Index, broadly endeavors

to prove, in his time did not live S. Irmina and Adela. S. Irmina and her sister Adela to have been

Dagobert the first's daughters, by S. Modoaldus excellently to

all piety formed, and by S. Irmina the monastery

Horreum, by the other Palatiolum constructed.

Of which none at Stephen, who the ancient monuments

scrutinized, is found mention: and we to volume II of April

in the Preface against the same Masen, showed

S. Irmina and Adela to have been daughters of Dagobert II, whom

he was ignorant to the kingdom to have come Brouwer, with the rest who

before us flourished writers of the genealogies Frankish.

[5] The mentioned above Bobolenus, sufficiently a contemporary author,

pronounced Modoaldus in the citadel of Sanctity to have lived, and

often him with the title of Blessed adorns. The memory in the sacred Calendars. Stephen, Abbot of Liège

as a Saint principal with continuous of encomiums

praises adorns. Then later Calendars in Germany written

the cult sacred confirm, and there are with the Ms. Florarium

the Martyrology of Cologne and Lübeck in the year MCCCCXC printed,

and the Additions of Grevenus and Molanus to Usuard,

and with today's Roman Martyrology Galesinius, Canisius,

Ghinius, Gelenius, Saussay on this XII of May, likewise

on the XV of February under the name of Rodoaldus a Ms. Calendar

Benedictine, and the XVI of April on account of the translations of the body in

the before indicated Ms. Florarium, Relics at Trier. and the Ms. of Brussels of S. Gudula,

with some who on the XV of April him refer. Besides the sacred

of the body bones to Helmwardenhuis conveyed, and perhaps by

heretics dissipated, in the temple of S. Paulinus left three little portions

has the history of the Translation n. 36, to which (that of

the honor of the old sepulchre I be silent, testified in the Life number 41) adds

the Archdeacon, the people of Trier in such a Patron's dismissal

consoling number 45, whatever to the sacred bones formerly was joined

itself to contain, the heart namely and the tongue and the rest of

his flesh pledges, which into ashes turned, without doubt for themselves

reserved those. Some also his Relics are outside

the city in the church of S. Matthias, and at Cologne in the church of S. Gereon.

Concerning these last treats Gelenius in his Cologne page

267, concerning the former we treated at the Life of S. Matthias 24 of February

page 453. In the little book concerning the Relics in the Church of S. Paulinus formerly

printed, among the Relics of the Patrons of the said Church is reckoned

the Head and Leg of S. Modoaldus Archbishop of Trier,

and afterwards among the Relics of Confessors, again is added

among these to be preserved of the Relics of S. Modowaldus Confessor,

and these I would believe to be three particles, concerning which

above: the head moreover and leg, already formerly outside the shrine apart

from the rest of the bones to have been to veneration preserved, and therefore

a work it was not that a part other more notable there should be left.

Doubtful however this explanation makes the quality of bones from

the bodies of SS. Abrunculus and Bonosus of Helmwardenhuis

handed over in exchange for those which they sent away. Among the Relics

also of the greater Church of Trier hands down Scheckmann

also found in a little ivory chest some of S.

Modowaldus Archbishop. and at Liège. But also at S. James's of Liège

place, not much before than Stephen the Abbot the Life

should write, translated some of the same Saint relics Stephen

himself testifies number 42, that even therefore from Mainz to Liège

it should be come: and it is credible hence to have been done, that by him

rather than another any Thietmar of Helmward the Abbot

him to of this kind a writing provoked.

LIFE

By the Author Stephen Abbot of S. James of Liège.

From Mss. & Surius.

Modoaldus, Archbishop of Trier (St.)

BHL Number: 5984

BY THE AUTHOR STEPHEN THE ABBOT FROM MSS.

PROLOGUE.

[1] To the Lord Tietmar, of the Helmward cloister

Abbot reverend, and to the holy who under

his care live Brothers, Stephen, Abbot of the humble

congregation of B. James in Liège, eternal

in the Lord salvation. Since the of graces distributor

God in dividing to individuals, as He wills, above

all things gives charity, by which we may love the good things in others,

which are wanting in us, The Author congratulates Tietmar that all things of individuals and individual things

may become of all; it is necessary, that in our neighbors we should study

by loving to possess, what we see in ourselves

by working less to come forth. Whence the good of your zeal

drawing the odor, very much glad and delighted

we are, upon these namely, which concerning of your labor

the profits became known to us through a certain one of

your men, whom for a time we used: in whom one of all

of you the conversation good imagining,

we rejoice already from charity you to foreknow, whom

with a bodily gaze it has not yet happened to see. By hope for

to the supernal tending fatherland, thither of prayers and tears

the legation being sent before, to ask we ought what

to the peace are of Jerusalem; and to the perpetual with that one's

citizens of dwelling covenant to be composed, to lift up

rather of faith the eyes to the mountains, whence to us of intercession

help may come, than to presume concerning Princes,

in whom salvation none is.

[2] Of this therefore heavenly habitation to be obtained

with a pious kindled desire, to a citadel of so great strength your

minds you advanced, that the treasure of the people of Trier, the obtained Relics of S. Modoaldus and other Saints: for

from several years laid up, with pious importunity you should set about

to spoil, the pledges namely of S. Modoaldus the Archbishop,

and two bodies of Thebans, with

other relics having dared to demand, worthy to obtain, to carry away,

to honor and in the patronages of them to exult. And

since the desire of His poor heard

the Lord, both with God's and the Saints' will preceding,

and your following industry, that to obtain

you merited, which no of silver or gold abundance could

be acquired, which no royal power would presume

to attempt. How much moreover of time, how much of labor

to these to be obtained you have expended, with what favoring

persons to this of good will efficacy

you came, how of this, so to say, victory's

prize you apprehended, sufficiently diligently unto

a nail's depth described that man abovesaid, nay now

our both brother and friend cordial, and whatever

from charity he merits to be called, a man of sincere jucundity,

who to such business always with his labor and counsel was present.

Who in body indeed for a time to you absent,

in spirit moreover always present, while for to be investigated

his Patron's nobility, of our order places

very many he visited: and as a bee argumentative,

of the flowers the sweetness into honey's liquor carrying together,

both the deeds of the Pontiffs, and the Annals of the Kings of the Franks, and to him asking that his Acts be written

and the fame of the ancient wise ones with diligent

inquiry should run through; at last to us of all

the last he turned aside, beseeching not perfunctorily, but indefatigably

and most instantly, that of the life and miracles

of B. Modoaldus, in lessons and responsories, some

of our little ingenium gift home to be conveyed by us

he might merit to receive. By whose prayers opportunely

importunate, when on this hand the humility of our profession

for declining of presumption a note to oppose persuaded,

on that hand the charity of an internal hardening toward a neighbor

us would argue; of a more supereminent way the breadth

fear cast away considering, since that

which we are, that we live, that we are wise, all

to God and neighbor we owe; at last to the friend's pious desire

we acquiesced to satisfy.

[3] But when to these we to be fit despaired,

by the very our despair more robust, that he would do it he receives, to Him

forthwith hope we raised, who even the immense and brute

of the she-ass brayings, into sensate of human colloquy

distinguished modes. By His therefore strength of consideration

girded, we set about by God the author to narrate, what

concerning the life and miracles of B. Modoaldus the Pontiff, both from

the ancients' relation, and from authentic books

reading we could gather: in which of words

leaves are not to be sought, because of unfruitful

loquacity the levity in the sacred pages is restrained,

while in the temple of God through Moses a grove to be planted is forbidden. Deut. 16

This one indeed the way of sanctity from a boy having entered,

so far from virtue to virtue through spiritual

ascents he advanced, that according to the word's presage,

by which among men he was called Modoaldus, with

God he is named and is modo altus (now high). Whose sanctity

and nobility in so great of loftiness parity met,

that us by their very magnitude doubtful they render,

which of them in the exordium of the narration to the other we should prefer.

Because when for the most part in of this kind persons

nobility sanctity impedes, in this holy

man one of the other was said the ornament. But because

in this tempest perspicuous it is, nobility in all

businesses to excel, but private sanctity,

although to God and to the few faithful acceptable, by the sons however

of the world to be little esteemed; therefore of this most noble posterity

the line, if so much more prolix, the more diligent with a style

it be run through, we beseech the reader, lest the prolixity

he loathe, which of many contains the utility: which

also from grandfathers and parents to be begun, and more certainly

to be described by us would have been, unless the barbarous depopulation

to the of noble Gauls titles formerly had begrudged.

[4] It is reported for the barbarians' nation then through all

the borders of the Gauls of its fury the reins to have loosed, although they through the barbarians' incursions. divine and

human with equal abolition into contempt to have held, the cities

richest to have overthrown, the sanctuaries of God to have profaned, the illustrious

of men labors to have emptied, the monuments

of the Saints, the titles and names of the ancient

heroes altogether to have destroyed; no vestiges of the virtues,

no of the victory, no of the praise or probity

of our grandfathers to us to have left, all things with the sword

and conflagration to have exterminated. But above all

the cities, to so great subject overthrow, made as it were a widow

mistress of the nations, and of the Trier city's overthrow accurately cannot be had. with the Threnodies of Jeremiah to be lamented

was that metropolis glorious Trier, of cities

the noblest, which by the prerogative of dignity merited to be called

another Rome: in which when more abundantly had abounded

riches and glory, felicity and exultation, supervening

an extermination, more sharply redounded want and

desolation, grief and sadness: and so much in it more miserably

to be bewailed were of the ancient virtues the monuments,

the more damnably from many's profits

they were taken away. Where when of the ancient the records of exemplars

consumed the fire, and on account of this all of the old

genealogies the series abolished had been, it happened

also all of B. Modoaldus's back-acted parentage

so far to be subtracted from the posterity's memory, that from

what of consanguinity vein, although most noble, himself

and two sisters of his, Itta namely and Severa, descended,

or, that more truly I confess, ascended, not enough

certain we may have. But since the Lord,

who concerning the subjection of demons the vain of the disciples

joy corrects, admonishes concerning the heavenly of names inscription

rather to be rejoiced; let cease the fraternal

solicitude to complain of our pages to be wanting, whom

the works of justice in the book of eternal ascribe memory. Luc. 10

Let deign therefore to receive your Holiness this our

littleness's little gift, weigh and embrace in it

of only charity the affection: because although we may not seem

to have satisfied the fraternal utility, whatever little however

labor we have expended of friendship.

BOOK I.

The progeny of B. Pippin the Duke, and his wife: of whom a brother is reckoned S. Modoaldus.

[5] Among the principal and illustrious with the highest sanctity

and ingenuity men, S. Modoaldus from the Aquitanians sprung is said of whose faith, doctrine and

morals, signs and virtues, the holy shines Church

as the sun and moon; the man of venerable memory Modoaldus,

with a twin ingenuity not moderately distinguished,

from the illustrious of the Aquitanians stock, than the moon more beautiful, than the sun

more splendid, to the honor of God and the Church shone forth.

Of whose nobility the line, from what parents, from what

grandfathers or ancestors he descended, or from how worthy a root

so distinguished a tree came forth, although to us, on account of antiquity

or of the writers' abolition, less it be certain;

yet from kinsmen and relatives, in name,

glory and honor by land and sea most renowned, of whom

by virtue the public thing flourished, of whom the power the whole

world feared, of whose peace the Church rejoiced, of whose

triumphs it was exalted, both by document and by fame his lineage

unknown is not.

[6] For just as from a faithful a of the ancients tradition,

in whom is wisdom, and Brother of B. Itta certain we have; there was

a sister of his, b Itta by name, a woman very venerable,

and to God devoted in faith and works good. Who

indeed in matrimony joined to the most illustrious Duke c Pippin,

in lineage and wealth, and (which in the powerful so much

is wonderful, the more rare) by the sublimity namely of honors

and the humility of morals equally most noble, by divine

providence in all of piety study to herself unanimous to obtain

merited of the legal bed a consort. By whose

example that may learn the powerful to be humbled, who of empty

power are wont to glory, let them not disdain I beseech to hear,

what concerning his very husband's praises found, to this

work not unworthy I have judged usefully to insert. At the time,

in which the Duke excellent and most true father of the fatherland from human affairs

departed, so much d Austria whole with grief

struck, that to his mourning the mourning of Kings by no means

could be compared. For he was of a most approved

life and most pure fame, of wisdom a domicile, of counsels

a treasure, the defense of laws, of controversies

the end, the bulwark of the fatherland, the ornament of the court, the way of dukes

and the discipline of Kings. Let them hear therefore now the Dukes, of the most serene

Duke Pippin so many illustrious after his end

praises: let them understand the Kings his equity and

prudence, fortitude and temperance: who was the wife of B. Pippin let them be instructed

by his example the powerful, who judge the earth.

But if the wives of the nobles or even of Kings,

to whom familiar is wont to be elation, of the venerable Itta,

the wife of the aforesaid Prince, by the example would deign their mind

to apply; they could indeed weigh from that,

which strongly and holily she did under widowhood now free,

that devoted to God she lived under so great a husband's discipline.

[7] For while after the death of her pious consort, both

on account of the elegance of morals, and on account of the lineage's excellence, and who, her husband being dead, most holily lived,

or even on account of the manifold of estates

possessions and numerous family, by many and noble

suitors most studiously she was sought; she a second

avoiding matrimony, who the other of holy continence

palm to attain desired, by S. Amandus

Bishop of Maastricht, divinely to her directed, the sacred

veil and of holy religion habit undertook,

and the hope of nuptials from so many suitors foolish a wise

woman took away. Wonder all that she unhoped-for of her own

house the summits into a church changed, and the whole

of it appearance not into any suitor's love,

but to the heavenly Spouse's honor with of diverse kind ornaments

adorned; and herself reduced into the number

of the nuns, whom there for to serve

God by her example she had gathered, to obey rather humbly,

than to command. Let learn the matrons of this most noble

woman by the example, what to God, what to husbands

they owe: let learn also the widows, who with proud worship delighted,

triple and quadruple or even more matrimonies

with all study affect, nor with second ones even to acquiesce,

that the sixtieth of widow's continence fruit

with this one to God may study to render.

[8] But now the lineage and nobility of B. Modoaldus, that from

the children and grandchildren of his venerable sister, the more

truly, the more clearly may shine forth, let there be brought into the midst

three of the highest worthy memory children, whom to

the praise and honor of the holy Trinity to her pious consort

Pippin happily she brought forth: Grimoald namely, of the paternal

dignity and piety heir most worthy to the of the whole

kingdom firmament: as also their children, then two sisters of his

ornament of gems, to the heavenly Spouse's glory

and the Church holy's ornament and grace referring.

Of whom the brother illustrious Grimoald, while in the Palace

of Sigebert the paternal dignity by his probity had

attained, besides that which he flourished at home and in war the industry,

Grimoald the Mayor of the palace, a great also toward God of his devotion

he gave an indication. For those two illustrious monasteries,

which performed with pious solicitude, and adorned

with all beauty, made also there the legitimate of adjacent

lands and other possessions tradition,

to B. Remaclus, for to institute there the monastic

life, under a firm stipulation and the royal seal's impression

he delivered.

[9] But what concerning his sister most illustrious and to God

most devoted Gertrude should I say? S. Gertrude the Virgin, Should I praise in her the beauty,

the riches, the nobility, the family, which

all for Christ as dung she despised? Itself her praise

is, whom in the heavens a spouse she chose, whom in the flesh

placed with all devotion she loved. For she despised

a spouse to have on earth, who her would desert when

he died: and Him to herself she chose, with whom, because to die

He cannot, always she might rejoice. Him loving as a spouse,

adoring as the Lord, new houses, high palaces

on earth to construct she cared not, because a pleasant in

her virginity dwelling for Christ already she had prepared.

Whence both her lineage's name and glory magnificently

she increased, and also to her blessed uncle Modoaldus

immense conferred joy, while in the Church with a sweet

odor smelling, and as a necklace precious shining,

of virginity to be kept to her contemporaries so noble she left an example.

She therefore, with Him whom with so great charity

she loved the Spouse, so much more truly to reign now is believed,

the more often to all, who the place of her sepulture, which

among us flourishes, with humble devotion seek, very many

through her benefits are conferred.

[10] But indeed her sister venerable Begga, although a spouse

on earth, and S. Begga wife of Ansegisel: divine disposing providence, with fear

of God she consented to undertake; with a double however order of sanctity,

on this hand the thirtieth fruit of matronal chastity,

on that the sixtieth referring of widow's continence,

a double of beatitude palm she merited to obtain. Of whose

also sanctity pious among us shine the monuments,

in the place in which from divine revelation seven she constructed

churches, where also her body by the sacred of virgins

choirs is honored, who from her time by day and night

to God there serve. There also the Duke excellent

and her husband most pious, by name Ansegisel, by her

was buried; who by his foster-son, whom the same Duke

a boy by chance found, and from the sacred font received,

reared into a son and exalted, cruelly in a hunt was slain

on account of the appetite of his honor, which however

impious he obtained not. It is to be known,

that Ansegisel to have been the son of g B. Arnulph, from Mayor-of-the-palace

happily joined in matrimony, of generous offspring and of most noble

Kings the mother was.

[11] Of him indeed the son, by name Pippin, whom

to the aforesaid Duke she bore, Their descendants Pippin of Herstal, just as the name of his grandfather, so also the virtue

with dignity referring, dead the king Childeric, under

whom B. h Lambert with eminent shone sanctity, to such of greatness

grew and of power, that in all Austria, although

not with a royal name, with royal however he ruled power.

For many illustrious wars waging, of all

strongly he triumphed, and the very king of the Franks

Theodoric in war overcoming, into flight he turned: but also

B. Lambert, by the faction of the wicked from the Episcopate

cast out, Charles Martel, in his Chair most becomingly he relocated. And

that of so glorious offspring, which hence from the root of S. Arnulph,

thence from the kinship of B. Modoaldus came forth, strong

and illustrious deeds it may be permitted somewhat to behold, nay not

with small astonishment to admire; let us see i Charles, whom

the same Pippin to himself surviving, both of dignity

and of his virtue left heir, how the paternal

leaping over limits, the ancient of the fathers victories with new

exceeding, wonderful triumphs of Dukes and Kings,

of peoples and barbarous nations brought back.

For both the Saracens, three of their Kings slain,

unto internecion he poured forth, and their cities

most famous storming, unto the foundations overthrew.

Whence also the surname Tudetes, from striking (tundere)

he received, in that from the Slavs unto the Spaniards, so many

kingdoms, so many cities, so many camps and towns, both of the Saracens

and of the Christians, of an iron like hammer

striking, by propitious God, to have flown across is said rather

than overcome.

[12] Carloman But what concerning the sons of the same Charles, Carloman

namely and Pippin, should I say? of whom Carloman,

after very many wars and noble triumphs, the secular

deserting warfare, made a monk on the mount

of Cassino, to the heavenly warfare himself enslaved; but Pippin, and Pippin King of the Franks.

of his virtues by the merits growing, the first in this

stock the Royal name obtained? For when by the merit

of his prudence and virtue, acclaiming the Dukes and

peoples, first by S. Boniface Bishop of Mainz,

by the authority of Zacharias the Pope, into k a King

was consecrated; afterwards by Stephen the Pope, the successor

of Zacharias, because the Roman commonwealth from Aistulf's

the King of the Lombards incursions he defended, by the Apostolic

benediction, both himself and his wife and

children, in the kingdom perpetually was confirmed. Now at last,

if it pleases, let us come to that most glorious Emperor

who the paternal virtues than the rest more magnificently

increased, and to the royal name, which his father merited,

the Roman of the Empire name and dignity happily added. Charles the Great Emperor.

He is for, to whom on the day of the Lord's Nativity Leo the Pope

with the Apostolic benediction the Empire's crown imposed,

and by the whole of the Romans people thrice was acclaimed:

To Charles Augustus, by God crowned, the great and

peaceful Emperor of the Romans, life and victory.

His name and glory, virtue and victory, through so great

times still as it were recent, by the mouth of all with

so great study and admiration is celebrated, that if the letter

be silent, fame alone as if to live is believed.

[13] But indeed concerning his son Louis what worthy

to relate could I? Louis the Pious Emperor. who after his father's death the Imperial

scepters, as no one more worthily, undertaking, besides the rest,

which in war strongly he did, the greatest of his piety monuments

exhibited. For to do justices, and the oppressions

of the churches or of the peoples to relieve, legates

fit into all the provinces of his kingdom sending,

whatever to be corrected he could find, to correct

and to amend wisely he took care. But also, what more

in the Imperial dignity thou wouldst be astonished, of all things, which

publicly amiss he did, by Theodosius Augustus's example,

a public did penance. What also concerning

Lothair, of this Louis the son, should I say, of whose power

it was, or what of humility an example to posterity

he left? Himself the elder by birth, Lothair Emperor. greater in virtue and

empire, dividing the kingdom with two brothers

Charles and Louis, m the kingdom, which hitherto from

his name is called, obtained, and also

all the kingdoms of Italy with the very Roman city Augustus

Emperor obtained. Who also of the paternal religion

heir being, after very many both wisely

and strongly done things, the kingdom to his sons divided; and the world being left

to the holy conversation's habit undertaken,

in this monastic profession the course of life happily

consummated.

[14] But now considered of these the power and nobility,

what beyond so many Charleses and Pippins, so many

Lothairs or Louises, and other Kings and Emperors,

who from this glorious stock unto our

were poured times, is it necessary to commemorate,

since from these, whom we have enumerated, and others, the illustrious

of B. Modoaldus ingenuity than light more clearly shines forth?

This only in the sum of our narration

to have said let it suffice, of no stock, which we may know,

so illustrious and so noble a germ

of Kings to have sprouted, who so much of power to the Gallic

kingdom added, and so many and so wonderful

triumphs of Dukes and Kings and barbarous nations

brought back, helping them and protecting

the Divine mercy, of His Saints Modoaldus

and Arnulph by the merits as we believe; of whose affinity

so great a stock to have fructified we know. Lastly,

how much of religion, of power, and of honor

to the Gallic they conferred Churches, These to the Churches of the Gauls conferred manifold good things. testify the books, the holy

decrees of the Fathers containing, which they themselves in Synods

by their authority corroborated: testify also the Churches,

which both with of diverse kind ornaments, then

also with estates and royal their things, camps namely and counties,

tolls, mints and bans, with the right of cities

granted, magnificently they exalted, lest the holy

of God Church to this world's powerful should lie subject, or

by their tyranny should be afraid; nay the proud's necks,

by God's virtue superior, should trample. Hence it is, that nowhere

among the nations of equal power Pontiffs to be found

can be, or that from the Royal county and opulence little

they differ.

[15] Whom certainly blessed to be I would say, if for this

power more holily they lived, if for this opulence richer

in virtues to be they studied; if a good work, not

dignity, they sought; if gains, not of monies, but

of souls they sought; if upon the needy and poor

benignly they understood; if sobriety, if justice, if

humility following, in all things, as becomes a Bishop,

irreprehensible themselves they exhibited. which that they well use the Bishops wishes the author. But, what

very grave is, while certain of them from of honor sublimity

swell, while of temporal gain by the love

of souls the damages they postpone, while their own seeking

justice except for coins they do not, while the ecclesiastical

gifts freely they bestow not, while the sound of bronze

more sweetly than the cry of the poor they hear, while the secular

warfare more than God's Church they love,

thence elated the Pontiffs God displease, whence the Emperors

humble God pleased. And how unworthy

it is, that in the hearts of the Emperors should reign humility

of morals, and in the mind of the Pontiffs the vanity of vices:

while in those familiar is wont to be elation, and in these

friendly ought to be religion? But whither from this work

alien tends the oration? Such things to Jerome or B.

Gregory let us leave; we moreover the begun things better

let us pursue. And since the exterior of B. Modoaldus

nobility, from the most noble and manifold offspring

of his venerable sister, sufficiently openly we have shown; in

the following volume of his mind the ingenuity, from the life

and conversation of him most holy, to declare let us try;

by the merits of him him himself to us inspiring, in whom

we are signed in the day of our redemption.

ANNOTATIONS.

a. Would that

these ancient authors he had cited, perhaps some of those still

would be found, from whom concerning the things related we should be made more certain and

more secure.

BOOK II.

The deeds and death of S. Modoaldus.

[16] Therefore the glorious and venerable Modoaldus, while

of most illustrious he was sprung birth, S. Modoaldus by the nobility of lineage not inflated, the nobility

itself of the flesh, by the more worthy of the mind nobility knowing he knew not;

nor of his parents the riches or power, but

the humility of Christ and the poverty Evangelical,

which he might imitate, already from a boy, but not boyishly,

he attended to. Finally not wantonness boyish, not vanity

or ambition secular in his studies in any way

appeared: so that in the boy a divine already thou couldst

admire grace, which him a vessel of election to itself in future

foresaw. For when to liberal studies and

spiritual disciplines to be instructed he was delivered by

his parents, who him tenderly loved; the boy learns letters and piety. so great in a brief

time he attained of the twin science the efficacy,

that all in glory he went before, and yet to all from affection

dear he was. No one indeed through swelling despising,

nay through the humility of his heart all to himself

preferring, obsequy, which begets friends, piously to all

to exhibit, to no one an injury to inflict; nay rather having received

an injury to forgive, than to persecute to prefer; but also

the inflicter for Christ to love as a brother, to embrace

as a friend. Thus Christ's little recruit envy by virtue

overcame. And lest perchance virtue conceived by sloth or

leisure should grow lukewarm, the tender age by no means to spare; not

his members to rest, not his mind to inertia or cowardice

to give; but always either to sacred reading, or to pious meditation

to serve. With those playing he did not mix himself,

but either to the tutor of discipline, or to of the elders the words diligent

he adhered; that from the mouth of them hanging, how

sweet is the Lord he might taste, and afterwards the memory

of the abundance of His sweetness to the edification

of many he might belch forth. Inasmuch as he, according to the purpose

of God's vocation, to the highest summit of the degree

Sacerdotal, and to the pastoral care of the Lord's sheepfold

was to be promoted; already with such virtues' studies,

with such of holy institutions rudiments,

under the heavenly mastery he grew up; already by the finger of God

to the good shepherd's office he was informed and advanced.

[17] But indeed so illustrious of the recruit of Christ adolescence

when into virile strength it began to grow, the virtues growing with age when

the studies being changed, the age and mind virile seeks wealth

and friendships, serves honor; he himself from the former intention

his mind by no means diverted: but to the of stronger warfare

studies himself manfully girding, the degrees of age by the degrees

of diverse virtues sublimely he transcended.

Not secular to enter friendships, or wealth to gather

he sought about to perish. Not in honors with the ambitious,

not in sublimity with the proud; but with the strenuous in virtue,

with the modest in modesty, with the innocent in simplicity,

with the meek in patience, with the abstinent in parsimony,

with the pious in charity and mercy he contended. Thou wouldst see

him with frequent fastings and vigils the voluptuousness

of the flesh to break, for honors with his own abjection

to be delighted, poverty for riches to embrace, to the assembly

of nobles the consortia of the servants of Christ and of the humble

to prefer: whence his mind either about the church,

or toward the poor's care always occupied

was. And when in his breast already long ago kindled

had grown the flame of heavenly desire, no leisure,

no rest he suffered, that to leisure and rest of divine

contemplation he might come. the contemplative life he chooses, Wherefore all

of the flesh affections, all of the world occupations

from the foundations from himself he decreed to extirpate, desiring to glory

with the Apostle saying; To me the world is crucified,

and I to the world. Gal. 6, 14 The solitude, which John and

Paul with the beasts in the desert, this one deliberates to spend

for himself in himself. There with himself he proposes to dwell, there

the of secular cares uproar being trodden down, removed from his mind

of earthly phantasies of thoughts, to Him alone, who

is beautiful in form above the sons of men, into whom

also desire the Angels to look, with a free of mind

gaze he strives perpetually to adhere. He Him into

his, with virtues' flowers adorned, as in a little bed,

prefers to receive and to embrace with conscience, that he may be able

with the spouse to rejoice and to say; Behold thou fair

art, my beloved, and comely: our little bed flowery. Cant. 1, 15

[18] But behold as if from ambushes very many to his intention

contrary he sees from this world to grow up, the objected impediments he overcomes:

on this hand of secular care of businesses, on that of the illustrious

frequency of neighbors: which while unexpectedly

his mind they impugn, from of this little bed the rest and

his beloved's sweetness unwilling they rouse. Wherefore

more remote to himself places to seek, and from of these uproar

himself to conceal in all ways he labors: that

the more secretly, the more freely of the most beautiful and to himself

beloved Rachel the embraces he may be able to adhere.

Whose sister, namely Leah, although fruitful, yet

blear-eyed and less seeing he despises, lest his mind so much

into divine contemplation less to tend it should be able,

the more sons from the labor of preaching

he should generate. But Rachel fair, well seeing,

although barren, with all affection he covets: in whose

love so much more sweetly under silence he would rest, the more

to generating by the labor of preaching sons less

he should go out. But because it is not in a man's power

his way, unwilling to the Palace he serves but against hope and vow often from the Lord

his steps are directed; B. Modoaldus, to Leah laborious

in the night of this life unwilling is joined, while to the Chief men

of the kingdom and the Mayors of the Palace, as useful in word,

provident in counsel, by divine providence, although struggling

a companion is summoned. There shone at that time in

the Palace men most strenuous and the same most religious: among

whom eminent was Pippin, of Carloman the son,

and Sigebert most powerful Kings: of whose

praises the proclamations because in the upper little book briefly

we have touched, now where the matter requires, concerning his counsel

and equity, prudence and fortitude a little more broadly

let us discuss.

[19] At that tempest Dagobert of affairs was master,

under whom the same Duke with a dignity, with Pippin the Duke a little from the sublimity

royal differing, endowed, all the kingdom's businesses

with a most prudent disposition ordered, and was excellent

both in war by fortitude, and by justice in peace.

For he was toward the King of faith most keeping, toward

the people indeed most tenacious of equity: and in disputing

of each one's cause with a most strong of mind judgment

persisting, neither the gifts of the people for overthrowing

the right Royal regarded, nor the favor of the King

for overwhelming the people's justice attended.

Inasmuch as the King God to the King man he preferred,

by whose command forbidden he knew, the countenance of the powerful

to honor, or the person of the poor in judgment to attend. Levit. 19

So therefore what of the people were, to the people he defended; under Dagobert the King

both what of Caesar, to Caesar he restored. By such of this

Duke industry and counsel Dagobert with such of celebrity

splendor shone, that by liberality, justice,

meekness and other arts, by which a King it became,

many before himself Kings he excelled. But this royal

way, this of virtue line he held, as long as the sound

doctrine of his most wise preceptor he sustained, and not

to his desires he heaped up for himself masters. Eccl. 6 Happy, if,

according to the wise man's admonitions, of a thousand peaceful

his this one he had chosen counselor. But at last

by Solomon's example was depraved his heart for a time

through women: and as is wont in a great of things abundance

and loosed liberty prone to be into the consent of sin

the nature of mortals, on account of the riches' affluence and

prosperous of things successes from the good and honest into

the depraved drawn away, to the salubrious admonitions ears he shut.

He began therefore both with avarice and lust to seethe, with the things

of the Churches new treasures to fill: of whose impudence

while Pippin by grief moved with a most free

mouth rebuked, reproaching that to the greatest of God benefits

ungrateful he existed; he to obscene lusts

rather than to sound obeying counsels, attempted

rather after the manner of a frenetic the physician by whatsoever mode

to extinguish, than from of his depravity the fury to recover his senses.

But the benign Lord, who whom to save He has decreed,

now from evils frees, now also the innocent saves, and

the pious Duke from the peril of death powerfully rescued, and

the malevolent King from the effusion of just blood mercifully

recalled. For with a sounder counsel reckoning

of his dignity the state to be shaken, if a man noble,

powerful, by faith and justice to the populace acceptable

he should slay; little by little his mind he turned back, and began

the excellent Duke untouched to revere, that the conceived

malice into peace and favor he might change.

[20] Which the most wise Duke not to his industry,

but to the divine ascribing mercy, and with Arnulph Bishop of Metz and Cunibert Bishop of Cologne, so much more in

the manner of the holy animal, eyes before and behind having,

studied in all things himself prudently to act, to the divine

justice's line all of his judgments sentences

to direct. But because of the holy Scriptures'

science less learned he was, prudent every men,

whom in the fear and love of God he knew to have grown,

of all counsels or of his businesses

companions he assumed. For both Arnulph of the people of Metz

the Pontiff, who before the Pontificate this same dignity

irreprehensibly had administered; and afterwards,

he dead, B. a Cunibert of the people of Cologne

the Prelate, with equal of sanctity fame illustrious, into

this of businesses administration he took care to apply

a participant. Thou canst weigh, with what of equity ardor

inflamed he was, who such circumspect guardians,

and such incorrupt arbiters for his counsels chose.

Because for from depravity averse, to right and honest studies

most attentive he was, in the exercise of good work of holy

men always he used the counsels. In whose

number while the Blessed also Modoaldus,

not so much indeed for his sister's affinity, as of him

prudence and of eminent virtue brightness, divine preceding

grace, to himself a companion he had received; so great of equity and

of sanctimony with comeliness that hall Royal everywhere shone,

as with light the darkness being put to flight the dawn the lands all

suffuses, while by the sun supervening's rays it is illuminated.

But now to be estimated cannot, with how great gladness

of the King himself and of the Nobles, or with what honor received;

with what reverence, with what affection among all the courtiers, pleasing to the King and to the Nobles.

as an Angel of God, he was held. But what wonder,

whom God Himself loved, if by men he were loved?

or whom had filled His grace, if to all

most pleasing he were held? What wonder, who to the hall Royal

a cause of gladness and of honor was about to be, if by all

the courtiers with gladness and honor he were received? Justly

for honorable I would call the hall Royal, by right happy the

commonwealth, to which God so great gave a man,

by whose doctrine and example the King and Nobles

both to wisdom and religion should study, and wisely

and religiously all the kingdom's businesses should dispose. But how

him to promote, or of him the merit to declare

the Divine providence decreed, by the subsequent

narration than light more clearly will be clear.

[21] Meanwhile the venerable Prelate, b Sebaudus

of the Church of Trier, from human affairs departed: to whom

a successor not unequal in sanctity while by all with

all affection is sought, he is sought for Bishop of Trier: God's grace procuring and

by certain indications presignifying, this one far most worthy is found.

For wherever thou turn thyself, Modoaldus's fame

most renowned through the mouths of all resounds, Modoaldus's

name like oil poured forth with a sweet odor everywhere is fragrant,

Modoaldus's sanctity with diffused rays far and wide

than the sun more brightly shines again. Him all thou wouldst see to behold, to attend to,

to admire: him some to others with the finger to point out,

him all in common the small with the greater

chance, nor by of human industry the ingenium, but by a hidden

was done counsel of the disposition of God: who just as formerly

David, so also this one to himself according to His heart had sought, who

a leader should be made over His people, and should feed the flock

of His sheep. But nevertheless of his sanctity the testimony

lest from the popular breeze, praised in a certain epitaph or from our only page

be expected; there is shown even today at Trier in

the church of S. Paulinus, from his sepulchre taken,

and wondrously sculptured of Parian marble a tablet; in which is read

inscribed to his memory in generation and generation

to be transmitted, of this kind an epitaph:

This is the sanctuary of God beloved of Trier the Archbishop

Modoaldus, whose King Dagobert the sanctity,

as in his precept c concerning Trier is contained,

between the Loire and the Rhine magnificently exalted

and dilated.

[22] And so there concur equally of all the vows, the King

and the Duke that most equitable Pippin, and other Nobles,

the Clergy and people, every sex and age with unanimous

cry out consonance; Modoaldus the Pontiff, not

so much they elect, as by God already long ago elected, and

to themselves promised, he strives to subterfuge the Episcopate: they demand. What should do the man most holy?

What, except that which became an imitator of Christ?

what, except that which did his predecessors, Prelates

most holy, who not from elsewhere, but through the door entered

into the sheepfold of Christ? Fled Christ, when Him they would

sake, when to undertake they were called the Pastoral

summit of governance. By whose example Modoaldus

flees, himself unworthy professes: cries out, and to be compelled

merits. Nor however anyone so should think the man

holy to have declined, that to the divine will, which toward

himself he had understood, more obstinately he had decreed to go against: but

on each side humble, on each side subject, both to be over,

first himself measuring, he was unwilling; and yet, of the commanding

God's strength presuming, afterwards he consented.

Inasmuch as in one his breast as if fought

two of virtues the greatest, on this hand the fear of humility,

on that the love of charity. From humility, that honor

and burden he fled: moreover from charity, to the desolate

citizens to have succored now he desired. This the love

persuades, that the fear forbids. Between these two, to each other

repugnant, Christ's soldier first having hesitated, with a doubtful

somewhat clung opinion: at last consenting he is consecrated. but a little after, as

equitable it was, both charity conquered humility, and love

outside sent fear. So the man of God conquered

they snatch, lead away, that they may exalt him in the church of the people,

and in the chair of the elders praise him. He is clothed therefore

with the stole of glory, is girded with the zone of justice, with divine benedictions

Archbishop of the Church of Trier is consecrated.

Good Jesus! how great was the gladness of that day?

what exultation to each sex? what dancing to every

age? With how devout a heart, with how sublime a voice

all with praises redoubled Angelic, Glory

in the highest to God, and on earth peace to men of good

will?

[23] To consider now it pleases, what was that time,

how acceptable, how serene, when Kings

indeed reigning, but the Kings with the kingdom by just

and God-fearing men ruling, justice, faith, truth,

modesty, and the rest of arts good, both in war and

in peace, were kept: when to the line of equity

divine all of the Royal power's businesses were directed.

What, how holy was that palace?

from which so illustrious, and so renowned received the Church

Priests; from which proceeded followers,

not of Simon, but of Peter; not hirelings, but true ministers

of Christ; and who the courts of Kings should not seek, it shines with SS. Arnulph, Cunibert, and Remaclus:

but rather by Kings should be sought; not themselves honors

through ambition should desire, but rather the offered through

humility should flee. From whose number (for there were

very many) was Arnulph of Metz, Cunibert

of Cologne, of Tongres d Remaclus, of Trier

our Modoaldus, to these and all others with every of virtues

kind to be compared. These are plainly, these are

men holy and friends of God, by whose faith and sanctimony

the Church was corroborated, by doctrine illustrated,

by humility sublimated, by charity founded, by virtues made joyful.

Then certainly reverence was bestowed on religion, love

on modesty, honor on virtue. Then ambition blind, with a lethal

pierced wound, moribund lay: avarice, greedy

always of money, its strengths utterly had lost: of injustice

moreover, of lust, and the rest of evil arts already

it was lamented (all over). But indeed in our tempest of this

of serenity face wholly was changed, when, according to

the Truth's eloquence, abounding iniquity, grew cold

the charity of many: in which in perverse modes justice,

faith, truth, laws, divine and human all things, in hand,

in favor, in tongue are situated: and that briefly I conclude,

according to that historian's sentence, no honor

to virtue is given, but all of virtue the rewards ambition

possesses. Matt. 24, 12 From which what evils follow, what

of Churches Rectors, what of Provinces Judges,

how great of Churches calamity, what of crimes impunity,

too much, too much we have experienced. And so

complaining we are compelled to exclaim: O times!

O morals!

[24] Modoaldus therefore, in the house of the Lord and in

the courts of our God planted, as a palm flourished, and

as a cedar of Lebanon was multiplied. For just as a palm

verdant and into the high tending, by faith's verdure and life's altitude

to the profit of the Church flourished; and as a cedar

of Lebanon was multiplied, while by the odor of holy conversation

every venom of the serpent ancient from his subjects

he expelled; while also with much of virtues whiteness whitened,

through the altitude of contemplation to the heavenly

he flew. Inasmuch as on occasion of Pastoral care, with manifold

of good works exercise so far himself he studied

to renew, that then first thou wouldst think him to begin. To

whose praise should say another, whatever to his mind had occurred, with illustrious adorned virtues,

his spirit namely to the heavenly perpetually adhering;

with indefatigable him prayers occupied, days with fastings,

nights to have continued with vigils he would discourse; rightly and

orderly concerning the single virtues, concerning benignity, concerning

parsimony, concerning the mind's purity he would pour forth in praising,

whatever of ingenium, whatever of eloquence ever

he had drawn. But this orderly narration

forestalls us the supereminent merit of the most excellent

Prelate, who so all these virtues had, that

in the single ones he was eminent; so in the single ones he was eminent, that in

all equally he shone.

[25] But meanwhile those being omitted, which in the interior man,

God only being witness and His holy Angels, he worked

is; the care toward his subjects, who even that solicitude, by which a Father most vigilant

his subjects presided over, worthily could explain?

Whom with so great of teaching perfection, with so great of mastery

art by informing he instructed, that as that

prophetic table within the rim he turned back, that is, to

the heart the discourse he recalled, what he spoke he attended to,

he worked what he preached. Finally the word

of doctrine by the work commending of mercy, so toward

the interior of his subjects studies he was fervent, so far as to them

of the exterior life the providence he should not deny; lest if

the care of the exterior life by him were neglected, as if by right from

receiving the preaching of the flock the mind should be broken.

For because Peter's vicar over to Peter committed sheep watched,

that general his exhortation, as

to himself specially given, solicitously he attended to: The Elders,

who among you are, I beseech a fellow-elder and a witness

of the passions of Christ, and of the future glory, which to be revealed

is, a partaker: feed, who among you is, the flock

of God, not from necessity, but with will toward God: and,

When shall have appeared the Prince of the Shepherds, you will receive the unfading

of glory crown. Ioan. 21, 1 Pet. 5

[26] But now when mitred, as a Pontiff

supreme, he entered into the holy of holies, about to pray for

the people's salvation, and with pious amid Sacrificing devotion. for ignorance or some necessity;

so through the single species of the Sacerdotal habit to single

he answered virtues, that as many exteriorly with sacred he was adorned

vestments, so many interiorly his soul with spiritual

was clothed ornaments. Thou wouldst believe in his mind, as

in Aaron's breast, the rational of judgment by binding fillets

to be imprinted, while his heart by no means a flowing thought

should possess, but reason alone spiritually should constrain:

for neither indiscreet anything or useless to think could he,

who to an example for others constituted, from the gravity

of his life always to show studied, how great in his breast

a reason he bore. Exod. 28 In which also rational the twelve

of the Patriarchs names described thou wouldst think, while the examples

of the preceding Fathers unceasingly to behold, and

the Saints' vestiges without cessation thou wouldst see him to imitate,

lest perchance outside of the sacred Order's limit of work the foot

he should tend, if from their subtle examination or of discretion

the reason in any mode he should deviate. And because it is commanded

to Moses, that the tabernacle entering, with little bells

he be encircled, that from it a sound of sweetness be heard;

he ceased not the sound of preaching as if from little bells

frequently to emit, while of the supernal beholder

the judgment from silence he feared to offend. With such

therefore and so great of divine adornment comeliness the Pontiff holy,

entering the tabernacle of the covenant, and a host

of a contrite and humbled heart to God offering in an odor

of sweetness, so by his vows the divine conciliated

clemency, that as if with Moses he merited to hear:

I will do according to thy word. For because according to

the word of God innocently he lived, and of His commandments

not a deaf hearer, nor a sluggish

executor he was; therefore the merciful God according to

His word to have done we believe, as often as for

the salvation of his subjects pious before Him prayers humbly

he poured forth. Exod. 33

[27] Meanwhile when of his house the comeliness he loved, and

to render worthy to the Creator praises with most ardent

always love he burned, a monastery of Virgins he builds: upon the bank of the Moselle an oratory

in honor of B. Symphorianus e the Martyr he built,

in work indeed small; and of artificial scheme

with comeliness less ambitious: but, what more noble

is, with most illustrious of virtues gems and most beautiful

of virginal whiteness pearls, much more splendid

and remarkable, than was that most famous

of Solomon temple, with gold and silver and so many wondrous

polished devices. There indeed a congregation

of holy Virgins, as sweet-sounding of young girls

choirs, in the nuptials of Christ and the Church

perpetually praises singing, he instituted, concerning whom

the spouse in the praises of the bridegroom seems that in the Canticles

to say: Oil poured forth thy name, and over it he sets S. Severa, his sister, therefore the young girls

have loved thee. Cant. 1, 2 To whom also for of regular

vigor the discipline to be kept, his sister he set over,

by name Severa; who according to of her name

the presage and convenience, with the worthy of a presiding

mind severity the bond of the flesh, wealth, glory and

all things which about to perish she knew, with her very nobility

and of body appearance, which by worms to be eaten was, to be little esteemed

judging, her virginity to Christ

undefiled had offered. In whose faith and love the virginal

battle-line, which for the Spouse she had gathered, both with maternal

piety and with mistress's severity confirming, all

to them of holy institution the diligence she exhibited.

Nothing of her severity more joyous, nothing of her joy

more severe: her gladness sad, her sadness sweet: uncultivated

garment, eyes cast down, head inclined, gait grave,

food thin; so indeed, that since all things to God worthy

she did, nothing however worthy herself to have done she believed, and her companions

more by examples she taught than by words. Nor

was lacking to her of her venerable brother the assiduous consolation, who

in the manner of bronze glowing burning with desire, sounding

in word, through sparks of sacred exhortation the mind

of the Virgin to the love of God more strongly should kindle, and, as

they say, oil to the furnace should add. Benedict and Scholastica

thou wouldst believe: the same desire, not unequal zeal,

the same toward of God the cult devotion in these

thou wouldst see. Him not a master, but a disciple thou wouldst think:

her not a mistress, but a handmaid humble

thou wouldst esteem: except that so much more he a servant, she

a handmaid of Christ was, that each toward their subjects not

to lord, but to minister seemed. Of whom the worthy

of faith and labor remuneration because now the time

is to narrate, of the most prudent Virgin's vocation,

just as in time it preceded, so our it precede by narration

let us make.

[28] Who while the voice of the Spouse calling she heard and

saying, Come from Lebanon, my Spouse, come from Lebanon,

come, thou shalt be crowned; she nothing delaying, with a pious

answered affection: I to my beloved, and to me the conversion

of him. Cant. 4, 8, Cant. 7, 10 And straightway having followed the calling one, with a lamp

kindled and adorned with the oil of an excellently shining conscience,

with worthy was with honor by Him received, and

into that ethereal bridal chamber with much of the Saints

exultation introduced. f In which at last, what

long she had desired, happily placed, among the most sweet

of her beloved Spouse she rests embraces; there holily having died: and to the most splendid

of the daughters of Sion bands joined, with delights

most blessed perennial she is delighted. Whose most sacred

body, with virginal surrounded choirs, with virginal

bewailed laments, with psalms and hymns

spiritual with much honor in the church of the abovesaid

Martyr, over which with the highest strenuousness she presided, most officiously

was laid up. O truly blessed and venerable Virgin,

who for a mortal spouse an immortal chose, who

for a clayey house a heavenly bridal chamber exchanged!

Truly blessed and glorious, who for a brief labor with eternal

beatitude enjoys, for the vain of histrions songs

by the sweet of Angels concert is made joyful. These things

concerning the life and passage of the most illustrious virgin in few we have tasted:

for neither just it was, both for of her

merits, and for the honor and reverence of her excellent brother,

the memory and praise of her to pass over, of whom

rejoice the Angels and praise together the Son of God. Now

moreover, how the most blessed Pontiff his most beloved

sister to the prize of perpetual brightness afterwards

followed, according to the style's measure let us pursue.

[29] After the happy of his most holy sister passage, the distinguished

athlete Modoaldus, and of the eternal King a soldier now

a veteran, all of a most just life studies with a best end

composed, to whose memory to the reward and palm of felicity eternal

he began more ardently to pant, to which his sister

with exultation of the Angels translated himself he knew

to have preceded. He rejoiced indeed for the glory and beatitude

of his sister, but for his own still as if imperfection

he grieved. Inasmuch as himself imperfect, himself unhappy,

himself miserable, himself slow and lukewarm he judged;

whom, the girls to the kingdom preceding, the mass of the flesh

still in the world retained. he himself humbly concerning himself thinks: What we, says he,

miserable ones, what now concerning ourselves are we about to say, who in girls

so great constancy, so incredible labor,

so wondrous abstinence we see? We in the members

of the body men are, and yet effeminate nothing virile,

nothing of praise worthy we perform. Many often

strong things with a virile mind we propose, but with a small labor

broken, from the purpose more quickly we recoil. Such things indeed

the man holy relating, humble concerning himself thought, who

by right and without any boasting to glory could with

the Apostle, a good himself fight to have fought, the course

to have consummated, the faith to have kept; of the rest reposited

for himself a crown of justice, which in that day by a just to himself

Judge to be rendered he trusted. 2 Tim. 4, 7 Whence when from of faith and

works security and of hope certitude a worthy now

he could discharge to demand, yet as if still many

in himself to be reproved were, with new and sharper torments

devised, of himself a punishment he took; and himself against himself

a cruel exactor persecuted, in that now as it were last

age, which assuredly not so much by nature,

as he himself by continuous labors urging had accelerated.

[30] Meanwhile Christ's soldier indefectible, of his now

impatient rest, by a wondrous art of warfare, a recruit daily

renewed for the fight: but the King immortal

and of the highest equity Judge a worthy to His soldier wove

in the heavenly a crown. When therefore under a grievous of body

labor by day and night he sweated, and with all of mind

desire above himself to the heavenly he was snatched, now desiring

into that most beloved and inestimable of the supernal

city court to enter, those hymn-singing of Angels

choirs to be present at, and twice and thrice not without admiration

crying out, How beloved thy tabernacles

thine O Lord of hosts! divinely he learns his death imminent. My soul covets and faints

into the courts of the Lord; by a pious at last consolation

divinely is refreshed, and of the expectation of his near death

and of the reward's security forewarned is certified. Psalm. 83 Then

indeed suddenly he is changed into a certain deific and incredible

of an exhilarated heart gladness, and the disciples being convoked

while his death's day glad and hour cheerful he expounds,

the minds of all with a sad grief wounded he renders.

Nor wonder indeed, the man holy of

the certitude of his passage so great to have conceived gladness,

to whom a pure and happy conscience testimony bore,

of Christ's family the measure of wheat in his time faithfully

himself to have distributed, and the committed money with a twin

interest multiplied, to his now Lord to carry back,

whom most vigilant awaiting, prepared he was to the knocking

forthwith to open. Who when now he desired to be dissolved

and with Him to be, now of the flesh forgetful and with all spirit into

heaven suspended, he afflicts his weak body with failing members, as if now renewed

new he studied to superadd torments, himself

more than usually to persecute, and the very little, which remained,

of vital heat to extinguish. To whose most ardent

labor when also the molestation of the body from the vow of the mind

had acceded, not in spirit, but in members failing, the strong

athlete on the bed lay down. Nor however therefore himself more

to spare, not on soft beds to lie down, by disease

than by food more to be delighted: inasmuch as virtue

to be perfected in infirmity, to testify. And when the assisting

disciples weeping suggested, that to the failing little body

a little he should have mercy: Do not, says he,

the spirit to God about to go by a fomentation of the flesh impede,

to which namely then a greater mercy is bestowed, when

with the spirit overcoming it is mortified.

[31] With such of spirit fervor the father most loving the languor's

molestation surpassing, and his soul to his Redeemer

with the Angelic choirs awaiting to render

longing, his men meanwhile piously consoled, and the very

residue and scarcely in his mouth palpitating of life motion, he exhorts his men: to the doctrine

and admonition of his sons wholly imparted.

Of faith's integrity, of the commandments of God the diligent

meditation, of religion's love, of the memory of death,

of the coming of the strict Judge a certain of a living voice

efficacy his tongue dying, openly however, expressed.

And when many he saw panting to run together,

on this hand the Clerics grieving, on that the monks weeping,

the poor also widows and orphans

with much wailing crying out; the tears of all forbidding,

he said them to rejoice rather to ought, inasmuch

as who a father did not lose, but happily to God

sent before. And so the hour drawing near, brought

the life-giving of Christ Sacraments, prayer being premised,

he partakes: and his beloved sons with a glad countenance kissing,

to the supreme Father with a votive of peace and salvation imprecation

often commends. Then indeed from the earthly his eyes

casting away, and the fellow-citizens of Angels and Saints

choirs to be present feeling; with his whole little body to meet

the beloved army himself he raises, his hands and eyes into

heaven extends, and with the Cross's little sign twice and thrice himself

signing, his splendid head into the hands of the Savior

he reclined, and amid the words of prayer falling asleep,

in peace rested. O blessed man, whom

that heavenly Jerusalem rejoicing received! to whom

to be conducted the King Himself of Kings Christ, with an Angelic

company surrounded, advanced! to whom Mary with of Virgins

choirs ran to meet! signing himself with the Cross he dies. Peter also with of Apostles

the number, Symphorianus with of Martyrs the choir,

Eucharius g with the holy Confessors and the whole of heaven

militia, in hymns and praises blessing the Lord,

who with such a peer, so illustrious a Pontiff their

augmented college.

[32] Meanwhile the sacred funeral after the custom is composed,

and by the surrounding of those chanting choir now

with pious tears is bewept, now with psalms and hymns

is honored. Whose to Christ happy and free passage, with the mourning of all he is buried:

just as with a festive joy to the supernal citizens it was,

so the whole nearly Austria with an excessive a certain and inconsolable

grief shook: whence the whole nearly

province to of so great a Father the obsequies panted, nor only

from cities or towns, but also from villages a crowd

of rustics mournful to the funeral ran to meet. A multitude

indeed of the poor especially flowing together, old men

bent, the weak by a staff sustained, widows with scattered

hair, orphans with torn garments, all equally lamenting,

and from the bier hanging, their Father, who

them to clothe, to console, to feed was wont, with a voice

lamentable they complained themselves to have lost. With these familiar

bearers heaven with their cry striking, the most dear

body into the beloved to him church is conveyed,

which above we said by him founded, and in

honor of B. Symphorianus the Martyr dedicated: in which

also, not without grave groaning and many tears

of his men, as became so great a Pontiff, with

his beloved sister to the earth is committed. Which indeed to have been done

we believe by divine preordaining grace, that

whom the same devotion, the same of Christ charity, the same

affection, not so much of blood as of spirit had joined,

while they acted in the flesh; the same also of sepulture

place, the place, I say, which this one devoutly

constructed, she faithfully ruled, should join

in death. Where in testimony of his sanctity, it shines with miracles,

so many and so great miracles daily to coruscate are seen,

that now at last more truly with Christ to live he is believed.

To live, I say, to live most certainly is proved, through whose

merit by God Himself, who the salvation and life is of all,

to all faithfully asking many of salvation and life benefits

are bestowed. And indeed most renowned is held even today

at Trier, and by certain indications found, by the sanctity

and merits of Modoaldus to all the around region salvation

frequently from God conceded, if ever by of divine

vengeance animadversion, or air's inclemency, or

by famine or sword, or of any adversity tribulation

pressing on, the patronage of him the inhabitants faithfully

implore. Whence a father and a singular refuge of the miserable

by the citizens he is called; and his deposition

on the fourth of the Ides of May, with the greatest devotion and festive

of the whole region exultation, to the praise and glory

of the divine majesty is celebrated. and festively is venerated. We beseech therefore, that

B. Modoaldus's most renowned among men piety, and

with God omnipotent efficacious power, our

also miseries may have compassion on, the cords of sins may break asunder,

and in that beloved and desirable in the heavens tabernacle

an eternal for us mansion may obtain, granting

our Lord Jesus Christ, who with the Father

and the Holy Spirit lives and reigns, through the immortal ages

of ages. Amen.

ANNOTATIONS.

BOOK III.

The miracles by S. Modoaldus after his death wrought.

[34] Since, inspiring God, the noble of B. Modoaldus

stock, from the highest of royal blood

line produced, The miracles confirm the infirm. in the first of this work little book we have elucidated;

in the second his life laudable and by few

imitable, by which to God dear and to men venerable

he was, to all royal nobility we have preferred,

and his passage glorious to the Angelic choirs joy

to have brought we have discoursed; now already in the third not

from the matter we have judged in very few to explain of his sanctity

the indications, what namely of miracles the first beginnings

by of omnipotent God grace, after the quiet of His servant

falling-asleep, from his Relics in the city of Trier

He wished to show. For although signs by no means are

to be sought by the faithful, for corroborating however the more infirm

of the people's faith, sometimes the dead of the Saints

bones to testify are wont, what their living did

spirit. To infirm indeed minds not undeservedly

a dissonance of faith of the whole preceding narration

series to generate would seem, if a man of so illustrious among

the world a lineage, of so eminent with God sanctity,

without of signs the attestation among men had lain hidden;

if his glorious pledges, to his greatly to profit

worshippers, of human had lacked the exhibition

of honor.

[35] But from how great of barbarians cruelty, from

how great of the aforesaid city desolation an occasion that arose

was, by which of the man of God the merits to the faithful first became known,

in few it pleases to touch upon: because what in

the little preface of this little work concerning a similar calamity, In the Northmen's enormous barbarity,

at another introduced time, we have discoursed, an argument of knowledge

to be is able to these things, which in this place to say we are.

There for we have commemorated the barbarous nations

generally through all of the Gauls the borders of their fury

the reins to have loosed; here indeed we introduce of the Northmen

the nation untamed, from the scabbard of its cruelty

drawn out, certain of Gaul and Germany parts to have occupied.

Which by the enormity of its crime ravaging, into

the necks of the faithful as a she-bear her cubs being snatched made savage,

to no sex, to no age to spare, old men reverend to slay,

young men and adolescents, according to their strength or the time

themselves defending, to pierce through, little ones from their mothers'

breasts torn away to brain, matrons chaste, virgins

modest to dishonor, cities most noble with flames

devouring to burn up, the sanctuaries of God either to overthrow

or to profane, divine and human with equal contempt

to ruin. There was in all these things misery

to see, and the judgment of God to the minds of men so much

formidable, the more impenetrable: except that,

as it is given to understand, willing the Lord a just on the reprobate

to exercise vengeance, who did not keep

His commandments, angry with His people, delivered

them into the hands of the nations, and lorded over them

those who hated them. But just as in the vessels of wrath, with a double contrition

to be struck, the wrath of the justice of God here begins, that those

in the future irreparably He may destroy; so His mercy

those loving Him for the most part through a compendious

of martyrdom way to migrate disposes to that inenarrable

glory, which the eye has not seen, nor the ear heard,

nor into the heart of man has ascended: that whence the reprobate

are snatched to punishment, thence of the elect some be led

to the palm, others more chastened be rendered

to a life and conversation good, according to which

it is written: The pestilent being scourged, the foolish wiser

will be. Prov. 19, 25

[25] This horrendous tempest's storm the city

invading a of Trier, all feared, trembled,

neither of flight, which they had not prepared, nor of defense

any hope to have; before the eyes of all an image

of death to flit, the joyful of the people urbanities into

mourning, the choirs of those chanting into lamentation, the dances

of girls into lamentations to migrate; of the whole city

the face changed thou wouldst see, of divine religion scarcely

any thin remnants to remain. Moreover to God dedicated

Virgins, whom in the oratory of B. Symphorianus

the Martyr with a cenobial conversation to God to serve above

we have set forth, among so many of death kinds to the customary

of prayers arms fleeing; for chastity

to be kept, which they had vowed, not for life present

to be guarded, which they had despised, the supernal began

help with most ardent of spirit contrition to invoke; The sacred virgins implore the patronage of S. Modoaldus.

and to B. Modoaldus's sepulchre all fallen down, that by his

patronage from the imminent they might be rescued peril,

with such or of such ones similar heaven with prayers are reported

to have penetrated: Lord Jesus Christ, to the eternal

Father the Son coeternal, who by being born of a Virgin, that

of the curse loosing elogium, Cursed, who has not

made seed in Israel, the seed of virginity in the fullness

of the times Thou didst command to be multiplied, that in the time

of harvest its fruit Thou mightest receive a hundredfold; Thou

to our groanings, Thou to our tears and voices the ear

lend of Thy wonted piety, that whom to Thee we have vowed

the chastity of life, which we have offered of the flesh modesty,

of Thy Confessor Modoaldus by the prayers and merits

from all pollution Thou mayest guard; and what no

of our mind consent merits, no of the barbarians

violence to our virginity may bring corruption. With of this kind

prayers with great of spirit contrition,

with a great of tears rain poured forth, not was lacking

the operation of supernal hearing, not was lacking the exhibition

of miracles of the blessed Confessor. Lest therefore to God consecrated

Virgins evils should see, and within 30 days all die: which for the sex's fragility

they feared; nor good things should lose, which for chastity's

observance they had merited; wonderful to hear, more wonderful

to see! in peace on the bed lying, within days thirty

all from the present departed life; and so happily,

as perennially about to live, with adorned lamps

the Spouse heavenly meeting, of everlasting jucundity

the bridal chamber with Him entered. Whose

bodies in the same were oratory laid up, in

which B. Modoaldus's pledges: that of whom by the patronizing

merits the souls of them heaven with their

Patron possessed, of him by the demanding Relics, the bodies in the same

should be buried place: where flourish their prayers,

and abound of God benefits to the memory of the Virgins

from then, and now, and unto the world.

[36] When therefore of the same tempest still remained

vestiges, and a long solitude most of the Saints'

restrained places; it happened indeed, that that of the Saint familiar

corner for its indeed dignity little obtained

of reverence, The Franks at Trier put-in for obtaining the Relics: but by the negligence of the citizens of all guard

destitute, also lay open to injury. But that of mortals

carelessness, to our Pontiff of greater glory was made

a matter. For certain men, by lineage Franks, of their

nation not ignoble, in mind and body as much as possible

strong, of holy devotion for the sake the city Trier

had approached, which by of its Saints number

proud, and by antiquity's dignity celebrated, than all

Gaul more to shine they had found: of it for some time

at the household abiding, by religion delighted, the sacred they wore

thresholds, from unknown nearly most known: when meanwhile the men

by nature sagacious a flame entered of a most beautiful deed,

that by whatsoever mode, by prayers or by price, of so many Saints'

pledges with the greatest of the people of Trier they might share

a benefit. Which when too slowly proceed, and nothing

in those of good hope or favor they presume, by day

and night their mind to weary, in all places opportunity

to seek, nor a disgrace to judge by whatsoever art,

provided that not ineffectual they return, the begun to perform.

And so with simulated devotion the church of S. Symphorianus

entering, and of it all things, which to themselves soon for use

would be, exploring; they see a house uncultivated, to injury

opportune, by ministers and citizens neglected, deservedly

indeed of its Croesus's riches more noble, but of family substance

by want far than the rest more obscure. And who, they say,

thy, Modoaldus, Relics in this of the whole city

corner constrained? Unworthy certainly a sanctuary to thy

dignity acquired. Where for is the door-keeper frequent in

the threshold? where the various furniture of thy adornment of the church?

Nothing here worthy of so great we behold name. How

holily, and S. Modoaldus's body unguarded having obtained how usefully of thy guests thou couldst the journey

accompany, that the parched of our region desert with a large

blessing thou wouldst suffer to be irrigated, where neither to thy adornment

choirs of those chanting, nor with the best virtues praises would be lacking

of those celebrating. We will dare however, if with thy peace

it be permitted, something of this business to attempt,

and a part even small of thy body to carry away: from which to the Trier

indeed people of detriment the least, to us

of emolument the most, God propitious, will be able

to come.

[37] By this familiar colloquy as into a good

fruit animated, at the same time because nothing enough is hastened to a mind

desiring, a part some they carry away: best to be done they reckoned the next night

to this work to dedicate; lest while nights to days,

delays to be prolonged consultations they should weave, the attentive

citizens to themselves both suspected, then of a repulse worthy

they should make. Removed therefore witnesses, of the night having entered

the time, with a pious but bold violence the mausoleum they break open,

with the most holy fruitful body: thereupon one

than the rest more ready, his hand rashly putting in, and whatever

with the tenacious of fingers comb to enclose he could, for himself laying up,

flight with his companions hastens to invade. Which

deed, although by love of the Saint freely perpetrated it was,

not however to the Saint to have pleased, by of things following the document

to be proved could. At the same time for with of him

drawn-out limbs, wonderful to say, blood copious

burst forth: which while abundantly as from an open wound

flowed forth, the darkness however the sight hindering, the robbers

themselves nothing of this kind either seeing or feeling, but by the blood from it distilled betrayed,

before betrayed than from the begun deterred. Meanwhile

the day to the lands restored, when the matin people to pray

had begun after the custom to run together, they notice

the church's pavement with abundant suffused blood; nor

straightway the matter being known, long and much by uncertain suspicion

they were agitated, what those were of slaughter the indications, where

no ever to be slaughtered had been wont a victim. But explored

diligently all things, first of a recent fracture

the indications, then of nocturnal rashness the damages than light more clearly

were clear to those seeking. Nor seemed the labor difficult

the fugitives to pursue, since the blood from the torn

bones emanating, nowhere of places its culprits deserted;

until those by conscience trembling, nor enough of peril

secure, by their footsteps, and indeed not obscure, manifest

made. There are sent therefore expedite horsemen

the injury to pursue, the rashness to correct: who most swiftly

of the fleeing the backs pressing, and them by an easy business

from flight drawing back, of the offence indeed favor they make,

all however the good men striving, the received

entirely of the supreme Pontiff Relics to the city they bring back.

Who to narrate could suffice, those being brought back, what of joy,

what of good hope to the citizens astonished returned? how benignly, to bring back they are compelled:

how exultantly the of blessed memory Archbishop

with the highest of the Clergy and people dancing to meet

advanced, as if then first whole to himself the Saint

had come? Thou wouldst see the whole city into the meeting to rush,

no one in the houses, very few in the fields or towns

to have remained; that to heaven himself near he would judge,

whosoever unoccupied the returning to salute to go merited.

[38] But for of this deed to be chastised, lest

anything similar thereafter pernicious should create license, they decree

in common, the body of the Saint in the open

placed, from the church to transfer, which done to S. Paulinus is transferred a new ark. and the heavenly treasure

to firmer storehouses and a safer treasury to commend.

And so an ark of wood, with most firm boards

compacted, and with iron bindings round about fortified

they hasten; and to it translated of the Confessor the pledges,

into the oratory b of S. Paulinus, over the altar of the holy

Cross, with the highest veneration they convey: advisedly

namely, that equal to equal, a Priest to a Priest should be joined,

and to that one those coming with a double patronage might be consoled.

To these is added of Parian marble c a tablet, to the extreme

hand of comeliness by a wonderful of the sculptor art brought,

which near his sepulchre found, of the buried one the name

and merit presented, with this series inscribed: This

is the sanctuary of God beloved of Trier the Archbishop

Modoaldus, whose King Dagobert the sanctity,

as in his precept concerning Trier is contained, between

the Loire and the Rhine magnificently exalted and dilated.

Which also in the above was commemorated.

[39] Therefore S. Paulinus's church, with a new illustrated guest,

into how great in a short brightness it came, with how great

of the faithful zeal the former neglect it corrected,

while the poor with the rich there his necessities hastens

to bewail, to commemorate is incredible. But after

a long-lasting rest leisure, of leisure indeed the security corrupted

morals had begotten; and the whole of the city face changed,

for religion of divine things contempt had advanced;

to be sustained was necessarily of supernal correction

the sentence, which the polluted license under the rein

of strictness should restrain. Ezech. 9, 6 And so according to the sentence of the Prophet,

From my sanctuary begin; which it burning, in the of an untimely night

silence the same oratory suddenly conflagrated with a fire,

that namely doing the divine censure, by which lest through

the day kindled, by the easy of those running together it should be quenched

industry. There were carried everywhere globes of fire with the winds

urging, and with all reins reigned of the flames

the impetus; when meanwhile the awakened guards, see

their things in the extreme placed, their wealth for succoring everywhere

unprepared. And so what in so great being constricted strait was permitted,

to hasten, to run together, with immense fear to tremble,

neither against to strive, nor to be able to be quiet: lastly

whether they should remain, or should flee uncertain, the evil unforeseen,

the doubtful peril by a cry to testify. By whose voices

roused although quite few, if some however under the obscure

night had flowed together, the gold and silver, which the first

mortals think, and the various of the sacred ministry furniture

with the highest effort to guard were busy: concerning of the Saints

indeed pledges to be rescued unmindful, no of things

less effort they expended. Whence also it happened,

that the fire devouring, while to no places it spared, not

only the parched of the woods material utterly consumed,

but the tablets also marble, of the work by the dignity

wonderful, round about corrupted.

[40] In so great of things difficulty who thy, Saint,

Relics would not estimate to be about to be lost? There rushed everywhere

the mass of the buildings, alone remains unhurt. there leaped apart by the force of heat the solidity

of the marbles, and the whole of the sacred buildings face one

of ashes was a heap. And who of all the storehouse

of wood, against the force of fire most tender, which in the middle

of the temple's vault on high placed, all of the rushing

fabric received the impetus, would believe the peril to have escaped?

But what in act most difficult seemed to the sick

mortals, to the highest Procurator most easy, of things

proved the issue. For on the next light, when most

of the citizens to come, and of the nocturnal tempest the spectacle

after the manner of human ingenium to look at had begun;

the fires being calmed at last, nearer they approached, that especially

caring, that even the small of the Saint ashes gathering,

for the salvation of posterity they might place back. What for else,

than even to the ashes by so long-lasting a destruction consumed

would they believe? A thing wonderful, and to our centuries unusual!

For removed, which the whole surface had covered,

of the fires the heap; all beyond

hope, which of the Saint were, entire they found, and the very

little coffer of all destitute of injury, that gold thou wouldst believe

from a furnace produced, purged, not corrupted.

Who there himself from the praises of Christ restrained? Who not

glorious God in His Saints with repeated cry

proclaimed? Thy, Modoaldus, name, thy merit

every sex and age above the stars lifted. So of Metz

formerly d Stephen reports antiquity, among

the slaughters of the miserable, among of the barbaric depopulation

the most atrocious tempests, only the little oratory,

by of his martyrdom blood consecrated, of the fires to have rescued

from the danger, that hence both as present should gather

as future, how much of reverence they would owe

to the Protomartyr.

[41] but of the empty sepulchre the scraping But because of the elders having entered the footsteps, how

the blessed Confessor of his Relics to the defense

always was present, we have shown; it pleases the rest of him in passing

to touch, and that of his suppliants after that

of days number never to the salvation he was lacking, in few to discharge.

That mausoleum of stone, which by certain rash ones

broken open, secretly spoiled, just as from

the premises was clear, of the elders the memory testified; after

of greater caution for the sake, all this counseling,

of the precious treasure it was emptied; with equal nevertheless,

than formerly, reverence in the same church composed,

holily quite was reserved. Of this the surface

a learned hand of an artificer with tablets round about

marble from the front had encircled, and to them solidly to each other

compacted, comeliness to the work, use to the comeliness had added.

But to these from the vicinity of the holy body so much

of virtue, and so much of grace salutary divinely had acceded,

that to be believed scarcely can be, with how great of mortals incommodes,

by the patronizing of the Saint benefit, salvation thence procured

was. the sick are healed: Whosoever for by long fevers even

to the bones devoured, whosoever by a disease long-lasting consumed,

hither with of faith integrity of his troubles

a complaint had brought; by the scraping of the same marble,

with water mixed and into a draught taken, a most swift

of the languor remedy by a most certain cure obtained.

[42] Of this aid to be obtained for the sake when even today

innumerable from divers parts of the world we see

to run together, and none in vain of the pious Intercessor the suffrage

to have desired, one however by faith and religion

most excellent in silence to pass over is not a counsel.

Mainz, a city of the whole Germany most renowned,

the Rhine overhangs the shores, to commerces open,

of want unaccustomed, of fields and vineyards fertile, and of no

necessary thing indigent, with men and buildings sufficiently

adorned, but much more blessedly, which it experiences in a fever the Provost of S. Alban. which the most precious

of religion kind is, with a reverend of monks order

illustrated. Of these in one monastery, which far

than the rest more noble, e of S. Alban is called, in our memory

a certain Provost, Severedus by name, with heavenly philosophy

exercised, a man with the best arts from a tender

nail imbued, and to God and men for many of ingenium

goods dear and acceptable. But these so glad

successes impeded a sickness continual, and with slow

of fevers vapors not slowly of the man eminent was pressed

the industry: by which pest most sharp now through a triennium

with exhausted strengths, nothing lastly he believed more salubrious,

than the useless of physicians work ceasing, of the heavenly

hand the suffrage to have sought. For taught the brightness

of the Trier Church, thither having set out he intended:

and a part made of the supplicating people, a humble

prayer-maker, but a most renowned of benefits obtainer,

the tomb of the Saint approached, the draught of the scraped marble

sincerely partook: nor with a faithful desire frustrated,

shortly from infirm most healthy, the pallor with a revived color

changed. He not unmindful of the benefit, both to the Saints

all purely serving, and to his curator more familiarly

adhered: and so much of devotion about him had advanced,

that our place, to which his relics lately

translated he had learned, with a special affection much and frequent

he sought; and before to our fraternity acceptable,

then indeed from the assiduity of abiding most acceptable

became. By whose relation the virtue, which he had experienced,

to the Brothers of his zealous found, not by injury our

narration we have believed to be inserted, nothing fearing

by a weak of falsity calumny to be assailed, which by of so truthful

a man patronage easily could be enervated.

[43] But lest to all of his suppliants and devout

always that necessity should seem to lie, for obtaining

of whatsoever incommode the suffrage and of grief, a draught

to go the dust of that scraped marble, worth the trouble

it will be by a present example to notice, how

easy, how ready he was to those serving him, to those calling

himself sometimes without this draught, by only of virtue

obtainment to answer. There was a certain nun

to God devoted in the same Trier city, who

with psalms, prayers and vigils being occupied, did not depart

from the temple, that Anna the widow thou wouldst believe of the Gospel.

But when those and those of the Saints frequent

she went round Relics, and in the tabernacle of God, of God full

a woman, to the Saint piously devoted a nun, most sweet of praise and of compunction sacrifices

offered; then before all and above all of the most excellent

Prelate Modoaldus the sanctuary she venerated

and frequented, embraced and honored,

and before him poured down, nay fixed, how many devout prayers,

as many acceptable hosts in an odor of sweetness

before the sight of the divine Majesty she directed:

Toward whom from inspiration divine so great she had conceived

devotion, from devotion love, from love familiarity,

that whatsoever to her from of human things,

as is wont, variety had befallen necessity, to

him specially her cause to set forth she would recur;

inasmuch as whom one and alone, with a certain boldness of confidence,

her Lord both she believed and called. She

at one time by the force of fevers touched, when more sharply she was wearied and

burned, even without it, to of the same her Lord the memory she betook herself;

and having pleaded with him concerning of her state, of her salvation the incommode,

of this kind a complaint with him deposited: Thus,

says she, is it pleasing before thee, my Lord, and so

does it agree, that when others, both external and domestic, thee

of their infirmities so easy and ready obtain

a helper, me thy singular handmaid

with so grave a grief, without any respect of clemency, thou sufferest

to be wearied? Nay rather a benefit, which to others

thou bestowest gratuitously, to me, that more confidently than the rest I may speak,

thy handmaid the Lord thou shouldst expend from debt.

Nor would I reckon to me necessary to be of thy marble

that salutary scraping with others to drink, when

faithfully and truly with my mind it stands, without

this or any exterior aid thee to me to be able to succor. suddenly she is cured of fevers,

These and these similar things when before her Lord

both pious and faithful she discoursed in a complaint, suddenly

seized by sleep she fell asleep. Whence a little after awakened,

so herself whole made, and of all grief

and trembling lacking she found, as if all that fever

with the sleep equally had vanished.

[44] Good Jesus! with what exultation, with what joy, with what

she to this praises rebounded, with what dancing? For indeed

who by so manifest of the very matter had proved by an experiment,

not herself hitherto in vain to have served, and from astonishment forgetful of her psalter, nor

anything in vain to have supplicated Modoaldus. Into a hope

therefore the greatest animated, she stood with so great in this very thing

admiration astonished, that almost of herself and her things

unmindful, nor the book even of the psalms, which as

a companion individual to her always adhered, departing from

the sanctuary, did she remember with herself to take from the place, where she had placed it.

Meanwhile thither coming a certain youth,

in appearance a Cleric, in body and mind wandering, in act

undisciplined, the found psalter, of no witness

solicitous, snatches: and himself thence more quickly, nor however from

the city more remote, hurries away: but that the less he should be caught,

into the suburb a lodging of a certain one he entered

a poor man. As if indeed, of men the most inept, the damage

of his handmaid, Modoaldus beholding and now pursuing,

any place, any hiding, any of human ingenium

industry could either lead away or conceal. Therefore

because a mind into evil hardened, nothing ever of weight,

nothing has of moderation; iniquity upon iniquity

he adds, and the cloths of his host, which the wife of him for

washing had set out, by night rising and taking away,

to the psalter as gain a gain he joins; it from the thief taken away and impatient

of delays and of rest, of a doubled evil the conscience

urging on, nothing for himself the wretch safer reckoning, of the night

and of flight the protection he invades. But the little woman from sleep

in the morning roused, when neither her furniture, nor

her most faithful that her host she found, to her husband

the damage she complains, the fleeing thief by the footstep

to follow she exhorts. He indeed nothing delaying, more swiftly

the thief follows and seizes, and execrating

the foul man, violently what his was,

and even the psalter takes away and brings back. Meanwhile the devout

nun, when her book seeking not

she finds, with the devotion, with which she was wont, before the sanctuary

of her Lord, her loss having pleaded, bewails;

again and again him she prays, that to her with the wonted

benignity the psalter he would restore, whence a sacrifice

of praise to God and to him she might immolate, the Saint invoking she recovers it. and might render to the Most High

her vows. Nor deceived the affection of her pious petition the effect

of a most just hearing. There is made an inquiry through the whole

city concerning the psalter: it passes man by man to another from another,

until asked the poor man, who had received it, sets forth,

restores, the nun receives it, to God thanks and to her Lord

Modoaldus, not without a great of mind and faith

ardor, repays.

[45] Behold the most lucid of miracles distinguished signs, but

very few from very many tasted: by which however, if

them rightly you notice, so the life of Modoaldus glorious and

merits illustrious most splendidly are illustrated, as if a golden

tablet, other things thereafter many are wrought. with gems or stones precious distinguished and

decorated, it should seem. For what his life, except golden

rightly I would call a tablet, with golden namely works

coruscant? What the gems or pearls in the tablet,

except the interlucent in his deeds miracles? Moreover

just as neither of his virtues, so neither of this book the end by

us is fitting to be expected: because while daily, God

His soldier glorifying, with new and special he shines forth

miracles, a new likewise matter new daily

and special demands writers: nay the highest mass

of the matter on the Tullian insults wits and eloquence.

But let depart from of the faithful minds an unworthy of to be described

the holy man's deeds solicitude and molestation. And indeed

precious his memory eternally flourishes, and above

all things is fragrant aromatics: as one who with glory endowed

unfading, always is multiplied as a palm and a cedar

of Lebanon, and germinates as a lily, and flourishes before

the Lord through all ages of ages. Amen.

ANNOTATIONS.

TRANSLATION

Of SS. Modoaldus, Auctor, Abrunculus, and Bonosus Archbishops of Trier to the monastery of Helmwardeshusen.

Under Tietmar the Abbot made and described.

Modoaldus, Archbishop of Trier (St.)

BHL Number: 5985

UNDER TIETMAR THE ABBOT FROM MSS.

PREVIOUS EPISTLE

to Stephen Abbot of S. Stephen of Liège.

To the Lord and Father Stephen by divine election Abbot,

and to the holy Congregation to the blessed Apostle

James under his governance serving; Tietmar and his monks

brother Tietmar, whom they call Procurator of the sheepfold

of B. Peter in Helmwardeshusen; with all to Christ

with him warring, a gift of perfect charity from

the soul, and of full fraternity a weight from debt.

[1] Since, Father Most Serene, as of many we have learned by relation,

with the of Apostolic religion norm most perfectly

imbued, of the Apostolic life the tenor by faith and

acts you imitate; worthy we have judged you with words Apostolic

to address: Blessed be God and the Father of our Lord

Jesus Christ, who you a fit chose minister

of the new Testament, for the written S. Modoaldus's life giving thanks to Stephen the Abbot not only by the letter, but also by the spirit's

modulation the praise of omnipotent God to pronounce,

and of His Saints the glory to the present and posterior

ages imitable by word and writings to proclaim. 2 Cor. 3

For the most copious of your heart garden, of all of the Northern

cold the torpor being driven away, of the Southern spirit

with a grateful temperature breathed upon, sweet-flowing distilled aromatics,

which by their fragrance far and wide diffused, the odor

of your good opinion to our even transfused

notice. And although so many of lands spaces to us the aspect

of you have concealed the notice; yet of morals the maturity,

and of the heart the sincerity, and of the pious mind the affection, and of the ingenium

is clear the efficacy: and in this to be wondered at of omnipotent

God to mortals, is proclaimed the dispensation, since

there are men above thousands, of whom the notice

we retain from the face, but not even a small intention

we know from the heart. But of your heart

the secrets, although in flesh absent, in a certain way we perceive,

as often as of our blessed Father Modoaldus the Life with a mellifluous

treatise to our resounds ears; and the delectable

of your voice we perceive modulations, as often as the sweet-sounding

of his chant the melody either we discern, or singing together

we attend to.

[2] These both luminously digested so great above

all aromatics sweetness to our jaws gave,

and so great of dilection a fullness infused, that

by no of bitterness rancor they can be abolished, to him well they pray; by no

of molestation tedium be evacuated. For such and so great benefits,

most just having reckoned in all ways with of thanks proclamations

of your pious devotion the zeal to answer, in

us nothing, to your labors to be compared, from us

we suffice to estimate: since they surpass all

eloquence of our praise. Wherefore with all our marrows

turned to Him, who by your mouth is magnified and

by voice is glorified, and by our although thin service is honored,

indefatigably we supplicate, that by His merits

and prayers to you for the action of thanks of perennial

glory the crown, for the reward of eternal life the beatitude

with Christ He may obtain, to whom without doubt

is expended, and to him they offer this little book whatever to His Saints to serve, worthily and

laudably is exhibited. Therefore since with an investigation

sufficient by no ever abolition to be deleted of you

the notice we hold; equal it is that by the zeal of our hand

and tongue we also to your notice be conducted.

We offer therefore to your Beatitude of the Translation

of our most blessed Father Modoaldus the little book, with a humble

style digested, of your dignation by the skill to be corrected,

by your authority to be corroborated. Of which the series

investigating, you will know concerning the situation of the place and the exordium

of our cloister, with how benign and wonderful a dispensation

of God into prosperous successes it grew strong, with how

devout of the pious stipulation into the increase of religion

it grew. It will be clear also by what occasion's event,

with a pious already kindled desire, by the large of omnipotent

God commiseration into so great of mind confidence we are

moved, that the most precious of the Saints pledges, which

by no of gold or silver abundance worthily could be acquired,

with pious importunity demanded we might merit to receive.

Which with worthy veneration and honorificence

to our place brought, with divers of miracles signs the divine

glorified dignation: that clearly might be clear to all, of whose

merit, and of whose magnificence is their spirit

in the heavens.

[3] In all these things by our acknowledgment, and of the whole matter

our the sum, to you sufficiently laid open, Father most reverend,

your Holiness to congratulate

us we invite, with all of charity devotion,

with a deprecatory affection words using of the Psalmist: Magnify

the Lord with me, and exalt His name

into the same. Psalm. 35 This moreover of your magnification the series

we demand, that, with a better style to be polished. just as of our blessed Father Modoaldus

the noble stock and life laudable with a luminous

style you digested, so also of his translation the little sheet,

with the chisel of your ingenium polished, through the caverns

of your pious heart you would transfer, which an unpolished anything

either to admit or to emit by no means have been wont.

In this therefore of fraternal charity by the regard our desire

satisfy: that the sacrifice of the past work,

which to Christ through us you offered, now a holocaust

may become; and of the marrowy host the marrowy tail,

that is, of a good work the perfection, by the authority

of your pious devotion strengthened, by us anew

to omnipotent God through all things pleasing we may exhibit,

and gratefully received in this order to be recited

we may hold.

CHAPTER I.

The cloister of Helmwardeshusen constructed: to it translated the arm of S. Auctor Archbishop of Trier. The miracles there done.

[4] There is a town in the province of Saxony, from the name

of its first land's inhabitant a Helmwardeshusen

called, Count Ekkihard lacking posterity which through an ancient tradition by hereditary

right passed into the glorious Count Ekkihard's and his

most noble wife Mathilde's own possession.

These by the line of birth and secular dignity illustrious,

but by the probity of morals especially, into this of misfortune lamentably

fell, that except one son, in his third

age deceased, of all offspring they were deprived of the succession.

Whom omnipotent God because of the fruit of the womb He attenuated,

with religion's fecundity He enriched: and the more

less they were solicited in the increase of progeny, the

more largely they sweated in the study of divine servitude. Whence it was done,

that all of kinsmen postponed posterity,

the world's Savior, and His most pious Mother,

and also the Apostles' Prince, heirs

of all their possession they made, by building a monastery by themselves he asks from Sylvester 2 privileges, and in the town aforetitled

a cloister, the monkish order befitting,

to their honor and name they should dispose. Wherefore

the same man illustrious Ekkihard to Rome going, by the counsel

and authority of venerable memory b Sylvester

the Pope, whatever of his right of possessions was, to B. Peter

the Apostle delivered, and of constructing a cloister the licence

and of the place the liberty obtained. He obtained for

by the Apostolic privilege's sanction, that no one there to construct

or to ordain should presume an Abbot, except according to

the rule and the holy Fathers' institution

canonically elected: similarly an Advocate, not from his

birth, but whomsoever the Abbot and congregation

should demand to be constituted: things also of his right acquired

or to be acquired with perpetual liberty to be possessed,

and from all servitude of Emperors, Kings, or

of whatsoever powerful immune.

[5] By this therefore the father of the family by authority strengthened,

and by the Apostolic benediction fortified, and with prosperous

success to his fatherland restored, he decreed the intention

of his desire to c Otto the third Emperor to lay open,

with whom he had been for his probity, which Otto 3 confirms. and for of faithful service

the multiplicity, already long ago by an exceeding bound charity.

There survive even today in the ornaments of the church

signs, that the same Prince to this his beloved one (who with him

in the Roman expedition faithfully standing

through a long day the bridge of the Tiber strongly with his men

stormed, and against a most strong a certain one of enormous

body terrible, and with bold arrogance the majesty

Royal dishonoring, manfully having encountered, the head

of him cut off to himself presented) royal certain

ornaments his, on account of the badge of a noble victory, in reward

conceded. Whose vow being known very much

congratulated, he conceded to him by authority Imperial,

whatsoever he saw by the Apostolic testament to be contained;

of the cloister's namely construction, and of the place's liberty,

of the canonical of the Abbot election and of the Advocate substitution,

of all-mode of his and his men's servitude immunity;

giving him upon these of the Imperial privilege a charter,

with his seal's impression and his own hand's sign strengthened.

By this double authority the pious provisor animated,

an Abbot, with a few Brothers, over his

all set; and in Christ's name the foundations laying,

and to a prosperous effect tending, the work initiated

he hastened more quickly.

[6] But God by which He Himself knows providence disposing,

the fabric not yet halving itself, each constructor

by an immature was prevented death. To the increase

also of the lamentable misfortune, Dead Ekkihard and the goods being diminished, of each one's

kinsmen, of great namely power men, the funeral

their spoils, and of various furniture the remains,

very much for the most part to their uses claimed; some

also of estates the manors invading, withdrew

from the church. But the rude of the church provisor the new Abbot

Haulfus, with no effort trusting so great to go against

powers, since neither the faculty was available to appeal to

the authority Apostolic, or the majesty

Royal, better he judged under of silence the moderation the divine

to ask mercy. Meanwhile d Menwerc

Bishop of Paderborn, S. Menwerc obtains the place, Otto already from the midst

made, going to the King, who was called of Bamberg

within of his diocese the limits f Brothers poor

to abide, to the Roman See's dominion to be subject, to strive to be

what they could not supply, of God's mercy and of the Emperor

to be in want. These, he said, with the place, if to your

Majesty it pleases, to my to commit tutelage and

provision; I will procure, by the obtainment of your favor and the love

of God, that they may profit into the increase of the divine service:

and the under a determined promise of faith obtained consent

Imperial, he came to the place, of the to be disposed of the inhabitants

causes to order. who in vain having endeavored to transfer the monks elsewhere And considering the of things

thinness, and the monastic religion's order under penury

to flourish not able; the prudent's used counsel,

he deliberated with a better disposition the utility of the abiding

to provide. For he had intended in a castle of his right

to build: and better he judged, that the composed of each

place forces, and his as long as he lived supplements, hence

thither of all should be made a translation: and so more advisedly

of each one the things with perpetual should flourish stability. But

to this counsel did not assent the divine disposition: whence

the Prelate the same, by a nocturnal vision somewhat gravely admonished,

from his intention desisted as soon as possible.

[7] By whose concession's and royal permission's occasion

the Pontiffs of the Paderborn church the place

this contain by h parochial protection, to the quiet of the Brothers

abiding of molestation nothing bringing, them under the protection of his successors he leaves to the Abbots

for themselves regularly elected the pastoral rod or consecration

canonically bestowing, from no one of his right

anything of service exacting, but in every cause of them

with the privileges Imperial piously assenting. Not

for they are ignorant by the Apostolic of Sylvester the Pope, under whom

the tradition of that place with all its revenues to blessed

Peter made was, condemned to be with an anathema,

whosoever the privilege of him canonical and synodal

shall have presumed in any way to violate. But since

by no of his own right they were solicited by debt to

benefits to be conferred; the place the same through the succeeding to itself

Bishops a long time, of all supplement

the largesse, in neglect was held; in great poverty: which little by little being relieved, except that the Abbots

for themselves substituted, in augmenting the church's revenues

were busy according to their each one strengths. And when the inhabiting

Brothers frequently straitened an anxious of things

thinness, yet in no mode grew cool in them the love

of religion and the regular sedulity: but the poor in spirit,

their believing to be the kingdom of heaven, went gradually

from virtue to virtue. When this fervor of the sons

of God far and wide the opinion of itself dilated;

several of Christ faithful, by their kindled and animated example,

the things of this church with their revenues began

to dilate. Many also emulating charisms better,

a small thing to seem reckoned, if only to their things

own they renounced: and by the precept instructed evangelical,

believed themselves not to be worthy of God, except renouncing

themselves, under the rule monkish to carry round

in their body always the mortification of the Cross

of Christ.

[8] Meanwhile Tietmar, the sixth of this cloister by

God elected Abbot, Tietmar the 6th Abbot desiring to obtain the body of some Saint by much of his predecessors

animated industry, nothing he suffered remiss to the to be supplied

church's businesses, by antiquity and carelessness almost

half-ruined: he restored the buildings, and, what of all

to the Creator more acceptable he knew, to win to God souls,

wholly himself he overspent. To whom when several things ceded

according to his vow, inspiring to him of great counsel the Angel,

he began with a greater to sigh desire, that the body of some

Martyr or Confessor to him to bestow should deign

the divine commiseration, to whose himself and his all he might commit

a special patronage. With pious also consideration he weighed,

himself and his men to this not to suffice, that to the manifold

of the religious vows worthy they should repay benefits,

unless God by His should succor grace through of His Saints

their suffrages. Which to be obtained, because he believed

greater to be than his strengths, the counsel with the spiritual

communicated Brothers, he deliberated this from God

to be sought by vigils and prayers. The Brothers therefore

by the pious of their Father zeal rejoicing, and the ears of the Omnipotent

with frequent supplications knocking, besought

that so devout of the pious breast a desire to a worthy

He would advance issue. What many things? The Lord

Jesus, who said in the Gospel: If two of you shall have consented

concerning every thing, which they shall have asked, it will be done to them; showed

Himself to be present to His faithful's unanimity, and the counsel

of them to a prosperous enslaved effect. Matt. 18, 19

[9] The sum of the counsel by God directed this took the beginning,

that upon this business they should appeal to the ears and

heart of i Bruno, Archbishop of the holy Church of Trier,

which by the privilege of its principate is over all the Churches

of the Gauls, in that founded by B. Peter the Apostle,

it is in order the first and in dignity the chief, and by many

of Saints bodies glorious. Then

it seemed useful the secret of this business to the Paderborn

by the limit, the commendation of the Bishop of Paderborn being interposed, that by his strengthened counsel, licence,

and authority, with their letters of him also epistles

deprecatory they should direct, for of the whole Bishopric

the profit and honor. Nor was it difficult that with the Bishop

to obtain his faithful, to whom already long ago

by religion's love and of full fraternity the communion

joined, with a special he had been by charity bound.

The Abbot therefore all his things moderating advisedly, premised

and disposed his and his men's prayers,

as of so great a way and so great a business companions,

one of his fellow-soldiers a monk, with

the epistles Pontifical and his and of the whole Paderborn

Church, directed to bend the clemency

of the Trier Archbishop, so that he would assent

to the effect of this spiritual business. Received therefore

and read through the epistles, the Pontiff venerable feared

first the novelty of so unusual and so terrible

a business. he acts with Bruno of Trier: Called also and consulted the Priors

of the Church, nothing from them he reported certain, as being

terrified and wondering anyone of mortals to dare

with the mind to conceive, much less by work to attempt,

the magnitude of so horrendous and unheard-of a thing.

Wherefore the pious Prelate received a respite again

deferred, and seven days having elapsed anew admonished,

anew consulted the Brothers nothing of effect

found, and again the responses by delay protracted.

[10] After these things ten and more interposed

days the Brother legate, joined as well religious monks

as Clerics faithful, whom of orders and

of future service by benefits to himself he had attached, him tergiversating, again the Pontiff

approached; and with a clement importunity, as great as

to use he dared, appealed; the delay of his response

to his imputing negligence and unwisdom,

and no however despicable and abject

legate protesting to be repudiated. Besides

of his Prelate the nobility and of his order the dignity,

and also of the Abbot the venerable sanctity he proposed;

not to be contemned to be persons of so great dignity

and so great authority, to become the dignity

Pontifical to his honor convenient responses

to render to those supplicating. With of this kind an oration

bent the most pious Pontiff with a cheerful countenance a sweet-flowing used

an excuse, saying himself in the delay of the response, neither

on account of foolishness, as being which none was the legate's

person to have rejected, nor by any contempt the dignity

of the Bishop or Abbot to have dishonored: of fear

by the anxiety to be walled; and at last the just fear excusing, of so great a business, which

was asked, the ministry to have feared; l Hermann

Bishop of Metz from the sepulchre of S. Clement, the first

of the same city Bishop, whom he was translating, scarcely

by the hands led down on the third day to have died; himself a sinner,

himself unworthy his of life peril to fear;

the Saint Legontius who was asked, before several

years attempted from his place neither to be moved

to have been able; a turf upon him, as was thought, the day before

dug up, the next morning entire and sound

to have found, himself by his and his men's counsel, which not

he found upon this matter, nothing to define to dare, and

for this of a longer time a respite to have wish.

These things being discoursed to the Legate letters excusatory to be conveyed

he delivered, and equal things to the Abbot by living voice to be related

he mandated; not to despair concerning the mercy

of God; but rather in this the will of God by continuous

prayers to merit he admonished, and from himself bidding farewell

dismissed.

[11] sad returning he who had been sent Who thus dismissed to be straitened exceedingly began and

to be wearied, and himself of so great a journey the fatigation in vain

to have consumed to grieve, and much labor by his sins

frustrated, reckoning himself unworthy, himself unmeriting,

by whose ministry such and so great a business

the Omnipotent to be effected would deign. But the Father

omnipotent to this grief condescending, and the wonted

piety's ears to the Brothers His prayers accommodating,

of their hope did not wish them to frustrate, but mercifully

and wonderfully to them worthy and unhoped-for conferred

of the Saints Relics:

From the sacristy of B. Peter:

Of his staff: some other thing and the arm of S. Auctor he receives:

A scraping of the nail of the Lord in a little cloth wrapped:

Of the sandals of S. Andrew the Apostle.

From the sacristy of B. Eucharius.

Of the body of B. n Celsus the Bishop.

From the sacristy of B. Maximinus.

Of the pallium and stole o of him:

The arm of S. [p] Auctor Archbishop of Trier,

of great sanctity a man.

[12] By these the sent aforesaid exceedingly animated, and

as if from a deep of grief and of straits whirlpool

relieved, which with great solemnity translated, his returning steps hastened: who after

long of lands spaces measured, at last of the known turf

attained the confines. And because the day of the sabbath the hour now

had passed the eleventh, fit he judged of a certain faithful

man a client of the Church to seek the lodging: and directed

letters to the cloister, to his Abbot and the Brothers

he intimated, how great with him, concerning the conferred arm

of B. Auctor the Archbishop, the Divine had worked clemency.

Whence all the Brothers very much exhilarated;

the Abbot, kindled with incense and lights,

to salute the most holy Relics sets out;

and deputed Brothers to celebrate

to so great a Pontiff vigils home returns. Then

after dawned the next day happy through ages, the Brothers

happier about to be of so great a Father by the presence, disposed

of the peoples bands mutually themselves they exhort,

to undertake with of the spiritual apparatus glory of the supreme

Priest the pledges. The bearers indeed not yet departed

from the lodging's thresholds, the scholar boys advancing

with banners and crosses, conduct the Saints,

with litanies and hymns spiritual, already

then glorifying God His Saint's merit, begun

praises from the mouth of infants. Then in of the journey

the middle advance in garments white the Clerics

with the people, some of the Saints relics carrying

in a bier, and with their whole body prostrate the young men

and virgins with the younger ones praised the name

of the Lord. And so advancing to of the village the middle, behold

they behold of the militia heavenly the apparatus, the bands

palled of monks, to the church of the monastery who to the ground bowed down

the first of a devout heart holocausts to so great

immolate Pontiff; glad namely sighs of groanings with

sweet rivulets of tears, which an excessive joy extorted

affection, from the inmost of them bowels.

Hence praises being imposed with a solemn dancing advancing,

of the temple they are received into the bosom, not less

of the peoples troops, round about singing together,

and of diverse age with a confused voice resounding,

that now in these the Prophet's prediction was fulfilled,

Let every spirit praise the Lord. Psalm. 150

[13] With so great therefore veneration of B. Auctor the Archbishop

and of the rest, whom we have foretasted,

received the Relics, in the sacristy of the temple were laid up

in the year of the Lord's Incarnation a thousand one hundred

fifth, indiction the thirteenth, the day before

the Ides of May, on the day [q] Lord's, the hour of the day third, in which

the holy Spirit formerly of the disciples filled

the hearts. Received therefore venerably and with becoming

honorificence located the arm of B. Auctor,

of Trier the Archbishop, in the sacristy of the Prince of the Apostles,

which is Helmwardeshusen, which

the of largesse divine dignation wonderfully and unhoped-for

to that very place directed; long would not wish God to be concealed

of how great He was merit with Him, but declared

in the dead member of the body, what his holy

soul could in the heavens. For a woman a widow

poor by the alimonies of the Church was nourished, to whom an arm had withered, who of a continual

languor labored with the incommode. She by a sudden

paralysis struck, of all members a dissolution

so strongly incurred, that herself in no mode

into the side the other without a ministering one's aid to turn

was able: nay even to the increase of misery

the thumb of the left hand into the palm recurved of the four

fingers a continual constrained reflection, and that very

arm so great had dissolved aridity, that utterly

insensible as a wood she carried from the neck depending.

Who of the holy Relics the coming

learned, by a divine visitation to the marrow touched,

suddenly to a sitting is raised; and a tunic having been asked is clothed,

and partly on the shoulders of her procuratress carried,

partly by a staff sustained, herself to meet the sanctuary

bore, confidently asserting of him herself by the virtue from

the assiduity of the little bed relieved, and herself by the benefits of the

Saint to be saved. Then the arm of the Saint her debility's

places being handled and signed, presently

wonderfully in a manner the bone parched to the parched veins of the pristine

vigor of moisture infused, and the member dead

the limbs forewearied of vital spirit by the office animated.

[14] contracted in his whole body, A herdsman a certain of the same village, by an insensible

seized languor, of all work the use his body

invalid with food frequent he nourished: but his members

thence by no of strengths vigor profiting, on a little bed

debilitated he lay. Of this incommodity the remedy

exploring, himself because free he was, to B. Auctor by the right

of property he delivered; and of recovering health

for the sake, a census of coin himself to him annually

to pay he vowed. Nor delayed the new Lord

to of the new servant's vows to assent, that the granted to uses

necessary strengths, he might be accustomed not idly the fruits

to consume, but diligently to the fruits to be augmented effort

to give. A woman a certain of the aforesaid place by a sudden

of ears deafness is struck, and in sleep is admonished,

that for the of hearing recovery to B. Auctor

her earrings she ought to offer. a deaf woman, Who morning being made

to obey to the orders hastens, and the earrings being offered whole

home returns, and to those wontedly crying out to her not

without a derisory rebuke, clearly herself to hear pronounces.

In a little possession of the church, Muthen called,

a youth a certain [r] Susalian, a youth shamefully gaping, one morning

wontedly striving to rise, with so great suddenly was seized

an infirmity, that with eyes miserably open, of the mouth

with a gaping terrible terror to those beholding he struck

with grief. Presently to the monastery it is run,

the Saint's arm is conveyed, the sick man from it with faith

is blessed, and to pristine health is restored. Of this

Brother the bearers of the holy Relics into his lodging had received,

to whom also benignly he had ministered: whose

buildings after this by enemies set on fire and utterly

were conflagrated, only his granary the fire escaping,

in which of B. Auctor had passed the night the Relics.

[15] a woman in childbed by loathing of food failing, In a village which Heyson is called, a certain woman

with much difficulty bringing forth, with so great of food and sleep

loathing is seized, that with neither to use commodiously

prevailing through days nearly to the extremes she was conducted.

Who by suggesting friends admonished, how great things

God through S. Auctor would work miracles,

a vow faithfully vowed, and straightway to sleep yielded:

hence slowly awakening, with food asked is refreshed,

and the tedium into a natural delectation changing,

of the peril of death is stripped. In the same village a woman

a certain, of grief of the head growing heavy, another of a deaf woman. of each

ear the office utterly lost. Who of hearing

empty, but of faith full, a vow to B. Auctor made the monastery

sought: where so most swiftly and so perfectly

recovered, that she who a sound however great to feel

was not able, thereafter of a most thin whisper the hiss

most fully drew in. In the aforesaid village a boy

little of a miserable languor by the disease was sick: by a miserable languor seized,

for at times as if lifeless falling down, sobs

various he emitted; at times as if sound he walked;

at times indeed with voice utterly interceding,

with eyes open and gaping mouth, of no breath the breathing

he drew. Whose parents, amid of continual

grief the anxiety the name of B. Auctor learned,

and a vow rendered, with so most full of their son

were health exhilarated, that of whom the only death before

for the excess of tedium they desired, his life with paternal

sweetness they embraced and fostered.

[16] In the town of the Monastery, of a fisherman a certain

daughter little by an inflation miserable of the belly translucid

is burdened, having suffered the belly's inflation and with the rest of the members with the face by abstinence

and pallor squalid, with of the eyes a rolling moribund,

nearly all of vital hope the certitude to the unhappy

parents had taken away. Who the name being ignorant

of the Saint, from the coming of the arm a person unknown

cry out: vows they vow, that by his aid the wretched little

daughter, if it be possible, may be bettered; but if otherwise,

an end to so great imposing torments, the way of all

flesh she may enter. the navel being burst she is healed: These things being discoursed the navel of the girl

wonderfully bursts; and with an excessive impetus flowing out

of corruption, the vigor vital is repaired: because the weight deadly

is evacuated. This seen the parents with immense praises

of this virtue the minister extolled, and with a mind

more alacrious both the daughter received, and of tedium the fatigation

lost. In a little village of the church, Windelesheim called,

a little infant scarcely two years by an assiduous was shaken sickness, a sick little infant is cured:

so that of milk the victuals utterly spurning, nights

and days sleepless she led, and at times with a moribund

appearance, with her joints stiffening with of grief

the assiduity, the languid of the mother bowels she tortured. Who

at last of faith full hope of obtaining health for her

conceiving, the monastery with the same sought the thresholds,

S. Auctor's earnestly asking the suffrages: and the sacristan

consulted, the sick one with the Saint's arm is blessed, and presently

the spirit resumed seeks the mother's breasts, is suckled and sleeps,

and home is brought back sound.

[17] In the contubernal of the monastery a woman a certain,

in mind and habit an appearance presenting of religion, a cloth by theft taken away is recovered.

abode: who from the sacristan a cloth excellent

to be washed had received, which by theft taken away

she lost. Which learned presently the monastery she enters,

to B. Auctor complains, and a thread silver

for a vow promises. Thence going out forthwith the indications

of the theft she catches, and a person suspicious

meeting, the fault she finds; an exaction being made,

what she had lost she received; and to the holy provisor

thanks with a vow she rendered. A man a certain of the canton

of the Westphalians, of the head by a grief vehement of the light

was deprived of the eyes; and his shin the other,

by a cancer seized of an ulcer, of walking utterly lost the office.

He in one of the nights of B. Auctor faithfully invoked

the name, a blind and lame man is healed. of his commiseration by the insensible cured

was medicine: and coming to the cloister a thread

he offered silver, with thanks-giving,

which for his salvation he had vowed of its recovery. These and

these similar of miracles signs omnipotent God therefore

to be done disposes through of His holy Confessor the merits,

that clearly He may declare, how much of remedy to souls

into eternity about to live to obtain prevails in the heavens

with Christ happily living his soul; when with bodies

about to die, his bone dead, so much to bestow

can benefits.

ANNOTATIONS.

p. There is venerated S. Auctor, 20 of August, to which day the following miracles could be transferred, unless it were better the whole this relation together to be brought forth. Lived S. Auctor a Bishop from the year 409 to 427.

q. Was this the Lord's day of the Rogations before the Ascension of the Lord, or the fifth after Easter, which with the Dominical letter A was celebrated on the day 9 of April: and hence I corrected the error which into the number of the Indiction had crept, as if it had been XII when it was XIII: the Correction moreover is proved from the final clause where the acts 12 of May 1107 are marked with Indiction XV.

r. I fear lest rightly here are written of the places the names because such nowhere about Helmershausen are found noted: for Susalia moreover occurs Uslaria in the Brunswick Duchy at the interval of leagues 2; for Heysen, I find Hemsen in Paderborn, in the Bishopric at leagues 4.

CHAPTER II.

It was labored to obtain and dig up the Body of S. Legontius, Bishop of Trier, but with a vain effort.

[18] In the year 1100 In the year of the Lord's Incarnation a thousand

one hundred sixth, in the Indiction the fourteenth,

was appointed a a Synod in the parts of Italy by the venerable

the state and concerning the divers utilities of the Catholic Church,

and the concord of the Kingdom and Priesthood, whose

dissension by much had grown strong time, not without peril

of many of body and soul: to which invited

flowed together from divers parts of the world Archbishops,

Bishops, Abbots, and with Catholic monks

religious Clerics, and of the kingdoms Nobles secular, and

of divers powers administrators, with clients

and an innumerable hand of the people. Tietmar to the Synod of Guastalla setting out, Whence it happened Tietmar

of Helmward, through two Legates of the Apostolic one

by name called, accompanying a monk his

with the rest to make a journey; and unhoped-for the of Trier Archbishop,

with other legates of the Roman King, in

the city Basel to meet. Whom encountering, and by him

most becomingly received, he reminded of his legation

and of his Bishop, to the same nearly before two years through

the present his monk transmitted, for to be besought

and to be obtained the body of c B. Legontius, Archbishop

of his See, namely of the Trier Church. he asks from the Archbishop of Trier the Body of S. Legontius,

He replicated also the same things, which then in writing he had mandated,

now also by living voice and humble suggestion;

the necessity and cause and devotion of so spiritual

a desire his, the intention and zeal of his and his men's

service, the adornment in various of operousness of painting

and of divers furniture, of his monastery the awaiting

long-lasting, and on account of this the desires of the monks

and Clerics and of the promiscuous sex and age people:

to become the dignity Episcopal this to effect,

lest so many and so great sons of the Church of their should be frustrated by the expectation.

[19] There were added to this petition the man venerable Hermann

the Count, and also religious Clerics d Reinhard

afterwards Bishop of Halberstadt, intervening for him various others, e Adelgoz

the following year of Magdeburg Archbishop

made, and the rest legates of the King and of his way companions,

the same protesting, and the same often redoubling;

nor able a Saint anyone anywhere more becomingly

and more honorably to be conceded or located, under the obtainment

of an ampler divine service, confirming. In the place

also of the held Synod he is solicited by the assent and counsel

of the Archbishop of Salzburg f Conrad, with religion,

nobility and wisdom endowed, and before three days by

the Apostolic one himself ordained; saying him in this advisedly

to act, and himself worthy to judge and rare to think, if

for the increase of honor and glory, for the increase

of the service of the veneration and reverence of the Saints, from place

to place be translated and destined Relics.

By a similar also he is moved assent and counsel by his Clerics

religious and wise, and some laymen

faithful, with him in a ship from Pavia even to Piacenza

on the river Po setting out; and often that not

to be necessary to fear the divine animadversion

or of the Saints offense on account of this to incur protesting, by good hope he is fed.

if to the devotion and necessity of the faithful he should consult

in bestowing on them, of which he abounded, of the Saints

bodies. These all the Prelate most reverend in

the balance of his heart weighing, and with a subtle counsel with himself

handling, and the force of the words and in these the truth

considering, admonishes the whole of this business the cause

to God to be committed, and His will and

disposition in all ways to be implored, and promises

himself to the Abbot with charity to be about to respond, if with life as companion

he returns to his fatherland. Then himself to the very Abbot's

and his men's commending prayers, with all

humility, and a hope of himself approaching and himself without doubt

moving promising most confident, kisses being given

he dismissed in peace.

[20] The Abbot therefore these for which the Synod he had approached

being ordered, Returned to the monastery and with grace and benediction Apostolic

fortified, and of the promise of the Archbishop

certain, to his fatherland returns most glad; all things which

were seen, which said, and which heard had been to his announcing

Brothers: with whom also of the long intermitted desire

the business anew he began to ventilate, and also

the event of the Archbishop, and of the rest of his companions,

in his postulation, in assent and counsel concording,

to insinuate. Of blessed also Auctor the unhoped-for

coming, and his by signs attesting merit

he began to replicate; and in these the bowels of divine piety,

to himself and his place and his all expended, to consider.

Wherefore, says he, since omnipotent God so great

of His largesse benefits to us unworthy ministers; the monks being excited to pious exercises, of all

us the indefatigable skill with continuous prayers,

vigils, and also fastings with His mercy

let it obtain, that what in us He began good, from

His holy temple, which is in the Jerusalem heavenly,

He confirm and perfect; and our business

toward the desire of B. Legontius He complete, and our way

with His preceding and accompanying grace to this to be performed

prosperously with His wonted piety direct. With of this kind

an exhortation his all ready and unanimous

he rendered, and he himself at the head as a good standard-bearer,

that the more freely to imitate himself the rest he might animate,

in spiritual exercises above his strengths he stood; just as

the most wise Seneca the best of warriors masters

instructing says: A shared with the leader labor, is persuaded

to the soldiers lesser.

[21] Then for months nearly three, with prayers

and tears publicly and privately multiplied, on the VIII

of the Kalends of April, 25 March of the year 1107 to Trier he advances, a commonly proclaimed three-day fast

with of Masses supplications, and first

of the Brothers the benediction received, he sets out with

two monks, and with a prosperous journey, on the fifth

feria which preceded the Lord's of Palms, the walls

he glimpses of the Trier city: and straightway with his whole

body on the ground prostrate, with all reverence the holy

Parents for committed he beseeches excesses; and that

to himself of the way the prosperity, and of his desire the effect

to concede they would deign, with tearful he appeals prayers.

And that more devoutly of them to implore he may be able the suffrages,

with the spiritual things he exercises barefoot-walking, and

the rugged crags, and of the journey the anomalous windings,

more, that so I may say, creeping, than walking,

not without of terror and of much sweat the strait

he went round through long two miles: and the of the Moselle

bed crossed through the bridge renowned, of B. Peter

the Prince of the Apostles, who there with special is venerated

devotion, he sought of the oratory the house: and after of his

remembrance of sins, with all of heart contrition,

his he implores suffrage. Imploring

also in this mode of the present there Saints

helps, the sepulchre he sought g of B. Simeon:

and it besought concerning his business and desire,

at S. Maximinus he sets out, there to be received

with the lodging, which he had asked a little before sent ahead

a legate.

[22] Whose coming learned, the venerable Abbot

Arnulph of worthy memory, received by the Abbot of S. Maximinus, with all veneration

received him; and the joined of the Brothers common

congregation, and given the customary benediction,

ministered to him as much as the will

was available for the time. Then on the sabbath which

preceded the Lord's of Palms, admitted before

the Archbishop, most honorifically he is received,

and his business with the Primates of the whole Bishopric, and by the Archbishop of Trier:

on the next day to convene about to be, to be treated

piously is procrastinated. Shining at last the day

Lord's, the hour first, gathered to the benediction

of the Palms of all the congregations the Priors,

the Archbishop pronouncing, the cause is intimated. him the matter in the convention proposing,

The matter, as if unheard and unusual, first by

all is feared: and themselves mutually regarding,

and, what they should answer, hesitating, to the admiration

of all is held.

[23] But the Archdeacon, a man of all honesty and religion

Godfrey, and the same Dean of S. Peter,

whose it was of office the first responses to render, [and the Archdeacon approving but on account of the fast to be premised to defer persuading,] loosed the silence

thus an uttered voice: We have understood, says he, and

without delay we have found, the Abbot present,

a man venerable, a great indeed, but just, and

(as we reckon) to God pleasing, and to the whole world about to profit

to demand; and for obtaining himself and his men with fastings

and prayers, vigils and alms to have fitted,

which worthy and useful and to such a business necessary

are proved to exist: nor worthy we judge so

spiritual a desire and the divine disposition if it is, utterly

to contradict. Especially since for much already time,

now through letters and legates, now through himself

for this to be obtained it is established him to have labored.

But we to these things to be handled and to be expounded altogether

unworthy, since to so holy a ministry to be present

we are in all ways unprepared, it remains that to us

a respite being conceded of our conscience we may scrutinize

the secrets, and therefore commonly with a three-day fast to

God in the heavens our hearts let be lifted with our hands,

that in this of pious devotion action to them in a certain way

equal to be made we may be busy, who cannot in all things.

These things indeed to have done already we ought, but by ignorance

of so sudden and so unhoped-for a thing we had not foreseen.

To these things to be carried out us the highest compels necessity:

which if we intermit, and of our own accord ourselves into illicit things

cast, a great seems rashness; lest while

of others to the salvation inconsiderately we endeavor to provide, of the Saints

we incur the offense, and of the most equitable judge

God we offend the grace. The Abbot meanwhile, having received

for charity's sake of some Saints pledges,

into his with his companions himself let recede, and to us

after these things commodiously for answering and his

desire to be satisfied prepared let return, or certainly

fit and spiritual messengers, who his place may supply,

let send.

[24] a delay he deprecates. These things heard, the Abbot with his men in mind exceedingly

dismayed, and as if shot arrows from the heart

wounded, first grew stiff; and presently the recollected

spirit, constantly to the Archbishop and the whole

assembly answered. Father most reverend,

let weigh the excellence of your nobility the labors and

straits of our littleness, the expenses which we have expended

by coming and here remaining above the strengths

of our faculty, the interval of a more prolix way,

nor anyone except in the days of peace anywhere to advance

to dare: and what us especially constrains,

the uncertainty of our life and of yours: nor

would you wish, what of your Priesthood in the days the Omnipotent

through you disposed to be done, into another to defer:

especially since exhorts the Apostle us,

While time we have to work good toward all. Galat. 6, 10

Inasmuch as concerning fastings and alms, vigils and

prayers it is treated, and he shows to suffice the present fast. nor except these being premised our business

to the present can be terminated; there remain seven

days next to this to be carried out, more excellent and

more apt in time of the whole year: in which to these

exercises whosoever cannot be moved, either

scarcely or in no mode will be provoked in all the course

of the time summer. For neither the Omnipotent with a forced fast

or unwilling prayer's duration is fed, who

rather with a pious of good will zeal in a brief time

is delighted. Let dispose therefore your piety, whatever

upon this is to be done, to be exercised in these days

of salvation, and in this acceptable time, and us

the end of those we will await most promptly:

that we who began the expenses to disburse, not in two but

in one may expend time: for neither another time

more apt or more becoming is, than in these holy days

holy things to be treated: and religious men, who already to God

have lived not to themselves, through this Lent's observation

purified, more devoutly than at another time,

this all which we demand and we need,

prevail to carry out.

[25] These things consequently being discoursed, and by a long silence

a common consent betraying all,

the Lord Archbishop, present i the Abbot of Prüm,

and in all things counsel and consent to the Abbot's

business affording, It is deferred to the next day the definition. who to visit the sacred

places by chance had come then in time, the silence of all

of this kind loosed with words: To just executions faith

to afford is not to sin: and so since

I by a royal precept to the comitatus am compelled to set out,

nor is there leisure now to define the sentence of this business,

tomorrow hither all may you convene, in my place

at the first hour of the day upon this matter to be about to treat, and the end

to be about to deliberate: and may you know my consent in this

to be, that the disposition of God and of these Saints be made

in the Abbot's will. But if perhaps B. Legontius,

for whom the matter is treated, by an event for himself, as we have heard

formerly, customary cannot be found,

nor would wish at all, not is by us to be blamed or

to be judged this hidden of God disposition. You moreover

a man of so great authority in no mode empty or

sad let return suffer, but to him a Patron holy

and approved may you procure from the sacristy of B. Paulinus.

[26] These things said and the benediction on the branches of the Palms

imposed, and also the procession, which under heaven nowhere

on this day more becomingly and more honorifically is held

being disposed, and the consent of the people being required after long circuits the order of his discourse

to the people he began in the basilica of B. Maximinus

the Confessor: and digested conveniently some things

to of so great a day the mystery pertaining, now

the determined discourse thus he brought before all:

There came, says he, to us a servant of God faithful a certain

Abbot from Saxony, of the Saints seeking the patronages,

and to himself to be given demanding of one named holy

Prelate, and Lord formerly of ours the pledges,

to which sufficiently befitting he fitted a monastery, and the rest

to his honor and divine service congruous:

Which since great are, and above my strengths; nor

am I able alone of so great a business the weight to attempt,

to you all I notify, who sons are of our Church,

and by whose counsel all my divine and human things

I have been wont to dispose; protesting in this to the divine disposition

and to your consent my will

to accord, if it please the Saint himself to be translated

to that one to manifest. They indeed equanimously and benignly

answering, and the will of God to be done upon this

imploring, the Lord Archbishop, from the Abbot

his and his men's society and fraternity to himself and his

all received and to him his and his congregations'

inviolably conceded, and it being obtained; as was asked,

set out to the Court, admonishing on the next day

to await, from the counsel and consent of his Primates,

as he had ordered, the will divine.

[27] On the night therefore following in divine praises

consummated, shining of the day following the dawn,

the Abbot with his men celebrates of Masses the solemnities: and finished

prayers congruous, and of so great expectation

necessary, and proclaimed also singularly to himself

and his men a three-day fast, of the Prince of the Apostles

he approached the thresholds, upon this hope his doubtful of him to implore

the suffrages. from the common of the Nobles of Trier sentence And straightway convening

Bishops, Abbots, Provosts and Deans,

and the Priors rest, joined also the Abbot of S. Maximinus,

who was of Royal dominion, mediating the grace

of God suddenly was made one of all the consent, one

concord of pious will of those saying: Not to become

longer to protract men of so great reverence and so great

gravity, not to ought to be contradicted to the desire of a business

spiritual, rather to be carried out the divine will

into the effect of a good action. And called

the Abbot with his monks, the assent and concord

their they confess to this even conducted, that to his

they would the will satisfy, and the Saint whom they demanded

to investigate the means to concede, and found

that he be exposed and translated, with due

to so great a Pontiff reverence and devotion, themselves commonly

to be present to wish; and they admonish not it further

to be deferred, but to be more maturely begun.

These things being discoursed, the fraternity and society, the day before

to the Archbishop conceded and by him received,

in their convention they judged to be iterated, and it

to of the to succeed posterity the memory by writing to be confirmed

and perpetually to be stabilized. there is given to the Abbot the wished-for licence: But the Abbot,

to repay worthy thanks for their pious

response, with his men to the ground prone is bent

with body; and given and received, as they demanded,

the fraternity he prays, that of his prayers by the suffrages

to him they would deign to stipulate, so far as He, who is the beginning

and the end, of his business the beginning and end may deign

to prosper.

[28] These things so done, rising all, k the Abbot

of S. Martin precedes with the Dean and sacristan

of S. Paulinus, to insinuate more certainly, who the place shown to him as they believed,

the place of digging up of the long desired treasure. Which

beheld the Abbot with his men the lodging seeks again, and asked

mattocks and digging-tools, and also baskets

to this work necessary, and hired workmen in

this office expert, his men to the appointed place sent back,

himself with faithful monks and religious

Clerics a crypt, of SS. l Paulinus, Thyrsus, and

Palmatius and their companions with bodies filled,

the seven Psalms singing entered. Of whom

with sighs and tears from the inmost heart by the suffrages

implored, he goes out to the place with a litany and

of incense: and prayers being premised the Abbot himself,

girded the earth with a mattock first opened, the of digging beginning he makes,

the poor meanwhile with the largesse of alms gladdened.

Then with others and others succeeding,

and the earth hence and thence manfully throwing, and many

of promiscuous sex and age to this spectacle

flowing together, and the divine help to them

to be present they prayed; they wished and asserted most

not to be long to be labored, but as soon as possible the vows

with prosperity to be obtained: which alas! far otherwise

the event of the matter showed to be about to be. For through the whole

day with much endeavor it was labored, and nothing

certain found, but nor of a sepulchre any appeared

vestige; but with labor through day and night in vain continued, and of all hope the event was deferred into

the morrow. But the Clerics younger to the laboring condoling,

of their own accord themselves they gird to the work, and through the whole

night they labor digging, the Abbot in vain even

to morning with his men passing the night. But in of the night the midst

two indeed sarcophagi were opened, but in them no

certain of an indication was contained, by which to be designated should be he

who was sought.

[29] Then the hymns matutinal completed, and made

morning returning the workmen, and others set above,

the Abbot with his men to the wonted of the Saints recurs

suffrages; and Masses celebrated and prayers superadded,

to the place returned, some of his vow to apprehend

desiring indications. and also through the two following days But by no of doubtful fear

still found relief, anew he undertook God to appeal to:

and since, as says the Scripture, to one desiring

and loving it does not suffice once to have sought or to have looked back;

again he came, went, and returned, and with a trembling

breast with curious eyes often surveyed. In this

of mind fluctuation of this also day even to the descent

protracted the labor, the Abbot with his men exceedingly

was wearied, and in mind and strengths exceedingly was dismayed:

but because prudent he was and exceedingly discreet,

to these things by a little of recovering hope he was ruled. Wherefore

his men's used counsel, not yet he judged to be ceased

to be from the begun, but on the morrow all places

to be scrutinized, in which according to the opinion of divers ones

to be investigated would be some estimation. Wearied

then members with a small rest recreated, after the matutinal

synaxis, after the twilight of the fourth feria,

the mystery of our redemption being tasted, after prayer

or psalmody of a congruous time, wontedly

more temperately is insisted the labor of the begun work. There animated

for and incited the showing diverse of many, themselves some

feverish and with other incommodes laboring,

in those and those places, healings to have obtained protesting;

lamps also kindled by the faithful's hands, on account of the signs by which the place was wont to be illustrated;

by day and night, and not by wind and any breeze until

they should be consumed utterly to be extinguished able, themselves to have seen

asserting; and also lights of the untimely night

in the silence from heaven emitted, in those very places shining, themselves frequently

to have found saying.

[30] Wherefore in a garden, a place to it contiguous, obtained

of digging licence, no moreover anywhere appearing indication, from the Cleric whose it was of right,

round about all things were tried with industries, if perchance

anywhere to his suppliants He would deign the omnipotent

to manifest the gift of His largesse. For in the former

digging six are of men, women and infants

opened sarcophagi, in the garden three, likewise near the hedge

of the very garden three: in which all no of Pontifical

mitre found indication, the Abbot and his men an intolerable

of mind passion grieved. They were pale with fastings,

vigils, and excessive straits worn the faces, with griefs

excessive the languid bowels shaking, the members

debilitated of certain a sudden dissolution occupied

an effigy: with eyebrows by acedia contracted, the bloody

orbs of the eyes a moribund pressed appearance; and the whole

of the body habit a horror a certain and trembling

grieved by turns. Now, as says a certain one of themselves, in

us alas! is fulfilled, what in of the Maccabees the book

is contained; 1 Mach. 3, 16 that whosoever the countenance of the prince

of the Priests contemplated, the grieving Abbot, in mind was wounded:

it was for an intolerable misery to see a man

of so great religion and reverence, of all hope nearly exhausted

of confidence, so that truly to cry he could with

the Prophet: My heart is troubled; has deserted

me my virtue, and the light of my eyes is not

with me. Psal. 37, 11 But also this the man the same most patient for relieving

his men, as much as possible had been, very much

dissimulated: but on every side the interior of mind grief

by betraying indications to conceal he could not.

[31] Wherefore his peculiar ones secretly apart

taken, these he used addresses. We came, says he,

to these places, most beloved, by hope exceedingly animated and with much

confidence corroborated: the hope of finding S. Legontius being cast away, but I fear lest we seem in each

to be frustrated. A twin to us was a business, with

men one, with God the other: of which

the one of both we feared, of the other nothing we doubted:

but these with a turned vice much otherwise than we estimated

proceeded; while that prosperously, which we doubted,

has come; and what confidently we hoped,

God from us has subtracted. And other very many things attesting,

at last he brought: And since B. Legontius, to whom we

most humbly have vowed, neither by our miseries is bent,

nor by labors is moved, nor of our service by the devotion

is delighted; whomsoever the Divine largesse to His suppliants

in his place to subrogate will deign, with equal honor

and reverence from the inmost heart by us let be received:

and equal cult and veneration to his dominion in all

service by all us let be exhibited. he decrees another Saint to receive. Of this

discourse by the sweetness relieved the of so great a Father sons, and from

the whirlpool of so deep grief by the hand of pious consolation

drawn out, and as if now obtained a Patron exhilarated,

of all labor and strait the burden laying down,

only treated concerning the celebration of the vigils

of the instant solemnity of the Lord's Supper, and the order of the divine

service.

ANNOTATIONS.

CHAPTER III.

The Body of S. Modoaldus obtained, and with a solemn pomp carried out, with other sacred Relics.

[32] But the following day made morning, the Abbot with

his men the summit of the neighboring mount climbed, On the Lord's Supper, 11 of April the Abbot endowed with particles of S. Beatus invited

thither by two to God devoted women there in the church

of blessed Mary enclosed: there consolation and exhortation

mutually expended, he received from them of S. Beatus

the Confessor pledges, namely, a tooth of him and a part

of a rib, which they themselves had lifted with their hands from

his sarcophagus, before the altar of the same church placed.

Performed then with gladness spiritual of so great a day the solemnities,

and the bodies after a long-lasting of the fastings abstinence

refreshed, the Abbot joined the Provost of S. Maximinus,

with his men the basilica of S. Paulinus sought; and convoked

with the Dean some of the priors of the Church, from the church of S. Paulinus he asks for himself to be given a body some

first of his troubles the order, and of the manifold

labor grievously shaken the series he replicated, and

thus forthwith brought: Since admonishing the holy Scripture,

to the sad solace we are bidden to expend; teaches

this especially the spiritual to the spiritual to exhibit,

since from the capacity and knowledge of letters an excuse

they have not of ignorance. Wherefore let move

you our intolerable, to which by condescending and pitying

you were present, tribulation: and because known to you

it is, as much as of one suffering and compassionating to be noted can be

the discretion, the more large let be made through you in us your

commiseration and relief. Now for the time is, that clearly

you may declare, if of charity by the regard to our miseries

a cordial compassion you have expended. Recollect

therefore, how the most benign Pontiff with how great us with piety

received, with how great benignity dismissed; with how great hope

and confidence, if what we hoped, did not befall, he animated;

which thus alas! according to the mind of the Archbishop: to have happened the event of things proved.

For he promised and mandated to us in your

presence, all ambiguity being driven, a Patron worthy

and holy a Pontiff from you to seek; which

we also do, with all humility and devotion of our

service, and of continual prayer it to merit desiring

by a promise; and what to these in your mind

sits indicate.

[33] But they first ambiguous circuits to offer

machinating, and a choice being given to himself of one of three to escape attempted; but the constancy of the Abbot

in the exaction considering, and the deliberation

of him again the Bishop to approach, and upon this matter anew

to appeal weighing; secretly among themselves

to confer for the sake into a part withdrew. Nor much

the conferring being protracted they returned, and to the demanding one benignly

to answer: As you have pursued the matter's series,

to have proceeded we profess: by your labor we are bent, by your

straits we are moved, and of your prayers

and spiritual benefits by the expending we are delighted:

nor you longer suspended by ambiguity to be tossed

we suffer: therefore to your will's desire to satisfy

we delay not. On the morrow therefore day, a more secret

hour to us procuring, and to us by a messenger to you

intimating, you will come: and from the authority of our Lord

the Prelate of three Saints' bodies the choice

will be given to you, namely of Modoaldus, b Abrunculus,

Bonosus, Pontiffs of this Trier city. Which

however we confess, God being present, who is the inspector of our conscience,

since, if with the saved grace of our Prelate

and yours it were lawful to contradict, as much as to

our pertains judgment, to no one of men we would wish

to concede. But the Abbot with his men from the heart's abundance

glad drawing sighs, and with prone eyes and

neck suppliantly inclined, From God, says he, to you

of retribution let be repaid the grace; by whose mediating, and your minds

disposing with this us you have gladdened consolation:

These things then being bidden farewell the cloister of S. Maximinus

most glad he enters.

[34] After these things the Lord's Supper with spiritual jucundity

celebrated, On the 6th feria in Parasceve and after a small of the wearied body

rest the matutinal hymns solemnly completed,

the day glides upon the lands, and admonishes his men the Abbot to be communicated

to the Lord's passions, that participants to be made

they might merit of His future consolation and most glad

resurrection. Straightway, the earth although with a most sharp frost

curled, with bare feet they advance with psalmody,

the Saints surveying to implore the patronages: and by a certain

path seeking again the church of S. Maximinus,

the psalter there with prayers congruous they terminated.

And completed in the diurnal synaxis those things which were appearing

in that time, nearly now wearied to the lodging they returned:

and called of venerable memory and to himself most faithful

above noted Arnulph the Provost, concerning the single

of the Saints merits, of whom to them given had been the choice,

to inquire they studied diligently. But he, There are, says he,

each one of great sanctity, and of great with God

merit: but B. Modoaldus by lineage and virtues to us

is most known, and in this place principal. To these things the Abbot: The same, says he, most blessed Pontiff Modoaldus, he chooses the body of S. Modoaldus

after God and His holy Mother

and the blessed Apostles, with a pure heart Lord and Patron

I choose, and devotion my and service

my and of all mine I offer; his help

that to us to come and his suppliants to visit He may deign,

I invoke.

[35] Presently as the vow he vowed, behold a messenger of the brothers

of S. Paulinus was present, admonishing them to hasten to perform

the business of his will. Who having taken incense

and a most clean linen, hasten most promptly,

and with the very Provost of the Clerics presented

to the gazes, confer, in what it is to be done order.

But they, of ours, they say, one, and to the place advancing, with a white stole and cope

adorned, let precede bearing incense; and we following

with psalms and a litany of the Saints will enter

the dwellings. Which heard the Abbot; Nothing, says he,

to be in the way if even of my Brothers one with white be clothed,

that with two preceding ministers, what is to be done

more quickly be completed. These things so disposed, and in

the sacristy before the altar standing the Abbot with the Provost

and his monks, and a few Canons, and prayers

completed, then the pall lifted, and of the Saints'

coffers raised, the Dean of S. Paulinus thus said

to those awaiting: Behold two bodies of SS. Abrunculus

and Bonosus the Bishops, of great merit men:

whom of them as Patron and Lord you shall have chosen,

he will be of your place and of all yours a protector

most faithful, and of the fatherland whole a protector most powerful.

To these things the Abbot: So, I say, as you have asserted not only

we doubt not, but also we believe and profess: which he asks

but because of three a choice is given to us, to D. Modoaldus

we have vowed ourselves and our service: him before

God and you Patron and Lord we choose, and

him to us to be given by a devout supplication we beseech.

[36] These things heard suddenly with changed face, and with all

their bowels trembling, and seeing a man of so great constancy

from the purpose not to be able to be bent; revealed the ark

wooden, on every part with iron bindings constrained,

and exceedingly fortified, again say they: Lo himself for

whom you supplicate. See if among so many iron bonds him

in any mode you can draw out. Forthwith the monk

that, who in sacred vestments stood adorned, approaching

and more curiously all things surveying, with the jawbones of S. Abrunculus, the arm of S. Bonosus, two boards

to each other joined in the front of the ark found: which because

by antiquity nearly consumed they had been, with a slow effort

handling; separated he sets down, and the introspected most holy

limbs, to receive them a most clean linen

expands. Presently imposed an Antiphon, and

set on incense, on the ground with his whole prostrates body,

and the Clerics standing around, and of the heart sadness

with sighs and tears betraying, the members holy

one by one he drew out, and diligently wrapped, three little portions

being left to those supplicating; and for them the jawbones

of S. Abrunculus, and the arm of S. Bonosus bestowing.

Received therefore the most precious of blessed Modoaldus

of Trier the Archbishop body, and in

a shrine of the very sacristy placed, and with a key fortified, and to himself

retained the key unto the day of his departure,

they go out full of all exultation.

[37] Besides the Abbot of S. Maximinus, secretly asked

and much importuned for the relics of S. Auctor the Bishop,

and taught how great miracles through him the Lord

in Saxony had deigned to work: considered,

that with miracles attesting He would not disdain in

the cloister of the present Abbot for the salvation of the inhabitants

an exile to be held. some Relics of S. Auctor, Weighing also that other many of the Saints

bodies would suffice to that one; the sacristan being consulted,

he ordered that as many of his body as he could have Relics,

secretly he should concede to the same Abbot, believing and

protesting by many indications this to be by the will of the very

Saint. The sacristan himself also the day before asked and bent

had been by the love of the aforesaid Provost, and by the familiarity

of one of the present monks, to himself once in the necessary

use of the church sufficiently profitable. Returning therefore

the Abbot with gladness immense from the sacristy of S. Paulinus,

the aforewritten sacristan, called and into a part led

the same monk to himself known, the upper shell

of the head of S. Auctor the Archbishop, and also two of

the larger members assigned to him, attesting of his

with himself, except a small portion, nothing more to be had.

Which with immense thanks-giving the Brother

that receiving to his intimated Abbot. Joys to joys

are accumulated, and on the altar of the heart of praises victims to God

with the odor of devout humility are immolated: which to

of each one of the giver or of the receiving the profit expended

with of charity fire are burned.

[38] The Abbot meanwhile about to advance to of Masses the solemnities

with the Sacerdotal is clothed mitre, and also by the ministers

of the Church the rest to so great a day's mysteries congruous.

Meanwhile arrived the Provost, of those things which had happened

upon the relics of B. Auctor unaware, and himself

his beloved ones concerning those things which he had learned from the revelation

of the holy Thebans about to gladden. And now the Abbot

advancing to one of his monks joined,

with this brief little verse used: Visited, says he, us

the Lord. And receiving with brief words the discourse,

succinctly of the done matter discloses the series. and two Bodies of SS. Thebans: Then of Masses

and of the sacred mystery the celebration completed, the Provost

to the Abbot announces all things: and taken

of his monks the other, and also the Brother, who the matter

to himself had revealed with the sacristan, the crypt enters secretly,

the Brothers rest to recreate their bodies sitting

in the refectory, and the Abbot with the Brother the other

the end of the matter awaiting in the exterior oratory. And presently

prayer being made the Brother that the known place seeks again,

what he had obstructed, opens, the Saints' limbs larger

and smaller draws out, and to the Abbot's monk with a linen

clean straightway offers: c but with two bodies

nearly gathered and diligently wrapped they departed, and also

to the Abbot with the Brother awaiting and praying great

relics, and an immense joy conveyed.

Who presently to heaven extended hands, and tears

sweet and glad pouring forth from the inmost bowels, thus

brought with prone to the ground eyes: Be to Thee, good

Jesus Redeemer, of the sad the consolation, of the laboring

the fortitude, the glory, praise, and jubilation, who hast deigned

on this day Thy suppliants to visit from heaven holy

Thine, and to gladden with a manifold of the Saints patronage.

[39] These all things beginning, mediating, and perfecting

the divine disposition, so gloriously completed,

the Abbot with his all to S. Maximinus, of that

place the Brothers themselves there by charity detaining, with all

jucundity spiritual, the Sabbath holy, and of the most holy

Resurrection the day in God passed in praises. of whose Translation to be made on the 2nd feria of Easter

Of which day completed the vespertinal synaxis, the Abbot the Dean

of S. Peter approaching, to him through himself took care to notify,

himself in of the following day the twilight to set out

to wish. Whom the man religious receiving most benignly,

straightway directed a legation to all the congregations

and the rest of Christ faithful studied to intimate. Then

after a small and brief of the night rest, the matutinal

hymns, as the customary of the holy days

order required, solemnly completed; now made

morning the Abbot with his men taken the bier, with incense

and palls, and also a cross silver and gilded,

which the image of our redeemer from bone

most becomingly sculptured contained, and which on account of this

alone with him he had carried, and in that hour to the name of S. Modoaldus

had determined (for neither an Archbishop

without a cross anywhere to set out it became)

the basilica of S. Paulinus he sought, and himself to the religious Canons

it now awaiting represented. Who straightway

finished Prime, the signals being rung with crosses, the labarum

and holy water, and also incense, the Abbot

also with sacred vestments clothed, to the sacristy

advanced: and the seals found safe, the body of the most precious Confessor of Christ Modoaldus with other

of the Saints relics on the bier they imposed, and given an Antiphon

with tears, the choir of S. Paulinus, of Masses

the solemnities festively about to celebrate, they ascended.

[40] And behold d the Abbot of S. Mary, with all his congregation

his in white palled, there come the monks of S. Mary, with Crosses and of the Gospels

a book and incense, arrived, and to the celebration

of Masses devoutly was present. Which venerably

completed, and the procession with congruous praises

imposed with a solemn voice, taken of the holy Prelate the bier,

with crosses and the rest apparatus, they began

to set out. How much there was poured of tears, and how much

resounded of groanings, except who present

were difficult faith to the words can give. Who

for himself from weeping could abstain, when the Shepherd most pious,

now of heaven a Consul, the place, which through many of years

courses with the inhabitants he had protected, was seen

corporeally to desert; and into a far-off

fatherland about to set out, and as if an exile to be, to B.

Paulinus and the rest of his confreres in a certain way

was seen to bid farewell? Scarcely going out from the choir

of S. Paulinus, behold advances to meet a devout congregation

of S. Maximinus, with crosses and an immense apparatus, and of S. Maximinus,

the monks all palled, and with of praises melodies

they join themselves to the preceding procession. Then drawing near

to the gate of S. Simeon, the Canons of S. Simeon, there meet the Canons

of the same Church, with palls adorned, receiving the holy

Body with crosses and all veneration. And standing

the bearers, and incensed and also sprinkled the Relics,

and premised a prayer, to the procession in their place

themselves they joined. In this order advancing to the middle

of the village, behold there drew near like a heavenly

army honorable men, with a contiguous to themselves congregation,

of the Prince of the Apostles the Canons, with palls

with gold and gems shining clad, receiving, and of S. Peter,

but rather drawing out the body of the Shepherd most loving,

with crosses and all ornament double: and bowing

themselves with tears, and with prone to the ground countenances

to so great a Pontiff, sprinkled and incensed

the sacred pledges, with praises and prayer solemn.

[41] The Abbot of S. Martin To these the procession's prayer prolonging,

and a little advancing, met the Abbot

of S. Martin with his Brothers; of whom how much smaller

was the apparatus exterior, the more shone the interior

more abundantly; and who as much as the faculty was available,

of the most pious Father the company prolonged, following

with hymns and canticles spiritual. Suddenly moreover,

as bees bursting out from the hives, and a copious people. flowed together

the populace of either sex and age, longing to be present

to the company of the most beloved one; and gravely himself offended

grieved, whosoever more slowly should run to meet: not fathers

the sweetness of children at home retained: not mothers of daughters

the solicitude impeded; not of brides the love the bridegrooms

or them their joyful affection contained; not

the household-born domestic care prohibited; not servants

or handmaids of any work enjoined the solicitude

or fear of stripes restrained; not boys or

girls of the mother within the house the hunger and love of bread, or

without the custom of games restrained: but an equal of all

and concordant affection the Father to follow and the Lord

to conduct was. Now then for in a certain way

was fulfilled of this holy Shepherd by the office,

what says the Lord in the Gospel: The shepherd good

when his own sheep he shall have sent out, before them goes, and the sheep

him follow, because they know his voice. Ioan. 10 These for

were of those sheep the lambs, to whom in the place of the first Shepherd

by God to himself once committed words of pious

exhortation he had prepared, and whom with the sweetness of all

suavity by preceding, by working and by teaching he had filled.

[42] Of this most sweet and most large Shepherd the abundance

recollecting, and of his patronage the protection against

all things adverse and most faithful protection

in mind revolving, and of all these to be made deprived

for of so great a Father the absence fearing, very much grieving themselves of his patronage to be deprived and from the inmost

of the heart grief sighs drawing, these they redoubled

weeping: Whither, Lord? what is it,

Father most pious? Why dost thou leave thy sheep, Shepherd

most loving? In what thee did we injure? in what thee did we offend?

Did not to thy doctrines we and our fathers

prone ears accommodate? But woe to us,

who of patronage so great are destitute! And we, as

mad and as if to a feast invited, thee setting out

with praises pursue? Truly for our Lord

of ours, from far or near coming, thus was

to be received; with of this kind services to mercy

and to our affection to be bent; but into far-off

lands about to set out, and to a strange nation's salvation

about to profit, and us further not about to see, by no means

with so great dancing was to be conducted. Alas how

damnable a procession! how sudden of the whole fatherland the desolation!

how grave of this place the destruction! and, unless

omnipotent God with His hand contain it, into the depth

of the earth a submersion! But those thrice and four times and seven times

blessed, whom the Omnipotent of such and so great a Patron

with the honor and benefits endowed, whom by our loss

He enriched, whom with our spoils He dilated, whom by our

misfortune He prospered. These things more manifoldly redoubling

to tears tears they add, and weepings with frequent

sobs they adjoin.

[43] These therefore of this kind lamentable complaints

at times using, at times also of divers

praises the proclamations resounding, The Procession is conducted even to the bridge, with all devotion

and reverence accompanied, preceding

and following. Nor do we delay, nay with full faith

we believe, on that very day upon the most holy pledges heaven

to have lain open, and the holy Angels invisibly descending

and ascending obsequy to so great a Pontiff

to have afforded, and of so wondrous a procession the concord

and equanimity to have ordered (which beyond

doubt to three hundred Clerics was estimated to have had)

that in so great a frequency neither the preceding by the following

were pressed, nor the following by the preceding

were drawn, but in each equality and discretion

was kept. There was besides a stupendous miracle

to see so many and so great bands, of either sex

and age, so reverently and so concordantly from

each part of the procession to walk, that as walls

were seen in a certain way hence and thence immobile

to stand, whom neither a narrower way constrained, nor

a more spacious dilated, that they should remove themselves from the equality.

In such order, and with so becoming honorificence

with divine praises passing the long interval

of the way, at last to the Bridge renowned they came:

and straightway from the bridge descending the Abbot of S.

Eucharius, he is received by the Abbot of S. Eucharius: with his Brothers most honestly palled,

with crosses and the rest ornament manifold, to meet

advanced; and the holy Pontiff reverently

on the bridge received, and through the bridge following with

a manifold of praises dancing conducted.

[44] In this order descending from the height

of the bridge behold there rushed an innumerable multitude of the neighboring

populace, with Crosses and divers of the Saints relics,

receiving the holy Prelate with sweet

melodies. But by the vicinity of the mount round about

opposed they were forbidden further to advance: and the people being dismissed the Archdeacon discourses to the Clergy

and set down the relic, flows around with tears an innumerable

multitude, now now about to bid farewell to the Pontiff most holy:

and bowed down to the ground men with women,

and to the pious Shepherd their commending souls,

the sacred honored Relics with their offerings, and striking

their breasts sad returned to

their own. The Clerics then with the monks in a circle

gathered and in the manner of a crown girding

the members of their Pontiff, the Archdeacon Godfrey

and himself the Dean of S. Peter, silence being asked,

in this mode began the series of his discourse. A great thing,

says he, is, most dear Brothers, this mystery

and inestimable, and to be effected to all

back ages incredible, that by the nod of the divine disposition

from us nearly, that so I might say, unwilling,

done is established today, that so great and so principal,

and to all our commonwealth so profitable

to send forth. He for was the hope of the whole fatherland; in him

hung all the confidence of our salvation: and as often

as us of whatsoever tribulation struck the incommode,

in Modoaldus and Eucharius of all our help

lay open the refuge. And truly, the of this donation author, unless because to the command

of the Omnipotent to resist of mortals no one sane

and wise ought to presume, to of this kind a consent

no reason would bend the constancy of our mind.

For indeed we delay not, as long as is rolled

of this world the orbit, his patronage's wonted to us

to experience suffrages: since if by a change of place into

the fatherland, which to the Saint himself provisor it pleases, we send

his sweet bones: which by these was contained,

the heart namely and tongue and the rest of his flesh to us

we reserve pledges.

[45] You therefore, Brothers most dear, who of so great

Relics are bearers, weigh, how much of honor

and of joys bestowed has on you the grace of Christ, and to those to whom that was done. and how great

of praises a return you ought to repay to the benefits

of omnipotent God, and to us the bestowers of so great

a treasure. One indeed is, which alone and principal

we lead in our estimation, which stable

and unconvulsed by writing we firm dispose into the to-succeed

of the age times, that we be henceforth heart one and

soul one, and of mutual fraternity and society, of which

the greatest pledge to you we have conceded, between us and

you and our and your posterity a covenant let be firmed

perpetual. We commend therefore to God and your

faith, under the testification and obtestation of Christ,

upon the salvation and soul of you, the body of the most precious

Provisor and Shepherd our Modoaldus the Archbishop,

so far as the due honor according to the power

of you and knowledge in the feasts and in all divine service

you may exhibit to him. These things being discoursed, and the holy Relics

with the moistening of cheeks saluted, and also the Abbot

and his monks more frequently kissed, to their

each returned with sighs.

[46] These the Moselle being crossed returning Crossed therefore the river of the Moselle, into wedges

gathered the men with the women, on the part of the bank the other,

as a last bidding farewell to their Shepherd, of praises

resounded songs: and whom further they could not

with the body, with their eyes they followed and with a sweet-sounding voice.

But the bearers of the Saints, the steep of the mountains crags

and rugged seeking again ascents, with some of piety

by the regard and the love of the Saints accompanying, by the journey

by which they had come alacrious and the Lord in turn praising,

to their own to return hasten. Then not without

sweat the ascent of the steep mount being measured, behold of the contiguous

village nearly all the villagers flow together to meet

their Pontiff, some even with their whole body to the ground prostrate,

in faith standing, with struck breasts of their guilts pardon,

of life salvation, and of things commodity implored

with a suppliant voice. Others moreover the signals being rung

of the church preceding and following, from everywhere from the cantons it is run to meet with all

their strengths insisted of praises on the melody. Some indeed

with prone neck nearer approaching, and their shoulders

to the salutiferous putting under the relic, and to themselves by turns succeeding

of the Saints bearers longed to be made; with the highest

of devotion zeal themselves blessed declaring, and themselves to be sanctified

believing in mind and body, whosoever of sanctity

so great the burden merited to touch. And so

by a straight path from village to village hastening, and others

now wearied with a suppliant now with eye bidding farewell and as if

now hope being recovered of their salvation alacriously receding,

and others with entire faith and hope of being saved to meet

hastening, and of their felicity an augury

receiving; some even through of a mile and more

space advancing, in common the name

of the Lord was praised by all.

[47] Then of the Brothers of S. Maximinus three monks,

by the venerable Provost Arnulph to afford

a guidance directed, and there is brought by the Provost sent preceding forthwith quickly

follow, and the seized to alleviate the fatigation of the journey

a little while by resting they exhorted. And

first to those resting they offer a little box, with of the Saints

pledges crammed, by the mentioned Provost to his

most dear friends receding, and now through many of times

spaces not to be seen, by of charity the regard directed, and

these containing:

From the sacristy of S. Maximinus.

Of his pall and stole: and a little box of other relics:

Of the handle of the little knife of our Lord Jesus Christ.

From the sacristy of B. Mary ever Virgin

by the venerable of that place Abbot directed:

Of the wood of the Lord:

Of the body of S. Matthias the Apostle:

Of the body of S. Severa the virgin, the sister of S. Modoaldus

the Archbishop, and other of divers ones relics.

[48] By these devoutly received most glad they were rendered, because

neither the averted, and, on the way placed, and only of the desire

intent of returning, the Omnipotent of His largesse would deprive

of the benediction; those the same their journey pursuing but a so great of sanctity treasure to them would deign, with him whom they bore, to accumulate;

thanks to of all the Bestower they were busy to repay.

Then from those things which of charity the bearers with them

had brought abundantly refreshed, with these the same

they give effort to the exercise of setting out.

And entering the forest, which the path occupied, of them a certain one

by chance the Cross silver, in which the bone image of our

Savior was, which in the name of S. Modoaldus

entitled before his holy body unceasingly

was carried, incautiously bearing, on the branches lower

struck: which presently shaken off from the staff to which it adhered,

by falling between two stones rightly and as if

voluntarily fixed stood. A thing wonderful, that so fragile

a bone material, from the Cross torn away the image bone unhurt is raised. with so great an impetus of the branches into the high

torn away, and through itself thrice or four times before

to the earth it drew near turned, upon the stones, which by chance

heaped up the way's depth filled, which

by little might be broken to pieces, by divine virtue to the same

stones wonderfully infixed remained unhurt. For

to declare the merit of the holy Priest, provided

the grace of the divine disposition, that both with a better

caution of the Cross-bearer might be corrected the carelessness, and the sign

of our redemption of clayey moisture not be violated

by the uncleanness.

[49] He added even still with another miracle openly

to make the most omnipotent largesse of the Divine commiseration, and the parched lands through the single nights

what they merited and how much could of them

the spirits in the heavens, of whom the bodies of so great devotion

with the zeal were translated on the lands. So great for

was of the heat the aridity, and so great of the earth the dryness, that

the hope of all increase to its cultivators the wintry denied

sowing nearly torrid, a rain is poured in, and the soil as iron of no

ploughshare's point could be raised to summer seeds

to be received. But the bearers of the Saints of the first

mansion received with the dwelling, so great of rains an abundance

flowed from heaven in of the whole following night the space,

that to the herbs all verdure, and to the seeds fecundity,

and to the soil were rendered of cultivation the faculty.

And that it might be clear plainly, of whom by the succoring merits

of so great mercy the largesse flowed forth to the parched

world, so great was the convenience of raining and of being lodged,

that one and the same was seen hour, both the travelers

the house's threshold to enter, and of the showers the largesse

to flow out. Nor was lacking in of the whole journey the space of the same

divine piety the commiseration, the heaven always through the day serene. in a certain way serving

the heavens of the venerable Saints obsequies,

so that nearly in single nights the earth's face was moistened

with of showers abundance: and of the days in the spaces, the sun and

wind a temperateness affording, of setting out was conceded

an abundance.

[50] Therefore, as we have premised, received of the first mansion

by the lodging, with of all humanity and charity they were fostered

by the commodity; fish also into the lodging of their own accord are brought. except that the host a man strenuous,

with a wife sufficiently honest, complained, to themselves fish

altogether to be lacking, with which of so great religion men, as it would become

their honorificence, they might be able to refresh. Whose

straightway a consolation being received, namely the Abbot,

of all humility a man, concerning appetite himself excusing, himself

more sumptuous or expensive foods not of great to weigh;

to himself of whatsoever mode victuals, with charity expended,

although small to suffice; himself of good will

by his zeal thanks to give confessing, the rest to himself and his men

necessary began to dispose; behold two men, having discharged of a fisherman the office, one of the former unaware, and the entering one

presently following forthwith, each however

of the present necessity ignorant, so great of fish

an abundance brought, which if nothing of another had been at

hand, of all present the multitude could

for eating suffice.

ANNOTATIONS.

CHAPTER IV.

The rest of the journey performed. The solemn reception in the proper monastery.

[51] The Brothers therefore, whom we have foretasted, of S. Maximinus,

after in the same village, Setting out they are solemnly received by the people of Prüm which of their right was,

Evena called, at the abovesaid host with all

charity and humanity us had; shining

the twilight of the following day, premised the of divine service

ministries, a guidance affording they preceded, and the most holy

Relics at times on their own shoulders bearing,

even to Prüm conducted. Which drawing near,

one of theirs they sent before a sagacious man, by name

Burchard a monk, who to the venerable Wulfrann

of the same place the Abbot of the Saints might intimate the coming.

Which heard the man of strenuous nobility, and learned

of how great prosperity an effect had obtained his

petition, by which with the very Abbot in the same business he had interceded

with the Archbishop of the Trier city;

of praises thanks repaid to the omnipotence of the divine largesse.

And straightway sent an edict orders all the villagers

of either sex and age, with the highest celerity, to

meet the Saints to advance, and of the Monks

and Clerics the orders to the reception of so great sanctity

to be fitted. And premised the Brother, who with him

of the legation the office had discharged, he mandates first

in the oratory of S. Benedict the Saints to be received with reverence

and honor due, whose spacious and remote

court the Brothers use for a cemetery. Thence a little hill,

which near was with grassy flowers crammed, being crossed,

behold with a crowd of the populace, of devotion the cult by habit

and office presenting, advance the Clerics with palls

adorned; who the Saints receiving, with crosses and

a sweet of praises modulation, convey into the church

of the holy of God Mother and Virgin Mary. Which

after of the prayer the term being conducted honorifically, forthwith

with a palled of monks flock walled, himself to meet

bore Wulfrann the Abbot, a man of all reverence: who

with crosses and incense, and a manifold apparatus

of devotion, the reverend Relics conduct into the cloister

of S. Salvator: and there in praises divine solemnly

completed, with all of humanity and charity by the regard

they embrace the Abbot with his men.

[52] Then of the following day the morning shining,

celebrated the mysteries of our redemption, the Abbot

with his men, conceded of his and the present Brothers

alacriously received the society, and bidding farewell to his

conductors, in the kiss of peace and mutual charity, they are conducted

by all the congregation, with much reverence

and to the Saints due veneration. But the host

most munificent, desiring to merit the dilection

of God, mindful of the Scripture testifying: a cheerful giver by

God to be loved; 2 Cor. 9, 7, Job. 31, 32 and of that blessed Job, I have not suffered a pilgrim

without a viaticum to pass by, to the Abbot receding

an abundance of fish bestowed with charity; and affording

to them a guidance even to a village of his right, Monasterium

by name, the rest which to those passing the night were

necessary from his to be ministered ordered most abundantly:

and there to them most devoutly received, and a third mansion

making, he geminated the services of hospitality.

But they setting out, and from day to day advancing,

at the sixth of the day hour of the fifth feria, Cologne the Colony

reached: and straightway premised a legation, of the Saints

the coming notifying to their faithful, b of S. Pantaleon

the Brothers, and at Cologne by the monks of S. Pantaleon, for themselves frequent of prayers victims

from the debt of fraternity offering, and before a quadriduum

in the Paschal feast's celebration the coming

of them desirably awaiting, an immense

joy they instilled, of the wished business their obtained

prosperity. Who voluntarily, absent their Abbot,

themselves forthwith mutually exhorting, and ornaments to so great

a reception worthy setting out, whitened and palled

solemnly to the Saints to meet advanced: and received

with a devout of praises modulation, into the sanctuary

of S. Pantaleon conveyed. Then to their Brothers very much

congratulating, and for all things which of vow

their possessed by the divine grace of largesse they had obtained,

in common the Lord blessing, of all charity

the office they exhibited; and asking for of their journey

the acceleration, although unwilling and resisting, with all

honorificence pursuing they conducted.

[53] On the day therefore eighth of the resurrection of the Lord,

by a straight path and God leading before, c Soest they came:

in whose journey's middle a youth a certain Cleric, then on the Lord's-day in Albis by the Soest Clergy.

of a neighboring place a Canon, to them to meet came, by his

directed Brothers; saying, of their return and of the wished

effect the fame the ears of all to have struck, and the hearts

with an immense joy to have filled. These things said entering

the village behold of the populace an innumerable multitude, of promiscuous

sex and age, to the glory of the Saints of praises

songs resounding with voices alternate: whom

followed of all veneration with the cult adorned an assembly

of Clerics, with crosses and incensaries, receiving

and conducting of the Saints relics, in hymns

and of praises melodies. Then of Masses the solemnities,

as of so great a day the reverence and of the Saints the veneration

required, celebratedly completed; the of Relics bearers

into of his hospitality the contubernal received

honesty. Conducted therefore the Saints with due veneration

from the thresholds of the monastery, some also

of the Clerics and laymen of pious devotion by the regard accompanying,

through the space of the journey, which could be reckoned

a third part of a mile; behold the family of the house of the aforenamed

Cleric, which a man of all opulence very much

possessed, himself at the front walking, with the Clerics

whom with him he had led, with crosses and incense and

the rest apparatus by which he could, himself to meet

bore: and received the Saints with praises of songs, into

an oratory, the people of Paderborn and Helmward which there of blessed memory Anno of Cologne

the Bishop in honor of blessed Matthias the Apostle

had dedicated, he conducted. It pleased therefore thereupon

a legation being sent the mother Church of Paderborn

of so great a patronage by the coming to gladden, and the Brothers

their of Helmward, already by a long-lasting expectation and

by frequent of fastings, vigils and prayers instance

laboring, and what especially grieved, in of ambiguity

the balance suspended, with prosperous event's certitude

to relieve. It pleases a little by delaying the benign

of the most pious Father affection to weigh, and to his beloved

sons of sweet-flowing consolation the hand extending,

and the hope of perennial gladness announcing, to consider.

[54] Tietmar by God's grace, whatever is or to be

is able, to his beloved sons in the Lord. a letter sent by the Abbot, Joy to you and

exultation. Rise now, most beloved, and from the dust

shake yourselves, since has heard the Lord the voice

of your weeping: because for before the Lord you have humbled yourselves

and in Him have hoped, He has looked upon the prayer of the humble,

and has not spurned the entreaty of them. You have persevered

for in of heart and of body contrition, and therefore you

He has not defrauded of your lips by the will: but

preventing with of gratuitous dilection a benediction, He has filled

your desire with of a manifold patronage the largesse.

Wherefore rejoice and be glad, happy Saxony,

whom a King formerly most Christian with an iron tongue

to the divine subdued laws; and whom now the King of Kings

the Lord, through the principal of His dominion ministers,

now of heaven Consuls, wonderfully by visiting, to His

reclaims dominions. Be joyful, virgin, noble

of Christ spouse, and mother fruitful of the Paderborn

Church, whom with the numerousness of sons manifold

beatify of the Saints pledges, now repeatedly

the largesse of the omnipotent with a new of His faithful patronage

deigningly illustrates, embraces, fosters, protects,

and sublimates. Exult sufficiently, daughter Sion, praise daughter Jerusalem

heavenly, is announced of the holy Relics the coming. church of Helmward, because

there has come to thee from the supernal from the Lord salvation and protection,

joy, peace and exultation. For that similar to the rest

of churches to thee neighboring thou mightest be made in this part,

thou hast asked for thee from the Lord a Patron of thy salvation: and has given

to thee God B. Modoaldus, of strenuous nobility

and of wondrous sanctity a man, Archprelate

of the Trier Church: to whose most holy bones

are joined two distinguished of blessed Martyrs

of the Theban legion bodies, moreover even of the most glorious

Protector our Auctor the Archbishop the upper

shell of the head, and two of the larger members:

which, as we believe, suggesting, and of our legation

the office discharging, the same venerable Modoaldus

deigned, the hall of his Bishopric being left, with

us an exile to be called and to be. Of two also of reverend sanctity

and of principal nobility Pontiffs most worthy

are conveyed Relics: namely of B. Abrunculus

the jawbones with the teeth, and of holy Bonosus the arm,

and of the most glorious Blessed Confessor a tooth

one with a rib, and of other Saints most precious

pledges. For these therefore all benefits

of him magnify the Lord with me, and let us exalt

His name into the same, and with all marrows of heart

and of body praise God in the heights. In the reception

therefore of so great sanctity adorn the house of your

mind and body, cleanse your consciences,

wash away your faults, wipe off the filth of illicit action,

shake off the dust of windy thought; lest the most powerful

your friend and new Patron and Lord,

with that noble his company coming, in you

find what the eyes of his dignity may offend: but

rather of works good crammed with flowers, and an odor

of virtues breathing besprinkled with grasses, to meet

advancing may you say to him: Blessed who comes

in the name of the Lord.

[55] By of this kind a legation the Brothers to God devoted, from

of manifold labor the anxiety relieved, and beyond what

can be believed exhilarated, in whom by them are prepared all things. forthwith leaping forth, the church's

signals they sound together, and of thanks praises they intone;

and full of devotion of mind and of spirit, celebratedly they pursue

the hymn, Thee God we praise. Then

through order inquired, and all the event's series

taught, solemnly they dispose all things competent

to the so long desired reception. The Abbot therefore

with his men, with of largely-flowing charity an abundance, to the benevolent

bidding farewell host, the zeal they accelerate of returning:

then the river Almana crossing, at last to the city

of Paderborn wished they came: which with

many of the Saints relics, especially d of B. Liborius, near Paderborn they are received by the Abbot Gumbert

Confessor and Bishop of Le Mans,

is fostered and illustrated with his body. And behold a man venerable

multitude of promiscuous sex and age people,

with bare feet, and of all humility the cult

presenting by habit and mind, to the Saints to meet advanced,

with full of heart devotion, the people with consonant voices

in honor of the Saints to God of praises melodies

resounding. There congratulated for mutually the people

of the Lord and the sheep of His pasture concerning the coming and

presence of the new Shepherd and most faithful Protector, by whose

merits they trusted to be saved, and by his patronage from

all straits to be freed. Thence the gate of the city

having entered, in the city by the Canons, behold of the mother church the Canons, advancing

to meet the new Patron and holy Pontiff,

received the Saints with reverence and chant solemn

convey into the sanctuary of the glorious Confessor Liborius.

[56] Meanwhile the Abbot learned, that with prone devotion

a singular reception had instituted of the same

place the monks, nor was there leisure there longer to delay;

the Canons being saluted to him congratulating, and

concerning his prosperous coming God praising; resumed

anew the relic of the Saints, through the gate

Southern honorifically the Clerics pursuing they go out

of the monastery. outside by the monks of Abdinghof. And having advanced a little by the way

which leads to the cloister, behold a pale and palled

assembly of monks, all of devotion reverence

to the Saints arriving exhibiting in body and mind,

and bowed down to the ground, and to the most holy suppliant

necks putting under the pledges, in spirit and

mind and with all efforts insist on the divine praises.

With of this kind of veneration a dancing of the Apostles

Peter and Paul the oratory entering, and again

melodies of chants solemnly redoubling,

the Saints they convey into the sanctuary, in which f of B. Felix

the Martyr rests the body most holy. Then

thou wouldst see equally all to flow together, thou wouldst see man by man

each one from the abundance of heart to the Abbot and his men

of charity a salutation to offer, of inmost congratulation

the affection to expend, God by voice and hands

to praise, who of so great prosperity and largesse

the effect conceded to those hoping in Him. Straightway

of Masses the solemnities celebratedly completed, and the wearied

Brothers most officiously recreated, shining of the day

following the dawn, with all veneration conducting

the monks and Clerics, and pursuing with

of songs the modulation the peoples, they accelerate the journey of setting out.

[57] At last wished of their possession the limit

treading, behold like a royal army the peoples

round about gathered, to the new of their salvation Patrons

rush to meet, the Helmward borders having entered, with of the Saints Relics

and Crosses preceding and following, in hymns

and confessions. The first therefore of the following day

dawn, which illuminated of blessed the Evangelist Mark

the public solemnity, and which with of the greater litany the veneration

cultivates all Christianity, the Abbot with his

companions, and with much frequency from everywhere flowing together

of the people, carrying the most precious Relics

with litanies and modulation solemn, advances to

complete the customary execution of so famous

a day. 25 of April there runs to meet a Convent with a litany, He had disposed for on that very day to his most beloved

sons and Brothers openly to make of his labor and

obedience the reward, and of most devout prayer

the fruit; their long-lasting awaiting desire

to fulfill, and them with manifold patronages to gladden

constituting, of mutual meeting the place near a village

of his dominion, Cesle named: where when it was come,

it pleased the fatigation of the way by resting to alleviate, that

to the peoples widely flowing around an abundance might be given of convening,

and to the Saints of prayers and oblations the libations to convey.

And behold these of whom by the special love

and salvation for the sake of so great a way and so great labor the fatigation

had been expended, of the monks namely of Helmward,

the cross-bearers preceding, like a little cloud

dark hastened an assembly spiritual, of the ardor

of seeing and embracing what long it had coveted

burning with desire: whom with divers of the Saints

Relics preceded the relic of blessed Peter

the prince of the Apostles. Therefore both for of customary

of the litanies the reverence, and for of the votive

reception the devotion to be augmented, with bare feet

advancing, and with all of mind and of habit

humility close approaching, and long desired

of the Patron and of his companions the relic beholding, longer

to stand they could not; but a third time to the earth with whole body

prostrate, to the new Lord sweet of tears libations,

which from full of heart abundance of gladness spiritual

poured forth the affection, with excessive sobs

they offered.

[58] At last raised in their necks from the earth, these by mouth

and hands they intone with a voice exalted: Wished hast thou come,

Father desirable, whom we awaited

in of ambiguity and of straits the darkness, thee our

called sighs, thee the large required laments.

Receive now, Dominator most serene, to thee devout

little servants: protect, Shepherd most loving, the lambs by

God to thee delivered. Then of praises with chants solemnly

imposed, and their Abbot with the Relics congratulating he receives. preceding with Crosses and

of the Saints relics, the venerable bodies with worthy reverence

they convey into the church of B. John the Baptist:

and there of Masses the solemnities celebratedly completed,

at the Abbot's their feet, rejoicing that him with his

all safe and whole they received, humbly

they prostrate themselves: and received by the hands from the earth,

presently to of peace and charity a kiss are raised. How much

there of joy and exultation and congratulation

among the spiritual ones spiritually was had,

a witness is God the inspector of hearts, a witness the glad rivulets

of tears, a witness the church of those seeing and hearing.

The Abbot therefore his Brothers in peace dismissed,

to the bringing-in of the Saints on the next day solemnly

to be done, himself in the safe of his men contubernal

placed, the fatigation of his labor wide already led

most light, for all his benefits glorifying

the mercy of the Omnipotent.

[59] The blessed therefore Modoaldus, of Trier the Archbishop,

on the other day of his peculiar and perpetual

seat the domicile with so many and so great companions

his about to enter, The next day toward the monastery advancing, and there a court with the Angelic

spirits and the Saints all common about to have,

would not, because neither it became a man of so great authority,

secretly to enter or privately to be received;

as being whom of morals the nobility and of lineage the altitude

commended, and of order the dignity extolled,

and of admirable sanctity the merit distinguished.

Wherefore an innumerable multitude, both of the nobles

and of the plebeians of either sex and order,

namely, of monks, Clerics, laymen,

of men namely and women, whose God

the hearts had touched, and whom fraternal love provoked,

and whom of devotion the regard and the desire of gladness

spiritual and the love of divine retribution excited,

from everywhere flowed together; believing each one himself happy

to be about to be, whosoever of so great a Pontiff to the services

might merit to be present. The night therefore being at hand, with spiritual

vigils, and of songs melodies, and divine

praises spent within the church of B. John;

in the morning moreover now with the sun's brightness the world whole

illuminating; after of prayers the synaxis Masses there

celebrated, the Abbot with the present multitude

of the Clergy and of either sex the people, imposed

on his shoulders the bier, and given of praises chants,

in public they began to the place long desired,

namely the Helmward cloister, to advance,

on the day twelfth of their going-out from the Trier city.

[60] But to those drawing near advance to meet

first the poor and needy, from the expenses of the church, there run to meet the poor,

already by Christ to B. Modoaldus with the place itself

conferred, in that very hour of the journey in the middle abundantly refreshed

and gladdened; with the devotion by which they could the holy

Pontiff receiving, and praises of thanks according

to of their knowledge the faculty singing together. With these in this mode

passing by, behold the glorious of the militia heavenly

apparatus, with hearts namely adorned, and with bodies

becomingly palled, of monks an assembly,

preceding at the head the Cross-bearers and also incensaries

with of devotion zeal. Among these with

some of his cloister Priors advanced in the middle

the Corvey Provost, and the same of S. Vitus

the Martyr Sacristan, bearing in his arms a shrine, with gold

and gems precious wondrously fabricated, then the monks with the relic-case, in which

were contained most precious relics of the body

of the most precious Martyr Stephen. Beside whom on the side

right walked a Brother spiritual, bearing

with stones and gold becomingly adorned the relic of the most glorious

Apostle Peter. Of these two Nobles

of heaven the Relics followed of many of the Saints

pledges in a bier bearers, with the bearer of the arm

of B. Auctor the Archbishop; who to the most beloved

brother rejoicing-together, and to the arriving one in a certain way

a right hand extending, into the place of rest and exultation

conducted, which his face preceding formerly

for himself had prepared; and who a legation long ago undertaken,

by exhortation pious and friendly suggestion, this coming

of him thither had effected.

[61] These on each side with the highest veneration

conducting, and to the arriving ones themselves with due reverence

to meet bearing the Abbots two, The Relics of S. Modoaldus two Abbots to be carried undertake: men most illustrious,

advanced; who straightway their shoulders to the bier

most devoutly putting under, and incense to the censers

adjoining, the present all to the praise

of God provoked. Presently all profession, all

nobility, every sex and age into the voices of chants

burst forth, these beginning, those alternately

answering, consonant of songs modulations

into the high offer, that it would be thought under heaven

nothing to be, which from the praises of God could be free.

There rejoiced and chanted the monks, with heart and

mind intent on the most sweet Shepherd; there congratulated

and sang of the contiguous region the Clerics,

a hope the greatest bearing of a faithful patronage; there exulted

and sang together the nobles each, and with a great company and exultation common, with much

of clients a hand walled, and with confidence of great protection

provoked: there resounded and applauded

of either sex and age the peoples, by faith and hope of continual

salvation excited: from a roar excessive of so

manifold and so confused a voice all the earth resounded,

of the forests the density rang, of the valleys the hollows

resounded, of the mountains the summits answered,

of the rivers the courses, of the fountains, and of the pools

the bosoms bellowed; that at of so great sanctity the entrance

of Isaiah was fulfilled the prediction, The mountains

and hills will sing before God praise, and all

the woods of the forests will applaud with hands, since

there comes the Lord and Savior into the right and dominion,

which to Him predestined from the beginning of things all

the Creator: who since of so great a patronage the manifold

largesse before the ages secular for His foresees faithful,

let praise Him the heavens, the earth, sea, and all His creature. Isai. 55, 12

[62] Therefore with so manifold of men and women

and of all creature dancing, B. Modoaldus, they bring into the church:

of Trier the Archbishop and of Helmward

the Patron, with his associates and companions, of blessed

Mary ever Virgin and of the Prince of the Apostles

the oratory is received into the bosom: whose walls everywhere

with of divers palls the varieties adorned, and with many

lights kindled irradiated, in a certain way grew cheerful

at the coming of the new Rector and Lord.

Meanwhile the Abbot the Father of the very monastery, with the Co-abbots

his and of the Brothers some, having ascended a pulpit

and asked silence, a few to the people for of so great

a solemnity the gladness intimated, and after the discourse and the oblation and the notice of the Saints

and the cause of the coming of them replicated. Then

the faith of the creed being foretasted, and the confession of the people one by one

received, concerning the indulgence and remission of the present

all, for the Saints' prayers and merits conferred,

all very much hearing he gladdened. Which

done the men with the women; the old with the younger,

the poor with the rich, each one according to of his faculty

the measure, the Saints with divers honor by oblations: among

whom Sigefrid the Count, of that region the Prince

most renowned, one manse of his inheritance

to S. Modoaldus delivered with the family and all

revenues. Erpo also, a man illustrious and himself a Count,

a slave one sufficiently remarkable, with his wife

his, added into the fabric of the sanctuary of stones precious

and of gold a notable quantity.

[63] These things so completed, with due veneration

of all, on the altar of B. Mary imposed, anew lifted of the Saints Relics he conveyed

into the sanctuary; placing them upon of blessed of God

the Mother the altar, all to B. Modoaldus with heart and

mouth solemnly singing together: Enter now into the place

of exultation of thy associates. It was the hour of the day

third, in which the Holy Spirit formerly the faithful of the disciples

filled hearts; in which also the to God devoted family of the Helmward

cloister, with so great of the Saints patronage,

by vigils, fastings and prayers acquired, merited

to be gladdened, on the sixth of the Kalends of May, to the praise and glory

of omnipotent God. After these things on the day twelfth

of May, on which is celebrated of blessed Modoaldus the Pontiff

the birthday solemnities, with other relics they are enclosed in the chests on the 25th of May, many of the faithful for the honor of God and

the reverence of so great a solemnity from everywhere flowing together,

the vespertinal and matutinal synaxis they discharged

with the wonted more celebratedly, amplifying through all things

the divine office in psalms and hymns and canticles

spiritual. Shining at last the dawn of the day following,

the hour third now drawing near, in an ark

wooden becomingly the Abbot, the Brothers standing around,

imposed a solemn litany, the members of the holy Confessor

of Christ Modoaldus diligently with aromatics he embalmed,

and with the pall becomingly wrapped; joining to them of the bodies

and of his associates the most precious relics,

namely of B. Auctor the head and two limbs, of S. Abrunculus

the jawbones, and of holy Bonosus the arm, similarly

with aromatics most honorifically embalmed, and one by one

wrapped.

[64] with an instrument concerning the institution of the feast And presently finished the litanies this of oblation testament

he offered to all hearing: Hear and understand,

Brothers and fellow-soldiers mine, what by your

counsel and will, in all times of the age, inspiring

God, to be done I have disposed. Of this most blessed

Protector our Modoaldus, whom the divine largesse

after blessed of God the mother Mary, and after of the Apostles

the Prince, the highest to us Patron

has deigned to concede, the Birthday, which on this present day

is venerated, we constitute and wish annually, and as

of blessed Peter the Apostle, solemnly and celebratedly: the day

of S. Auctor, and as of blessed Andrew the Apostle; and of the other

two in their places with the full of divine office celebrity. the foundation of a lamp,

We constitute also, from the precept of God and

of B. Peter the Apostle, and of that very Saint by the authority, which

no of our successors may presume to violate, that

from the census of the allod, which the Count Sigefrid to the same

conceded in his translation, with the addition

of our census, as much as may suffice, a perpetual light

may burn before the altar of ever the Virgin Mary, and her

venerable body; that by his intervention a light to us

perpetual may shine in perennial felicity. We commend

also and deliver to his donation and patronage

us and all ours, that this place he may guard

by the adoption of patronage:

and may protect, by the adoption of patronage:

and the inhabitants in all sanctity

and religion may keep, and the whole family, with

all things which of our right are, may rule and fortify, and

from all tribulation and pestilence and of all necessity

the strait may defend.

[65] These things said, all Amen answering,

the ark diligently he closed, and with iron bindings

fortified, and again they are imposed on the same altar and with keys made firm, the Brothers solemnly

chanting with a glad voice, Praise say to God

our all His Saints. Then after of Masses

the solemnities lifting the ark, in its placed they imposed

upon the altar of God the Mother Mary with becoming reverence:

where to all with faith seeking, by the merits

of the Saints of healings are wrought benefits, bestowing

our Lord Jesus Christ, who His Saints

glorifies in heaven and on earth. Done were these things

in the year of the Lord's Incarnation a thousand one hundred

seventh; in the year 1107. 12 of May. in the indiction the fifteenth, on the fourth

of the Ides of May, by the venerable Tietmar, the sixth Helmward

Abbot, in the year of his ordination the twenty-seventh,

reigning the same our Lord Jesus

Christ, with the Father and the Holy Spirit, unto the ages of ages.

Amen.

ANNOTATIONS.

Notes

e. Gertrude and Begga, a twin as it were of most precious
f. Stavelot and Malmedy, from his own he constructed:
a. Bishop of Metz, to whom venerable Begga
l. Charles the Great, of this Pippin the son,
b. Of B. Itta or Iduberga the Acts from various collected we give 8 May, where first is brought forth Stephen in this Life, who this sister of Modoaldus said. In some Life of S. Gertrude, in the 11th century or 12th written, is said Itta from the most illustrious nobility of Aquitaine sprung. In Sigebert's Chronicle is called Modoaldus the brother of Itta and uncle of S. Gertrude, but those in the Ms. of Gembloux are wanting, perhaps from this Life by another added. To which all whether and how much about this can be believed in the more ancient's silence, let the reader judge.
c. There is venerated S. Pippin 21 of February, dead in the year 640.
d. Austria this others Austrasia call, plainly from Austria today's diverse: its limits we deduced 1 February at the Life of S. Sigebert, King of the Austrasian Franks.
e. The Life of S. Gertrude we gave 17 March, of S. Begga it will have to be given 19 December. Dead the former is in the year 659, the latter 695.
f. Concerning of these monasteries the construction broadly we treated among the Analects to the Life of S. Sigebert § 3, and what by Grimoald were conferred, are related at number 20: again to be repeated at the Life of S. Remaclus 3 September.
g. There is venerated S. Arnulph 18 July.
h. To S. Lambert Bishop of Maastricht sacred is 17 September.
i. To Charles Martel a branded by posterity note as if his damnation revealed had been to S. Eucherius Bishop of Orléans, we deleted 20 February at the Life of the same S. Eucherius.
k. Concerning this royal promotion we treated 17 February at the Life of B. Fulrad the Abbot, and 15 March at the Life of S. Zacharias the Pope, and again it will be treated 5 June at the Life of S. Boniface. Has also Carloman some veneration 17 August.
l. Of Charles the Great the Life we illustrated at 28 January.
m. Lotharingia namely, but this rather from his son Lothair so called, elsewhere we said.
a. Duke most illustrious and Mayor-of-the-palace under Clothair, Dagobert
a. Priest to long for. Which indeed not by fortuitous
a. King constitute: fled they for humility's
a. There is S. Cunibert to the Calendars sacred ascribed at 12 of November.
b. S. Sebaudus among the people of Trier obtains veneration 26 of November, dead about the year 622.
c. Concerning this precept, which indeed as to the written context pertains (for of the rights in it contained no to us disputation) we said in the antiquarian Propylaeum to volume 2 of April part 1 number 17, and we showed of no greater faith to be than the Horreum under the same King's name diploma: whether moreover after that one's fiction first composed was this epitaph, or indeed this of that one's feigning gave occasion, let the reader judge.
d. Nay of Maastricht. But they themselves afterwards the Bishops of Liège themselves of Tongres for love of antiquity called, as is clear in the X of Liège Bishop Stephen, who to the Life of S. Lambert by himself written himself Bishop of Tongres calls.
e. There is here the renowned Symphorianus, 22 of August with martyrdom at Autun crowned.
f. There is inscribed S. Severa in the Roman Martyrology at 20 of August.
g. S. Eucharius the first Bishop and Patron of the people of Trier is venerated 8 of December, sent by S. Peter with SS. Valerius and Maternus: of whom three the Acts we illustrated on the day 29 of January, sacred to S. Valerius.
a. In the year 882 on the Nones of April in the Lord's Supper, intercepted by the Northmen was the city of Trier, Regino being witness. For then with the Dominical letter G Easter was celebrated 8 April.
b. S. Paulinus Bishop of Trier and Martyr is venerated 31 of August.
c. This tablet, the temple of S. Symphorianus being disturbed, to be believed from the tomb of S. Modoaldus translated to the Paulinian basilica asserts Brouwer book 7 number 56: to us otherwise it seems, as above said: that certainly, which he himself so ancient to be wishes, tablet, no presents of that fire vestiges, by which here the author says the marbles themselves to have been corrupted: if moreover by a miracle it preserved had been, no the less that to be noted would have been than was noted concerning the wooden ark.
d. There is to S. Stephen dedicated the Cathedral Church of Metz: the miracle moreover here indicated relates S. Gregory of Tours book 2 hist. number 7.
e. S. Alban the Martyr, at Mainz by the Gothic Arians slain, is venerated 21 of June. To this Saint built a church Richolf the Archbishop and dedicated in the year 805, to which the adjoined monastery in the year 1419 into a College of Canons migrated.
e. Henry; with paternal piety's regard complained,
g. Warthberg by name a cloister of monks
k. Bishop to lay open, by whose diocese they are enclosed
a. Helmwardenhuisen commonly and more contractedly Helmershausen is a town now of Hesse, on the Diemel river near the Weser, in the confine of the dominions of Brunswick and Paderborn.
b. Sylvester sat from the year 999 unto 1003.
c. Otto 3 reigned from the year 989 to the year 1002.
d. S. Menwerc or Meynwerc sat from the year 1009 unto the year 1036, and the day 5 of June on which he is venerated.
e. This is S. Henry, Otto 3's successor, who lived unto the year 1024.
f. S. Meinwerc in the year 1010 after Pentecost to Helmwardeshuisen came, and the monastery which Ekkehard the Count in the property of his estate had constructed, in honor of the holy and individual Trinity, and the holy Savior and the most victorious Cross, and S. Mary ever Virgin and S. Peter the Prince of the Apostles and of all the Apostles and of all the Saints, on the Nones of June dedicated. So the Author of the Life of S. Meinwerc number 21: but at number 42 these things he has. In the year 1017 on the fifth of the Ides of July by the heirs of Ekkihard the Count concerning the Abbey of Helmwardeshusen a complaint being had, long and much among the Princes ventilated, at last to the Kingdom it was adjudged. And because neither in faculties nor in ministerials to the Kingdom for service it could be, by the intervention and counsel of the Bishops and Princes, to the Bishop Meinwerc and his successors from the Paderborn See Episcopally according to the Rule of S. Benedict to be governed and possessed it was conferred. Again a suit arisen concerning the Abbey of Helmwardeshusen, was in the year 1024 in the Convention of Warle settled, as at number 91 is explained.
g. Wartberg or Warburg a town on the Diemel river, 20 about miles from Helmwardenshuisen distant, formerly by a County illustrious. He wished it in vain to obtain S. Meinwerc from Dudicho the Count in the year 1010, as at number 18 & 19 of his Life is said. But that one in the year 1021 dead, it to have received there is handed down at number 71 & 72.
h. S. Meinwerc there from the monks of his city constituted as Abbot Winomen, whom in the year 1031 to Jerusalem he directed, as is said at number 120.
i. Bruno is created Archbishop in the year 1103 dies in the year 1124.
k. This is Henry from the Count of Werle, in others of Waldeck, elected in the year 1084, dead in the year 1126.
l. Hermann made Bishop in the year 1073, dead in the year 1090 on the day 4 of May: to this moreover the translation of S. Clement made on 2 of May is indicated in the Ms. Florarium and by others, he is venerated here especially 23 of May.
m. The name this had fallen out from the context, but it here to be restored persuaded, that below him by himself by name asked says Tietmar: there is therefore here not a little by which may be augmented the little Commentary edited concerning S. Legontius 19 of February, on which he is venerated.
n. The body of S. Celsus Bishop of Trier was found in the year 970, as broadly we deduced 23 of February.
o. The Acts of S. Maximinus we give 29 of May.
b. Paschal of the Roman See the Prelate, to be held concerning
h. Berengoz by name, and his Provost
a. Cross preceding, holy water with the odor
a. Is that the Guastalla Synod, in Lombardy at the Po river celebrated in the fourth week of October of this year 1106, when already begun for a month was the Indiction XV, but here it is treated of the time not of the held but of the convoked Synod, running still the Indiction XIV.
b. Paschal 2 the Pope sat from the year 1099 to the year 1118.
c. S. Legontius flourished about the beginning of the fifth century.
d. Reinhard is called by Bruschius, elected in the year 1107, dead in the year 1122.
e. Adelgoz in a Ms. Saxon, through this century 12 written, is handed down in the year 1108 to Henry the Archbishop to have succeeded, and to have died in the year 1120.
f. Conrad Baron de Abensperg, elected and by Paschal the Pope ordained in the year 1106, dead an old man holy and pious in the year 1147.
g. This is Simeon, who from mount Sinai to Trier coming, there a recluse lived, and is venerated on the Kalends of June.
h. Berengoz is called by Bruschius and to have succeeded Focelinus, who presided in the year 1101: and is said Berengoz still to have presided in the year 1125.
i. This Abbot of Prüm below at number 23 is called Wulfrann, therefore not did he depart from life in the year 1100; as wrote Bucelinus.
k. Theodoric by name, as much as from Bruschius we gather.
l. These three Martyrs are venerated 31 of August.
a. Patron, from our place we should wish or dare
a. The Acts of S. Beatus we gave 9 of May.
b. The Acts of S. Abrunculus we illustrated 22 of April, and of S. Bonosus 17 of February.
c. There are venerated these Martyrs of Trier 6 of October, also in the Roman Martyrology inscribed.
d. The monastery of S. Mary at the Martyrs called, situated on the shore of the Moselle. The Catalogue of the Abbots, but imperfect, exhibits Bucelinus: and perhaps Folcuinus or Peter 2 at this time Abbot was.
e. The Abbey of S. Eucharius, now S. Matthias is called, on account of the body of this Apostle there preserved, as we said at his Life 24 of February. There the Abbot Erwin or Everwin presided from the year 1097 unto the year 1110.
f. The Ms. Angaria: but augurium altogether the sense itself requires.
a. Cleric a certain, Azelinus by name, a man of reverend
e. Gumbert the Abbot of the same place, with an innumerable
a. I understand the Monastery of the Eifel, which from Prüm is distant 7 or 8 hours of journey: for the Monastery of Maifeld, which to those coming to Coblenz, and thence about to descend down the Rhine to Cologne, on the way would have been, hither does not make: it appears for by a land always journey and that much shorter them to have used: otherwise nothing would there have been need to run out to Prüm, but it would have behooved the Moselle at Trier to embark.
b. There is venerated 27 of July S. Pantaleon, whose there sacred Body in the year 1660 we venerated. But then there the Abbot was Hermann from the Counts of Zutphen sprung, who B. Wolphelm the Abbot of Brauweiler, as in his Life 22 of April number 42 is said, dying anointed, and from death buried, where he is said a man of all honesty and religion, and himself dead is in the year 1121 on the day 19 of December.
c. Susatum commonly Soest, a city Imperial and Hanseatic of Westphalia, in the County of the March.
d. There is venerated S. Liborius 23 of July. His illustrious Acts separately edited Bollandus our, this asking Fabio Chigi then Apostolic Nuncio to the Rhine, then Supreme Pontiff, Alexander VII called.
e. Gumbert the Abbot of Abdinghof is handed down for years 54 to have presided, and to have departed in the year 1120.
f. S. Felix, at Aquileia under Numerian, with S. Hilary the Bishop and others, suffered 16 of March: whose body Wolfgang the Patriarch of Aquileia to have sent to S. Meinwerc, in his Life number 109 is handed down. But for Wolfgang it seems Poppo is to be substituted, who from of the Germans an illustrious lineage sprung with S. Meinwerc lived, unless perhaps of two names he was. Long ago moreover it is that from the very monastery we sought the history of that translation if any is extant; but with various intervening causes not yet it we could obtain.

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