Peter Cælestine

19 May · commentary

ON S. PETER CÆLESTINE,

ROMAN PONTIFF.

IN THE YEAR MCCXCVI.

PRELIMINARY COMMENTARY.

Peter, Cælestine V, Supreme Pontiff (S.)

BY D. P.

On the old and more recent cult: on the Life first written by himself and to be supplemented by a Collection of old monuments; then by Jacobus Cardinal Cajetan de Stephaneschi in verse, but in prose by Jacobus de Alliaco and Maffeus Vegius and others; and in Italian by more recent ones, from whom the historical Supplement is taken: finally on the year of death.

[1] Among the illustrious Saints of this day sufficiently eminent is Peter Cælestine, founder of the Order of the Cælestines, who when at Murone or Morone and other neighboring places of Hither Abruzzo as a hermit he lived, From a hermit made Pope, he renounced in the year 1294, famous for the fame of sanctity and miracles, assumed into Supreme Pontiff, left that same dignity, and perfectly renounced the Papacy, which Alvarus Pelagius, an author almost contemporary, in book 2 on the Lament of the Church article 11 judges a greater miracle, and a greater and truer example of humility, than any which he did. He was elected in the year MCCXCIV, on the day V of July, crowned on the XXIX of August on the Sunday, the feast of the Beheading of S. John the Baptist, abdicated himself on the day XII or XIII of December: he died then on this XIX of May or (as commonly the authors) on the XIV of the Kalends of June. Bellinus in the Martyrology, according to the custom of the Roman Curia printed at Venice in the year MCCCCXCVIII, has these things on this XIX of May. On the same day of S. Peter Cælestine of Morone, who because he renounced the highest Pontificate, was Canonized by the Church only for a simple Confessor. The memory in the sacred Calendars, Which also thence Molanus described in the Auctarium of Usuard. But now by the mandate of Pope Clement IX, under the date II of July MDCLXVIII, in all the Roman Church his feast is celebrated with nine Lections, of which only one is proper: and the Office of a Confessor Pontiff is recited: which under the rite of a Double most recently Pope Innocent XI ordered to be made. In the Martyrology, printed at Cologne and Lübeck in the year MCCCCXC, only these things are held: And of S. Peter Cælestine the Confessor, from whom the Order of the Cælestines is named. now festive to the whole church with an Office. Greven the Carthusian of Cologne, in the Additions to Usuard printed in the years MDXV and MDXXI, writes these things: Of Peter the Confessor, who also Cælestine Pope the fifth. Him on account of the sanctity of his life the Cardinals, when now the Apostolic See had been vacant for two years, elected. But he, desiring to be at leisure for God alone, after five months laid down the burden, and made always better than himself, rested in peace. Which same are read in the German Martyrology of Canisius. Similar things have Maurolycus, Galesinius, and others with the Roman Martyrology: likewise Wion, Dorganius, Menardus, and Bucelinus in the Benedictine Calendars, and consonant is this concerning him the Prayer of the Church: O God who didst exalt B. Peter Cælestine to the apex of the highest Pontificate, and didst teach him to postpone it to humility, grant propitiously, that by his example we may deserve to despise the prosperous things of the world and to come happily to the rewards promised to the humble.

[2] The beginnings of his Eremitic Life the Saint himself in a simple style described, The beginnings of his Life written by himself, as is published in the first place among his opuscula in the year MDCXXXX at Naples by Cælestinus Telera: this therefore, together with the other writings of contemporary authors, containing the election to the Papacy, the abdication, canonization, and translation of the body, we give in the first place, under the common title of a Collection of more ancient monuments: about to add sometime, if it shall seem good to the Fathers of that Order to communicate such things, whatever the disciples of the same Saint of things seen by themselves noted: for various writings of this kind to be held in the order indicates, who used them, Lelius Marinus below to be praised. Meanwhile in the second place we give a notable and hitherto unedited metrical work on this argument of Jacobus Cajetan de Stephaneschi, Cardinal Deacon of S. George ad Velum aureum, There is given also a work written in verse, by Cælestine Pope himself promoted to ecclesiastical offices, then by Boniface his successor, ascribed to the sacred College of Cardinals: who, as in the Preface of himself he narrates, from the true matter, as if present, seeing, ministering, touching, and hearing, and known to the Pontiff, nay dear to the Pontiffs, the impacted compiled and into verses recast the history, from the death of Nicholas IV even to the Canonization of the Saint. But that work is threefold, by Jacobus Cardinal of S. George, and at three different times composed, and at last in one volume written, and sent to the Abbot and monks of holy Spirit of Sulmona in the year MCCCXIX. The first on the election, life, and abdication of Cælestine, consists of three books; and was composed by him not yet a Cardinal. The second in two books treats of the election and coronation of Boniface VIII, for many causes here necessary, but written five years after by him now a Cardinal, inserting into them what long before under

Nicholas IV he had begun to meditate in mind to be written concerning the ceremonies of the Pontifical ordination and consecration. The third again in three books treats the deeds of S. Peter after the abdication, the Canonization, and the miracles. But in all very many things are held pertaining to the history, nor elsewhere so distinctly to be found: from a Manuscript which Marinus and Odoricus used. for illustrating which too the Prose, by way of an argument or Synopsis prefixed at the beginning, will much conduce. This poem Marinus used very much, used it also Odoricus Rainaldus in the Ecclesiastical Annals, and also our Oldoinus the restorer and interpolator of Ciaccone, by alleging the verses of Jacobus rather often, and not the verses only but also the prose added to the verses for the cause of explanation. By the indication of these understanding, of how great moment that work was for the present history, I did not before acquiesce, than I received its whole transcript from Rome; as I received it from a Vatican Manuscript, collated with a transcript of the Sulmona autograph, existing with the Cælestine Fathers at Rome, the labor and pains to this conferring the Reverend Father John Franciscus Vannius, Professor of the Hebrew language in the Roman College, and Conrad Janning.

[3] To that work sufficiently prolix, and not to the taste of those who prefer to read the Lives of the Saints without digressions arranged in a lucid style and historical order, the complete one by Peter de Alliaco, we subjoin that which seventy years after the writing of Stephaneschi elaborated Peter de Alliaco, a man illustrious for very many books published: who from Le Puy made Bishop of Cambrai in the year MCCCLXXXVIII, and in the year MCCCCXI created Cardinal with the title of S. Chrysogonus, was present at the Council of Constance in the year MCCCCXV. He wrote the Life of S. Peter Cælestine, asked by the Friars of his Order, namely those to whom the King Charles V had founded a monastery at Paris, by the counsel verisimilarly of Peter himself, then his Confessor; so that the familiarity of Peter with those Religious was old, entered into before he became Bishop, to whom that this Life afterward written may be called a fruit of familiarity, when now for almost thirty years the Church of Christ by a horrendous dissension and nefarious schism torn remained, as in book 2, number 14 he affirms. But that Schism began after the death of Gregory XI in the year MCCCLXXVIII, about the year 1408, and consequently in the year MCCCCVIII thirty years had elapsed, beyond which the Church even to the Council of Constance still lacerated remained. This Life was first published at Paris in the year MDXXXV by Franciscus Stephanus: then to be recast it caused Laurentius Surius, the style being lightly here and there emended: we give it in its original style, from a Manuscript codex of the monastery of Rouge-cloître of the Canons Regular, divided into two books: of which the former is deduced from those things which had been noted by the Saint's own hand; but in the Preface of the second book the author testifies, that he writes those things, which of the holy man by his devout Friars, truthful indeed and faithful authors, were handed down, and in testimony of the truth also by the Apostolic See confirmed. His death then being narrated at number 19 he writes these things: Other almost innumerable signs of virtues and miracles, with which the holy man before and after death shone, here to narrate we omit, and to those things which of these are diffusely written, and by diligent examination by certain authors and truthful testimonies approved, we refer the reader.

[4] These things Peter Cardinal de Alliaco: to whose time next was Maphæus Vegius, other things written by Maphæus Vegius in the year 1445, of Lodi: who, perhaps ignorant of the writing of Peter de Alliaco, himself too composed a Life of S. Peter Cælestine, and arranged it into three books, of which the second book thus he begins: Thus far what of himself he himself left written we have set forth: the rest now, which by others piecemeal were committed to memory, with as great order of words as we can, and truth of deeds we shall narrate. He seems to have used the Process formed for the Canonization, to which Peter de Alliaco had referred the Reader, and briefly narrates various miracles. This Life in manuscript we found at Rome in the Vallicellan library of the Fathers of the Congregation of the Oratory of S. Philip Neri, contained in volume E, which the author at the end adds he absolved, at Rome at S. Peter on the IV of the Nones of May in the year MCCCCXLV. He then wrote the Life of S. Bernardine of Siena, to be given on the day XX of May, and absolved at Rome at S. Peter on the Kalends of June in the year MCCCCLIII. Dead finally in the year MCCCCLVIII the same Maphæus is buried with the Augustinians in the chapel of S. Monica: whose marble sepulcher with wonderful art elaborated, to be erected then he had taken care, when the Relics of her were translated to Rome, as on the IV of May at the Life of S. Monica was said. which being omitted, The same Life of S. Peter Cælestine by Maphæus Vegius was extant also at Rome in the Library of Duke Altaemps, and with Abbot Angelus Riccimus, and is praised by Ciaccone, as written in an elegant speech. Yet because in most things it differs only in style from the other of Peter de Alliaco; but the miracles, which it moreover has, more fully and distinctly can be had elsewhere; we did not judge its accession, although hitherto unedited, ought to augment the mass of this work; but we held it enough, with Annotations hence received now and then to have illustrated the former Life, and the more important to us, because the graver author with a maturer judgment too than Maphæus seems to have written: who yet if he had had and seen the work of Cardinal Stephaneschi, would have been more equitable to the memory of Boniface the successor, and would have believed less of the French, calumniously inventing many things of him. I find moreover with Philippus Alegambe, in the Library of the Writers of our Society, that Vincentius Mastareus wrote in Italian the Lives of SS. Peter Cælestine, Bernardine of Siena, and Equitius the Abbot, whom Aquila has as Patrons: but he who saw the book printed at Naples in the year 1628 at Rome and by my command examined it Conrad Janning, signified, that nothing in it is contained, which can be turned to my purpose, and so removed from me the care of acquiring it.

[5] In the last place therefore we shall give a historical Supplement, quite ample, there is given a historical Supplement from the Italian of Lelius Marinus, received from the Italian work on the Life and miracles of S. Peter of Morone, once Cælestine Pope V, collected by Lord Lelius Marinus of Lodi, Abbot General of the Cælestine Congregation, about the year MDXVIIII, as is read at the end; although that work first appeared at Milan, dedicated to the Protector of the Order Maurice Cardinal of Savoy with the Title of S. Maria in Via-lata, in the year MDCXXX. For this most diligent Author, having scrutinized the Archives of the chief monasteries of his Congregation, not only had before his eyes and faithfully alleged the Authors, as many as before him treated of the Saint, published and unpublished (besides the Life written by Maphæus, and the elogium given to the Saint by an Anonymous, of whom soon) but also the Process of Canonization, and its Summary; and thence, with almost the very words of the deposing Witnesses, whence too his epitome Telera, he expressed each thing, which makes for the present history, a curious observer of even the least circumstances, regarding places, times, and persons. That work the aforepraised Telera of Siponto had, and from it collected in a Latin style a shorter Life, now prefixed to the Opuscula of the Saint himself, by the mandate of Lord Franciscus ab Agellis, likewise Abbot General: which thus contracted in the year then MDCXXXXVIII, the same Telera with new study reviewed, and rendered into Italian published at Bologna, at the front of the sacred Histories of his Order, comprising the lives and elogia of men in it illustrious for the fame of sanctity, which he dedicated to Fabricius Campana, the Apostolic Vicar general of the same his Order. Marinus's work too had and very much praised John Vincentius Ciarlantus, Ciarlantus and others took from it. Archpresbyter of the Cathedral of Isernia, in the historical Memoirs of Samnium, in Italian published at Isernia in the year MDCXXXXIIII, treating several things of S. Peter Cælestine in book 4 chapters 16, 17, 22, and 24. Finally Lord Vincentius Spinelli, Abbot and Procurator general of the Cælestines, with Lelius as leader confesses himself especially to have used in the Life which he published at Rome in the year MDCLXIV.

[6] Other Authors, who professedly wrote the Life of the Saint, in the present or earlier century, not yet by us named, yet consulted and sometimes alleged in the Notes, in the Latin tongue indeed there are two of the Cælestine order itself French, others on the writer of the Life Latin, Dionysius Faber and Benedictus Gononus. Dionysius was Prior of the monastery of Heverlee near Louvain then of the Royal one of Paris, the book being printed about the year MDXXXVIIII, which there in the year MDCLXII given we received from the Reverend Father Franciscus Gervaise the Prior. But that Faber professes himself to give the Life, composed by Peter de Alliaco, but by himself enriched and given a more polished style. Benedictus, among the Lives of the Fathers of the West, printed at Lyons in the year MDCXXV, partly from Peter and Dionysius, partly from other ancient monuments wove the Life, and Italian. to be read in book 6 page 344 and following. In the Italian tongue we find alleged by Marinus in the proem Octavianus of Bologna a Cælestine, by whom there is extant a Life published in the year MD at Bologna; and the Nocturnal Poet of Naples, in vernacular tercets there at Bologna in the year MDXX printed; but neither yet have we been able to see. But we have seen and have, that which Paulus Regius, Doctor of Sacred Theology, first in a single book published at Naples in the year MDLXXXI, then Bishop of Vico Equense, in the very city of his See caused to be recast in the year MDLXXXXIII, at the beginning of Volume 2 on the Lives of the Saints of the Kingdom of Naples distinguished into XXV chapters. And these are the sources, from which then others and others more recent, in various places and tongues, took the shorter lives and elogia of S. Peter Cælestine, by no means here to be singly enumerated.

[7] As for the year of death nothing seems able to be had more certain than it. For Stephaneschi the Cardinal in the preliminary Prose, says that in the year MCCXCV, on the XIV of the Kalends of June the Saint died, and Peter de Alliaco, The Saint is commonly believed to have died in the year 1296, whom commonly all the other writers followed: for he says in book 2 number 18, that when on the day of Pentecost the Saint had most devoutly celebrated Mass, the dissolution of his body within the next Sunday to be at hand he foretold, and on the day of the Sabbath at the evening hour sent forth his spirit: but the Bull of Canonization, on the fourteenth of the Kalends of June commands his feast to be celebrated; on which day, says the same Peter, at number 19, after the labors of this life in the peace of Christ he rested. But such a concourse of the first Sabbath after Pentecost with the XIX day of May is had in the year MCCXCVI, when with the Cycle of the Moon 5 of the Sun XVII the Dominical Letters A G, Easter was celebrated on the XXV of March, and the feast of Pentecost on the XIII of May. To this deduction conformably also the same Peter defines the imprisonment of the Saint in the fortress of Fumone by the space of ten months. The Anonymous in the manuscript Lives of the Pontiffs deduced even to the year MCCCXXX, on the Sabbath within the Octave of Pentecost May 19, and so written only XX years after the Life dictated by the Alliacensian, treating of Cælestine, He survived, he says, his abdication for one year, four months, XXXVIII days, dead on the Sabbath within the Octave of Pentecost, namely on the XIV of the Kalends of June in the year of the Lord MCCXCVI … to the Catalogue of the Saints

noted in MCCCXIII, but from his own passing in the XVII. The same as to the year of the Lord agrees Maphæus Vegius; but, the circumstances of the Pentecostal festivity which Alliacus had noted being omitted, only he adds, that the Saint passed, when he died, the LXXXVII year of his life.

[8] Meanwhile Ptolemy of Lucca, then while the matters were being done living and writing, first in his Annals printed, when he had narrated various deeds of the year MCCXCVI, thus begins the following: Ptolemy mentions him as still living in the year 1297, In the year of the Lord MCCXCVII, Boniface makes a process against the Colonna, on occasion of Stephen de Colonna, who had plundered the treasure of the Pope: but the aforesaid Cardinals, namely the Lord James and the Lord Peter de Colonna, against the said Boniface write a famous libel, which they directed through all parts of the world to the Princes and Universities of Schools, asserting that he was not Pope, but only Cælestine. Of whose death indeed nothing more in these Annals Ptolemy: but in the Ecclesiastical History, more diffusely written, among the Codices of the Barberini Library Manuscripts in book 22 inserting, which below we give the Life of Cælestine, he concludes with the narration of the death and Canonization and says: Held therefore in custody, not indeed free, yet honest in the castle of Fumone, on the XIV of the Kalends of June he dies: and to have died only in the year 1302, and in a certain monastery of his Order, which they call of Anthony, behind the altar he is buried, in the year of the Lord MCCCII, as they relate. But the Canonization was done at Avignon in the year MCCCXIII, from his passing in the X or XI year. There was instituted his festivity to be celebrated on the XIV of the Kalends of June, on which day he himself migrated to the Lord. From the hastening copyist had indeed fallen the word Kal., but the determination of the feast sufficiently indicates that it was from the mind of the Author to be supplemented; there remains therefore only to be considered the year, and to be asked whether it can be confirmed or weakened from elsewhere.

[9] That therefore by the aforecited authority of Ptolemy we may be little moved, makes Stephaneschi the Cardinal, nearer and more intimate to the deeds done, and equally contemporary to the Saint; and perhaps senior to Ptolemy himself, William of Nangis, certainly before he himself ceasing to write, and ending his Chronicle with the year MCCC. For he at the year MCCXCVI thus speaks: Cælestine Pope deposed closed his last day… [but against make the nearer Stephaneschi and the more ancient than Ptolemy William of Nangis,] Peter and James de Colonna Cardinals of the Holy Roman Church, who that the deposition of Cælestine Pope had been undue and the promotion of Boniface unjust were asserting, by this intending the Roman Church to be moved with schism, were deposed from the Cardinalate by Pope Boniface, and were deprived of all ecclesiastical goods and benefices. Let us say therefore that the controversy with the Colonna, was begun while Peter was still living; and that this was the cause of the stricter custody: but the same controversy after Cælestine's death growing even more heated, the libel was widely scattered, already perhaps before published, and Boniface compelled to proceed more harshly, and the sentence at length pronounced in the year MCCXCVII. But Ptolemy, then perhaps dwelling in his Bishopric of Torcello, did not sufficiently distinguish these: and when he had read that Peter died on the XIV of the Kalends of June on a Sabbath, likewise health conferred on Antony Bishop of Luni in the year 1297, sought a year fit for such a concourse, and so ran on even to the year MCCCII. Indeed it is scarcely credible that by the rivals of Boniface a rumor was scattered as if Cælestine still lived; since the miracles begun immediately to be done at the sepulcher proclaimed his death: of which too one, by Lelius Marinus from Manuscripts related, most evidently concludes against Ptolemy. It is that of Antony, the domestic Presbyter of the Cardinal of Sabina, first made Bishop of Luni: who seized with a grave disease by the admonition of that same Cardinal had recourse to invoking the help of Cælestine, now dead and working miracles; and having experienced the same he himself went to the sepulcher, and adorned the place with a golden coverlet, and returned joyful to Rome. For of two Antonys, who about this age undertook the Church of Luni to be ruled, it appears that the Genoese cannot be understood, in the year MCCCXXXVIII created in France, whither now from the year MCCCV the whole Curia had passed; but is to be understood the older Antony of Bayeux, whom Ughellus in volume I of Italia sacra from the Register of Boniface teaches to have been promoted by him in his III year, on the Ides of May, that is in the year of Christ MCCXCVII. But he who then was Cardinal Bishop of Sabina Gerardus, and gave the counsel of invoking the Saint, as in his epitaph is read, died when March was entering, and they numbered the years of the Lord: M once, and C thrice, twice I, that is, MCCCII. Nor does it matter that the same narrating Faber chapter 44, names not Gerardus, but William: for he seems to have found that name after the custom of the century written by the sole initial letter G, and to have ill understood him, who in the year MCCCXII created in France, there died in MCCCXXXVI, and so could have seen neither Antony Bishop of Luni.

[10] Now as for the years of age; the aforesaid William of Nangis says, that Peter was, when he was elected Pontiff, of age as is thought of seventy years and more, yet vigorous: and it can be said the Saint, but that the vice of decrepit age at the time of deposition Ptolemy accuses, only argues the exaggeration of those, who alleged the impotence of old age in the holy man: but meanwhile both the Alliacensian and Vegius seem equally both to have erred in the number, by excess one, by defect the other. Nor do I know what I ought to establish about Lelius Marinus, defining the Saint born in the year MCCXV, according to whom he would have been LXXIX years old when he was elected Pontiff: because accustomed elsewhere to note his Authors accurately in the margin, here he indicates no one, only says that of the month and day on which Peter was born nothing written is found; only to have passed the year 75 when he died. as if he wished to hint that the year is found, by himself so positively noted. But if he defined it from a testimony not sufficiently certain and clear, there would be place to suspect, that of only LXXV years was Peter when he died, and so in the year MCCXXI he came into the light. With William of Nangis agrees Jacobus the Cardinal, who at the end of book 2 verse 55, says the Saint to the exercises of the solitary life Applied his mind for thrice ten years and more, By chance ten twin — whence the number of fifty years arises; which, twenty years passed in his fatherland being added, make seventy; but neither year is so precisely taken, but that almost two years being added, which between the day of election and death flowed, the number of LXXV years can arise; especially, if we conceive, that the Authors defining the years of the Eremitic conversation, began to number them from the time, when he came into Murone; the three years not being computed which before he had passed elsewhere. So to Peter de Alliaco, numbering sixty-five years of life, the ten had fallen out, and to Maphæus Vegius writing 87 years of age by ciphers, or to those who transcribed him, some other error crept in, about which we need not labor, having nearer and contemporary witnesses.

A COLLECTION

Of more ancient monuments.

gathered from various books.

Peter, Cælestine V, Supreme Pontiff (S.)

BHL Number: 6733, 6745, 6756

FROM VARIOUS SOURCES

CHAPTER I.

The confession of S. Peter on the Acts of his adolescence even to the Priesthood.

[1] Among the Opuscula of S. Peter Cælestine published, the first place deservedly occupies, the Life, which the same holy Father wrote, and in his cell left, when thence made Pope he withdrew: so Telera, prefixing the Title which he wished to that opusculum, which I would prefer, by the example of holy Augustine, to call a Confession of a humble soul, weighing the divine benefits in himself, and committing them to writing for the private instruction of the disciples; and I shall divide it in two so that in Chapter I the deeds before the Priesthood, in Chapter 2 the rest may be explained: which although in the authors of the life to some extent are read, yet it is better from the very mouth and pen of the Saint to receive the naked truth: which he promises thus beginning, Having professed himself about to write the truth, Come, and hear me, and I will narrate to you, who fear God, how great things He has done for my soul. A clean heart create in me God, and a right spirit renew in my bowels. Lord, thou wilt open my lips, and my mouth shall announce thy praise. Whatever we say, let it be to the praise of God, and to the edification of the neighbor: because the Scripture says: Let mercy and truth not desert thee: encompass it about thy throat, and write it in the tablets of thy heart. Prov. 3, Wisd. 1, And elsewhere: The mouth that lies kills the soul. Therefore in all things which I am about to say, I will speak the truth in Christ, I will lie in nothing. Having prefaced these things the Saint proceeds to explain the beginnings of his life.

[2] But first of my parents I will say something: whose names are these, Angelerius and Maria: but they were both just before God, as I believe, and before men greatly praised; he narrates that born of pious parents, simple and upright and fearing God; humble and peaceful, not rendering evil for evil; alms and hospitality most willingly to the poor they gave. Who in the likeness of the Patriarch Jacob begot twelve sons, always asking of the Lord, that some one of them might be a true servant of God. For which occasion the second son to the studies of letters they handed: who when he had become a man, very beautiful and good according to the pomp of this age, yet was not solicitous in the service of God, as his parents had desired. by his mother, desiring a religious son, But the father being dead in a good old age, the wife being left with seven sons (because the others had now died) the good woman saw, that that son a Cleric was not spiritual, as she herself had wished: she groaned with her whole heart, and said: Alas wretched me, how many sons I have borne, and none of them do I see a servant of God! But there was the eleventh son then five or six years old, in whom God wonderfully showed His grace; because whatever good he perceived by hearing, all in his heart he laid up, and all to his mother he related, and often said to her, I wish to be a good servant of God. Which the mother considering, within herself said: I will hand this my son to the study of letters; and perhaps to him the Lord will give a better grace than to the other son: he was applied to studies, and if that one should die, this one would remain to me. Which also was done: for he became a monk, and in a short time died: and that boy survived, still knowing little of letters. But the devil, who is always contrary to all good, fought through himself and through his own: for first he tempted the boy, that he should not wish to study: likewise he tempted the boy's brothers, that they should not consent; whence as much as they could they opposed the mother, saying, one not laboring suffices for us: because in that country the Clerics labored almost nothing. The devil tempted also a certain rich man of that country, and in them detained, who flattered the boy, saying, I wish to make you my heir.

There was present too a certain one (as I truly believe) a dæmon, because so it seemed to me to be, although I was a boy, who said, that he was divine, and said to the mother: What have you done? Take this one from study, and instruct another younger son, because this one will not be a servant of God, as you believe, nay quickly he will die of such a death: about which the mother was much saddened, but yet on account of this she did not cease to do what she could.

[3] She recalled one thing which had happened at the boy's birth: on account of the presages given her about the boy, because (as she herself said) when the boy had come out of his mother's womb, he was clad in a certain religious garment. And she recalled another thing, which had happened on the first day, when the boy began to read: On that night her husband appeared to a certain godmother saying, my wife has set our son Peter to the study of letters. O how well it is for me, and for him, and for many others! Tell her therefore, that if she loved me, in this let her show it, that as much as she can she should do it, and what she began let her perfect. Whence the mother against the will of her sons, took of the substances which fell to her, and gave to the master that he should teach the boy. To whom God conferred so great grace, that in a short time he read the Psalter. then confirmed in various ways: Who when he was still a boy and simple, so far that he did not recognize the Blessed Virgin, and B. John, who are painted on the Cross, yet he saw them descend from the Cross; and taking the book, in which the boy read, both on it, that is the Virgin Mary and John, beyond measure sweetly sang. Which the boy related to his mother with great joy. To whom the mother said; See, son, that you tell no one. Likewise when still a boy he went with other boys playing, he was tempted by the devil, that he should say words, which were not lawful, and which the boy himself knew not. But night coming, he saw in sleep, that he was in the church, where he read by day, and was before the Altar: and behold the Angels descended from on high, and stood on every side of the boy, threatening and saying, why did you reveal such things? Beware lest you reveal such things any more: and one spoke to another, Strike him, why did he reveal these things? Yet no one struck. These and many other good things in vision he always saw: which when he related to his mother, she prohibited, that he should tell no one, and he told no one. The mother too saw in sleep, that this boy was the keeper of many sheep, as white as snow: about which the mother beyond measure grieved; and even after she had awakened, too much she was saddened. But when on the following day she was with that boy, who was now twelve years old, she said to him, Son, such a dream I saw of a certain Cleric. To whom immediately the son answered, saying, This one will be the keeper of good souls. She hearing this, cheerful and rejoicing said to her son: Son, it is you: be comforted in the Lord.

[4] Many wonderful things God did for the mother of that boy, which with his own eyes that son saw. First when she was detained with a grave infirmity, for the space of thirty years and more, so that she had lost the right side of her body: to whom too other benefits conferred, on a certain day she thought in her heart to go to a certain holy place, which she did, and in one night she was healed. Likewise that very son, when he was a boy of three years, struck his eye on a sharp wood, and was blinded in the right eye, so that the physicians and all who saw him said, that the eye was lost. But she confiding in the Blessed Virgin, took him to a certain church of the Blessed Virgin, and remained there with her son the whole night: and so in the morning the eye was found sound without blemish. Likewise when another son, who was married, was reaping the harvest, in his own and his sons' person. an ear of wheat clung to his eye, and so hid itself in it, that by no man could it be found: and so for many days he went here and there seeking help, and did not find it; whence he cried day and night for too much pain. But the mother sad and grieving turned herself to the Blessed Virgin, My Lady, saying, restore the eye to this son, as to my other son hitherto you have restored. The light of day coming that son the Cleric looked into his brother's eye, and behold the ear was in the middle of the eye tending outward: he himself seized it with his fingers only, and drew it out of the eye. Likewise at a certain time of great famine bread had failed her, and she could not find any refuge: whence she turned herself to God on a certain night, asking and seeking of Him, that He himself would mercifully provide for her sons, lest they should die of hunger. But rising in the morning, she said to her son; Son, take the sickle, and go to the field, and seek within it: perhaps God will do mercy with us, that we may not die of hunger. But it was then near the time. The son refused, and would not go, saying. Why do I go? The harvest indeed is still green, I shall profit nothing. But yet at length he gave assent; he went into the field; and found in the middle of it as great a harvest white and dry as was necessary; which he that same day collected, threshed, and to the mill carried, and gave thanks to God. Likewise this mother greatly honored the Saints, and observed their solemnities. Whence on the Beheading of S. John (because on the following day it was necessary to make bread) that evening she wished to make the leaven; she began with fear to put water into the flour, and behold suddenly all the flour seemed to be worms. Then she frightened fell to the ground, praying God and saying, Have mercy on me; and immediately the flour returned to its state.

[5] But the boy more and more longed to serve God, and most of all in the desert: At twenty years touched by the love of the desert he leaves his fatherland: but because he did not know that a Hermit could be with a companion, nay he believed that he ought always to be alone, and he himself much feared in the night on account of phantasies; thus doubting, he knew not what he should do; for there was not in the fatherland any servant of God, from whom he could receive counsel: and so he passed from one time to another even to twenty and more years. But this youth had a certain companion, greater than him, in time and age: to whom he began to say, What do we do? Let us go out of our fatherland, and let us go far to serve God; but yet first let us go to Rome, and with the counsel of the Church let us do all things. He acquiesced, and deserted by his companion, and they began to walk: and the journey of one day being completed, that elder one repented, saying to him, Let us return, and let us not leave our fatherland and our kinsmen. He inspired by God, said to him; I confide in God, that if you leave me, God will not leave me; I will by no means return. And he remained alone. And walking the journey of one day, he came to a certain fortress Sangrum at the ninth hour. And immediately when he had come to that fortress, the air was troubled, and there was made a great tempest of wind and rain, when before it had been the best weather: but he wished to walk further. He came therefore to the bridge of the river, which was outside the fortress: and while he was in the middle of the bridge, behold the wind rushed upon him, the fear being overcome, he pursues the journey. and struck into him great fear, so that too much troubled he turned himself back. But at the head of the bridge was the church of S. Nicholas, into which he entered, and asked the Lord and B. Nicholas, that they would help him. But comforted by God he remained there for very many days: and while he was there, he understood from certain ones, that a certain Hermit was on the mountain near that fortress. Joyful he and rejoicing went to him: but before he went the Spirit of the Lord prohibited him, that he should not tell him his secrets. He went therefore to the hermit, and before he entered his cell, God showed him his dishonest life, so that he said nothing to him, except only of the journey to Rome, because that one said, that he would go to Rome. Whence that one appointed a day, on which he should return to him, that they might begin the journey: which the Lord did not permit, that on that day he could return, for it would have been evil for him, as appeared.

[6] But on the next day he bought two loaves and fish, and ascended the mountain. And when he was now near the place, Ten days being passed in the eremitic cell, behold there met him two most beautiful women, who grievously fought with him, taking him by the hands, and saying, Do not go, because the hermit is not in the place, come with us. He scarcely escaped from their hands. But he came to the place, and found the cell open, and no one was there. But this was in the month of January, and there was great snow, and then it was snowing. But immediately the Spirit of God was with him, and he began to think saying, Remain and try, and you will see what God will do for you: and so he remained, with much doubt and fear. But after he had long kept vigil, weighed down with sleep he fell to the ground, and slept. And behold a great throng of Angels and Saints was around him so openly, that it seemed to him that he kept vigil; not without divine solace and in the mouth of each of them were red roses, and with those roses they sang delightfully too much: so that after he had been roused from sleep, he heard that song for as long a space, as a Pater noster could be said. Then he joyful as much as cannot be said, and now made secure, remained there ten days alone, satiated with joy and gladness.

[7] But after these things the Lord showed him a place on another mountain, in which he found a great rock, and under it he dug a little, elsewhere under a rock for three years he lives: so far that scarcely could he there raise or extend himself; and there he remained for the space of three years: in which place the Lord showed him many good things. For first every night at the fitting hour he heard the sound of a great bell. But there came a certain one from a certain good hermit, saying, That that brother has a cock, which sings in the night, why do you not have one? And behold a certain matron was then present, who immediately said to him; I have a most beautiful cock, if you wish I will bring it to you. He, as a simple one, answered,

I wish: and it was done. But the cock never sang, and the sound of that bell disappeared. He at length perceived what he had done: he returned the cock, but the grace which he had lost he never wholly found again. Likewise many times, when he prayed in the night, he saw on this side and that beside him two most beautiful men, clad as Bishops, singing Mass; and it seemed to him, that they said the Psalms with him. amid various temptations. In the beginning of his conversion, he sustained many temptations, waking and sleeping. For two dæmons took the form of certain women, whom before in the world he had seen, who were very delightful, and often the appearances of them they represented to the eyes of the heart. And also while he slept, one of them with naked body on one side, and the other on the other were placed, and so they fought with him. He propped, while he kept vigil, his tunic under his feet; and those dæmons by force drew the cloths from his feet, and joined themselves to his body: but yet, the Lord helping, they did not prevail. Likewise in that place there were reptiles, serpents, scorpions, lizards, and such. Whence sometimes when he slept, those which commonly are called toads entered into his breast, and clung to his flesh; because he had no other cloth, except one tunic with a hood, with which he covered his head. And also after he rose, sometimes he did not perceive them, and said the whole Matins, bending his knees several times: but when he perceived them, he loosened his girdle, and so they fell upon his feet. And what was wonderful, he thought nothing of this what it was: but after they fell upon his feet, then he trod them under his feet, and they cast water from their mouth, and then he perceived what they were. Many other good and evil things happened there to the same: but to tell it would be long. I will come therefore to other things.

ANNOTATA.

CHAPTER II.

The Acts on the Mountains of Murone and Magella: divine visions, and diabolical temptations.

[8] Three years being completed in that place, all people persuaded him, that he should undertake the Priestly Order: on which occasion he went to Rome, and there was made a Priest. Made a Priest he migrates to the mountain of Murone: Then he came to the Mountain of Murone, and there found a certain crypt, which much pleased him. But immediately when he entered, he sat; and behold a great serpent went out before him, and departed from that place: in which many good things God did for him for the space of five years. And because he always desired solitude and poverty, therefore he thought sometimes to leave the office of the Mass, and wishing for humility to abstain from the Mass, and this with the counsel of the Pope. But this was in winter, since there was great snow on that mountain, and therefore he could not descend. He was therefore for many days in that temptation; and when near was the day on which he ought to undertake the journey to Rome; behold in the night he thought in a vision, that he went to Rome, and while he went, he wandered from the way: but looking before him, behold two Friars came, whom he asked about the way; who answered nothing, but rather among themselves laughed at him: whence he sad and grieving sat. And behold a certain matron came, whom asking about the way, she answered, You ought to have asked God when you were in the crypt, and nothing else she said: He understood, that of this he had not made prayer. He asked God, and behold a certain Abbot who had died (and he first had given him the habit of Religion) came to him in a vision in such a manner. It seemed to him that he was before the Altar, and behold there appeared to him behind him clad in a very white garment, saying to him, Son, pray for me, and remain with God: and he wished to withdraw. Whom he seized by the cowl, he is divinely bidden to do it, and would not let him go, although he said humbly, Let go, son; let go, son. To whom he, I adjure you by the living God, by the holy Trinity, and by the other Saints, that you tell me what I should do about such a matter? But he answered saying, Say Mass, son, say it. And he, B. Benedict and many other Saints would not touch so great a mystery; how shall I, who am too much a sinner, be worthy to perfect such a work? To whom he, O, son! Worthy? And who is worthy? Celebrate Masses, son: celebrate with fear and trembling: and immediately he vanished. On the same day there came to him a certain other holy Monk, to whom he was wont to confess; who said to him likewise, as the Abbot had said to him in the vision before.

[9] Likewise at another time there happened to him much temptation, what he should do when pollution happened to him, if on the same day he should celebrate, or not? And seeking counsel from many Religious, one said, yes, another no: and so he was in great doubt, even after a nocturnal pollution, not knowing what he should do. He asked therefore God, that He would help him in this: And behold the same night sleeping, it seemed to him that he ascended a certain fortress placed on high; and entering the gate of that fortress, he saw a great cloister, and in the middle of the cloister a great palace, and round about the fortress many cells, in which cells were Friars clad in white garments. But he desired to go into the palace: but he led with him a certain little ass, which he could not leave. He began therefore to ascend the steps of the staircase of that palace, by a beautiful vision animated to it. up which lightly the little ass ascended; and so ascending three or four steps, that bad little ass began foully to cast from its body dung, as if it had eaten tender herbs. Which seeing he, he fixed his step sad and grieving, and dared not ascend. But he saw at the head of that staircase, at the entrance of the palace, three Persons similar and equal, so that they seemed as it were one, and all looked at him. Of whom one, who seemed Christ, said to him, Ascend, ascend. Why do you not ascend? Because the little ass does its custom? What is it to you? Ascend, ascend. And immediately he was roused from sleep, filled with all joy and gladness, praising and blessing God. Many and unnarrable good things happened to him in that place for the space of five years.

[10] But because here he always sought solitude, and all the woods, which had been around the place, were destroyed and by men cultivated; he withdrew from that place, and came to the Mountain of Magella; where he found a certain great crypt, which much pleased him. But it did not please the two companions whom he had, The Saint passes over to Magella, nor even any of his friends; for all were contrary, one only excepted; whence alone he remained in the place. But after some days the companions followed him, because they much loved him; who made little fascines of brushwood, and erected them, and so closed the crypt, and dwelt in it. And because in the time of fervent summer, namely the month of June, the brushwood was dried up too much, behold on a certain night there was present the tempter, and the whole cell round about seemed to burn. But he called the Friars saying, Rise quickly, and cast all things out. But they rising, saw the cell burn. and constantly remaining there, With great haste therefore they took what they could, and fleeing began to murmur against him, that he had come to such a place: for they believed that fire had descended from the height of the mountain. Then he comforted by God, in his heart said, Even if my whole body were burned, I will not leave this place. And immediately that fire vanished, as if it had been a dream. Several of his devout came, and much accused him of such a place, saying to him: All men cry out against you, and reprehend this: and unless they feared you from devotion, before you they would cry out. And well you know, that we love you; but yet so we have failed, that scarcely any longer would we come, so hard and long is that way: and even those of the near fortress now will not come. But he with a placid and humble mind answered, saying: Most dear, go with the blessing of God, and then come when from great will it shall proceed. But a little after one of them asked of him, that he should be received as a Friar, which also was done.

[11] Many began thereafter to leave the world, and came to him: he receives several companions: but he as much as he could refused to receive them, saying, that he was simple, and his desire had been, that always alone he should remain: but sometimes overcome by charity he gave assent. Many and great signs there appeared; by which God showed, that He had chosen that place in honor of the Holy Spirit. For in the beginning, when the Friars began to dwell in the place, there appeared there a certain dove, which always seemed to take food in the proper place, in which the altar afterward was placed, and so it walked among the Friars, as if it were nourished by them. Whence a little oratory being constructed, he builds an oratory marked out by a dove. this dove often was in it, even while the Office was said; so that on a certain day there were outsiders in the oratory at Mass, and the dove among them: and so one of them bent himself to take it, but by no means could. And so that dove, for the space of two or three years, appeared there.

[12] But after these things there was erected a beautiful oratory in honor of the Holy Spirit, and many came with great devotion, even from distant parts: whence on a certain day there came certain ones from his fatherland, and the Friar sitting with them, spoke with them of the word of life. And behold there came up four men from another fatherland, and immediately as they arrived, there came upon that Friar a certain spirit of charity and great ardor, where he praying with the pilgrims, so that scarcely could he contain himself: whence quickly he sent away those of the fatherland from himself, and remained with these, and his Friars:

but it was the ninth hour, whence he said to them First let us render to God the due praises, and afterward together we shall have consolation. And they entered the oratory, and said the Office. But they began to hear the sound of many and great bells; yet that place was so remote from the habitations of men, that never could the sound of any bell have been heard there: whence they were astonished. Then two of them went out of the oratory, lifting their eyes and ears to heaven, and weeping. But going out from the Office, those men came to the Friar with tears, and great fear, saying, Where is the place in which it is rung? But the Friar hearing their words, there is heard a miraculous sound of bells, understood the cause, and said to them, It is not very far, and so to other words he passed. And they sat speaking many good things until vespers; and when the hour was made they entered to the Office; and immediately they began to hear the sound of great bells until the end of the Office: and so at all the hours night and day, until the third day until they withdrew. From this moreover it is proved, that that sound was from God; because one of them suffered a great infirmity, which was such. While he slept, suddenly he was roused and vociferated, fleeing from place to place, and hiding himself in whatever lurking-place, and no one could hold him: and two of them are aided. but from that day he never felt such things. But another suffered a spiritual infirmity, so that every night at least twice he fell into pollution: who from that day was freed from the vice, so that he never felt anything of it. But the dæmons fought every night and for a long time, but by the grace of God they did not expugn. But all these four had been converted to God, and immediately took the habit of Religion, and gave all their things to the poor. Two of these, who were young, led such a life, that God showed them many things in life and in death: the other two, who were now old, led a good life for several years, and rested in peace.

[13] After these four, several heard the sound of bells, namely in the aforesaid place; and after they had heard there, the same sound is heard by many other seculars, everywhere they heard it, except within a city or fortresses. Only of one city there were twenty who heard that sound, and of other parts several men: who all were laymen and seculars, and none of them was a Cleric or Religious, which is wonderful. But the Friars who were in that place, all heard it; and according to the day of greater festivity, so the sound of very many bells they heard. All indeed the Friars heard it, but not all equally; and all the Friars, because one more openly than another, and of very many and diverse bells. A certain Friar heard one bell, which rendered a sweeter sound than all the others, and this was rung when the Body of Christ was elevated; which bell was heard always in a certain place of that mountain, in another place two, and in another two. And doves were seen many in the air above the place: and the more anyone accommodated his hearing to that sound, the less he perceived it, and conversely: and so much that sound filled the hearing, that scarcely could it be borne.

[14] There was heard often the great chant of the Office, sometimes in the oratory, sometimes in the cell of that Friar, and there were understood the things which there were said. likewise Angelic chants: A certain Friar often, while the Office was said, heard other most sweet voices with the voices of the Friars, so that while the voices of the Friars paused, those voices better were heard. On the feast of B. Stephen in the evening this Friar said to his Friars: Let us make this night a good Office to the honor of B. John, and tomorrow I will give you a meal: but it was the sixth feria. They rose very early to the vigils, and the Office being said, the Friars returned to their cells. And so that Friar returning to his cell, prayed as long as he wished: and afterward he placed himself on the board, on which he slept; and immediately rapt by sleep he began to hear the Office in the oratory; and suddenly roused, listening too openly he heard it, among which he is admonished to keep abstinence: but the cell was distant from the oratory ten paces. But there were several who said the Office, among whom were boys: and one, who seemed to be above all, sent forth a voice like the voice of a trumpet. But the Office being said they went out of the Choir, and fixed their step before the Cross, and there said many good things especially of that place. After these things the greater of them turned himself to the cell of the Friar, and with a great voice said: Peter, observe abstinence, observe abstinence; and immediately they vanished.

[15] Likewise on a certain day similarly after Matins this Friar lay on his board sleeping, and behold suddenly it seemed to him, that he was in the oratory; and it seemed that then Mass ought to be said, by other visions likewise he is taught, but he knew not by whom. But he saw then few men in the oratory, and immediately it was filled with men clad in white garments. And then there appeared a certain one at the right horn of the altar, who said Mass, and he seemed to be the Abbot of that Friar, but he did not know him. But after he was roused, it seemed to him that it was the Holy Spirit. But all stood with much reverence: but this Friar was at the right hand of that Abbot. When therefore the Body of Christ was elevated, a certain bell was rung, the virtue of whose sound wonderfully and suddenly drew all those cast on the ground to the altar. And then this Friar awaking, found his head, where before were his feet: and he heard that glorious sound, even after he had awakened. But at another time at the dawn of day he sat in his cell, and a book was before him, the place to be divinely consecrated. and he read in it: but the window was now open. And behold suddenly outside the cell near the window there appeared several glorious ones to see, who said among themselves, Let us build this cell; and they began to say the Office of Dedication, going round about the cell. And this Friar said the Office with them, of which he wondered, saying within himself, What is this? Now I do not sleep. And he looked at the book, putting his hand on his own letters, because it was now day. And the Office being finished, he felt himself openly stripped of a certain most subtle garment, which he had not felt when he was clad with it, and immediately they vanished.

[16] Likewise to a certain Friar of the place on a certain Lord's day there appeared in a vision a certain splendid man, similar things too seen by his companions, saying to him; See that this oratory is built by God, and this sign I give you: this morning when you enter the oratory, the lamp which is before the altar, will go here and there: which also was done, all the Friars seeing it: and very wonderful, because although the lamp was full too much of oil, nothing went out of it, although they saw it run much into various places. Likewise sometimes certain Friars saw a great throng of dæmons in the wood around the place, roaring and bleating like sheep, wishing to enter into the place; and on that part above was another throng of good spirits; who fought against them, and did not permit them to enter. Likewise on a certain Lent the Friars gave themselves to too much abstinence, prayer, and silence, and the other good works as much as they could; but the devil tempted them inwardly, the dæmon gnashing in vain and vexing them. namely in heart, nor could do anything to them. Whence he was present to them openly on the Sunday of the Passion in the night, before the Friars rose to the vigils. But while they were in their cells, the dæmon struck four Friars with great fear, so that rising to the vigils they all began to vociferate and say, Help us, help. One of them had lost both hands, because all the fingers of either hand were turned away; and all the Friars who were in the choir and in the church through the air on every side saw most foul dæmons, so that all left the Office. But the Friar who was in the cell, when he felt this, sent to them, saying, that they should by no means leave the Office who could. But morning being made all those phantasms vanished. But all things which are said they heard continuously for the space of three years, namely while the oratory was small, but afterward rarely and to few men they happened.

ANNOTATA.

CHAPTER III.

The election to the Pontificate and its abdication, by Ptolemy of Lucca, William of Nangis, Francis Petrarch, nearest in age celebrated.

[17] At twenty years (as at number 5 is said) the Saint was, when having gone out of his fatherland he undertook the solitary life; wherefore he can seem to have been about thirty years old, when he committed to writing what in the two preceding chapters we have given: who would that likewise he had committed to writing the other things done in all the remaining space of his life even to the Pontificate! But to this by what reason he was elected, will best teach those who made the election, the Cardinals, by their instrument made thereupon, which together with the Bull of Canonization from the most Illustrious Abbot Angelus Riccius at Rome we received in Manuscript, but printed we found at Paris by the care of Dionysius Faber after the Life. Receive it: In the name of the holy and undivided Trinity, of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit. Amen. We by divine compassion Brother Latinus of Ostia, Geraldus of Sabina, John of Tusculum, and Brother Matthæus of Porto Bishops; Hugo of the title of S. Sabina, By 11 Cardinals, Peter of the title of S. Mark, and Benedict of the title of S. Martin, Priests; Matthæus of S. Mary in the porch, James of S. Mary in Via-lata, Neapoleo of S. Adrian, and Peter of S. Eustace, Deacon Cardinals. We make known, that in the year of the Lord one thousand two hundred and ninety-four, in the month of July, on the day of the moon, the fifth of the same month, the Apostolic

See by the death of happy recollection the Lord Pope Nicholas the fourth being vacant, in the year 1294 on July 12, after divers treatments, held at divers times by us on the election of the supreme Pontiff, to which the desired effect did not accede, in common consistory in the wonted manner we convened, the venerable Brother our Peter, Priest of the title of S. Mark aforesaid, being absent, who was in his lodging detained by infirmity or weakness. At length among us, unexpectedly or unforeseen, of the venerable and religious Father, Brother Peter of Murone of the Order of S. Benedict, a man of celebrated sanctity, mention being made; all, who then present were in the consistory aforesaid, by common vote, to his person directing the gaze of intent consideration, upon him, as if divinely inspired, not without the shedding of tears, no one at all discordant, we consented. And our venerable Brothers, the Lords John Bishop of Tusculum, Hugo and James aforementioned, to the aforesaid Peter Priest Cardinal we sent, to scrutinize over this business his vote; who, the name of the same Brother Peter being heard, devoutly consented likewise on the same, as the same Cardinals sent to him, as is premised, in our presence reported. And we, wishing more efficaciously to proceed in this part, to the venerable Brother Bishop of Ostia aforesaid of electing, in his and all our name, the remembered Brother Peter of Murone, as Pontiff and Pastor of the Roman Church, full and free by living voice we granted power. he is announced Pontiff. Who the power itself received, we being present, as is premised, fulfilled it forthwith efficaciously; the same in his and our name, from the power delivered to him, electing as Roman Pontiff: and we the election, of the said Brother Peter made by the same Bishop of Ostia, holding ratified, the same Brother Peter of Murone, although absent, devoutly receive as our and the same Roman and universal Church's Bishop and Pastor. In testimony of which thing, and for fuller evidence, we have caused the present writing to be made, and to be fortified with our seals, and corroborated with subscriptions. Done at Perugia, in the Year, month, and day aforesaid.

[18] Thus far the public Faith of the Cardinals, extracted from the original, existing in the archives of the Abbey of the Cælestines of S. Spiritus near Sulmona, the subscriptions of the single Cardinals being omitted: but these in the transcript of the most Illustrious Riccius singly are expressed under this formula: I Brother Latinus Bishop of Ostia upon the same Brother Peter, although absent, expressly consented, and named and elected him, and received him as Bishop and Pastor of the Roman and universal Church. There follow, in the same words plainly the rest, and there is added in the transcript of Riccius; the Exhortation of the Cardinals, made to Brother Peter of Morone, that he should be content to undertake the place of Pontiff, into which he had been elected, in the year 1294. Which Exhortation under the title of Letters, written by the Pontifical Electors to the Lord Peter the Hermit of Murone, the aforesaid Dionysius published in this tenor: To the most holy Father and Lord, the Reverend Brother Peter of Murone, of the Order of S. Benedict, by divine providence in the Roman Church elected Supreme Pontiff, by divine compassion the Bishops, Priests, and Deacons Cardinals of the sacrosanct Church, the kisses of the blessed feet. If the diffuse material of the deed by the office of a solicitous pen we should pursue, and the quality of the present business with a series of worthy speech we should lay open; it would certainly happen to us to begin the web of a prolix dictation, and to form a page of ample tenor, to be directed to the clemency of Your Sanctity. But lest by the prolixity of words or multiplied eloquences we should overburden Your hearing; the process held by us in the same business, we disclose to You in compendium. and letters being sent, The Apostolic See being vacant, by the death of happy recollection the Lord Pope Nicholas the fourth; We, after divers treatments, at divers times, by the zeal of our solicitude on the election of the Supreme Pontiff held, to which the desired effect did not accede, in common consistory, in the wonted manner we convened; and at length among us, unexpectedly or unforeseen, of You mention being made, all to Your person, conspicuous by the virtue of merits, directing the edge of intent consideration; upon You, He working who makes the minds of the faithful of one will, not without the shedding of tears we consented, as in the Decree, made thereupon more fully and more amply is contained. Since, therefore the Decree itself to You by the venerable Brothers the Archbishop of Lyons, the Bishops of Orvieto and Patti, and the beloved sons, Masters Franciscus Neapoleonis of the City, and Guillermus de Mandagoto, Notaries of the Apostolic See, the exhibitors of the present, we confidently destine; to Your Sanctity most instantly we supplicate, and from the inmost affection of heart we demand, that with profound and sedulous meditation weighing, that this election celebrated of You, He who breathes where He wills inspiring proceeded; attending moreover the manifold necessity, not only of the Roman Mother Church, which the losses of a long vacation has borne, but also of the whole Lord's flock, now long destitute of the convenience of a Pastor, the innumerable dangers too to which the universal Church is known to be subject, unless to them by the Vicar of Jesus Christ our Lord it be met; his assent is asked. and You to the divine dispositions, as becomes Your Sanctity, with humble mind adapting yourself; to the aforesaid election, so laudably and with so great concord celebrated, your pious consent you would accommodate; about to gladden thereupon, by your desired presence, the thirsty minds of your sons, who are we; that what by us with pious intention is known to have been begun, by You a desired and celebrated effect may obtain. Given at Perugia, on the fifth of the Ides of July, in the year of the Lord one thousand two hundred and ninety-four.

[19] In what manner then he was crowned, and a little after, the Pontificate being abdicated, was kept in custody by his successor Boniface, an eye-witness in many things Ptolemy of Lucca, Ptolemy of Lucca narrates, Bishop of Torcello in his Annals, which are held printed at Lyons; but more prolixly in the Ecclesiastical History, which now is kept in Manuscript in the Barberini library: from whose History book 22 the Life of Cælestine Pope V described here we give, which with the published Annals the curious reader can compare. In the year therefore of the Lord MCCXCIV, and from the city founded MMLXXXV, after the feast of B. John the Baptist, that is on the VII of the Kalends of July, at the persuasion of the Lord Latinus Bishop of Ostia, in what manner he was elected on June 25, and after the departure of the King, the Cardinals direct their votes to a certain Hermit of Abruzzo, whose name was Brother Peter of Murone, and elect him as supreme Pontiff, who was called Cælestine V. He very devoted to King Charles in a certain hut had his dwelling; a man of the greatest abstinence and prayer, wholly consecrated to God. The Decree received therefore at the instance of the King and his men and the whole region, he received the Papacy, and came to Aquila: where then he fixed his see, and there he was consecrated, and crowned: and there were at his coronation more than two thousand men, and I was present. But he made immediately after this at the petition of the King one great ordination of Cardinals, he was crowned at Aquila, among whom three were of the Kingdom, namely the Lord Landulphus of Naples, one of his Order who was called Lord Thomas, but the third was the Archbishop of Benevento, who before had been Abbot of Monte Cassino: he made also the Chancellor of the King the Lord Guillelmus of Bergamo, he made also the Lord John Monachi, and the Archbishop of Lyons, and the Archbishop of Bourges: the first called the Lord Beraldus de Glotho, and was made of Albano; the second was made of Palestrina. the Cardinals being bidden to come thither to him; But it is to be noted, that he being created together with the Decree the Cardinals send letters to him, and signify to his Sanctity, that to the commemorated place, where his election had been made, he would deign to come: but he at the instance of the King refused to come, nay rather commanded the same that they should come to him. These things being done therefore the Lord Latinus grievously fell sick, in whom the whole weight lay upon the election of Cælestine. For this Lord Latinus was a man of great religion, and sanctity, and from devotion specially had been joined to Brother Peter of Morone, as the Cardinal Latinus being dead, and to him every year from the time of his acquaintance sent a special alms; and his Confraternity who dwelt at Rome, where they had a cloister near saint Peter, he aided. From this familiar devotion and confidence of his goodness he was moved to persuade of him that he should be assumed as supreme Pontiff. Aggravated therefore by sickness he dies at Perugia, of whom great and virtuous things are said, and worthy of example. But it is to be returned to Cælestine, because he could not be persuaded to come to Perugia, but at Aquila for some time fixed his foot. But so great was there the concourse to him from villages and fortresses, that it was a stupor to see; because they came more to obtain his benediction, than for the acquisition of a Prebend: whence it was necessary for him often to go to the window, all did so. to bless the people overcome by their clamors: which I both saw, and was present when these things were done. Meanwhile some Cardinals precede to the Pope, some follow toward Aquila: yet the last to arrive was the Lord Benedict Gaetani: and it was doubted that he would not come, because he had offended the King in words at Perugia: He came therefore last, and so knew to conduct his affairs, that he was made as it were Lord of the Curia.

[20] These things therefore thus conducted, although Cælestine did the works of a holy man, because through the Pontifical state he had not receded from the innocence of his first state, Meanwhile by the fraud of his officials often deceived, but the same humility, the same purity persevered in him, although the manner of living was changed on account of the dignity; yet he was deceived in his Officials, as to the favors which were done, of which he could have no knowledge; both on account of the impotence of old age, because of decrepit age; and on account of the inexperience of governing, about the frauds and cunnings of men, in which the Curias greatly thrive; whence favors were found sometimes made to three, or four, or several persons; parchment too empty, but sealed. This therefore perceiving certain of the College now begin to complain, and to attend to the fluctuation of the Church, and even to insinuate to the same Pontiff, he is admonished to cede the Papacy. under the pretext of his sanctity, how great a danger was at hand for him. Meanwhile King Charles, as they relate, ordained with Cælestine, or with the good pleasure of the College it was done, that the Curia should be translated to Naples. Going therefore thither he is much stimulated by some Cardinals that he should cede the Papacy, that even Rome under him is endangered, and under him is confounded. By which goads stirred the holy Father thought to cede the Papacy. Which when the King had weighed and the Clergy, he commands a procession to be made from the greater Church even to the Castle of the King, at which procession I was present: where there convened many Bishops of the Region, all the Religious, and the whole Clergy. And when the procession had come to the said Castle where the said Pontiff stayed, we cried out in the wonted manner for the benediction. That he should not do it the Neapolitans supplicate,

But he for the reverence of the procession came to the window with three Bishops. The benediction therefore being given, one Bishop of the aforesaid procession asks audience of the holy Pontiff, speaking in the person of the King and the whole Kingdom, as to the Clergy and people, I being present, supplicating humbly the same, in the stead and name of all the aforesaid, with a most high and trumpet-like voice (because the whole procession heard below in the square but the Pope above in the window) that since he was the glory of the said Kingdom, and they move him: he would consent by no persuasion to resign. To which words by the mandate of the Pope one of those, who were with him, answered; that he did not intend it, unless something else should appear whence the conscience should be urged. Then the said Bishop the spokesman for the King and Kingdom aloud began, We praise Thee O God, and so thence to their own they return; which was indeed, as it is established to me, about the feast of Blessed Nicholas.

[21] But this notwithstanding still some Cardinals bitingly infest, that to the peril of his soul he held the Papacy, but the counsel of cession being resumed, on account of the inconveniences and evils which followed from his governing. At which words the Saint is moved, and so begins to consult his friends in what manner this could be done: and thence afterward in a few days, that is ten days before the Lord's Nativity, he cedes the Papacy into the hands of the College: which cession the College itself too is said to have accepted. But before that cession, by the counsel and assent of his Brothers, he makes a Constitution, that the Pope can in certain cases resign: which Constitution Boniface VIII his successor authenticates, he decrees it lawful and does it, and confirms in the 6th book on Renunciation chapter 1 and the very deed of Clement I, of whom it was treated above of the fourth Pontiff, also makes faith. But after the cession after a little time, according to the form of the Decree; to the election of another they proceed in the presence of King Charles at Naples on the Vigil of the Nativity of the Lord upon the Lord Benedict Gaetani they direct their votes, and assume him as supreme Pontiff, and Boniface VIII he was called, and Boniface Pope 8 is elected: namely in the year of the Lord MCCXCIV. But Cælestine sat from the VII of the Kalends of July, even to the XIX day or thereabouts of December. But wishing to withdraw from the Curia and to pass to the desert, he undertook flight; but Boniface after him sends messengers or couriers to detain him, and finding him they bring him back, and into custody he is put and held, for avoiding scandal of the Roman Church, because with some it was murmured whether he could cede, and so a schism could be generated in the Church. Held therefore in custody, not indeed free, under whom in custody Peter died, yet honest, in the castle, as they say, of Fumone on the XIV of the Kalends of June he dies, and in a certain monastery of his Order, which they call of Anthony, behind the altar he is buried, in the year of the Lord MCCCV, as they relate. This holy man for a long time led the eremitic life, and made many good disciples: of whose Canonization to be made afterward with great men in the Roman Curia solicitude lay, and for a long time lasted. by Clement 5, he is canonized in the year 1313. At length he is given to examiners in the Curia by Clement, at the instance of the King of France and other Princes, upon his life and miracles; and these being investigated and found, and by the College approved, the said Clement noted him in the Catalogue of the Saints under the name of saint Peter the Confessor; by which name also his cession is approved. It was done at Avignon in the year MCCCXVI, from his passing in the X or XI year, and there was instituted his festivity to be celebrated on the XIV of the Kalends of June on which day he himself migrated to the Lord.

[22] Thus far Ptolemy of Lucca in his History, to be corrected in the numbers of years, The reckoning of years faulty in Ptolemy, both here, where he notes the year of death; and in the Annals, where he treats of the rebellion of the Colonna. But that he in those things which only by the speech of the common people absent he learned, was not most accurate, it will help to observe, that when on the XXX of May it will be to be treated of the right of S. Ferdinand the King to the kingdom of Castile, on the part of his mother Berengaria, as among the daughters of Alfonso the firstborn; the authority of the same Ptolemy may less trouble, writing a hundred years after the matter done, that Blanche was the firstborn. Meanwhile let us hear him, who most efficaciously corrects the error of Ptolemy, William of Nangis, somewhat older. he is corrected by William of Nangis, After a two years', he says, three months', and two days' vacation of the Roman Church, the hundred and ninety-sixth Cælestine the fifth presides. He Brother Peter of Morone before called, an Apulian by nation, a Monk and Father of a certain slender Religion instituted by him, which is called of S. Peter in the Mountains, near Sulmona of Abruzzo led a strict eremitic life. He too a man of great humility, of holy condition and celebrated fame, of age as is thought of seventy years and more, yet vigorous and competent, of moderate literature indeed, but of good discretion and some experience, unexpectedly, when the Cardinals seemed obstinate and confirmed in their discord over the election of the Pope, and then to treat of the election had not convened, nor otherwise ever of that Brother Peter to be elected had had any mention (a certain Cardinal of his fame and sanctity in the common Consistory incidentally relating some things) by divine, as is believed, inspiration, by the unanimous vote of all, with very much shedding of tears, as supreme Pontiff was elected: Then he adds About the Lord's Advent Cælestine Pope, I know not by what spirit led, in full Consistory before all, the ring, mitre, and sandals laying down, every Papal office and benefice wholly renounced. After whom the hundred and ninety-seventh Boniface the eighth, a Campanian by nation presides. He Cælestine Pope deposed, wishing to return to the place whence he had been assumed, by no means permitted, but honorably caused him with diligent custody in a most safe place to be guarded. Finally, in the year MCCXCVI Cælestine Pope deposed, closed his last day.

[23] About forty years after the death of S. Peter Francis Petrarch, the most illustrious Poet and Rhetorician of his time, Petrarch in the book on the Solitary Life, composed a work on the Solitary Life, worthy of his genius: in book 2 of which work, chapter 17 when he had treated of S. Peter Damian, who from the desert drawn to the Cardinalate, to the same by right of return came back; Of this, he says in chapter 18 Peter the very rarity itself would make the most illustrious contempt, unless the more recent and clearer contempt of another Peter the Roman Pontiff, whom they called Cælestine, had obscured him: who the highest Pontificate, as a deadly burden, being laid down, into his ancient solitude so eagerly returned, that you would believe him freed from a hostile fetter. Which deed of the solitary and holy Father, let whoever will attribute it to baseness of mind: for it is lawful in the same matter for the variety of geniuses, to feel not only diverse, but adverse things. I for one, both useful to himself I judge it, and to the world: for to both, on account of the inexperience of human things, which by much contemplation of divine things he had neglected, and the long love of solitude, perilous could be the doubtful and turbid loftiness. For what to Christ seemed good, the miracle which through him God showed, on the day which after the renunciation first shone, is the proof: which surely would not happen, if what was done the Divinity did not approve. I altogether think it the deed of a certain most lofty and most free, and yoke-not-knowing and truly heavenly soul; and so I feel, that it could not have been done by a man, except by one who had esteemed human things at a just price, and who had subjected the swollen head of fortune to his feet. The patronage of Ambrose this place needs, from the mind of S. Ambrose to Demetrias, especially from that book, by which to the observance of true humility he exhorts the sacred Virgin Demetrias. Not, as the lovers (he says) of this age think, of a small heart or a sluggish mind is it to spurn earthly riches, to disdain perishing honors; nor there to seek glory, where the sinner is praised in the desires of his soul, and he who does iniquitous things is blessed. Whence if truly be understood that contempt of present things, to what it tends, and what things it longs for; nothing rightly than minds of this kind, nothing will be found more erect; which by most sacred desires transcend all things; nor to any creature, however powerful and wonderful, but to the very Creator of all visible and invisible things they aspire, whom to approach is to grow illustrious, whom to fear is to rejoice, whom to serve is to reign.

[24] By the proclamation of this praise, who anywhere I ask, or who ever more worthy than Cælestine? Others left their little boats and nets, others their little possessions, others the toll-booth, others even kingdoms or the hope of kingdoms, and following Christ the Lord, were made Apostles, were made saints and friends of God; from the magnanimity of soul, but the Papacy, than which nothing is higher (a thing so much desired, and so wonderful, that from admiration and stupor they relate it to be said), who at any age, especially from when it began to be in so great price, with so wonderful and lofty a soul contemned it, as that Cælestine? his pristine both name, and place, and the want friendly to good morals seeking; and, while he looks up to heaven, forgetful of earth? Whom in any state alike pleasing to God, who does not see, who his wonderful works, but worthy of another style, threefoldly distinguished shall have read through, which he did, either before he ascended, or after he descended, than to have pleased God, or while he sat? But what wonder if the virtue of works was not lacking, of whom both the tenor of soul was one, and as far as was lawful the change of life was none? If indeed at the supreme summit of things, and within the most august and papal chamber, a strait and eremitic little cavern meditating, in the high humble, among the throngs solitary, among the riches poor he lived. Add that immediately from the beginning he attempted flight, with a certain disciple of his Robert of Salento, then a youth; but surrounded by an unexpected and sudden multitude of the people, when there was no hope of escaping, turned to the disciple he asked, whether him drawn and compelled to the heights he would wish to follow? But he, who had learned from his Master to spurn the world, but to love Christ and the things by which Christ is gone to, virtue, peace, silence, and solitude; he showed by being seen from death to Robert of Salento. I beg, he said, that you spare my labor and peril, and rather wish me the successor of the want and safe leisure of the cell, than a partaker of the rich and solicitous glory. Which also was done. For he remained, the Father going away to Rome: whose not much after soul, from the twofold prison, ascending to the starry seats he is said to have beheld; ignorant of things, and stupefied at the miracle, and asking, whether him then too to follow, or something else to do he commanded? whom he that in solitude he should persist, admonished; and so seeking heaven, amid the words disappeared. But that disciple

that one mindful of the counsel, coming even to our times, and full of days, before these few years after the Master died, having left great opinion of sanctity with his own and fame of wonderful works.

[25] But to Cælestine I return, whose ascent how mournful and how against his soul it was, his descent joyful and spontaneous declared. But he ceded with a most joyful mind, I heard those narrating who saw, that he fled with so great joy, and bearing those signs of spiritual gladness in his eyes and brow, while from the sight of the Council, now at length restored to himself and free, he withdrew; as if he had withdrawn not his shoulder from a gentle burden, but his neck from dire axes, and that in his countenance I know not what Angelic shone again. Nor undeservedly: for he knew what he sought again, nor what he dismissed was he ignorant. Certainly from labors to rest, from insane disputations to divine colloquies he returned: he left the city; he went in mind, and (unless the haughtiness of the Successor had stood in the way) on his feet he went into the mountain, shaggy I confess and steep, but whence to him there was a level way to the supernal ones: with whom would that we had lived! Which therefore especially of this one alone, among so many solitaries, I would have wished, because nowhere was the prayer of the wished thing nearer. For neither are we separated by a great interval, and a little either by them was to be delayed, or by us to be hastened, that we might pass this journey of life alike, which he with our fathers passed. And in how brief a space of time through all the tract of Italy even to the Alps! how many sacred convents of the Order instituted by him! and now (as I hear) the Alps themselves the propagated devotion has transcended, the religious succession lasts, and will last: and those whom in solitude he begot, live their sons; while those begotten in the palace, and whom he raised either to the Cardinalate of the Church or to other grades, all long ago died: so much more stable are the foundations of sacred solitude, than of the age. Let them deride, therefore, who saw, to whom before the splendor of gold and purple the squalid despiser of wealth and holy poverty was sordid: let us wonder at this man, and among the rarest number him, and call it a loss not to have seen him, whose sight a huge gain, and a most illustrious example could afford, to those attempting the rugged things of a higher life. But the present fame, and the consecrated name of the man, both favor his praisers, and refute his insulters. But thanks to God, we are made so magnanimous, that these two Peters will not be without emulators, and pusillanimity of this kind will by no means be without example of our time, we hope.

ANNOTATA.

p Guilielmus Longus of Bergamo, whose praises more fully Ciaccone pursues, in this however rightly corrected by the successors and reviewers of the work, that from him he believed the sixth book of the Decretals composed: the Epitaph Oldoinus added, who also corrected the errors of Ciaccone about John aforenamed.

q Simon de Bello-loco, Archbishop of Bourges from the year 1280.

r Latinus died on the day 10 of August.

s In the Annals more expressly thus is read: But meanwhile the Lord James de Colonna and the Lord Peter (also de Colonna) and the Lord Hugo de Belliomo, go to Aquila, and were made Lords of the Curia: which the other Cardinals seeing, hasten to Aquila. Then came to Aquila the Lord Benedict Gaetani, who afterward Boniface the next, of whom it was believed that he would not be graciously seen there, because he had much exasperated King Charles at Perugia: who immediately by his ministries and astutenesses was made Lord of the Curia and friend of the King.

t I Cælestine Pope V, moved by legitimate causes, that is, for the cause of humility and a better life and an unhurt conscience, the weakness of body, the defect of knowledge and the malignity of the common people, and the infirmity of person, and that of the past I may be able by the consolation of a quiet life to repair, freely and willingly cede the Papacy, and expressly renounce the place and dignity, the burden and honor, giving full and free faculty from now to the sacred Assembly of Cardinals of electing and providing, only Canonically, the universal Church with a Pastor. The author of the formula is believed to have been the same, who was also the counselor of the Pontificate to be abdicated; to whom too is attributed the Constitution, defining such an abdication to be lawful, by the example of Pope Clement, as that Constitution is alleged by S. Antoninus.

u Our Ms.: And he sat about half a year, for he himself on the Vigil of S. Lucy ceded the burden of the Papacy. Yet if from the day of the Pontificate undertaken, as at that time was done, be subtracted that space, only from mid-July to December 12 about five months will be found: but from the day of Consecration only 3 months, 15 days.

x This is from epistle 84, ascribed indeed to Ambrose, but by many adjudged to Prosper of Aquitaine.

y Namely it is an admirative interjection, Papæ!

z The negation twice omitted, necessary to this place, I believe I have restored from the mind of the Author; who how truly from the heart he preached solitude, his very withdrawal into Vallis-clausa near Avignon proves, where he professes almost all his works either written or conceived.

CHAPTER IV.

A Summary of the miracles before the Papacy from an Italian Neapolitan Manuscript.

[26] After the universal Church's consent referred the causes of solemn Canonizations to the judgment of the Apostolic See alone, In the Italian Epitome of the Summary itself there are related, about the XII century; the method was little by little ordained, by which so great a matter might be treated by as certain a way as could be, and there began from Apostolic Commission to be made in the very places Processes, for hearing the depositions of sworn Witnesses. But because in that manner it happened those Depositions, in a probative form and singly received, to grow into a great mass of writings; this too was prudently provided, for relieving the labor of the Judges, that some Summary of the same Processes should be made, aptly referring in order the heads and articles of the truths, declared by the Witnesses, the names and number of the Witnesses being briefly added. A twofold example of this practice this day the XIX of May offers us; one in the present Saint, of whom Marinus testifies, not only that Processes are held and by him were seen and read, but also their Summary in his Aquila convent; the other in S. Yvo the Presbyter, canonized LIII years after S. Peter Cælestine. The transcripts of the latter we ourselves have seen and have: of the former we believe Marinus who used the same. Yet a certain Epitome of that Summary, in Italian long ago written we found at Naples, with the Theatine Fathers among the Collectanea of Father Antonius Caraccioli, in which is related only the substance of the miracles, with the names of the persons to whom they happened, the names of the witnesses being omitted, and it seemed to us a thing worthy, that rendered into Latin in this Collection, it should be prefixed to the Bull of Canonization, referring to those same miracles duly examined and approved. But let those miracles be divided into three classes, according to the order of time in which they happened, namely, before the Papacy, after the Papacy, and after death: that it may be seen this to be the treatise above indicated by Petrarch, referring the reader to the wonderful works of Peter, threefoldly distinguished, but worthy of another style. But the first before the Papacy are about fifty miracles.

[27] Catania, wife of the Notary John Riccardi and daughter of Master Benedict the Physician of Sulmona, made wholly blind, nor having any hope of recovering sight, when she was devoutly affected to that Saint, two blind women illumined, by whose preaching her husband had been converted from a most dissolute life to a better one, by the same was miraculously illumined. Trotta too daughter of Benedict, of Castro-Sangrio, deprived of the light of her eyes received the same the sign of the Cross over them by the Saint being formed. Likewise James of S. Euphemia, of the diocese of Chieti, deprived of sight and brought to the Saint with great devotion, by his merits and prayer was freed from blindness. And Peter son of Ser John Master Peter of Sulmona began to see with the right eye, which before he could not, immediately as he was signed by the Saint. and the eyes of several cured, Nicholas, son of Sermentina daughter of John Palumbus of Sulmona, blind in one eye, and devoutly brought to the Saint, by his merits and prayers was cured. Matthæus, son of Sinibaldus of Caramanico, having the right eye obscured with a film and darkness, received its brightness, the sign of the Cross by the Saint over himself being formed: With a similar consigning he received the sight, of which by divine judgment he had been deprived, Justin Antony of Serra-monacesca, brought to the Saint devoutly by his parents.

[28] To Angelus son of John-Albert of Sulmona the left leg affected with an incurable wound had withered, but by the Saint it was in an instant cured. Thomas Egualdieri of Rocca-Morici lame, contracted, likewise contracted and paralytics: and in his whole body swollen and full of pains; with his hands too so useless that nothing with them he could grasp, by the sign of the Cross from the same received health. Likewise Berengarius son of Valerianus, for five years contracted nor able to walk without crutches; and Benedict son of Robert of S. Valentine, in all his members paralytic, by the virtue of God and the merits of the Saint were cured. Guilelmus de Colalto had lost the use of his legs by a certain inflation, so that he could neither walk nor stand: through sleep taught, that if he should go to the Saint he would be healed by him, he caused himself to be carried to the same, and was made partaker of his vow. Thomas son of Guilielmus de Luco, from the girdle downward for five years paralytic; another

Thomas also, for two years bent down and contracted with enormous torment of the head, being brought to him, were raised up by the sign of the Cross. Lady Granata, wife of the Judge Leonard of Sulmona, contracted in the arm and fingers for four years; and her son Marinus, hectic, given up by the physicians; were freed by the merits of the same. Nicholas, son of Benedict Thomas of Sulmona, contracted from the belly down to the soles of the feet, so that like a trunk he had no longer any sensation or use of the lower members, obtained health through the prayers of the Saint.

[29] Frederick, son of Francis Cavalerius of Castro Sangrio, deaf and mute from birth, in the very hour in which he approached the Saint, led by his father, received hearing and speech. John, son of Isabella Julian of Bajano, the mute, the deaf, likewise mute from birth and lame for twelve years, as soon as he stood before the Saint, and he formed the sign of the Cross over him, was free of both evils. Stephen Gerard Valentine of Acciano, having lost the use of a sound mind, when he had been struck with a stone, accustomed to curse God and the Saints and to strike whomever he could, although he was held bound with a chain tied to his neck, had also lost his speech: but having been violently dragged by his parents to the Saint, he was miraculously cured and restored to his former state. Likewise a certain Roman from the city of Rome, able to speak nothing at all, immediately received the use of speech. Nicholas also, son of Galitia, wife of John Pelosi of Sulmona, mute from his birth, was healed by the sign of the Cross. John likewise, son of Lady Aulens, wife of James Cavazeja, mute from birth and crippled in the feet, so that he could not stand upon them and seemed nearly useless in his whole body; carried to the Saint, through the suffrages of his prayers began miraculously to speak and to call upon his mother, and to walk strongly on free feet. Finally Bartholomea, daughter of Riccard Berard of Rocca-murici, mute from the womb and paralytic from the waist down, so that she could neither move herself from the bed nor in any way help herself without another's support; when she had remained in that calamity for ten years, at length having been brought to the Saint and commended to him, immediately obtained an unaccustomed voice and the faculty of walking.

[30] Bartholomew, son of Lady Gemma, wife of the late Pamphilius of Riardo, also a leper, whose face a certain corroding infirmity and likewise other parts of the body so consumed that he was judged a leper by all, and his recovery was held desperate by the physicians; when he was brought with devotion to the Saint, was restored to fullest health. Lady Frances, ulcerated, daughter of Lady Gentuluccia Berard, sister of Sir Alexander of Sulmona, her left foot was so afflicted with fistula, gaping with many wounds, that it was believed to have brought the very life of the sick woman into danger, because for a whole three years it could not be cured. And when, the physicians despairing of her care, she had been presented to the Saint, and he had signed the wounds with a triple Cross, she soon began to walk: and within a few days she was so cured that not even a scar of any wound appeared. Master Gualterius Thomas of Caramanico, a Presbyter, was tormented with the iliac passion and the pains of stones, from which he was plainly freed by the prayers of the Saint: just as also from the epileptic disease was Nicholas, an epileptic, called Zuatellus of Sulmona, when he had devoutly sought to be blessed by the Saint, and had no other hope of obtaining health. Elizabeth also, daughter of Lady Bartholomea, wife of the Notary Bonhomo of Sulmona, ruptured, suffering a rupture in the groin with a grave and dangerous infirmity, which no art had been able to heal for three years, by his merits and suffrages most entirely recovered.

[31] Nicholas, son of Meliorat John of Sulmona, scabby in the face and as it were a leper, was likewise healed: scrofulous, as also the son of Peter Baldini of Sulmona, likewise called Nicholas, whose jaws and throat were so covered with scrofula that without great difficulty he neither ate nor drank, and was placed beyond hope of health; offered to the Saint and having confessed his sins to him, and signed with the Cross on the affected parts. Lady Florentia, wife of Master Joffred the goldsmith, and daughter of the Judge Philip of Sulmona, hectic, exhausted by the long duration of a hectic infirmity, lay bedridden, given up by the physicians beyond hope of health: who when she had devoutly turned herself to the Saint, and had placed upon her body a linen cloth sent to her by him, immediately and miraculously raised upon her feet she walked. Master Andrew Bartholomew of Sulmona, two ruptured, ruptured below from a grave fall, could not walk without grave distress, nor had he any hope left in the physicians: but touched by the Saint and signed with the Cross, he suddenly felt himself free. When Onuphrius, son of Peter Molinarius of Sulmona, suffered a similar rupture, left to him from a similar fall, he was likewise cured by the Saint in a similar manner.

[32] Peter Tani Hospitalarius, having an arm bent and continually drawn up, kindled with devotion toward the Saint, came to him: drawn up in the arm, and being bidden to sign himself with the sign of the Cross, in the same moment of time in which he signed himself he was released from that infirmity. Jacobacius, son of Bartholomew Amicus of Sulmona, almost from his mother's womb an epileptic, and that so gravely that sometimes on one day he would fall down three times, an epileptic, and all his kinsmen wished death for him as a consolation rather than life; moved by confidence toward the Saint, he came to his cell, and withdrew with a blessing so efficacious that he never suffered any such thing. Gualterius John of Casale, incurable abscesses, bearing an abscess in the groin so spread out and afflicted with fistula that excrement was discharged from him through the bladder as well as through the anus, after the sixth year of infirmity, was signed by the Saint and healed. Nicholas Nicolai had borne for five years in his right hand a scrofula, equalling the size of a hen's egg, which the Saint dissipated for him by the sign of the Cross. Bontempus of Serra-Monacesca, paralytic in the whole left side and weak in the rest of his body, could not walk nor work: who was likewise aided by the prayers and merits of the Saint.

[33] The health of Philippo of Guardia-grelle, often agitated by demoniacs and terrified by spectres, twisted in the mouth, one night fell, and remained with his mouth twisted from one side to the ears, so that he was both a horror and an astonishment to those looking upon him; and thus he remained for thirteen weeks, nor could he ever be helped by any remedy, until with confidence he came to the Saint, and having confessed his sins to him fulfilled the penance enjoined upon him: for then his face was restored to him into its former state. Brother Bernard of Monte-milio of the Order of the Saint himself, energumens freed, agitated by diabolical distempers, struck his throat with his own hand with a knife, the spirit who possessed him crying out, "I wish to remain here." When he had been brought to him, the Saint commanded the demon to go out at once and depart: but he said, "Do not drive me hence, Petruccio." This was understood by many Monks: but when the Saint had made the sign of the Cross, the infernal guest, going out at once, left the monk even healed of the wound, who afterward lived many years in the Order, commended for his notable sanctity. Lady Antonia of Pretulo, vexed by a malign spirit, as the evident indications showed, and violently brought to the Holy Spirit near Sulmona, where the Saint stood ready to say Mass to the people; as soon as she was signed by him with the Cross, vomited up three coals, and returned home freed. Another energumen, brought into the same church at a similar time, cried out before all who were present there, "Petruccio must free me": at which voice the Saint, turned, formed the sign of the Cross, and dismissed her free: which same thing happened in the same place to several energumen women.

[34] When Brother James Pacentranus of the Order of Preachers, still a youth, all the bread having been given out to the poor, more was returned, had gone to the Saint to perform the divine Office with him in the place of St. Margaret, where he was, and then to dine with the same; he asserted that he saw with his own eyes that there were there only three loaves for five persons. But while he and the Saint were together, there was a knocking at the door by a poor man, asking for bread for the love of God: which the Saint commanded to be given to him. And they had not yet completed the Office, when a second poor man likewise knocked, and received the bread which he asked; as also a third. But while the bread was thus being given out, there appeared at the gate two unknown and pilgrim men, laden with loaves, nuts and other fruits, all of which, depositing them there, they went away. The doorkeeper brought these to the Saint, who, taking from this an occasion of salutary exhortation, began to persuade his own never to despair of divine help, but to have their confidence placed in it. The same Brother James moreover said that he was with the Saint in the Magellan monastery of the Holy Spirit, at another time few loaves multiplied for three days, and with twelve other Monks in the Lent of St. Martin, when, the feast of the Lord's Nativity approaching, nothing else was found in the monastery than seven loaves of diverse mixture, and two cakes made on account of the solemnity of the feast: and that the Saint, going out from his cell, had those loaves and cakes divided among all, giving to each his portion as best could be done. But the witness himself and others present noted that it would not suffice among so many: yet it happened miraculously that on that day, which was the Lord's Day, all were twice satisfied with that bread, and likewise on the two following days of Monday and Tuesday: and thus it manifestly appeared that what remained over to those eating was more than had been set out: but after the feast of the Innocents, very many came from those parts, notwithstanding the rigor of winter, with bread and other necessary provision, saying that they had been stirred to this by two men who had passed by crying, "Let us succor the Brothers who are on the mountain, lest they perish of hunger."

CHAPTER V.

Miracles during and after the Papacy and after death, from the same Italian Summary.

[35] When Pope Celestine passed through the castle of Rajano toward Naples, a certain woman, Amata by name, by his blessing recovered the use of her members and the faculty of walking, of which she had been deprived. Three women aided by miracle: Angela, of John Peter of St. Euphemia, swelling and inflated from head to foot, for four years could not move herself, much less walk, and moreover, destitute of all hope of recovering health, she mourned; when she was signed by the holy Father and healed. Lady Mary, daughter of Conrad of Vairano, for two years gravely vexed by demons, and kneeling before the holy Father, while he was passing through the streets of Naples, by his blessing received suffered no more molestation from them.

[36] But after he renounced the Papacy: Peter Nicolai of Malapezza of Venafro, blindness cured, having lost through disease the light of both eyes, recovered it, being signed by the Cross formed by the Saint. A girl of Miniano, contracted in all her members and destitute of strength, brought to the Saint, paralysis, was healed in a similar manner. John of Lisa of Sulmona, suffering in his whole body and almost paralytic, so that he could scarcely move himself crawling by hands and feet

to advance, being brought before the Saint received even thus the free faculty of walking. Master Gimund of Vairano, scrofula, burdened with scrofula grown out at the throat, and finding no remedy in human art for removing it, approached the Saint, when by Pope Boniface VIII, his successor, he was being led away from the town of Vestia: who when he had formed the sign of the Cross over him, from that same hour the evil began to lessen, and within a few days was wholly removed. Robertina, wife of Ricciard the Spaniard, burdened with great scrofula at the throat, betook herself to the public road in the territory of Marzano, by which the Saint was about to pass when he was being led away to Vestia, as has already been said; and the blessing being received, she also was freed.

[37] John, son of Bartholomew Angelus of Ferentino, straitened with grave constrictions of the chest by asthma, so that sometimes for a whole hour he labored in drawing breath, asthma, by the prayers of the Saint, to whom he had been brought, and by the sign of the Cross was loosed from that infirmity. A certain woman, badly vexed by a demon and violently brought to the church of the Holy Spirit near Foggia, when the Saint was being led away to Vestia, 3 energumens freed, was freed by him by the seal of the Cross. Likewise another woman, similarly vexed, through whom the demon spoke in Latin as well as in the vulgar tongue, dragged by force to the public road near Teanum, by which the Saint had to pass, was cleansed. Finally a third, brought to the presence of the Saint near the place of St. Martin in Valle-gaudii, was loosed from the troublesome guest, the blessing being received.

[38] When St. Peter Celestine, shut up in the Castle of Fumone by the command of Boniface VIII, labored with a most grave infirmity, by which also he died; in the very article of his death there appeared, a Cross seen at death, and was seen by many witnesses present there, a most splendid Cross hanging in the air, in the middle of the house, that is above the door of the chamber where the Saint lay: which was held as a kind of prodigy, the more certain the more conspicuously it was several times turned in a circle, and remained there for the greater part of the day. But afterward the following miracles occurred.

[39] Leonard Gualterii of Pectorano bore a scrofula above his right eye of the size of an almond, so that he could not open the eye: but when day by day it became larger, there are cured, scrofula, and now for one year it had so advanced, by the touch of the chain with which the Saint was wont to be girded, it immediately vanished. Lady Philippa of Palena, contracted and paralytic from the waist down for the space of one year, and deprived of walking: paralysis, who, girded with that same chain, in the manner in which the Saint himself was wont to be girded, obtained a miraculous health. Lady Marca, daughter of Mary Leo of Guarcino, paralytic in the right side, so that with it she could neither move herself nor carry anything, brought to the church of St. Anthony near Ferentino, where the Holy body lay, and placed upon his sepulchre, was suddenly healed. Likewise Romana, daughter of Philippa, wife of Nicholas Matthew of Ferentino, contracted in the arm and paralytic in the right side, able to use neither hands nor feet, brought with great devotion to the sepulchre, there obtained health. Lady Laetitia, of Lord Clement of Ferentino, and an impediment of the feet, laboring gravely with a continual fever, and moreover paralytic in the right side, binding herself by a vow to visit the Saint's sepulchre, soon was bound by the vow fulfilled. Peter, of Master Jordan della Serucula of Anagni, suffering so much pain in the right hip that he could not walk, nor place his feet on the ground: recovered his step, being brought to the same place.

[40] Laetitia, daughter of Leonard Licaze of the castle of Mozolo of the diocese of Anagni, for six years contracted in the right foot, and placed upon the Saint's sepulchre, obtained the grace of unimpeded walking. Peter, otherwise called Pietas of Ferentino, through a certain disease joined to an intolerable torment had lost the faculty of walking, nor could he draw together the fingers of his hands, but contracted in all his members had remained contracted for a whole year: but devotion toward the Saint having been taken up, and his sepulchre visited, persevering in fervent prayer before it the whole night, the following morning he appeared healed. James, son of Lady Mary Nicholas of Paterca, contracted in all his members, and devoutly brought to the Saint's sepulchre, and placed upon it, in the sight of all recovered health.

[41] Mary Ferraria of Ferentino, inflated by an abscess and therefore in the opinion of all about to die, various sick persons healed, was likewise saved there. Lady Palma Gandolphi of Ferentino, laboring with a pain of the head, which had also twisted her neck onto her shoulder, after a year and a half brought to the sepulchre, was so entirely healed that with the very head with which she had suffered pain she could thereafter carry even great bundles of wood. Brother John of Buccani, of the Order of the Saint himself, suffering gravely in the whole body and contracted, neither able to walk nor to do any of those things which he was wont to do, as though he would thereafter be useless, was brought by the other Fathers and healed at the monument of the Saint. the contracted, Petruccio, son of Lady Bellutia John Bartoli of Coccano of the diocese of Ferentino, contracted in hands and feet and the whole right side, had endured that infirmity for more than seven years, when he said to his parents: "Carry me to that Saint who heals children": and being carried to him he recovered. Thomas, son of James Thomas Luke of Caramanico, paralytic and contracted, who could neither walk nor stand, but neither speak, despaired of by the physicians, at the imposition of the aforesaid chain immediately recovered.

[42] Thomas, son of Sulmontina, wife of Bernard of Sulmona, by a diabolical vexation had lost all the vigor of his body, nor could he speak a word, nor had he any further hope of health; the deaf, but devoutly brought to the place of the Holy Spirit, and there girded with that chain, was miraculously freed. Nicholas, son of Peter Gabolinus of Aletrium, for two years and more suffered worms in his ears, distilling a malign humor: whose head when it had been devoutly reclined upon the Saint's sepulchre, was loosed from all distress. Leonard of Roxa, of Aletrium, likewise placing his head on the sepulchre, recovered hearing utterly lost.

[43] Odo, son of John Odo of Ferentino, had incurred a grave infirmity, which had deprived him of speech and gait, mute, nor permitted him to hold his head erect: and when he had so remained for a year and more, placed upon the Saint's sepulchre, was visibly restored to entire health. Brother Peter of Cere, Monk of St. Bartholomew of Trisulto of the Carthusian Order, suffered a cardiac infirmity so grave and a cardiac sufferer. that he felt a continual torment in his whole body and all his viscera, and it seemed to him that he would expire from hour to hour: yet this infirmity had lasted for him a full twelve years and more, when, taking confidence in the merits of the Saint, he came to the church of St. Anthony, where he was buried, and there remained for three days, and thereafter felt no distress.

[44] Hugo, servant of the Prior of St. Bartholomew of Trisulto, by carrying an elm of great weight had contracted a hernia in the genital parts, so grave that no remedy for curing it could be found: but when he had vowed to come to the sepulchre and had fulfilled the vow, a hernia cured, he also obtained the effect of his vow, namely entire health. Lady Margaret, wife of Peter of Passano, and daughter of Angelella of Ferentino, bore six scrofula at the throat for twelve years, nor had she been able to be freed from them by any remedies whatsoever. and scrofula. But when the Most Illustrious and Most Reverend Cardinal Thomas of the Order of the Saint himself had brought her to the Saint's sepulchre, and the chain of this one had there been applied to her throat; that troublesome and deformed appendage began at that very instant to decrease, and within a few days so entirely vanished that not even a trace remained.

[45] Bartholomew, Bishop of Ferentino, and many other inhabitants of the same city, the elevated bones smell sweet. who were present with him at the disjoining of the bones of St. Peter, done by the will and commission of the Brothers, in whose power they were, and at the petition of the people of Ferentino, for placing them more honorably and decently: in the very handling of them perceived a great sweetness of odor (such as is often breathed forth from the bodies of Saints and Blesseds) which surpassed all the power of aromatics. Thus far the Italian Manuscript. But here Bartholomew Bishop of Ferentino opportunely presents himself to us, for the year in which this elevation of the sacred bones occurred, 1306, to supply the gap in the Episcopal series in Ughelli, vol. I of Italia sacra col. 727, who names no Bishop who sat between Landulf, who died in the year 1303, and Philip, only confirmed in the year 1308.

CHAPTER VI.

The Bull of Canonization and the history of the Translation, from the edition of Faber, collated with the Manuscripts.

[46] Clement Bishop, Servant of the Servants of God, to the venerable Brothers, all the Archbishops, Bishops; and to the beloved sons, the Abbots, Priors, Deans, Archdeacons, and other Prelates of the Churches, to whom these letters shall come, health and Apostolic benediction. He who does great and inscrutable and wonderful things without number, the Church is filled with new joy by Christ, the Son of God, the uncreated Wisdom, the Word of the Father; who once from the beginning, together with the Father and the Holy Spirit, making the world from Himself out of nothing, by a sweet disposition turned all things produced, according to the grades suited to their natures, filled heaven with Angels; making man to His own image, by pouring grace upon him, made him worthy of the starry mansions; most lately in these days, renewing ancient signs, changing wonders, the Most High Himself did a stupendous and admirable work, proclaiming on high the glory of the Divine majesty, pouring upon His Spouse the Church a new kind of joys. For behold, the insignia of a new Confessor come forth to the world, the illustrious merits are made plain to the wayfarers of the passing world, great miracles proclaim the magnitude of his sanctity, which prove him undoubtedly to have full rest after labor in the delights of Paradise, within the secret chambers of God. And rightly indeed: for he who on earth ceased not magnificently to advance from virtue to virtue, is recognized to be worthy for the Sanctity of St. Peter of Morrone, who in heaven, leaving the earth, should behold the glory of the Lord with revealed face. For this cause the throngs of blessed spirits exult in joy, while the holy man, gleaming with solar splendor, is inserted among them; and from him bearing glory, the sacred number of these, which the ruin of the falling had diminished, is made whole. The heavens also applaud, when to him advancing on high in virtue they offer an open way, and to him reigning God prepares an ethereal seat among them. Let therefore the Spouse of Christ, mother Church, applaud and jubilate with tuneful voice, while him whom the wave of baptism begot, and whom she nourished at the breast of a pious mother, whom she had both as Father in the world and as Pastor, rejoicing she sends glorious to the heavenly ones: when from herself, a garden divinely watered, she festively represents him to the divine sight as a lily of snow-white whiteness, as a blooming rose of exceeding fragrance. O how happy art thou, Province of the Terra di Lavoro, who art proved to have brought forth such and so great a shoot, clinging most firmly to the vine of Christ: whose tendrils, with the fragrance of wondrous sanctity diffused, are extended even to the ends of the world, and the liquor of wine pressed from its grapes, gladdening the hearts of the devout, allures to the love of God the minds of worldly men

allures and inflames.

[47] Blessed Peter therefore is said to have drawn his origin from the aforesaid province of the Terra di Lavoro, from honest parents, Catholic and devout. who from a boy lived in the desert, He, taught with Tobias to fear God from infancy, and to abstain from vices, considering the allurements of the world, which for the most part, while they soothe human minds, wound, bind, and captivate them; placed in an age still tender, but having within himself a manly spirit under a frail body, before anything secular could glide into his mind, prudently attempting flight, with John the Baptist sought the secret places of the desert; where, removed from harmful things, he could live alone for his Creator. But how greatly there, in solitary places, rugged, arid, and almost inaccessible to men, by the harshness of garments, how great a parsimony of food, and with how many vigils and prayers, and how many other afflictions he macerated his flesh (lest, delicately nourished and growing insolent, it should rage against the spirit), the tongue could not easily or briefly explain. This the holy man therefore did with counsel and foresight, so that, the chaff of his flesh shaken off and worn away, his innocent spirit, like purged and clean wheat, might be worthy to be stored in the heavenly barn. But that for the edification of Christ's faithful at least a few things of the many may be expressed, given to harshness, which may be as it were certain instructive examples of our life; he himself, just as has been proved by many and trustworthy testimonies, despising the splendor and softness of garments b in which the lovers of this world delight, was clothed with hairshirts made of horsehair, likewise netted and knotted, and with other garments cheap and very rough. Next to the bare flesh also he wore an iron chain, and sometimes an iron circle c. Declining also the softness of a bed (lest the flesh, wantonly lascivious, d should contrive harmful things against the spirit), he slept on the ground or on bare boards, or on latticed gratings, clothed with a hairshirt and his usual rags, his loins girded with an iron circle or a chain. For a pillow he used wood, or a stone, or some other hard thing: and (which is almost unbearable) whether well or sick, he used no other beds. Striving also with all his strength to subdue the domestic enemy, lest it could prevail over the spirit, neither in health nor in sickness did he eat flesh. Wine indeed he drank but very rarely: in exercises of abstinence; and yet so watered, that it seemed not to have the appearance of wine. Also he always fasted, except on the Lord's Days. Making nevertheless six Lents each year, desiring to refresh the mind not the belly, he afflicted in them his flesh more harshly than usual. O stupendous and to others unaccustomed matter of things! to behold a man, living in mortal and frail flesh, not falling under the weight of so austere and long a maceration. For in three Lents he fasted continually on bread and water, and sometimes with only the leaves of cabbages, without bread: but at times he fed only on apples, or only on apples or chestnuts, or on grains of beans softened in water, or on raw turnips only. But in the other Lents, he used only one little dish, yet insipid and in small quantity. But in some of these Lents (which is the horror of the nature of the human body) he used for clothing only a hairshirt: and in certain ones indeed, a hairshirt and over it a panseria e or cuirass, by whose weight his flesh, through the knots of the hairshirt entering beneath, as his companions testify, was sometimes broken. And in truth these things were carried on in this holy man above man: for to bear such grave things human virtue does not seem able to suffice, but rather the divine, dwelling in him, did this.

[48] This blessed man, the desires of the flesh now mortified in spirit and repressed, likewise to prayer, supremely devout to God, by praying assiduously kept his mind firmly elevated to God: for he himself, rising at midnight for the morning lauds, when these were said read the Psalter, with the Litany and very many Collects and frequent genuflections: and with hard disciplines he crucified his flesh with its vices and concupiscences. But at dawn, Mass having been celebrated by him, he again devoutly began the Psalter, and ceased not to pray until the third hour. But that the devil might not be able to find him idle, and to labor. he labored with his own hands, by writing, or sewing hairshirts, or doing some other honest and useful work, from the third hour until the ninth. After food taken, he persevered until deep night with God, not relaxing his spirit from fervent prayer. Comely also with honesty of manners, the odor of his sanctity of life now commonly spread abroad, he drew many to his sight; and very many, wandering through the precipices of vices, he led back to God by his holy prayers f and examples. Nor is it wonderful: for charity made him common to all, Here many being converted to God, obedience prompt, humility placid, piety afflicted-with-those-who-suffer, purity decorous, parsimony admirable, the maturity of honesty reverend, benignity cheerful, and the constant virtue of his mind uniform in adversity and prosperity. he instituted an Order: Finally the holy man, desiring to amplify the divine worship, ordained a monastic Congregation under the rule of B. Benedict, with most strict Statutes added to it: where, the numerous multitude of his Brothers serving God being increased, and not a few places founded in which Christ Jesus might be continually praised by them, he lived with them, flourishing in all virtues, and by works of exceeding sanctity instructing and reforming all.

[49] But because it was not expedient that the odor of so great a sanctity should be perceived in one corner of the world alone, but rather that, for the edification of all the faithful, created Supreme Pontiff, it should be more readily scattered everywhere through the world; by a provident dispensation he was advanced to the highest summit of the Pontificate. In which, however, remaining the same that he had been, under the habit of preeminent dignity; abandoning neither the eremitic life (as far as it was lawful to keep it) nor his disposition, he knew how to be amid feasts supremely austere and abstinent to himself, amid ample riches supremely poor. But truly this blessed man, of wondrous simplicity and inexperienced in things pertaining to the governance of the universal Church (inasmuch as he, from tender years to old age removed from the world, had not accommodated his heart to worldly things, but to divine ones), prudently turning the eye of his inmost consideration toward himself, of his own accord he abdicates: yielded the honor and burden of the Papacy, freely and wholly, lest on account of the aforesaid things any peril could come to the universal Church from his governance; and that, the disturbing solicitude of Martha being declined, he might be able to have leisure at the feet of Jesus in the leisure of contemplation with Mary. After these things therefore, attending assiduously to divine contemplation, he dies illustrious for miracles: until his death, by which that blessed soul escaped the prison of the flesh, seeking the heavens, he led a most holy life. And because it was very fitting that he, whom God had filled in mind with so many and so great gifts of graces, should appear illustrious to the world and to be venerated by the testimonies of divine virtue; divine miracles were not lacking in any state of his; namely before the Papacy, in the Papacy, and also after the Papacy, in his life as well as after death, with a clamorous voice proclaiming his exceeding sanctity to be imitated by all.

[50] But that this may become more known to the faithful of Jesus Christ, let us express some miracles of the very many, which are proved by trustworthy and certain testimonies truly to have happened by his merits. A certain woman, from a grave infirmity made so utterly blind that she could not be helped by any remedies of medicine applied; before the Papacy, carried to the place of the desert where Brother Peter at that time dwelt; when she had signed herself with a certain small wooden Cross, which the same Brother Peter had sent to her through her husband, and had applied the same to her eyes, was immediately and perfectly cured visibly. A certain man made so furious and mad that he would harm himself or others, was bound with cords and iron chains; being brought to the presence of the said Brother, when he had eaten of the bread set before him by him, was so perfectly cured that of the said infirmity he never afterward felt anything. A certain girl also, who had so grave a fistula in her foot with several openings that the loss of the foot was feared by the physicians; carried to him, and the sign of the holy Cross made by him over the wound three times, was immediately healed, so that after a few days there appeared in the said foot no trace or scar of the aforesaid infirmity g. A certain woman, who was so vehemently burdened with a hectic infirmity that her life was despaired of by the physicians, nor could she for any necessity move herself from the place without the help of several persons; when she had rested for the space of an hour under a certain linen cloth, which Brother Peter had sent through the father of the said sick woman, immediately rose healed. A certain man also had had a scrofula, large to the quantity of a hen's egg, in his hand for five years: a blessing being made by the same Saint over the place of the infirmity, he was after a little while healed totally and perfectly. When also he preeminently held the summit of the supreme Pontificate, a certain woman, in the Papacy, who by the force of disease had for four years been throughout her whole body saffron-colored and inflated, who also could not work anything, nor walk without notable burden; brought to the place through which Brother Peter, then supreme Pontiff, was about to pass, and blessed by him, was at once restored to her former health h. Another certain woman, so contracted in all her members that she could neither walk nor be moved from place to place unless carried by others; placed beside the road through which Brother Peter then made his passage, and the blessing of the Cross given over her, was through him perfectly and immediately freed. After also he resigned the Papacy, and after him, to a certain man who had almost wholly lost his sight, when he had presented himself to Brother Peter, a certain small wooden Cross being drawn over the patient's eyes, he restored sight entirely at once. Finally, that at his death the divine testimony of his bright sanctity might not be lacking, of that Cross (which he supremely loved) and light i, God made a wonderful sign to appear. For at the time of his death there appeared a small and shining cross, in the middle of the door of the chamber in which he was; which, turning itself in the manner of a whirling, continually remained divinely suspended in the air, until his body was translated from that chamber. k But also after the death of the holy man a certain one was so struck with paralysis, and after death. that he could neither walk, nor stand, nor speak in any way. Being brought to the place where Brother Peter was wont to do penance; and a certain chain, which he was said to have worn on the bare flesh while he lived, applied to the patient's neck and head, and to his other members,

he was immediately and utterly freed. A certain man also, who had lost the strength of walking and standing, and the use of his hand, being brought to the church where the body of the said Saint lies hidden, and passing the night with devotion of mind in the same, felt himself in the morning totally freed from the said infirmity.

[51] By these and very many other glorious miracles the Lord magnified His Saint, and rendered him illustrious to the world and to be venerated. Let therefore mother Church rejoicing applaud, Wherefore the Pope, giving thanks, and bring forth sweet melodies: for this Confessor of Christ, her exceeding offspring, possesses among the throngs of the Blessed the morning star, and over the table of Christ with the Angels with full mouth tastes the hidden manna sweeter than honey. Let not the Catholic people cease to jubilate: for the kindled coal, which from their midst that burning Seraphim took with tongs from the altar, is joined in that Jerusalem which is above, among the fiery stones, in whose midst the King of heaven walks; and has this one as Advocate with God, whom the fount with its perennial outflow joyfully inebriates, the tree of life abundantly satisfies. Let moreover the Religious Order instituted by him be glad, and loosen the organs of voice in the praises of the Most High: for here her unwearied Protector is clothed with the stole of immortality, and sitting with the Princes, ever holds the illustrious throne of everlasting glory. But because it is worthy, he enrolls him among the Saints, that him whom God glorifies on high in heaven, the world here below should venerate for its patronage; we, concerning the sanctity of life and the truth of the miracles of this Saint, into which we caused diligent inquiry to be made, the discussion of a prudent examination having been applied, obtaining a full and firm certitude; being moreover requested by the humble and devout supplication of all the Prelates then existing at the Apostolic See; by the counsel and assent of our Brothers, confiding in the virtue of almighty God, by the authority also of the Blessed Apostles Peter and Paul, his and ours, have decided to enroll him in the Catalogue of the Holy Confessors. And therefore we admonish and exhort your universality attentively, by Apostolic writings commanding and charging you, that on the fourteenth of the Kalends of June you devoutly and solemnly celebrate the feast of the same Confessor, and cause it to be celebrated by your subjects: that by his pious intercession you may be able both here to be protected from harmful things, and in the future to obtain everlasting joys. Our Lord Jesus Christ granting it, who with the Father and the Holy Spirit in unity lives and reigns God, through the infinite ages of ages. l Amen. m

[52] Let us add here the history of the translated body, from the vicinity of the city of Ferentino to Collemaggio near Aquila, probably written by an author of the same time in the fourteenth century, and indeed for the Lessons for the use of the Choir on the 15th day of February, when the feast of this Translation is celebrated. Have them here. These indeed are extant together with the Bull in the Manuscript of Carlo Strozza, in a more ancient style, but mutilated at the end: wherefore we prefer to give them from Faber. It befits us to celebrate the solemnity n of the wonderful Translation, by which the body of B. Peter the gracious Confessor was translated from the parts of Campania to the city of Aquila, When the Saint's body, placed among the people of Ferentino, with a mind so much more thankful and with reverent devotion, by how much more with firm and undoubting faith we ought to believe this to have been done by the wonderful dispensation of God. But when the body of the aforesaid Confessor had been laid up with great praises in the monastery of St. Anthony near o Ferentino, which he himself indeed at distant times had long before constructed, at the time of his death; many and innumerable and stupendous miracles at the sepulchre, where the aforesaid body was, the Divine clemency deigned to show by the merits of the Confessor himself. And although all of that province of Campania for the most part venerated the Saint himself, and out of devotion frequented the Church; yet because the devotion of that people was by no means equal to the merits of this Saint; almighty God, who desires His Saints to be honored worthily, according as their merits are illustrious before Him; willed the body of the aforesaid Confessor to be wonderfully transported from the region of Campania into the city of Aquila, which panted for this with all its affections. the people of Aquila could not have obtained him for a price; And although the people of Aquila, from ancient devotion, had been in the greatest anxiety, that they might be able to have the aforesaid body, and for this would give an innumerable quantity of money to the Counts of Campania; the glorious Confessor himself, who always abhorred simony, willed to return to his devout and most faithful people of Aquila, whom in his life he had loved with intimate affection, without the price of money. Nay rather, every obstacle being driven far off, miraculously and without any danger, by divine dispensation he willed thus to be brought forth.

[53] But the translation of this holy body was thus carried out in order. For when between the city of Anagni [p] and the city of Ferentino a very great war had arisen, the Count Palatine who at that time ruled Anagni, a war having arisen between these and the people of Anagni, a multitude of fighters being gathered, against whom the city of Ferentino could not resist, scattered almost everything that the same city possessed outside the walls, even up to the gates. But the citizens of Ferentino, fearing lest they should lose the holy body of the aforesaid Confessor, came one day with an armed band, and quickly exhuming it from its place, carried it into the city of Ferentino. And it is wonderful, that while the Bishop [q] of that same city descended into the sepulchre to take thence the holy body, he was immediately freed from the rupture which he had suffered for many years. But the body, carried within the walls of the city, was placed in the church of St. Agatha. But the Prior, who at that time presided over the monastery where that holy body had been, was not a little saddened by these things thus done. And not without reason: because [r] the Order, which the same Saint had constructed, seemed in a certain manner to remain as it were without a head. And because the same Prior of himself had not dared to attempt anything concerning this deed; he intimated all things thus done in order to the Visitor of the Order. Which Visitor indeed, as he was a solicitous zealot for the good state of the Order, with hastened step hurried to the aforesaid place of St. Anthony of Campania. [s] Who also by divine instinct feigned a cause, that he wished to make a visitation: the Visitor coming to Ferentino, on account of which he ordered all the Brothers native to Ferentino, who were in the custody of the holy body, to be summoned. And two other Brothers being sent by night, who were not of that province and city, that they might remain in the custody of the holy body; the same Visitor expressly and secretly commanded, that with all the sagacity and ingenuity in which they were able, applied, they should by all means procure to have the holy body. Who although they proceeded to perform this rather tremblingly, on account of this namely that a great guard of armed men was kept; yet confiding in the divine help and in the merits of holy obedience, as far as it was permitted them by the people, they went on to the custody of the holy body.

[54] through the Brothers ordered to guard it, But when in the first watch of the night they had risen; with bended knees before the chest where the holy body was laid up, they thus prayed humbly and devoutly: "Lord Jesus Christ, by the merits of this Saint, whose bones and Relics are stored in that chest, we suppliantly beseech Thee, that if we can lift the holy body hence without danger and carry it elsewhere, Thou wouldst deign to show us a sign, namely that one of those tapers [t], which are kindled before the holy body, be immediately extinguished." For there were there three tapers continually burning, the bones taken from the chest and brought to themselves, out of reverence for this Saint. And the aforesaid prayer thus poured forth, suddenly and without any interval, the taper which burned in the middle was extinguished. At once those Brothers, rising from prayer, and strengthened in the spirit of fortitude by this sign, opened the great chest with a key. But the smaller chest being taken, which was inside, in which under certain seals all the bones of the aforesaid Confessor were laid up, and the cords cut from beneath by which it was bound about in a circuit, they opened it: and the seals being preserved, applied on the front part, they drew out all the bones thence. But binding from beneath with a thread the cords with the integrity of the seals, they placed the little chest, as it had been before, in the larger chest: which being secured and closed with a key, wrapping all the bones of this most holy Confessor in a linen and white cloth, they hid them in the mattress [u], in which they had lain. But morning come, folding up the mattress, they placed it on the head of a certain good matron, and directed it to the house of the monastery; feigning a cause with the guards who were there present, that the aforesaid Visitor had not where he could lie [x]. The Brothers also returning to the monastery, indicated to the Visitor transfers it to Aquila: what had been done. Who rejoicing not a little, charged those Brothers prepared for carrying, that they should not delay to follow him with that holy body: which also was done without any impediment, divine grace working. And passing through Campania, which was at that time all full of wars, they found no obstacle in any way. Nay, on that morning, in which the holy body was carried away, there was made in the city of Ferentino a great muttering about this: and when they were now prepared to take the passes, before the gate of the city by Divine permission there appeared four hundred soldiers ready to make war, and they continued in the siege of the city so long, until those carrying the holy body had passed through all Campania, and by divine instinct gone on to Aquila.

[56] where it was secretly received, But the people of Aquila, the firm truth of this being learned, for twenty days and nights continuously, were carried away with such great joy and gladness, that they passed nights and days as it were sleepless, refreshed with the praises of this Saint. And, to speak compendiously, the people of Aquila made so great a solemnity, persevering unanimously in hymns and canticles, and in other things which are known to pertain to divine worship, that the human tongue would fail to narrate this. But this is the relation of this Anointed one, in which he is said to be crowned again through Aquila: for properly in that place of Collemaggio, where he was anointed and crowned as supreme Pontiff, there the feast of this kind of translation, with the showing of the Relics of his holy body, was made with enormous gladness and honor. At which showing indeed of the body, many languishing with diverse infirmities were totally freed: they are illustrious for miracles. for at the touch of the iron chest, in which that body was laid up, the blind receive light, and the mute speech, the contracted the extension of hands and feet; demoniacs and others hindered by diverse languors, were freed by the merits of this Saint. To the spectacle also of which festivity several Bishops, other Prelates, and Abbots, with a very great abundance of Clerics and Religious men of every Order, with solemn array convened processionally: but of the other faithful of Christ there was so great a multitude, that it is believed to have exceeded the number of a hundred thousand men. But the Translation of the body of the aforesaid gracious Confessor was made in the year of the Lord one thousand three hundred and twenty-seven, on the fifteenth day of February. But it was laid up honorably in

an iron chest, fenced with most strong bars in the church of St. Mary of Collemaggio of Aquila, which church indeed is of the Order of the same most illustrious Confessor, which church also the same Saint had constructed before his Papacy, and being in the Papacy adorned with the Indulgence of plenary absolution [y]. Let therefore the city of Aquila rejoice and exult through the ages, which merited to recover so great and such a Patron… [z] Let also the Provinces of this kingdom rejoice together, which from the familiar city have the Relics of so illustrious a Confessor, and are adorned with the presence of his most holy body. Which Saint indeed for this cause willed his body to be in these provinces, that those venerating it worthily, he may both guard while living in the body, and lead those departing from the body after death into eternal glory. Amen.

ANNOTATIONS.

b. Faber, Levitatem.

d. The same, Noxie.

i. Likewise light.

p. Anagni, distant five miles from Ferentino, the head of the most ancient Latins there.

q. Philip II, Bishop of Ferentino.

r. Manuscript of Strozza, because the whole Religious Order, destitute of the presence of so great a Father, like a mournful widow, had grieved inconsolably.

s. The same Manuscript: "Who, as is the custom of those Brothers, the visitation begun, the Brothers of that Province being recalled to the monastery, who on account of the custody of the Saint were remaining in the city, and in their place two others of another Province substituted; the same Visitor expressly commanded."

t. Spira, in Faber Spera, seems to be the same as to others Intortitium, that is, a shaft, wrapped about with a ductile and long candle. The more recent Italian authors of the Life render it Lamp.

u. In the miracles of St. Ambrose of Siena on the 20th of March no. 250 Materatium is said, the bed on which the poor are burned, surely not of feather, but of wool packed.

x. The Manuscript adds: "Which guards indeed permitted them to go away, being utterly ignorant of the deed." And here that Manuscript nearly ends, the rest are wanting.

y. See the Bull itself below in the Supplement, and it is also edited by Ughelli among the Bishops of Aquila col. 426 and in Raynaldus at this year num. 14, under the day of the III Kalends of October on the feast of St. Michael.

z. There followed words making no sense: "Let him also learn what he owes to that Saint, who, that he might show the deeds of salvation in it to be true while he lived, showed them confirmed after death from the presence of his holy body": which we have omitted. Nor does what soon follows please us sufficiently, From the familiar city; did he wish to say the friendly or neighboring city?

THE METRICAL WORK

Of Jacobus Cardinal of St. George ad Velum aureum, contemporary and in the Papacy a familiar.

from two Manuscript Codices.

Peter, Celestine V, Supreme Pontiff (St.)

BHL Number: 6746, 6747, 6748, 6749

a

A. By the Cardinal Jacobus, FROM THE MANUSCRIPTS.

DEDICATORY EPISTLE

To the Religious men, dearest friends, the Abbot and Convent of the monastery of the Holy Spirit of Sulmona, of the Order of St. Benedict, of the Diocese of Valva, Jacobus, by divine compassion Deacon Cardinal of St. George ad b Velum-aureum, health and the affection of sincere love.

A great history indeed, and wonderful to all, which long ago begun by us in heroic meter we completed with devotion in the time of the recent past vacancy c, namely the Life, manners, rules, the history described by him in prose and verse, the election to the Papacy, the deeds in it; the renunciation, death, canonization; lastly also the miracles of the holy and gracious Confessor, Brother Peter of Morrone, formerly Pope Celestine the fifth, of your Order and especially observance under the Rule of B. Benedict the Founder, and likewise inserted among the same the coronation of Pope Boniface the eighth of happy memory, and his solemnities, supported (unless we are mistaken) by an arduous Rhetorical and veracious description, with other adjuncts for the Office, and the succinct prose, unraveling the matter of the same history, together with the three Responsories, the Alleluia, the Verses, in letter and chant, long ago destined d to you, and the three Orations composed by us about the same Confessor, now first we transmit to you and to your Order with glad pleasantness of mind; and if not perfectly, yet somehow, he commends and sends them to them, corrected with such discussion as the press of business allowed. This therefore being gratefully sent, receive, we ask, with grateful familiarity; and so much the more confidently devote yourselves to its discourses, by how much the same is not depicted beautifully from the Writing of preceding ones, as from feigned images; but is designated rather from the form of the deeds certainly, and as if from the rays of truth: and therefore bear with us at times deficient more benignly, in that we do not in it forge new from old, but new from new meter in the work, where the skilled one neglects the form. And therefore let the genius of the student be vigilant; yet let the hand abstain, let the tongue be tamed; lest perhaps the incautious one correct that which in it he swiftly does not know; especially since it does not require as many correctors as the same demands readers: and we, if time be at hand, will hasten to run through it again with repeated reading, to discuss the rerun, through the Prior of Isernia, and to correct what is discussed. As for the rest, the present book, containing the aforesaid history of meter and prose, which through a Religious man our dearest friend, Brother Anthony of Isernia, Prior of your monastery, devout to the Saint and the Order, and having from us a certain introduction of the book itself, we have decided to destine; whose original e we have decreed to remain perpetually with your monastery of the Holy Spirit of Morrone near Sulmona. and he orders it to be kept with them, Meanwhile to the Brothers and Convents of your Order, especially where study flourishes, we permit it also to be given to seculars: provided that this book, as it were the original, pass not from the monastery itself, and that a copy extracted from it be granted truly, point by point, with the interlinear or little glosses f placed there. Otherwise what we fear would happen, that the unknown book be rendered more unknown, the composer be accused without fault; and what is most of all to be avoided, nor be communicated without its marginal glosses. that future devotion to the Saint from the inspection of the present work should decrease, which we hope [not]. May your Charity fare well in Christ Jesus, with whom render the Saint propitious for me a sinner, entreated by the suffrages of your prayers. Given at Avignon, on the twenty-eighth day of the month of January, in the year of the Lord one thousand three hundred and nineteen.

ANNOTATIONS.

PROSE.

For the precognition of this whole triple metrical work.

PART I.

The author's preface about himself; and of the form, matter, cause, utility of the following work.

[1] Since this is turned over in the mind of each one beginning the exordium of a new work of deeds done, Before all things he explains, so to declare the things spoken and to be uttered in it, especially graven with the colors of meter, by graceful preambles a, that the gravity of the style, radiant with its flowers, may persevere at the summit, and the truth of the written matter, veiled by verses, may lie open; therefore, according to the doctrine of the Philosopher of the Analytics, saying, "All teaching and all intellective discipline is made from preexisting cognition"; certain things it is worth our while to be precognized

to premise; by which the teaching of the teacher may shine in the course of this work, and the discipline of the speaker may grow together; which is effected, if the matter of the work, the Author's b intention, the form of the volume, and its efficient cause, and the utility of the matter done, be set forth.

[2] For a twofold matter is presented to us; one brief and succinct, what he proposed to write first more briefly, not yet set to the style by the hand, but preconceived by intention; namely to weave together in meter the mysteries of the consecration of any Roman Pontiff, the insignia of the coronation, and the solemnities of the procession of the Clergy, and the ancient rites in them, which hope promised to those ignorant of the future could be dispatched in three hundred verses or thereabouts; the other longer and more prolix, God helping Us; in the thing itself also, and by the succession of times (as will be opened below more openly) furnishing a stupendous matter; what he now exhibits written more prolixly; which is to set forth the election to the Papacy of Brother Peter of Morrone the Hermit, his arduous life, his succinct coronation at Aquila, and the other deeds of his Papacy; not to pass over also the wonderful cession of the same Papacy, and to unlock the acts of its preceding and long, nor quiet vacancy; and also to adorn the notable triumph at Rome of the consecration and coronation of Boniface the eighth; lastly (although after a fifteen years' disuse of versifying) to extol with the praises of canonization the Hermit borne to heaven, which we have embraced in three thousand verses of meter or nearly so according to the variety of things.

[3] then with what intention, The intention is plain in the work, that, it being completed, the youthful and then inexperienced ardor of genius might profit by exercise, and the long undescribed triumph of the supreme Pontiff might gleam with the flowery grace of meter; and also, nay rather chiefly, the praise, honor and glory of God, the proclamation of the Saint and of God's Saints, the ardor toward the neighbor, the cognition of things; to consult for posterity, to profit the present; to merit in the way, to be rewarded in the fatherland.

[4] The form of the volume is divided in two ways: one indeed is the form of treating, and by what style the work is to proceed; which embraces the mode of proceeding, which is both narrative, historical, descriptive, and demonstrative with a Rhetorical demonstration; which according to the saying of Tully is, when the matter is so set forth to us, that the business seems to be carried on, and the thing to be before the eyes; moreover exclamative, prolocutive, suasive, dissuasive, metrical, hexameter, heroic, and the same dactylic; and so as to lead to one, narrative, veracious, and wholly rhetorical, since it blooms with various flowers and a colored adornment. The other is the form of the treatise, which has obtained the section of the work into books, and of these into parts.

[5] But also the moving and efficient cause of this work is manifold. The first, of itself sufficient, directing, effective; God granting it, itself the end, itself the beginning, and itself perfecting, God: by whose help relying and supported by His gift, we undertook and completed it. The second, coadjuting, the Saints favoring, assisting, and finishing by suffrage; namely, after the gracious mother of God, mother and Virgin Mary; and after the Princes of the Apostles, the bases of the Church, Peter and Paul; the gracious Confessor, Brother Peter of Morrone, then a Hermit, the future living Celestine, sometime past, now heavenly, and the same perpetual, whose chief praise this is turned upon in the work. The third, the ministerial and instrumental cause of the dictation falling into meter: we, Jacobus Cardinal Caetani, writing it, know this, who desire to know, that this one indeed is he, who from the veracious matter, as it were present, seeing, ministering, handling, and hearing, and known to the Pontiff, nay dear to the Pontiffs, set together and sweated out into meters the impressed history; Lord Jacobus by name, by surname Caetani, Deacon Cardinal of St. George c ad Velum-aureum; born near the venerable church of the mother of God, once called Taberna d meritoria, conspicuous on both parents' side by ancient nobility.

[6] born of noble parents For Peter Stephani being the father; and the mother, Perna e; the one begotten of the sons of Stephanus or of the Stephaneses, the other of the daughters of the Orsus or of the house of the Orsini, of each of whom he somehow makes mention in the meter: the father, as well known by strenuousness of arms as by rectitude of justice, and by the constant love of relatives and friends; the mother, by pious charity, by exceeding sanctity; both enriched with offspring. The one in youth, the other f in old age piously and Christianly being withdrawn from the present light, they died. He therefore after the rudiments of grammar, of adolescence, who with accelerated studies, and the beginnings of puberty, having drunk at the fount of the sciences, being delivered at Paris g to the liberal disciplines of Philosophy, so profited by the gift of God, that not yet a triennium having elapsed, only some books of those schools having been read cursorily, promoted at Paris to the mastership of Arts, in the faculty which they call of the liberal Arts, with great favor and great decorum of himself, he merited to obtain the License; and forthwith with great solemnity, and no small praise to ascend the Magistral Chair, in which it is established that he profited, instructed, and taught.

[7] Thereupon there (unwillingly however, since he hoped to apply himself wholly to Philosophy and the sacred Page) by the command of his elders, becoming a Canon; in Italy also he thoroughly learned the civil law, and returning into the parts of Italy, in the Civil law and the heights of the laws, under preceptors of great profundity, in a short time, so coalesced no less in erudition and genius in the same, that he not only grasped with the sense the more difficult books heard of them, but held them in memory; nay also instructed others in the same. And sometimes, without an instructor save himself, intent nevertheless upon poetry, devoting himself to the acumen of Lucan and the flowing sweetness of Virgil's rhetoric, looking around at the arduousness of the deed of the one, the subtlety of the feigned matter of the other, and the gravity and loftiness of the style of both; of these as we have said the brief and succinct matter of the books, a Subdeacon he wrote about Celestine, (namely in the fourth year of Pope Nicholas the fourth, then being a Subdeacon) he nearly began; and remaining in that grade of the Order, first the more prolix Celestine formerly; then being made a Levite Cardinal of the Roman Church by Boniface the eighth, in the second year i of his Pontificate, of the most glorious and unconquered Martyr of Christ George ad Velum-aureum, a Cardinal under Boniface, by the gift of God, and the protection of the same Martyr, completed the second work of the same Boniface: whose Prose now this (in the time of the vacancy, namely after the death of Clement the fifth, in the second year, the twentieth of the Cardinalate elapsing) while staying at Valence of the province of Vienne, and the meter of this kind of canonization, the same Peter favoring, being enrolled in the Catalogue of the Saints, and in the year 1316 the Canonization of Peter with this preface. he terminated with an unhoped-for, laudable, and illustrious end.

[8] But the utility of the narrated deed done shines forth from many things. For by it the means is given to know the courses of the times, to meditate on their varieties, But this work will be useful: and thence to be rendered more cautious; to become accustomed to the high-sounding manners of the fathers, to speak eloquently, to flee dangers, to imitate manners; and no less not to forget and neglect the celebrated observances and sacred ceremonies of the consecration, coronation, and procession of the Roman Pontiffs in them, and lastly also of the Canonization of the Saints; whence many things will be learned, but in them by writing to renew the memory, the exercise, the habit; that when need shall be of them, it may be easy by inspection known, to make application of the deed; and thereby the more to revere the Confessor and Hermit Peter, to imitate his life, to follow his footsteps, to crave his suffrage is given; and also by his example to return from the very highest grade to oneself, to measure one's strength, not to court the access of that summit, whose Hermit Peter the dread titillated: and an example will be taken of dreading the supreme height. that thus, the inexperience of certain ones being chastised (by which, as it were perfect in contemplation, they presume themselves so in action) they may cease to seek higher things by act, who discerned by the sight of contemplation those to be lower: especially since neither the accumulation of sciences, where life is wanting, and the same though it be present at times, exalts some well in governance, if the mother of action, exercise, be set aside: nay rather the exercised act and proved science, the preeminence of state very often wavers also with the temptations of riches and luxury: which B. Gregory, sublime in contemplation and exceptional in action, presiding at the highest summit, k Chapter IX of the Pastoral instructs us, saying, "Although for the most part in the occupation of governance the very use of good work is lost, which was held in tranquillity: because in a quiet sea even an unskilled sailor rightly directs the ship; but the time being troubled by the waves of tempest, even a skilled sailor is confounded."

Annotations

namely 14 February (since indeed the Easter of the year 1296 was kept on 25 March), because Jacobus himself soon says the twentieth year of his Cardinalate was elapsing for him in the year 1315, in the 15th month of the vacant See, that is in the month of September.

PART II.

A synopsis of the history to be treated in this work.

[9] Now it is briefly premised, But that the ordered series of the more prolix and longer matter comprehended in meter may shine forth; know, that in the year of the Lord one thousand two hundred and ninety [two], Pope Nicholas the fourth, conducting the fifth year of his Pontificate, how after Nicholas 5, the See being long vacant, and at the beginning of the same fifth, worn out with age at Rome, died: but the Cardinals were twelve in number, six Roman, four Italian, two French. Who, the obsequies being paid to the Pontiff, and the proposal having been set forth in a closed assembly among them (outsiders being excluded) through Latinus then Bishop of Ostia, illustrious of Roman stock, with a most lucid word of exhortation; were so little concordant, the Cardinals discordant, that they neither agreed to remain in the same place, nor before the second year and a third part of the third of this kind of vacancy, did they create a supreme Antistes; but now in one, now in another place of the city, and at intercepted turns, they convened for the ministry of the election. Meanwhile, alas! intestine wars arose at Rome, and a summer afflicting beyond the wont pressed in with diseases: and one of the Fathers, a Gaul, failing with fevers b; a Campanian, one of these, and at length in the diseased summer having gone in different directions, and the same afterward Boniface the eighth, shaken with a grave, long, and chronic infirmity, so that either his cure was despaired of, yet by the nod of God reserved to greater things, departed to his native soil Anagni. But the other, Hugo of Auvergne, the only surviving Gaul, and three other Italian Fathers, struck with fear, departing from Rome, summered at Rieti; but the six Roman Fathers, joined by consanguinity but divided by wills, remained in the chief city. But September, the heats of summer being passed, the Campanian, also the one of Porto, the one of Todi, the one of Sabina; and at Easter [one] of the Italian Fathers, the one of Parma by birth, returned to Rome, nor are they yet found to be unanimous in consent.

[10] Among these things, in the pernicious renovation of the Roman Senate and government, and again on account of the dissensions of the Romans dispersed, execrable things and not to be unlocked by us in writing increased in the space of six months: by which tumult three of the Roman Fathers less strong, and the aforesaid one of Todi and the one of Parma, return to Rieti to summer. The Campanian was conducting himself alone at Viterbo: the remaining three Romans strove to persist at Rome, nor by their delay were the intestine perils of war driven away. with peril of schism, These things being so, the fear of schism crept in; lest either the three Romans, then dwelling in the City, by the privilege of place as they alleged (as those who had pre-solicited the other non-Romans by writings), or even the other three Romans and the rest of the Fathers at Rieti, far more numerous, should break forth into an election. But God, unwilling that His Church, which He redeemed by the precious blood of His only-begotten, should perish, removed the perils of schism. For the Fathers, by force of a compromise, commonly conferred upon outsiders, for the business of the instant election, a place being chosen by arbiters at Perugia, and by the same a term assigned on the feast of B. Luke the Evangelist, then near enough, namely in the second year of the vacancy, convened. at length by compromise they convened at Perugia: And at the time at which the Cardinals convened at Perugia, at Rome under a certain shadow of peace quiet appeared, while by the concord of the parties two were assumed to the helm of the City, into Senators illustrious by nobility of birth, namely Peter Stephani, the Author's father, of whom we discoursed above, and Oddo of St. Eustace the other. The winter time being nearly past, Charles the second, King of Sicily, returning from the parts of Gaul, and Charles Martel of Hungary, his elder-born son, where, saluted by the Kings of Sicily and Hungary, meeting his father from the parts of Apulia, convened to visit the assembly at Perugia: and the King father having exhorted the College about a speedy provision, the answer being directed to him through Latinus by the command of the same Assembly, and Farewell said within a few days, he set out for Apulia, a part of his Kingdom.

[11] Two years of this kind of vacancy having forthwith elapsed from that time, suddenly they elect Br. Peter: and a fourth of a third part, at the beginning of the month of July, namely within the Octave of the Apostles, mention of Brother Peter of Morrone the Hermit having wonderfully arisen, on the occasion of a certain vision; the same Latinus, among the Brothers or Fathers of the Assembly unexpectedly moving the word of that vision; suddenly by the nod of God, the same man of religious and wondrous sanctity, Brother Peter of Morrone of the Order of St. Benedict, remaining in a cell situated on the Mount of Morrone above Sulmona, was elected supreme Pontiff by the unanimous vote and unanimous consent of the Fathers: by whom forced to come to Aquila, who, the decree of election having been received, sent to him through the Archbishop of Lyons, two Bishops, and two Notaries of the Apostolic See, destined by the Assembly to that end, being induced, consented; and the same Assembly summoned him to itself at Aquila of the Province of Abruzzo, unwilling, and reluctant by letters and prayers. But at length, the minds of the Brothers being overcome, especially three of the Fathers [not] sent hither approaching him, and Latinus of holy memory then recently dying, the name of Peter being changed into Celestine, and the Papal insignia received, they consecrate him there, he compelled them to come to Aquila where he stayed: and the sacred mysteries of his consecration, by Hugo the only surviving Gaul, festively promoted by the rest of the Fathers to be Bishop of Ostia, and Matthew Rubeus first of the Levites, the Assembly now present, he received the insignia of the Pallium and Coronation in the same city of Aquila. Which to describe hastily, runs before the principal intent of the Author: for at the time at which he was about to write the Coronation of Celestine carried out at Aquila, at that time already at Rome Boniface the Eighth, his successor, the ancient ceremonies of the elders being kept, had been most celebratedly crowned. Concerning which matter also, in heroic and composed and grand meter, he unwittingly destined the diadem of the Kingdom to Boniface himself c, saying;

We have written these things in haste, to loosen our muses, bent forward upon the footsteps of the sacred successor.

[12] who thence having set out for Naples We return. This Celestine, remaining in the Papacy, did many things, that I may not say inept, but would that they were thus known unworthy and worthy of praise and perfect, even as his holy life passed in the desert demanded. The ordination of the twelve Cardinals being then celebrated in the month of September, when he was thought about to migrate to Rome, the months of summer fervor being revolved; led, or seduced, by the cause of Sicilian peace, and allured by that color, he turned his journey to Naples: and dwelling there, a wonderful thing, he embraced a great sign of sanctity and of a supernal vacancy. Some indeed being unwilling and dissuading, especially the Brothers of his own institute d, and reluctant, where he learned that he could, he easily showed that he wished to renounce. Since in the month of December on the feast of B. Lucy the Virgin, there he renounces the Papacy: when the foreknown opinion of his already yielding was banished, in the hands of the sacred Assembly he yielded the honor and burden of the summit of the supreme Papacy. Which renunciation the Senate of the Fathers, astonished at things so wonderful and so great, tears being poured forth here and there, received with great veneration; a law being first sanctioned, by the assent of the Fathers, for driving away every scruple of pernicious ambiguity, that a Roman Pontiff can, especially if a cause of insufficiency underlie, yield the highest and supreme summit of the Apostolate.

[13] and Boniface the 8th being afterward created, Forthwith, after this kind of cession of Celestine, on the eleventh day, namely the vigil of the Lord's Nativity, which ran on the last day of the then elapsing year one thousand two hundred and ninety-four, Boniface the Eighth, then Benedict Caetani by name, sprung from Anagni, of profound knowledge of both Laws, and of long exercise in them and learned experience, a veteran in the customs of the Roman Church, distinguished also by the Cardinalate, was elected supreme Pontiff by scrutiny and accession. Who treating the one yielding humanely, attempted to lead him with him to the Roman or Campanian parts; taking care lest to himself or the Church, by the craft of some, anything dangerous should be persuaded to the simple man: But yet he is frustrated for the time in his opinion. secretly fleeing, For on the day of the feast of the Circumcision or its morrow, about to undertake the journey from Naples to Rome, he learned that the one sent before, concealing his ways, Morrone, his guards being ignorant of it, had turned aside. At these things Boniface cautiously anxious, neither to pursue the begun journey, nor to investigate the one hiding, as if he had noticed nothing of that matter, ceased.

[14] At Rome therefore Boniface, festively bound with the crown of the Frigium f or Kingdom (the triumph of which solemnity the Author, paying the debt of his promise, promised to give more diffusely in meter) after some space, and at Vestia apprehended and persuaded to return, he made the same one formerly Celestine, tending to the remote regions of Greece, when he learned that he had been found by chance on the shores of the city of Vestia of the Adriatic sea (that he might avoid the perils of his world and of the Church) consenting by more solemn messengers sent by him and by Charles the second King of Sicily, to come to Anagni; received him kindly, and exhibited praise g to him, acquiescing in the monitions of the Prelate, to stay at the Castle of Fumone of the province of Campania. Where leading the Eremitic life as before accustomed, in the castle of Fumone he dies in the year 1296. unwilling to use the laxer things which he could, in the year one thousand two hundred and ninety-six, on the fourteenth Kalends of June, dying catholicly, holily, and religiously, he changed earth for heaven, calamity for felicity, death for life; reverently buried at Ferentino, in a place of the Brothers of his own order.

[15] But Boniface, made safer from this, accomplished many and great things in the eight years, nine months, Boniface pacifies Sicily, nineteen days h in which he presided over the Papacy. The Sicilians in his time, after the courses of twenty years, and the various windings of wars, he among other things reduced to the devotion of Mother Church: and to Frederick, son of the late Peter King of Aragon, detaining the occupied Sicilian lands, he restored it; and composed peace with the King of Sicily Charles the second, the daughter of the same King Charles being given to Frederick in marriage i; the hundredth or Jubilee year also returning, he celebrates the Jubilee of the year 1300: which then occurred the one thousand three hundredth year, and also for any future hundredth, he confirmed, granting a full, fuller, fullest remission of all sins, namely to those visiting the thresholds of the Apostles and their Basilicas at Rome, in any hundredth year, and truly penitent, having truly also confessed their sins, foreigners for fifteen, Romans for thirty days, as the bulled letters of the father himself more seriously explain; and ours, which on this prose and verse we have embraced, the Hundredth or Jubilee unfolds k. Nor less the same Pope Boniface, and at the end of the 9th year captured at Anagni when to some he was a favor, to some (as they esteemed) a burden; at the end of the ninth year, injuriously, nefariously, and sacrilegiously by some, and perhaps of his own parties (yet noble in birth of the Colonna stock) captured at Anagni, within three days by a wonderful suffrage was freed by Blessed Peter. and wonderfully freed The citizens indeed repenting of the crime committed by them in the city, and from this vigorously rising against the perpetrators of such crimes, and driving them from the city of Anagni, some of them being slaughtered, this one, stripped of the peril of captivity, amid terrors still returning to Rome, magnificently received with the gleaming arms of soldiers and an armed Clergy, and within the month of his arrival oppressed with infirmity, he dies at Rome, having professed the Catholic faith, in the Basilica of the Prince of the Apostles, in the sepulchre which he had built for himself l while living, rested; at his death Rome fluctuating with great dissensions. and his successor Benedict XI at Perugia. On the tenth day after him Benedict XI, Nicholas by name then Bishop of Ostia,

[16] There again an afflictive vacancy of eleven months of terror, want, and also suspicion, which we have experienced, ran on: but on the fifth day of the entering month of June, then the vigil of Pentecost, of the year of the Lord one thousand three hundred and five, In the year 1305 Clement V created absent, Bertrand Delgot, a Gascon by nation, called the Bordelais, Archbishop of that City, absent and detained in his province, was elected by the Fathers, because he was learned chiefly in legal and canonical science and the experience of affairs: and the Decree being brought to him where he then lived, he consented; and received the insignia of the Papacy, changing his proper name into Clement, the Assembly still absent: nor less the Assembly, existing at Perugia, and earnestly entreating him by letters, that after the manner of his predecessors the father should first come to see his sons, his causes (as he alleged) being veiled, not to say sought occasions, omitting to come, called the Italians to the ultramontane parts, he summons the Cardinals into Gaul and what was surely not grateful to the ears of the mind, less placid to the senses, but pernicious by example, in his whole Pontificate, namely eight years, ten months, fifteen days from the day of his election, he entered neither to visit the threshold of the Prince of the Apostles Peter, whose successor he professed himself; nor that of the Doctor of the nations, by the privileges of whose authority, the one's, and doctrine, the other's, he was honored, the Roman thresholds. But while as it were at the end of the ninth year in the County of Venaissin, the patrimony of the Roman Church, he had drawn out a delay for some time, and surrounded by infirmity hastened to Bordeaux for the sake of recovering health, the Rhone, near which he stayed, being crossed, namely on the other bank of the opposite part of the river, (which was afterward the cause of the long vacancy) in a place to which the name is Roquemaure, he died: and so by God's permission it came to pass, that after his death almost fifteen months of the vacancy in which we are being computed, very many execrable things, (which we do not hasten even with intention to unlock) were committed. From the time of his election celebrated at Perugia the eleventh year elapses, in which dispersed still alas! the Italians at Valence, but the Gauls, Gascons, and Provençals at Avignon, and in other places, dwell, uncertain (according to the poetic saying) whither the fates draw them m, where it may be given to halt.

[17] Here therefore at Lyons, hedged about by the Saône and the Rhone, the Assembly of the Franks and Philip the illustrious King being present, and crowned at Lyons, and the same King performing for him the office of groom at that festivity; with the ancient crown of the Roman Pontiffs, placed upon his head by Napoleon then existing Prior of the Levites, he shone forth. But that solemnity had the dread of a sudden mishap n unknown. For while clothed in Pontificals and bearing the diadem, while he returned processionally to the Palace, sitting and the horse on which he sat, not without misfortune, in the narrowness of a way the fall of a wall, when it fell, oppressed, some Magnates holding the reins of the Pontiff's palfrey being injured by the ruin, and some of these, death from this being deferred for not many days, and the palfrey being given to death, at the prayers of the King of the Franks And when the King's delay there was extended to length; among the great things which then many were turned over, before the Assembly of the Pontiff, the King demanded one pious petition and acceptable to God; namely the canonization of the man of wonderful sanctity, and besprinkled by fame with the sweetness of a fragrant odor, and gleaming (as he said) with signs of miracles and prodigies, Celestine, formerly Brother Peter of Morrone the Hermit, and the inscription of the same in the catalogue of the Saints.

[18] The known purity of the holy man to the Pope and the Assembly, easily obtained the inchoation of so great a matter. the cause of Br. Peter of Morrone being examined It was committed therefore, by the counsel of the Brothers, to the Archbishop of Naples and the Bishop of Valva, a faithful and discreet inquiry of the life and miracles of the same Hermit. Which they, with the fatigue of labors and the anxiety of solicitudes, prudently and faithfully pursue: and after the death of the other Colleague, the same Pope destined the same inquisition to the Neapolitan one, by public monuments marked for them with his seal of wax. This to be seen often, this to be exactly examined the Pontiff committed to many of the Brothers, and in many places (as we were then borne under a divided sky) and in many ways. And at length the same Clement himself, he canonizes him. after also the Council of Vienne of almost eight months, returned to the Consistory of Avignon, more accurately applying his presence to the pious work, not without the heats of his own and the Brothers' summer heat and anxiety, was at leisure: and brought the holy business to such an end, that there, mature, faithful, and digested meditation and deliberation being had; first among the Brothers their counsel secretly, then on the third Nones of May, of the year one thousand three hundred and thirteen, in the eighth year of the Pontificate of the same Clement, the ancient sacred ceremonies being kept, in the Cathedral church of Avignon, we ministering to him in the office of Levite, he publicly defined both the holy life of the same Brother Peter the Hermit, and the miracles wrought by holy merits in the Papacy, before and after it, and lastly after his death, proved by witnesses: and decreed that his day of death ought to be venerated as the feast of a sacred Confessor, and to be venerated by the assembly of the faithful and the universal Church, over which as Vicar of Christ and successor of Peter he presided; a large Indulgence being granted each year, to those devoutly coming to the place of sepulture on the revolved day of the same Confessor's death and within the octave; and performing the solemnities of Masses after the wonted manner in the same Avignon church, resplendent throughout with lights, in the praise of God and the commemoration of the new Saint. Which several things, even as the matter of the whole conceived work, our meters pursue more copiously in ceremonies, more seriously in things, more adorned with embellishments o.

ANNOTATIONS.

There followed in the Manuscript this title: "Of Jacobus Deacon Cardinal of St. George ad Velum-aureum. Here begin the Chapters of the first book concerning the stupendous election to the Papacy of Br. Peter of Morrone the Hermit, and how the same yielded the Papacy returning to the desert; done before the Cardinalate": and the same title is thereafter repeated before the Chapters of the two following books; but here is added, "but before all things a succinct description of the meter about himself." In the Margin moreover this Gloss is read: "It is to be noted that the Rubrics, that is the titles of the chapters, of the whole book at the beginning of each book are well placed; scattered through the book they are not fully placed, nor do they well correspond to the Rubrics placed at the beginning of the books: because, on account of the haste of the messenger carrying the book, they could not be corrected with the same: but, God being author, when we can be at leisure, they will be corrected." Jacobus indeed lived afterward up to the year 1343, numbering the forty-eighth in the Cardinalitial dignity: but always occupied with most grave cares, he could not be at leisure to correct these and other things more necessarily. After the syllabus of Chapters follows the promised description of himself in these verses:

The City is to me the beginning of my race, Jacobus is my name Caetani; across the stream of the Tiber river sprung of the stock of the Stephaneses, I am produced from an Orsina. I have sung of Morrone, the Monarch seeking again the cloisters and inserted into heaven; and how Boniface triumphs in the sacred City bearing the diadem, by which Cardinal supported I composed this; and into heaven I poured the Father both in meter and in the Hundredth, and I poured in prose. Hence to thee is the praise, O God.

But it pleases, the numbers of the Chapters being noted in the margin, for the easier use of those who perchance shall have wished to cite this work, in the same margin to set the number of the verses by fives, as we see employed by most who have elucidated the ancient Poets in this century.

THE DIVISION OF CHAPTERS

Here begin the Chapters of the first book.

Of the death of Nicholas the fourth at Rome, and the exequies made in St. Mary Major for him, and the oration of Lord Latinus: and how the Cardinals did not agree about a common place for the Election. Chapter I.

How the Cardinals departed into various parts. Ch. 2.

Of the Senate of the City, and the war which was in the City in the time of the vacancy. Ch. 3.

Of Brother Matthew of Acquasparta, Bishop of Porto, sent against the people of Narni, who were besieging the Castle of Stroncone. Ch. 4.

How a schism was feared, because they did not agree about a place, and of those things which were done concerning this. Ch. 5.

Of the two Elected as Senators, namely Lord Peter Stephani father of the Author, and Oddo of St. Eustace. Ch. 6.

How some tried to impede Brother Matthew of Acquasparta, Bishop of Porto, in the office of the Penitentiary. Ch. 7.

Of the arrival of Charles the second King of Sicily, and Charles Martel his son King of Hungary at the Curia the See being vacant, and the withdrawal of those Kings. Ch. 8.

Here begin the Chapters of the second book.

How the Cardinals convened on the day of the Election, and of the casual motive by which they came to Peter of Morrone. Chapter I.

Of the Conference held among the Cardinals about Brother Peter of Morrone, and his election to the Papacy. Ch. 2.

Of the five Envoys sent by the College to Brother Peter of Morrone. Ch. 3.

A description of the Mount where Brother Peter stayed. Ch. 4.

A description of the Cell of Brother Peter, and his aspect, and the oration of the envoys of the College to him. Ch. 5.

The response of Brother Peter and his assent to the Election, and of the reverence exhibited to him by those who had convened there, and especially by Charles Martel King of Hungary. Ch. 6.

Here begins the serious life of Brother Peter, Ch. 7, under which several rubrics are contained as follows.

I. Of the diverse temptations of the Devil that Brother Peter should not study.

II. Of the sign of the religious garment, with which at his birth Brother Peter came forth clothed from the maternal womb.

III. Of the vision made to a certain woman, by the dead father of Brother Peter, that he should not withdraw from study.

IV. How within a short time he knew how to read the Psalms.

V. Of the vision, by which Brother Peter seemed a keeper of sheep.

VI. Of the desire of Brother Peter from very boyhood to serve God, especially in the desert.

VII. How, a certain Hermit having departed from the castle of Sangro Castro di Sangue, Brother Peter passes there for some days.

VIII. Of a certain rigid mountain divinely shown to him, in which Brother Peter remained for three years.

IX. Of the bell, which he miraculously heard at night, and of the cock given to him.

X. How at Rome he was made a Presbyter, and returning remained on the mount of Morrone for five years.

XI. How he came to the mount of Maiella, and of a certain illusion of the demon recognized and put to flight.

XII. How he was of the Rule of B. Benedict, and how he received Brothers to the same.

XIII. Of the cell, which he alone had, and the Mass which he there celebrated, and of silence.

XIV. Of his harsh bed, of his clothing, and cuirass.

XV. Of the Abstinence of food and drink.

XVI. Of the six Lents, which he kept most strictly every year.

XVII. Of the Psalms which he said, and the genuflections.

XVIII. Of the hairshirt and other little works, which he made for the brothers.

XIX. Of the obedience, which he rendered to the Abbot.

XX. Of the wonderful abstinence, which in a certain Lent he kept in food and drink, and the harsh garment of the hairshirt and cuirass.

XXI. Certain general things, and of great commendation about him, as to virtues, abstinences, prayers, and miracles.

Here begin the Chapters of the third book.

The continuation of the things narrated to those to be narrated, and the Author's excuse why he is about to say these things.

How Brother Peter of Morrone received the King and the laymen to his counsel. Chapter I.

How Brother Peter entered Aquila sitting on an ass, and made diverse Officials before the Cardinals came. Ch. 2.

Of the letters of the College of Cardinals sent to Brother Peter of Morrone, that he should come to Perugia to the College. Ch. 3.

Of the arrival of two Cardinals to Brother Peter, not sent on the part of the College; and the petition made to him by the Bishop of Orvieto, sent on the part of the said College, that he should at least leave the Kingdom: and of his negotiation. Ch. 4.

Of the death of Lord Latinus Bishop of Ostia, and the consecration of the aforesaid Hugo the Cardinal to the Bishopric of Ostia: and the reception by Brother Peter of the Papal insignia and name. Ch. 5.

Of the Coronation and consecration of Celestine made at Aquila. Ch. 6.

How the Author insinuates that he is about to tell the coronation of Boniface the eighth seriously, excusing himself for the succinct narration of the coronation of Celestine.

How the Cardinals, on account of the ignorance which they believed to be in Celestine, spoke in the vulgar tongue in the Consistory: and of the diverse provisions of Churches which he made. Ch. 7.

Of the Ordination of Cardinals which Celestine made, who were twelve. Ch. 8.

How he went to Naples, did not go to Rome. Ch. 9.

Of the inept promotions which he made, and especially of the Archbishop of Benevento, whom he made a Presbyter Cardinal. Ch. 10.

Here the Author speaks by anticipation of the fire, which was at Carpentras, in the time of the vacant Church, after the death of Pope Clement the fifth.

How in the Advent of the Lord Celestine shut himself up in a part of the hall, and the Papal power being given to three. Ch. 11.

Of the oration of Celestine to himself that he should yield the Papacy. Ch. 12.

How he sought counsel from some Cardinals that he should yield the Papacy. Ch. 13.

Of the Neapolitans bursting into the cell of Celestine that he should not yield. Ch. 14.

Of the Counsel, which Celestine sought from the College of Cardinals whether he ought to yield, and the response of the Cardinals. Ch. 15.

Of the devised renunciation of Celestine made at Naples on the feast of St. Lucy. And thus, since the same Celestine was elected Pope at Perugia within the octave of the Apostles Peter and Paul, he did not stand in the Papacy, computing from the time of his election, six complete months. Ch. 16.

Of the response made by the College when he yielded. Ch. 17.

How the College of Cardinals accepted his renunciation. Ch. 18.

The words of the Author upon the renunciation of Celestine. Ch. 19.

The end of that work with the continuation to the future work concerning the coronation of Boniface the eighth. Ch. 20.

THE LIFE OF ST. CELESTINE V

BOOK I

CHAPTER I.

The tumults after the death of Nicholas IV, both among the Cardinals and among the citizens: and their dispersion with peril of schism.

The gracious See of Peter, long now languid in countenance, Envy of the Fathers prevailing, whom by a divine gift she received, and his manners, his strict institute besides, The Argument of the following work, we speak: and with a light pen to set forth the signs, [5] that God shone upon the darkness, that He radiated with gleaming light, we conceive; and the sphere of the neck infused with sacred liquor; the temples shining with the Kingdom of the Pontiff; by which the glad procession of the Clergy is advanced. O Clement, drench the squalid earth, 10] O Father almighty: cause the cast seed to grow, [the invocation. and let the gold make clear the new herb.

CHAPTER I

When therefore equal death received into its own jurisdiction the Father worn out with age, Nicholas, the fourth by name, spouse of the Roman Church; the exequies being solemnized [15] after the wont, the venerable Mass of the Senate deeming it worthy to treat of a new President, the sacred prayers it appointed to be offered: which Latinus himself, After the exequies of Nicholas the 4th, first in the Order of Pontiffs, gleaming with virtue, and radiant with the titles of his race, poured forth at the Virgin's 20] altar, the choir chanting. Soon, all the Fathers [Latinus the Cardinal of Ostia exhorts his Colleagues, secluded together, with kindled breast he speaks: "Who shall be able to join the gleaming stars, the Pleiades, to Heaven? Thou, God, Thou canst so bind the hearts of the powerful with a concordant yoke: and it swells, the future [25] promised to the Seer, that, Thou granting it, the peoples shall receive a Minister. Lest it please to have bent the right eyes from heaven; He is at hand, who beholds the known things of the heart, and weighed in a just balance condemns the degenerate, commanding the meritorious to be girt with garlands gleaming between gems: [30] O how great a power! For it is given to few, to the height of the highest summit to sublimate a man, who in Christ's name may preside and succeed Peter, and may close the heavenly things, while he binds on earth; may unlock the vaults of the Poles, [35] while he looses the bonds: by so much it is better to drive away guilt. But the heights of the lofty mass, who can grasp them by vows, unless wandering in mind? who can be held worthy of these? But the Fathers; whom excellence sets before, that they may concordantly elect a fit successor, it is wrong to despair; for in sacred things illustrious virtue, [40] Christ, is present to the desires, fulfilling the wishes of the pious, whom He makes to wish. If any, let us tend toward one, in whom, the tree resting on founded roots, of virtues, with spreading branches has grown up high into a summit, marked with the various color of flowers, [45] especially with a rosy fervor of mind gleaming, and equalling the fruits of justice with the snowy whiteness of chastity; whose prudence has led the branches into the straight: because in our time disaster has prevailed, sins press, and virtue has receded. who may remedy the present calamities of the Church. [60] We tend into Latium, Alas! the Babylonian foe, conquering, utterly overwhelms illustrious Acre and Tripoli. The Aragonese press on, a savage race, shaking very much of the land this side of the sea, which possesses the Sicilian cities. Nor less the Aragonian offspring and Peter's seizes the Kingdom, [65] conferred upon the Gauls; a disgrace to them and to us, who give Kingdoms. On every side the subjects trouble us! O watchful Fathers, succor the people: in these so great mishaps, to succor is yours, is yours." He spoke, and not otherwise than the cold hearts press [70] the fire diffused by words, lest it can break forth in flames, than the earth forbids the new seeds to lead forth a germ, in what place they have been ripe: yet the things long since recognized the elders commemorate, and the younger learn.

CHAPTER I

Such few things being rightly run through in these days; [75] again they demand the heights of the Aventine Mount. (For twice five days the houses of the Prelate Nicholas they have not yet They on the 10th day from the dwellings of the deceased, deserted, raised near the Virgin's Altar, which neither worthy reverence of the Fathers built to follow, nor a powerful cause, nor a useful [80] example to the world; for each one will lead up on high his own houses, and will leave the shrines of the head of Peter, and will despise the Lateran halls, royal gifts, rejoicing to dwell in his own Penates.) Here first manifest faith, how dissonant the hearts: they migrate to St. Sabina, for they report that no one mounts the fourth number, while they scrutinize their vows through closed silences. Afterward they sought another place: nor did it profit them thence to another, to have changed the ground, whose mind even then is livid. Then they approach, taken, the changed names of false Minerva, [90] in vain: because while they thought to have firmed these places, already Satan was at hand, and the malign one turned and finally to the Minerva. the concordant minds, and made the Brothers demand again, that the Council should seek to remain at another station. As, fearing for her brood, the peahen, [95] dreading the variegated feathers with her eyes, through closed by-ways hides, and the crafty one does not leave in the open the eggs of her offspring; so the throng of the Fathers changes seats, anxious lest the Brothers in turn disturb things conceived. Meanwhile the most celebrated lofty day at Rome,

CHAPTER II

100] the annual one, is now kept, consecrated to the feast of the two, [the diseases beginning on 29 June commonly,

of ethereal Peter, and of Paul gracious to the nations, the Doctor. Groans, alas! and also sad wars rise up against the people, fate troubling the quiet: the languid plague from heaven shook the bodies

[105] sent down upon the earth, causing in order some of the Fathers to have feared death: nor is one mistaken in the hope [s] of death: by the grave novelty, they avoid abiding together. But nevertheless, four from the Assembly, driven by such great terrors, a part of the Cardinals seeks Rieti, to Rieti [u], washed with waters and placid [x], [110] come; in summer they remain, and enjoy a healthy air: twice three [y] inhabit the walls of Rome, the Romans, separated in wills: and the foreigner [z], the Campanian, revisited his homeland, put to flight, the disease goading. six remain at Rome, This had been the surviving number, a Gaul dying. [115] So therefore the summer, shaken with evil languors, dispersed the wandering ones? scarce do they know to halt together, before the sun, illuminating the year by months, those return in September, received in mid-course the Scorpion [α]: hence is rendered to the city the Campanian, the one of Todi, of Porto who keeps the walls [120] now long since ruined, richest in the merchandise [β] of the sea. Together they convened, distant in mind, at the Minerva [γ], these chiefs (nor the one joined in number at the time [δ] of Easter, the one of Parma) to keep the supreme words [ε] of God speaking, [ζ] but a will not apt brings forth affections,

CHAPTER III

whom it irks to have mentioned. About these things, because the circle [η] exhausted demands a new Senate to reign after the wont (the Serpent demands), the Assumed [θ] mount the Capitols by command of the people: but by the death of the Leader the annual power [ι] is closed in the month of Ursinus, and by the timid descent [κ] of the one raging into arms, [130] while he seeks the writings, while [λ] the engraved seals. Whither do I go? what more shall I follow, which it were long to weave? This it is enough to have said; that Rome lacked a Senate Meanwhile the city is troubled by seditions, for six months passed, alas! and the men called to war [135] by engines cast huge stones, dug through houses with beams, made ruins by fires, the towers burned, and the lintels darkened by the neighboring smoke, whence the furniture was despoiled: and therefore many return to Rieti: those attacking [μ] fought, overcome by Christ the avenger, [140] while firm constancy is given to a few. Among these things, while Rome rages, while it fluctuates with new waves, the inveterate one, they revisit their colleagues in summer, in order they leap forth, and taste the pleasant things of Rieti [ν], solicitous with cares: for those, the city being left, [145] kept Pergama, with peril of the head, the three Red ones [ο], by whom the fire could be increased, those blowing with applied strength: to many this a cause of fear. But far [π] from the Assembly the Campanian conducted himself with himself. The Fathers being separated in body, discord in the Assembly

CHAPTER IV

[150] is laid open into the light, which long manifest through the year had stood forth, and had given to the evil ones to lift up the horn unde the people of Narni, besieging Stroncone, against their colleagues, the subjects. Alas Narni, after the Gaulish manner, had walled the Castle of Stroncone [ς] with a tight siege outside, scorning the insignia of mother [155] Church, and thinking it safe at this time of war to wanton openly. But it fell, taken by the counsel of fury: for a chosen band, with gleaming arms, of Abruzzo, the Red [τ] Gaul being leader, is sent burning by Charles [υ] to subdue the evil, to subdue the rebels [160] of the Church, by the command of the Fathers who kept the roofs at Rieti; and the people rushed, having slipped away from the city, they send the Cardinal of Porto with troops. the city of Rieti: yet as fore-leader to all the same one sublime in the Cardinalate, the one of Todi and minister of Porto, is sent. Going forth, they enter the placid Interamna [φ], [165] full of hatreds and arms, wont to break into the borders of those, and to suffer commotions, when Narni stirs up war: lo, a small plain distinguishes the walls. Hearing that the men hasten and seek battle, Narni boldly presumes to attempt the Leader about a covenant [170] of peace; the leader Cardinal Matthew refuses to be bound by such pacts, unless they declare that they wish to undergo the commands of the Church, and follow with deeds This being commanded, the siege is loosed. the promise, and return home, and leave the place safe from siege. The commands of the one charging they undertake forthwith, taught, by the helmets and gleaming arms, that the time of vengeance was not to be despised, long since to be shown to them by their sins. Thereupon the Cardinal, the foes subdued; and the fortress fallen by strong impulses, which Narni had founded near the Castle of Stroncone,

CHAPTER V

[180] returns a victor, the people accompanying his return. Moreover a depraved harvest, rough with thorns, cast through the fields, to be doubted lest it suffocate the good herb, The three who had remained at Rome, sprouts up, and brought forth threatens various mishaps, to divide for a long time the sacred peace from the world [185] by schism: for the three bearing the Red Hats in the city, born of Rome, of whom two sprung from one stock, and the one of the other stock having suffered himself to join those, insinuate by writings in words in order to a few [not] born in the City, or perchance to two [190] Cardinals, that they could prefer anyone to the See of Peter the Prince; while they keep the walls of Rome, while the others are distant; yet they would prefer to treat these things quietly with their colleagues; on that account to the city [pretending that the right is theirs of electing the Pontiff, if the others do not return:] let them hasten their step, if they desire to put an end [195] to the tears of the Church. Forthwith these lay open the known things to the Brothers, and in turn the gathered throng of the Senate at the city of Rieti confers, what for such daring deeds is fitting, what strict discretion of law wills. On account of these things it seemed good to summon all the skilled. [200] To the counsels were present many; the first voice of speaking was given to the Levite, Matthew, these, the matter being brought into consultation, to whom the name, and Red the color a surname ancestral which men give themselves, whom the noble progeny of the Bear begot; the Roman House, grown old with great [205] fasces in the Clergy, and experienced in the pomps of the Senate and of wars, surrounded by a great band of kinsmen; holding the Cardinal Heights, and also the summits long since of the Papacy repeated; now with the light of a divine Levite he radiates, as the illustrious offspring of a star, [210] into the shrines of God: whose great titles of virtue to describe, lest the discourse stray longer, and lest I be accused of having feigned poems with faulty meters (taking from the Bear the mother and sister of so great a one, the Stephanis) I will halt, although those through the world Matthew the Red Cardinal relating, [215] should shine more amply; I will report what he brought forth from his mouth, sounding from his mouth with placid voice, the elder and first Levite: "Not that mind is turned in my soul, to seek by vows the dissidence of the languishing age, or dire scandals to go forth into the world. The Fathers and the Lords sitting [220] in these seats watch, that they may pluck out crime, not give matter to wars (For sufficient, he says, is each single day, instant upon its own errors.) But because we are tempted first, and by words we confess arduous things, that the chiefs choose to inhabit a city full [225] of civil danger, and that they can betroth the vacant Church to a man; you, skilled in law, it has pleased to summon, and to require your sense. And what the laws will (the work is not for light daring) weigh long in counsel, weigh, ye faithful; they propose the cause to be discussed by the jurists: [230] and give right counsel. Let no one deviate, let love incline no one, let not the true through fear be kept silent, the mind wavering; but lay open what the conscious mind decides upon these things, what the laws say or what is given to them or to us, what the sacred decrees [235] of the elders decree. We call to witness the judgment of God to be present, and let whoever strives to subject the gracious Church to perils by false utterances fear for himself, and feels otherwise than with sonorous voice he expresses. We seek not praises, nor things dissonant from truth: [240] but what, looking up at the stars with clear gazes, the arbiter mind of any one of you judges." After these monitions quiet was made and the hero halted himself; they consult the hidden things of the books, and with the following light, when Titan poured his flaming rays from the Eastern axles upon the world, and these being heard for the three following days, [245] taught they begin to lay open the laws: nor does the day alone hearken to each one in single things; but the illustrious ones divide the men through the times to be spoken. For the first day had called to hear those, whom private prudence at home had taught [250] to become attentive to such things: thereupon the next day some of others: the neighboring [day], supported, hearkens to its own on the second, and by several turns they fill these modes. The wandering feet fixed where the weights of the balance incline; and equally they bear, that supported by the Cardinalate [255] the greater part at the city of Rieti, while old Rome rattles with arms, may be able to appoint to the others a time they decree that the right of electing belongs rather to themselves. in which they may come quickly to prefer a Summit to the world. This sentence had settled in the mind of all, two being excepted. The twin order, who would it not have confounded? [260] And they confess that double Fathers cannot call the distant ones (which they prove by law) if Rome especially hold the summoned ones: for these had followed thee, led by the Ligurian, who languishing at the city of Rieti wast lacking to these Assemblies, but bound by the love of the Column. [265] After these things, he who often raises the bark of Peter, dashed by the floods on the waves, avoiding with the point of iron lest the chiefs should fall, breathed the odor of peace; a compromise however being made on both sides, while it is given to outsiders, the whole Senate commanding, in taking the place which the arbiter virtue may fence, [270] circumscribed only. Which beginning forthwith having used, these chose to seek the seats of the people of Perugia. So when, driven by the swelling blasts of the liquid South wind, the ship rushes upon the rocks, the good sailor on the sea it is decreed that all convene at Perugia by 18 Oct. 1292, bids the sails be bent, stretched the ropes, and the prows to turn to the deep, [275] fleeing to strive against the rock; so also lest the engine shake the strong towers, they oppose hurdles woven of pliant withe. The term is the feast of Luke: which rightly keeping, the chiefs convene there. Memorable ever, [280] nor is this praise small, but by the people for a long time worthy honor to be rendered to the people of Perugia, that in the very whirlwind they merited to admit the Cardinal Leaders to their roofs unanimous, and to begin on their own soil the husband which also they do. of the mourning Church, not by force, but of free will, each one delaying [285] in his own theatre, until the hour subrogates itself that the Fathers should sit down at the morning star.

ANNOTATIONS

p. Because the Emperor Constantine gave the Lateran Palace.

q. That is, deceived, namely by the vain hope of the cause to be carried on there more conveniently.

r. For today it is called St. Mary, or St. Mary above Minerva, where as well as on the Aventine at St. Sabina the Brothers Preachers dwelt from the year 1275.

s. That is, by fear, by an antiphrasis common enough to the Italians, by which they say to hope for to expect, to fear.

t. John Cholet a Gaul, as already said, died in the year 1291, on 2 August.

u. Namely Gerard of Parma, Cardinal of Sabina; Matthew of Acquasparta of Todi, Cardinal of Porto; Hugo, Cardinal of St. Sabina, a Gaul; Peter, Cardinal of St. Mark, of Milan.

x. Whoever will wish to see the amenity of the city and irrigated fields of Rieti everywhere, let him approach Athanasius Kircher's Latium part 3 ch. 3, where many things about the Velino river, which flows through it, and the lake of the same name: but correct the map of Sabina, whose metropolis it is, not expressing how the Velino flows through the city: through which yet that it flows Ughelli in the Bishops of Rieti and Pompeo Angelotti in his own Description testify.

y. Latinus Cardinal of Ostia, John Cardinal of Tusculum, Matthew the Red, James Colonna, Napoleon Orsini, Peter Colonna, Deacon Cardinals, all Romans.

z. Foreigner that is outsider, namely Benedict Caetani, born at Anagni in Campania.

α. That is, mid-September, whose sign is the Scorpion or Scorpius.

β. Because the city of Porto is beside the sea, and merchandise was carried thither.

γ. Of Minerva, that is, at St. Mary above Minerva.

δ. The Easter of the year 1292 was celebrated on 6 April, when the Cardinal of Parma had not yet arrived.

ε. To keep * They kept.

ζ. Christ said namely, bidding farewell to his own, "My peace I give you, peace I leave you" (John 14, 27).

η. The circle of the serpent exhausted, i.e. the circle, the course, of the year.

θ. The Assumed, are the Senators: but Senators are here said, as of old the Consuls, namely two Presidents of the whole Senate: for as the supreme power of the Consuls, so also the name had long since been abrogated at Rome: which also elsewhere in Belgium among the people of Ghent today obtains, where for the abolished Consul there is the First-Alderman, as they call it: the Greeks would say Protosymbolon.

ι. The power, which ought to have lasted through the year.

κ. The descent of the other colleague, that is of the Senator, Agapitus, signifies to me a voluntary abdication, of one fearing to come to arms, on account of the seal and other insignia of power, which were either detained in the hands of the heirs of the deceased, or the people had drawn back to itself; but he pretended, that it could not be conferred that year on another, but ought to be consigned to himself. Which beginnings and causes of the civil troubles are nowhere else explained, as far as I know.

λ. Engraved, i.e. sculpted.

μ. Those attacking, i.e. the attackers: but who these were, and who indeed the few whose constancy prevailed, from elsewhere we do not yet know. Yet because the deceased Senator was an Orsini, we can suspect that between the Orsini and the Colonna, factions long since powerful in the city, it was disputed, the people on account of them being drawn into parties. But all these things pertain to the first half of the year 1293.

ν. For all the Roman Cardinals, i.e. who had convened at Rome, found themselves at Rieti, three being excepted: but these three below at Verse 185 are indicated by a little Gloss.

ξ. Those, i.e. by those.

ο. The three Red ones, i.e. three Cardinals; for these had begun to use the purple at the Council of Lyons in the year 1245. But Pergama here is taken for the city of Rome, just as of old for the city of Troy.

π. I.e. at Viterbo, which is expressly indicated in the Prose.

ρ. Narni, of which much at the Acts of St. Juvenal on 3 May, a city of Umbria, distant 40 miles from Rome. But it is called Gaulish: for after the Gaulish manner there the firstborn succeeded into all the goods of the parents, with only the burden of suitably sustaining those younger born.

ς. Stroncone is distant from Narni toward the East about 8 miles, of which see more on 7 February before the Life of B. Anthony of Stroncone.

τ. The proper name of the Leader himself this is, the added little gloss opportunely indicates.

υ. Namely Martel, son of Charles King of Naples.

φ. Interamna of neuter gender, yet some decline it, this Interamnis, commonly Terni, and only 5 miles distant from Stroncone, nor more from Narni, wont to be at variance with this, after the manner of neighboring and rival cities.

[k']. Namely Lord James and Peter de Colonna, the third called John de Boccamazzi, who was Bishop of Tusculum.

ψ. Namely Lord Peter of Milan, and Lord Hugo of Auvergne.

ω. For the grandfather was called Lord Matthew the Red Orsini.

aa. For many of the Orsini house very frequently were Senators, many Cardinals: and the same house had two Popes at different times, namely Celestine III and Nicholas III, the first created in the year 1191, the second in the year 1277. About Celestine however this had been unknown up to this century; and Ciacconius had made him of the Bobone family: but Ughelli in his Additions to him alleges ancient monuments of the Orsini family, which are extant in the archive of Bracciano and of the Vatican church in the Life of Innocent III, and show him to have been the son of Peter Bobone of the Orsini: but the successor of that Celestine was Innocent here, and the Author, only one century later, supports them.

bb. Namely the Author of the work: for on the father's side he was a Stephanis, on the mother's an Orsini: but this mother, that she was the sister of Cardinal Matthew, is here also indicated.

cc. Querere, for queri, conqueri, to lament.

dd. Era for year is here employed, by a Spanish phrase; but then only to be employed, when the year is to be numbered from the Epoch of Augustus, anticipating the vulgar Era by 38 years. They think the name drawn thence, that the Spaniards thus speaking would say, Erat, understanding annus: but others write Æra, as if from A. Era, the Year was.

ee. The day alone, i.e. the single day.

ff. On the first day the Cardinals heard each their own domestic Chaplains.

gg. That is, the third day confers its own with the outsiders, the second day being heard.

hh. Understand saying, or asking, how can it be that the ordination of two Elected on each side would not induce a confusion of the Church?

ii. That is, they strive to prove, by adducing laws.

kk. He calls the Ligurian Peter Cardinal of Milan: because Milan is the head of Liguria, inasmuch as under the name of Liguria also Insubria is comprehended, as in the Itinerary of the Emperor Antoninus and other authors Philip Ferrari notes is done in his Geographical Lexicon.

ll. That is, he favors the Colonna Cardinals remaining at Rome.

mm. Namely, the boatman bending the ship elsewhere.

nn. For certain conditions were appended in the compromise, which I know not whether we shall find anywhere explained, just as neither shall we easily find upon whom the compromise was made; but the Outsiders can be understood as the non-Roman Cardinals.

oo. Theatrum in Greek theatron, and therefore the second, otherwise by nature long, the Author shortens: as of old everywhere Idols, were said with the middle short, eidola. But it was to the Greeks not only a place of spectacles, but of holding assemblies. Here indeed it seems taken for the proper lodging of each one: but below v. 281 it is taken for the place of the Conclave.

After such copious Annotations, lie open, reader, here nevertheless is exhibited to you a syllabus of those words, which contrary to the mind of the Author we esteem altered; and which lest you should again and again be interrupted hesitating at them, I presumed by conjecture to change. But I exhibit it, not for ostentation of diligence; but lest the faculty be subtracted from you of judging by yourself of each, or even of adducing better conjectures if they are at hand. The number of the verses will indicate the place, the asterisk * prefixed to the word itself in the same context. They are then:

* v. 2 Patrem, I read, Patrum.

* 4 Alloquimur, read Eloquimur.

* 29 geminis, r. gemmis.

* 42 nexis, r. nixa.

* 44 colorem, r. colore.

* 78 Patres, r. Patrum.

* 79 vix tale, r. utile

* 90 Nec quidquam, r. nequidquam.

* 96 fœta, r. fœtus.

* 111 tantum, r. terni.

* 122 juncto, r. junctus.

* 125 Commemorasse, r. Quos memorasse, quæ, r. quia.

* 128 Flagitent, r. Flagitat.

* 138 quod, r. quo.

* 145 discrimina, r. discrimine

* 153 arte r. arcta.

* 155 tritumque, r. tutumque.

* 176 contemnere, r. non temnere.

* 178 arte, r. arce.

* 190 petit, r. Petri.

* 192 Mallet, r. mallent.

* 194 Accelerant, r. Accelerent.

* 196 hincque, r. inque.

* 205 ex parte, r. experta.

* 206 manum, r. manu.

* 231 quemque, r. quemquam.

* 235 testantur, r. testamur.

* 237 affatibus, r. effatibus.

* 241 Istic, r. Istis.

* 248 Auscultant, r. Auscultat.

* 253 Narrantes r. Errantes.

* 256 alii, r. aliis.

* 259 geminus qui non veri fuderit, r. Geminus quî non confuderit.

* 263 docti, r. ducti.

* 266 devitas, r. devitans.

* 271 legissent, r. legerunt.

* 277 crimine r. vimine.

* 278 timentes, r. tenentes.

CHAPTER II.

Things being somehow composed in the City, the Cardinals continue to be discordant at Perugia: and there they receive the Kings of Sicily and Hungary.

CHAPTER VI.

Forthwith as they approach the Perugian summits, as if to drive away with them the matter of war with the winds; the Romans elect two Senators, the Roman chiefs, under the covenant of peace of Umbria, [290] abstained from arms, two being assumed for the realms in the Senate, conspicuous however by their father, and the favor of their birth. Heavy in age, but prompt in arms, Peter the Stephanis, a soldier praised from of old while he bore a spirited breast in battles, and the Cities, [295] being summoned, governed, was the one; and the other from him, having the surname of St. Eustace from the holy stock, not yet taking to himself the names of warfare, cautious in manners, and slow of step, and the following of a party, Oddo: but for a youth it is fierce to postpone fame. 300] These ruled together, for no great time, Rome, [under whom some peace returns to the city, concordant: yet sometimes, alas! they expose it more sluggishly to the brawls of the middling, while they dictate to themselves. There was a voice, and a greater name, nay credited virtue (the praised constancy of the man merited so much) [305] to the Stephanis: if the people should render the rule to one, he alone would be sufficient to reign for an age: but minds easy to be at variance among the powerful, but weak ones in common they rule the people, driven by parties. So that peace had been varying, that at Easter all [310] the hope of fasting we set aside forthwith, nor does the savage summer delay to return after the four Ember-times.

CHAPTER VII.

These things while the people, greedily thirsting for peace and detesting war, carries on at Rome, not without the favor and auspices of the Fathers, for whom hoping these things this fitting [315] peace might be, and each part gladly perhaps would give obedience to itself, because the use of blood is sweet toward kinsmen; the minds return to inquire, placed in a new city; and the mind is most like to the mind. For some rather seek, piety being removed, [320] to disturb the sacred Office, by which we wash away foul crimes, the stains of the heart confessed in the light; while it irks the Pontiff thereat. To set forth the one ruling with the divine offices, whom the sacred Pope had bidden to discharge those, and after his death the consecrated Order, meanwhile the major Penitentiary is vexed, [325] as is wont: and to take a cause for the begun evils that the Prelate, the Assembly at once standing together at his coming, had said to the Brothers, "Whom will you wish me to keep in such offices the course? what time to set? O would that the harmful vengeance, having lied its color, [330] strike not with javelins! because Narni, the Prelate being sent, lo the favor of the people of Narni hostile to him, terrified perverts, whom the covenant of love associates to these Fathers: and for several days on that account to the gracious thresholds they who come, to weep for pardon groaning, often to knock at the delays of the Fathers, and often abiding [335] to demand the help of the pitying Church, bowed down. At length, while wrath sought a pause for a little, they bid all the Presbyters to sit in concord in the Churches, and to absolve those confessing of their faults, imposing grave and light penalties for crimes, [340] as the offenses demand: for these, compelled by terror, had desisted. Not that measure, kept in the one Prelate to whom the said ones were subject, but with griefs they vexed him; yet to him yielding of his own accord, and with many new rumors thence and thence forged they foment. Avoiding to contend, [345] the Prelate hastily yielded to arbitration, and surpassed all his colleagues; whereby the first power was restored, constricted by new limits, which the hero uses. Not daring to condemn the vow of the Father without crime, while he refuses the sacred office, with great peril the office is restored. After the winter of the year 1293 [350] on his account and the cause perhaps of himself having arisen. But the measure, hastening, unknown to the colleagues, presses.

CHAPTER VIII

Now the winter months nearly passed without votive fruit, unequal in his steps by nature, sprung of royal stock and of an ancient King [355] of the Franks, of the Sicilian sea and land the second King Charles, so often driven by the adverse blasts of Fortune, and at once a memorable sign of fate, Charles II the unhappy King, unstable (while the deeds of his Father, while the lilies long since to have conquered in wars the Leaders we relate, and famous [360] in arms, but heavy with death, and mournful with grief we behold, in a naval war lo poured forth by the enemy, beheld in a Sicilian prison, his son is kept on the shores, the things lost, a grief, and the lance of a proud heart) now again, the offspring under a triple prison, [365] having measured the way returned, through the Perugian heights, while the gracious one seeks her spouse, coming from the seats of the Gauls, the now Prince accompanying his father, harsh, with few soldiers: let his companion be the fiery Marquis of Montferrat, in boyish years with the Marquis of Montferrat and Charles his son [370] showing a greater spirit, placid and swift; and also Charles the offspring firmer in age, having the surname of Martel, and called King of the kingdom of Hungary, that boy, comely in form, bearing a human rather than a soldier's sharp [375] aspect: who indeed knowing his parent to hasten, meeting him, comes to Perugia, surrounded by the soldiery of the kingdom of Apulia, having departed from Capua came, and traversing Rome and the Etruscan region, until he should join his wings to him. By chance it pleases to have written the manner, which the Cardinal-supported [380] kept. For when the bright day shone with the lamp of the sun, the throng of the Senate, entering the theatre, send two Levites not farther than the City and with great pomp by the 2 Cardinals sent to meet him to the meeting of the King. A diffused series of cappas follows these, as a throng the Leaders, the Senate commanding. [385] The Laymen go before; the stretched following grows. Elistaea Perugia bade her Knights with varied garments to break their lances in festive courses: the rest of the throng of the Common Fathers to fill the Palaces, confirming the delay: it befits to keep this quiet, [390] while alas! the see is vacant: for these bear the weight of the Pope. These then, received on the green grass of the furrow, lo, the two Levites, allotted the persons of the Kings, each accompanying his own, the greater the parent, and the lesser the son of that one, everywhere by the walls of the City [395] they conduct; until they enter the high House and the squares. But the sacred Assembly, awaiting in the inner part of the theatre, he is conducted to the Fathers awaiting in the Cathedral hence proceeded its way, and through the long hall goes forth, where the stairs extend a small space of the heights of the House, which presses upon the seats. [400] Then there the Fathers standing of old in order bestow kisses on the King and the lesser King, to whom it was given first to have seen at that time all the Cardinal chiefs: and they place both on the seats of the hall, and the father on the right, the lesser on the left; [405] the father of the Pontiffs in the midst, and the second in the midst between the first Levites: and having delayed a little, they applauded with jests, countenance, laughter, speech, and nod to themselves the Kings and Fathers, a faithful hand assisting, wishing to behold the custom of those desiring. [410] Then the Kings had as companions home the Prior Levites. Not a long day, and the Lord decreed to stretch his course to Naples: but first he addresses the whole Assembly, the King the Father, speaking with the discourse of Sparagus, and having exhorted them to a speedy election he departs. and asking with prayers to be breathed upon [415] with the sacred breath, and quiet to be imposed on the people of God by a Pastor. Latinus brought digested answers to the Leader, and poured forth words with placid charm. After, a swift space having elapsed, the King the following morning to visit the supreme Assembly: and "Farewell" being said, [420] he snatched his step, accompanied by the order of the Fathers even outside the City: the Parents returned into their roofs, whose mind is adverse: although through several things to be followed counsel it seemed good to require various forms, that they might please themselves concordant, in mind and deeds.

ANNOTATIONS.

b. That is, fear.

p. Understand, left: for the three sons of that Charles were held in prison, that is hostages given for the father in the year 1288: about which matter see Raynaldus at the said year num. 16 and following, and they remained in Aragon and his lands until the year 1295.

q. Understand, mother Church.

r. His firstborn son: but this was Charles Martel, about whom soon below at verse 371 a similar Gloss, who the elder among the sons. But why is he here called Harsh? or rather is it to be read Divo, on account of the title of King of Hungary.

s. Who was called John, and was the twelfth and last of his stock; because, he dying without children, the Marquisate passed to the Palaeologi, and from these further by marriage to the Gonzaga Dukes of Mantua in the year 1533.

t. He doubtless understands the Clergy, clothed in choral capes (they call them Cope-vestments).

u. Elistaea, that is, Perugia, whence or from what head it is so called I do not divine. The same name recurs in book I on the Canonization of St. Peter v. 227, where Oldoinus on Ciacconius vol. 2 col. 265 reads Clistaea: which there indeed, but here can in no way suffice. But the Knights with varied garments, so that a twin color and diverse habit may distinguish the twin squadron, to commit into a contest, pertained at that age to the other pomps of public gladness.

x. The palaces of the Common, that is the palace of the Community, or the Curia.

y. For in the College, the See being vacant, the power of the Pope resides, and therefore it befitted him not to move himself.

z. The two aforesaid Kings, namely Charles II King of Sicily and Charles Martel King of Hungary his son.

α. Namely Lord Napoleon of the Orsini, and Lord Peter de Colonna, Deacon Cardinals.

β. Domus, i.e. the Cathedral Church, commonly in Italian il Domo, in German den Dom. You may doubt whether from the Latin tongue, by which the church is called the House-of-God: or rather from the Lombardic, in which the particle Dom could have denoted principality, as today in German compounds Paus-dom, Prins-dom etc., Papacy, Principality.

γ. Namely the Lords Napoleon and Peter.

δ. The King of Sicily. But that Parthenope is called Naples is more known than ought to be advised.

ε. The proper name perhaps of the Royal Secretary.

ζ. By a Pastor, that is, by a Pontiff to be created quickly.

η. That is, discordant among themselves.

In this Chapter also certain errata had to be emended by conjecture, namely:

* v. 228 quam pellere certant, I read, quasi pellere certent.

* 291 parte, r. patre.

* 292 Conspicuns, r. Conspicuis.

* 316 quin sanguinis usum, r. quia sanguinis usus.

* 322 eos, r. eo.

* 324 servatus r. sacratus.

* 343 cum multis, r. multisque.

* 344 provisa forent, r. procusa fovent.

* 345 omnis, r. omnes.

* 360 dolorem, r. dolore.

* 362 Siculis r. Siculo.

* 364 nec, r. nunc.

* 370 ostentas omnium, r. ostentans animum.

* 401 Condonat, r. condonant.

* 415 Affari, r. Afflari.

BOOK II

CHAPTER I.

The sudden and unhoped-for election of Br. Peter of Morrone to the Pontificate.

CHAPTER I.

So therefore the orbit of Phoebus diffusing its light each day, advanced by its proper motion under the orb of the oblique star, until having reviewed its acts it should fulfill In the 27th month of the vacant See, [5] the serpent in its courses; the burning one had completed a twin continuous gyre, and had begun to recur by its wonted motion, and had traversed the fourth of a third year, bearing in its part the Sun which is subject to Cancer: nor yet had every fitting assent convened [10] to a Pontiff and so great a Leader. Then a wonderful will, God inspiring, was made, or He suffering it. It is fitting, O young men, having undertaken to lay open in meter these new things, that we ask in songs the Love of God. The Sun had loosed the obscure rays driving away 15] the night from the air, gone forth with his horses, and borne in rosy [absent from the assembly, chariots, when the throng of the Fathers, sitting after the wont, convened: and the right side (for first in order) the sacred Pontiffs held, and the Levite the left: but the side opposite, at this time, to the See drawn aside [20] the Presbyters, whom the Cardinal illumines with red helmets: of whom one was lacking, heavy with languor, and flowing with gout; and another Apex, a youth, standing in the left order, Napoleon; whom the dire compassion of his brother the Cardinal Napoleon, urged; because the boy had loosed the reins in the narrow, [25] lifeless, the evil overcoming. Alas! death knowing not law to take away! Thou sparest not treasures, nor sparest honor: nobility is unknown to thee; the distinctions of sex thou neglectest: or does the care of the powerful render thee watchful? on account of the untimely death of his brother, With thy sickle thou cuttest down the young and pressest the years: [30] and to the old the neighboring rest hateful to youth, unforeseen thou comest to the foolish; nor can any wise man deceive thee, though he has traversed all doctrine; to ponder death is the medicine of evils. For while the Fathers in alternate discourse bear the mishap [35] of death, the stirred fates; "Why forthwith," says the Cardinal of Tusculum at the mention of death urges a speedy election one of the Chiefs groaning in mind, "in foul darkness do we defer to wipe the tears of the sad Mother? And why do we neglect to set the supreme Priest over the world? Why so great a discord, Fathers, for us?" [40] When these words had been spoken, and a longer discourse expressed the last things of death; they begin to leave the presumed words. But vigilant in heart, kindled with love, and subdued by the fear of God, Latinus took up the dismissed things, relating. "By a fervent lamp, a thing seen adds the Cardinal of Ostia that it was revealed to a certain holy man, [45] is known to me, Brothers (whom with the honor of a Father I exalt), to be remembered with fear, which it is right to say. The omnipotent Spirit, revealing things closed to the devout and laying open things to come to His own, at this time by a vision showed, and said to a man, who is consonant in act 50] and wills with the law of God, that, unless we hasten [that unless it be hastened therein, to take a Pontiff who may preside over the world and the city, the wrath of God will rage gravely, and wrath fervent will rage at the command of justice. Nor a long time: for the warning of vengeance is not extended beyond 55] twice a twin month, when the celebrated festal days the citizens [a grave vengeance impends divinely: the celestial ones heap up with applause, and to the Saints to be venerated is rendered one day. Brothers, let these words admonish that we beware, and render us dear to God through the ages." Then as if smiling another; "Does the vision of Brother [60] Peter unlock this, whom called of Morrone fame teaches?" Cautiously, the Prelate to whom Ostia serves and to Caetani asking whether this be Br. Peter, gave answers to the questions, "These are to be held; but, we ask, speak to open and to closed ears. Indeed the Father, wont to inhabit the steep summits of the highest mountain [65] and the caves, devout to the same, had written, insinuating, that when, contemplating the sublime things of heaven, he beheld God by night, bowed before the altars; he confesses that it is he who had written this to him. the ethereal Spirit, irradiating the minds with burning light, was poured into his heart, [70] commanding him, that the great Cardinal at the summit should not terrify, and that he should speak the commands as if to Brothers to the Cardinals; swiftly unlocking, that unless they hastened to take a Pontiff, who may preside over the world and the city, the wrath of God will rage gravely, and wrath fervent [75] will rage at the command of justice, nor a long time."

CHAPTER II.

Excited by such things, much conference of the sacred Father is made in the assembly, and the blessed things of his life they unfold: Hence a discourse begun to be held about him, this one recounts his manners, this one his life; and the wonderful deeds others extol: whether he be worthy of the honor [80] of the Papacy, they treat among themselves, they say diverse things. When that Father, who sowed the things seen of the man in discourse, saw the minds infused with sacred sweetness, he leapt forth, and first gave his votes, professing and soon 7 votes concur upon him; that worthily he be Prelate of the eximious City and of the world, [85] Morro: whom follows, asking the votes by degrees, twice a triple number: the double Levite of the Senate deferred to render assent a little, until he should consult the absent one pressed by the languor of gout. Meanwhile one is sent for Napoleon, and he was 90] present, and placidly praised the votes of the former. [there fail also another 2: It had come to the first, full of great piety, Levite, whom indeed long prudence had made slow: this one perceiving the stirred things of Christ now to grow, roared, and groaning poured forth tears from his sincere [95] heart, and fell with bending knees, looking up to heaven, and with a pious mind and not unequal vote assented to the Fathers. And while that arduous Matthew performs these things, the colleagues moved to swelling sighs suffused their cheeks with tears, and their breasts with drops, 100] and with himself glad they confess to have completed the number [and finally the three remaining. which was lacking: but the known things they keep silent, and seal in the heart. Then the sent ones returned, leaders and friends of the absent one, and producing their conforming votes to the one created, not suspended however, but having a pure sense. 115] These things being thus succinctly forged, the slow endeavors [Afterward that headlong and stupendous election, who knows not, God goading (for hidden to the city, unknown to all in face, but known to the high and eternal Father he had been: nor had the ancient times conferred to prefer a man dwelling in the deserts. [120] Nor was a digested, but a raw will underlying: nor did arduous hope, relieving the depressed mind, give to them; for they were long preparing wars made public, that the pressed and subdued men should return under the laws of the Church, laying waste the lands of the Old, of the fore-named city. [125] Ah! dire plague! that the citizens should rise up against the Lady, while she sad bemoans the consolations of the Spouse.) This one again they choose, the Senate of the Fathers bringing forth the unanimous sense and voice through the mouth of Latinus, again it is solemnly confirmed, both of the Father, and of the Begotten, and of the Holy Breath, [130] interpellating the all-powerful one Deity, while with the help of the Cross he assumes its safe Seals with his right hand. So that Peter, by surname Morro, is elected. The chiefs forthwith resound with praise alike, and hence together they chant: while the first in the left order and being shown to the people he is received with the greatest applause: [135] lays him open to the people, whom the closed silences had known. Now the Clergy resounds its trumpets in the divine temples, on every side assemblies run together, and on every side throngs. A din is made; and they ask at once who has known him. Not otherwise do men exult, and are moved in a course, just as by hunters returning home at evening, [140] and fix their depressed minds from torpor toward the murmurs, astonished; than the high roofs of a house upon the walls the wanderers by their wonted art rejoice to stretch hunting, when, swift of foot and proud with branching brow, shearing the grass in the fields or by chance lying, [145] they leap upon a stag, and force it to rise with barking, the scenting whelps, when perchance Phoebus might hide his lights into night, and the languishing hunter at evening should bear his heavy limbs into the hospitable roofs. the suddenly surprised stag is received, For at the sudden sight of the prey, the most sad countenance [150] returns a glad face, the spurs drip with red blood, and the swift mastiffs in war are wearied bowed down, they distend their flanks in the course, their breasts joined to the earth, and their necks poured forth upon the fleeing prey; whom there follows not near in step dogs being let loose upon it from every side. [155] the bristly throng of dogs barking, and wearied seeking with dry nostril the footprints of the feet: nor less all distant through the places, give their ears to shouts, and with the leading bark hasten to reach the prey.

ANNOTATIONS.

p. James and Peter Colonna.

q. Peter Cardinal Presbyter of St. Mark.

r. Conscita, i.e. decreed: but by what license the penult is shortened, I know not: the same recurs again v. 391 but is written consita: as also at the end of the work v. 273.

s. That æther is employed in the neuter gender by Marius, Victor, Ennodius, Fortunatus, Aldhelm and others Cange notes.

t. Such namely as had been the votes of the two Colonnas.

u. That is, representing the person of the absent one, and so as it were leading him into the conclave.

x. That is, of Old Rome; but they who laid waste its lands, and to whose restraining the intention of the Cardinals was borne, were the Aragonese: moreover this is a very long parenthesis.

y. That is, the first of the Deacons, to whom it pertains to indicate the Elected to the people.

Olfantes, that is, Olfacientes, by a wonderful contraction indeed. How much more elegantly is it said by Virgil, "the scenting force of dogs"?

Now receive what we thought to be corrected, and if anything in these very things seem mistaken, pardon it.

* v. 13 Rogitamus, r. rogitemus.

* 59 Non, r. Num.

* 61 Præsularique, r. Præsul cui.

* 64 Summus r. summi.

* 66 sub limina, r. sublimia.

* 85 votum rogitante, r. rogitantem vota.

* 116 nam præditus, r. namque abditus.

* 121 depressas ardua mentes, r. depressos, ardua mentem.

* 135 Panditur in populum, r. Pandit eum populo.

* 136 Cleri, r. Clerus

* 142 soliti, r. solita.

CHAPTER II.

The election announced to Peter by the legates sent to Morrone, and accepted by the same.

CHAPTER III.

[160] O good temperance, fallen also from the deep heaven, moistening the squalid hearts, and associating the dry parts with a bond, how slowly thou comest! how the stirred The Cardinals after the election again not sufficiently concordant, hurtful things bend our way! For to leave the sweet peace the Chiefs begin, and show themselves grieved [165] that they chose this man: for to send those, who concerning him report the decrees of the Fathers supported by seals, after various delays, and the votes blunted by words, they dismiss, from a grave error: the discord is clear, which it was hard to conceal through times past. For the burning sun through the signs of the middle way had driven [170] twice repeating its course, and the fourth part of the year of the rolling other, when the sad vacancy of the See, afflictive, drew out the delay; they themselves troubling the peace of the Church. They command on that account, that the acts they send five legates not Cardinals: five should bear quickly: of whom three borne in the order [175] took the grade of the Pontiffs, two the offices of the Papal Scribe, yet to these was lacking the Scarlet of the Helmet. And when over the narrow Jaws and the mountain cloisters they had passed, and the houses of the People, where the fatter river enters the cold waves of the valley of Sulmona; who having set out, [180] where they could have seen the place, whither to stretch their course they desired, they bent their way: and the right side they followed, having entered first the walls of Sulmona.

CHAPTER IV.

There was a lofty mountain, rough with steep crags, which, situated in the midst, defends the rays from the city, [185] lest they strike, the day rising, Sulmona lying through the plains; whose name was from much time to the mount Morrone, Ursa, and through the length the spread of the valley discharged the office of a boundary, because with turned light it had closed the burning zone; which lest in any part it should lay open [190] an opened entrance of the valley, had aptly joined to itself the mountains of Rajano, veiling at the cardinal point the setting of the sun, and the high crags opposed to the North winds. Of this the situations of the summit they call by the name Morrone, the toilers behind, with depressed plowshare, the earth. [195] Hence he had given himself a surname (for at first there he had remained) desiring with a narrow life to reach whither from Maiella Peter had returned, the celestial realms, the Father: but when fame now began to grow of the Hero on the snowy mountains of Maiella, and the crossing through the hoary hills was hard; [200] compassionate of the peoples whom a pure vocation drew, he returned to inhabit this place. But a stony little cell on the bank, shut in a narrow cell, where the face, uncultivated in the midst, rose rigid, is raised, depressed however, wont to afford rather the use of a prison than the spectacles of a placid sight. [205] But new temples, fixed at the root of the mountain, shine to the Priest; under whose institute the strict life of the Brothers through the Abbot of the Holy Spirit they seek audience: flourishes there, memorable through the world. Hither therefore came the Leaders, whom the Senate itself had sent, and they command to ascend the steep hill quickly [210] the Abbot who rules the temples; when at evening Phoebus marks the empty figures of the shadows toward morning. He obeys the words: it is asked at what time they can report the commands of the men: abundance is offered to the Missioners, as it pleases. But there, when they perceived the foul darkness [215] of night to press, they laid their sleep on the walls of Sulmona: for it was a great thing to ascend the mountain. But when the bright day, borne to them, shone again, and the next morning, the steep ascent overcome, they sought the cave of the Father: where the moisture poured through their limbs flows by the heaviness of the way. Two could scarcely [220] go forward: the work rises, until they come near the cell, keeping the flight of cranes through the heights. To join himself a companion to these, not sent by the whole order, had come, and cautious he hastened that he might attempt all things, Peter himself the sacred Levite and Cardinal, sprung of the stock together with Peter Cardinal Colonna, [225] of Colonna (and grateful to himself, not so filled with praise, after the messages given to the Legates by the consent of the Brothers, that any should mature the way unless first to him they should bear the commands) lo, a witness is present, while it is run in the heights.

CHAPTER V.

It had come to a space, under a hard covering, closed [230] by a little door and a low wall, whence the gaze could stretch its lights far: and behind in straight order for a middle wall, a common boundary, divides both parts; rendering twin little cells by cleaving. [235] There also a den, which nets of iron close, impends; whence the Father sitting was wont to admit people with addresses, when he loosed the bonds of his tongue: since to none of the Brothers was it right to touch the one enclosed by walls; nor was the narrow cave passable [240] by step, keeping the servant of Christ under a prison. Forthwith the Chiefs entered, the Colonna standing by, of the holy Hermit they saw the aged old man through the bars of the window, astonished and delaying upon so great a novelty, shaggy with beard, sad with pallor in figure, [245] and bearing leanness in his cheeks and fasting limbs; but his eyelids, the veils of the black eye, swollen with tears; and rigid in his gown, and to be revered in countenance. For the house, and the face, the habit and gestures show the blessed one. To bare the head, and poured forth on their knees the same being adored, [250] they fell on their faces: to whom this one in turn prostrated himself on the earth. Then the one of Lyons, having begun, over these things began with these words, disclosing the things conceived. "The highest piety of God, having pitied the grief of the people, when it discerned those following a diverse way to be far [255] distant, under whose hinge the unstable world turns, and the ship of the Church to be shaken by strong waves, they set forth to him their election, the mourning one, the Lord; thee, supreme Priest, it chose the Ruler of the people, saved by the blood of the Son, O at how great a price! and that thou wast called [260] by God, the disused power of the Brothers shows, to stretch a concordant course, who had instituted to conceal the common conveniences of life: and the name being reported to them, then first it joined the distant hearts: without hope, they take thee suddenly. Nor shalt thou be written, enclosed 265] in any membrane, until the votes of the Fathers [made suddenly by acclamation. become patent: nor that its so great power the Senate conferred on a few: but a concordant spirit to them is laid open by an utterance, which we, written in order, bear, supported by wax, and supported by seals, [270] sent by the Fathers, whom the grape-grains stain in sign of the Cardinalate; and by the command of the celebrated Senate we offer thee, and so great Fathers and the willing Assembly: and they ask that he give his assent. and submissive on the knee we beg thee. Assent to the undertakings: assent to the devout love of the languishing people, [275] and relieve those who lie pressed, under proud death. Lest they be able to wander on the sea, thou a learned sailor wilt give the sails, seized by hand, and wilt hold the helm into the straight; thou wilt curb the horses and as a charioteer the chariot." The discourse of the one praying had stood, and a few things being reported [280] by the colleagues and by the motion of Peter, thus begins the hero.

CHAPTER VI

"I am anxious, O Chiefs, unequal to such great novelties in the hearing; and they move me so much, that ignorant myself I am made by doubts, what may be more advisable thence He, God being first consulted, to be assumed. But with my mind more submissively the high God [285] I will approach to ask: do you besides demand that Father with devout prayers, that I may return to visit you, Brothers." Then the decrees taken in hand he carried into the little cell; and asking the high Deity to be present to him, he prayed prostrate on the ground, that he might take the divine [290] way of Christ, and grateful to the faithful of the world. After a little while the Elder: "Discourses being dismissed," he says, "the sentence of the holy Augustine brings to us, that it is sufficient to touch the hearing of the prudent with few they answer with few words, words, whereby I may bear a few things to you, amply [295] adorned with virtues, and great in state, and eloquent in word. The grade of the Papacy I accept: and to the voice of the Senate, by which we are chosen, O Chiefs, to the height of the supreme summit, I assent, rendering consent; and first that I confirm with stable strength; prompt to submit that he admits the Papacy to himself. [300] my neck to the yoke, God reigning: for my conscious mind here trembles at the judgment of Him reigning unto all ages, and dreads the fall of the Church, implicated in narrow windings, if for its peace I should desert with so great a peril the gracious See of the Roman Prelate." [305] At once submissive they fix kisses on his shaggy slippers: the Father gave his mouth, gave bland kisses, Which fame being spread, many run together from every side, as is wont: praises resound: the concord of voices bent toward pious sighs. All desired to see the things heard of the Father. The hastening course of those going [310] thickened the indrawing of the pleasant air. Among these in the midst in the course to ascend the mountain I the Seer was glad, sweating in limbs and countenance, and desiring the cold air to be diffused by frequent indrawings and among the rest the Author himself, of mouth through my throat to my placid heart. [315] Nor was I alone: but an abundance of a great people stood by, hoping now to discern the Father with sight, long concealed to many coming thither. Pontiffs, Clergy, Brothers, Counts, and Chiefs, illustrious with noble titles, gleaming with virtue, and Charles Martel the King's son, [320] here the great and small alike: of whom the illustrious Hero thou, Charles, ancestral successor of the Sicilian Realm, wast one; a youth, the small down growing through thy white cheeks, bright in face, and fair in twisted hair, and they call thee King by the blood of thy mother [325] of Hungary; although that shore now obeys the yoke of Andrew, whom the laws will to prefer to the realm. It is not ours in meter to inquire the scepters of the powerful; but rather, while life pleases, while the fame of the Father breathes the King of Hungary as far as the heel.

the published good, nor did that one mingle his acts [330] with darkness, neighbor in his summit to heaven, we have decided to weave the arduous things of the Pontiff's life.

ANNOTATIONS.

i. As to harshness.

p. That is a window.

q. For he had black eyes and swollen eyelids.

r. That is, the Lord and spouse lost, namely Pope Nicholas.

s. That is, which is wont to dissemble that it may study privately.

t. As in a scrutiny made by secret votes.

u. As is done in a compromise: which are the two more ordinary forms of election, than that which is made by acclamation, as was done in Peter.

x. Who bear the hats of Scarlet, i.e. red helmets: but Grana is purple, of which also below.

y. Because he spoke from himself, not on the part of the College, Peter Cardinal Colonna.

z. Namely, to be.

α. That is, on account of his own peace.

β. For he had chiffones on his feet. It appears a kind of footwear, used in the Abruzzi, but exceedingly cheap; but to the one asking from Rome it is written back that they seem clogs or wooden shoes, and that the word is perhaps derived from cippus or a trunk: nor does it displease: yet they must not have been wholly of wood, but to have had under the wooden socks at the soles a shaggy skin drawn under, by which the foot was contained.

γ. That is, those things which they had heard of the Father.

δ. While namely the dusty cloud ascends from the feet of those hastening.

ε. As it was hoped (for he was the firstborn) but afterward he died before Charles II King of Sicily, his father: so that that Charles Martel, of whom mention is made, was not King of Sicily.

ζ. Mary, daughter of Stephen IV King of Hungary and sister of Ladislaus III, who died without children in the year 1290.

η. Andrew III, grandson of Andrew II by the posthumous Stephen, surnamed the Venetian from his mother Tomasina Morosini: but to him, Mary being excluded as a woman, it was pretended that the realm rather ought to be due, the masculine line, drawn from Andrew II through his firstborn Bela IV, failing in Ladislaus III.

θ. After these things begins the sententious Life of Br. Peter, or (as in the syllabus of Chapters and often thereafter it is read) the serious one. Meanwhile receive what in the text seemed to me to be changed.

* v. 162 Defectis, I read, Deflectunt.

* 196 mediam per signa viam, r. mediæ per signa viæ.

* 170 quantamque, r. quartamque.

* 172 Afflictura morem, r. Afflictiva moram.

* 204 Qua, r. Quam.

* 221 servanda, r. servando.

* 222 tanto, r. toto.

* 231 Tendere, r. Lumina.

* 246 tumidum, r. tumidas.

* 246 velamine r. vel animo.

* 261 vitans, r. vitæ.

* 268 affatum, r. effatu.

* 270 cruentant, r. cruentat.

* 274 amari r. amori.

* 275 sub mitte, r. sub morte.

* 276 valeas, r. valeant.

* 286 devotum &, r. devotis.

* 287 reddam, r. redeam.

* 289 quod r. quo.

* 294 amplis, r. ample.

* 295 verbisque, r. verboque.

* 303 an fratribus artis, r. amfractibus arctis.

* 319 coruscis, r. corusci.

* 325 nec, r. nunc.

* 327 vestrum, r. nostrum.

CHAPTER III.

Of the early life of Br. Peter and the singular rigor of his eremitic exercise.

CHAPTER VII. § I.

There is a place of Abruzzo, to which the inhabitant brings forth the name Molise, the homeland to this one once, or a part of the Terra di Lavoro! And, although of humble birth, his Parents are said Born of pious Parents, [335] to have been filled with piety and rectitude and to have feared God, and promptly to disclose their hospitality to the naked. To these pure ones a great Offspring was given, like to Jacob the Patriarch, And when they bore pious minds and often asked with prayers [340] that any one of their sons should grow up a true worshipper of God; thereupon by the death of the father, and the pledges left to the old woman, the father being dead they are applied to studies by the mother, the vows of the aged parents were fulfilled. For this boy, a five-year shoot, is delivered to the sacred books, the eleventh; that he may make his mother glad through all things: [345] who in mind groans while she now feels her womb failed by childbearing, nor receives in her bosom any one sacred to Religion, especially by the death of the other son. But the harmful one by fraud, and proud with dire envy, the demon attempts to subtract the small one from great things, 350] that he may withdraw from the undertakings: and he tempts his own [the demon attempting in vain to impede this, ministers, the brothers of the boy; and they persuade the mother, not to desire leisure for the boy, because the other suffices for the house, and it is enough, when ample furniture is lacking. Nor less meanwhile, promising that this one would succeed to the riches, [355] a rich man, and pledging him beloved heir to himself, flatters, Over these things the demon also tempts the mother more veiledly, that one, that she may turn him from studies: because learned in the art, the art of things to come, he should discern peril to underlie the mother, and that ungrateful to Christ, and grieving at death

§ II.

[360] he would surely make his own; and let her rather instruct the younger. But the woman, remembering the prodigy of the born nursling (for a garment had veiled him going forth because the prodigy of the cowl in which the boy had been born confirmed her, religious, covering him), did not cease to give favor to her son; and turning very often in her breast the command

§ III.

[365] of the godmother, to give gifts to his own, to give gifts to the master, that he may imbue the boy; since indeed she had heard the father admonishing, while it was sleep and in part darkness after the light, "Whereby it goes to know, say therefore to thy wedded spouse, that it is pleasing to us that the small one proceed. and the command of the deceased husband. [370] So will it be that under the institute of the Clergy our son may grow; and to us, to the mother, and to many he will be of avail profiting: yet let him not desert the begun things," he says, "if he hold us in memory, if he confirm his love." But the infant, suffused with the supernal dew,

§ IV.

[375] put on a comeliness, that small he knew to bring forth the Psalms which would be to him solace, rest, and the protection of his course Who quickly taught the Psalms, to merit and life, while the age glides.

§ V.

And when the boy was passing his tenth and second year, this woman beholds him beardless, pasturing the snowy shorn ones and to his mother seemed to pasture white sheep, [380] in the pastures, and the preludes terrify her doubtful, while drowsiness is, while sleep is absent, while in mind she revolves the things seen: but meditating inwardly more discussedly, she begins, "Rejoice with me, boy, having obtained a snowy sheepfold, and about to pasture the white flock with purged minds. [385] For that good Shepherd committed to Peter the little sheep, if yet inwardly he is bound by the bonds to that one."

§ VI.

Therefore he, for whom thus the preludes of things to come strive, shuns to seek the allurements and the wandering pomps of the age, he deliberates about taking up the eremitic life: and through the days grows in virtues, better than [390] himself, and labors more to serve God, and especially in the desert. The pious things sown of his youth draw him back; that he feared at home the phantasms of the night only, and knew not that he could in a cave take concord with companions: his folly is by no one [395] taken away, and the learned experience of the Brothers was lacking. Thence a drawing-out of delay, whereby about the tenth year flows twice into a circuit: at length the things conceived to a comrade he discloses, and persuades, "Why do we lose the sweet things of life for ourselves, and stand in the world, and follow [400] the fleeting? It will glide, clinging to the flowing waves. Whence come, the perfect life to serve the Supreme One, and at length, twenty years old, having gone forth with one companion, and the manner of reigning, if we leave all our homeland, let us attempt, and the gracious Rome more succinctly by way, that consulted beginnings may be given to sacred vows." [405] He consented, and they go together: but to stretch wearied one day forced the empty companion to return. and being deserted by him,

§ VII.

This one however went on the way: but held by a whirlwind he halted: and learning by the desert, fame bringing forth, that a man inhabited a summit, under the castle of Sangro; in the cell of a hermit, [410] he approached him: nor does he report all things, removed to Olympus. By chance the evil one feigns the good, and leaves the cell, the man secretly having departed he stays; where this Peter the youth, fearful, stays under the night, until languishing sleep receives his wearied limbs, and fearing the divine visions he grows glad, and thence

§ VIII.

[415] secure and safe he was. And by the supernal nod behind the place, he enters a rigid hill through the times: and digging through the ground, under the huge weight of a rock so moderately drew away the earth, that small in body [420] scarce upright, and long lying, he could abide. And for three years he, clothed in a bitter tunic, which encircled his head, over a rough bed, on the bare, here was, here lay. With serpents and lizards then in the harsh mountain for three years: this place is: toads as companions are present to those lying down. There often tempted by evils, often refreshed

§ IX.

[425] by honeyed and great gifts: and one I will unfold. For a great bell of sound, in the time of night, where instead of a bell he was wont to hear from heaven, there bright indeed from the remote crags, at the hours is heard. This long made the watchful one watch quiet: but another messenger sent to him, says; [430] "Why, Peter, dwelling a guest in the rocky hills, dost thou refuse the cock singing through the times of night, whom thy dear Brother has?" And a Matron present added, "Lo, I will report something fair to thee: receive the grateful, the cock he in vain admits which I think placid, holy man." He consented to the same, [435] the simple man and fearing Christ: but forthwith that cock kept silent, and denies its voice, and refuses its song: and the bell of metal refuses to be heard, or rather the heavenly gift; while the earthy power is received, the cleaving of the hours, and the crested bird. [440] Then knowing the work of the artificer and the divine gifts his Simplicity gave away both the cock; and a certain one sounding

he did not distinguish, lying on the ground, the hours in the nights as before. To lean and rest on Christ alone is the greatest praise of a man: yet that illustrious one enjoys,

§ X.

[445] and profiting for God, many persuading, in the city he took on the burden of the Presbyterate: and returned from Rome Made a Presbyter at Rome he ascends Morrone. the sacred one came to the uncultivated Morrone about to remain. At whose coming a serpent with spotted belly through the cave [450] goes forth, distrusting to have a common bed. "Here a small one shalt thou live, illustrious Father, in a cell, and in a narrow cave, and shalt stay for the space of a den, and hence to thee a name; hence the Papal honor will rise again, if thou shouldst return." Then he ceases to leave the cultivated wood, and to inhabit the hoary situations and the deserts of the mountain thence he migrates to Maiella,

§ XI.

[455] of Maiella: it pleases there to abide in the narrow crypt. But proving the devices of fraud, it casts fires by night, and with grim eyes set the fuel aflame, that he might flee and leave the place; to whom forthwith he is opposed, while he commands, let them hasten, hurry, withdraw, and set apart where he conquers the phantastic perils, [460] the moderate things. They do as bidden, for the cell to be burned: but the timid ones belch out murmurs, sad in the peril; for the Brothers reckon that globes of flame had fallen from the summit. And this one, knowing the perils contrived by the savage foe, remains; and replies with words, that he is not torn thence, [465] if a fiery madness should roast his limbs member by member. Which faith being destroyed, as we are, the little flame ceased: and so together they remained, to whom care is to grow up.

§ XII.

And this one thereafter little by little a fervid band embraced as its Father, (whether it should draw out the delays of the word, or the near land [470] should take him, or sometimes removed should hold him) pledging the institutes of Benedict, whose habit also and manners he was here professed. And not content with these the youth (for more strictly he himself overcame his manners, desiring to attain the life [and under the rule of St. Benedict he receives companions, himself alone remaining in a cell]

§ XIII

[475] of the Fathers of Egypt) it was his custom to choose a cell for himself alone, and one closed by walls, that none might have entrance: and prepared to serve God alone, he celebrated Mass continually in the small prison, and a Brother stood outside, ministering with his hands through the den.

§ XIV

480] And striving to restrain the flowing tongue, [and keeping silence;

at certain times he had bidden them to depart utterly from speaking words: to whom a wooden series, a ladder with boards bound to him, offered a bed of straw; lying hard, or the earth, lying uncultivated, but turned with dust; [485] and to him the weights of the iron chains give a girdle to his girded loins, lest the ardor of the flesh sprout: and a stone, or hard, and firm wood resisting, woven into nets, filled with hay and chaff. [490] These same coverings, bristly, offered themselves to his bare members; which, that they might more grievously goad with their bites, an iron mass of a cuirass woven over pressed his limbs. Over this he completed the year in various months. fasting rigidly,

§ XV

He on no day took food of flesh, [495] but was fasting on all the feast-days and days, only the Lord's Day gave to him to take food twice. But on the day of Venus and of Mars he loosed his fasts with bread, and his hot thirst with gliding waters: and he bids those keep this manner who by the institute of the Father

§ XVI.

[500] are constrained. The man, always water; the man, drank the limpid of the pure stream, avoiding to applaud Bacchus: and adding six Fourteen-days Lents, that more strongly all gluttony he may overcome, and refrain the flesh, observing six Lents, and compel it to be subject to the mind through each thing, [505] in three of those tasting bread and water without any other condiment, for the most part refusing things cooked by hand, by what motion Phoebus might gird the orb. Not chickpeas and beans with liquefying waters ever softening, or raw turnips, or other legume, [510] chestnuts or apples, sweetening to himself with juice: but in three of those wont to join a mixed and insipid food, and fruits more modestly grown.

§ XVII

Nay, performing the watchful days and the quiet nights, verse by verse he prayed the Psalms: and with hands and knee continually chanting on his knees,

§ XVIII

[515] often bent on the ground, he bore callous flesh with the skin. Nor is it doubtful that, near to the bright orb, he became by contemplating God, and the savor of Christ the honey-flowing, by turns gazing, he licked burning: nor lest delay render him dull, sluggish, or perchance exposed 520] to perils; with learned hands little gifts [or attending to manual work and the hairshirt of the desert he wove, the little works of the Brothers besides. And although he should bind various ones with reins; yet he knew also to submit himself to the small one, and subject to the Abbot. the famous Lord to the Abbot, whom fame pursues fleeing, [525] and the people wishing to discern him enclosed. After these things we reckon it timely to write in meter things scarce to be believed by men, which long ago in the ancient time once for a whole Lent he lives on raw cabbage leaves. we knew. Lo, ten times squared to subject the body to the mind love commanded, gliding back from the divine fount, [530] so that all things being scorned which soothe the organs of taste, he himself should take food of the plantain of a green cabbage, not by cooked leaves, but raw on the stalk, as the vine-shoot puts forth with curled nerves on every side; and in his thirst should drink water from the eddy of a living torrent. 535] Shall I bear more? That supernal man [using a hairshirt and cuirass for clothing, used a hairshirt for clothing, with the sole covering of the body, and at times broken by the weight of the Cuirass. Wonderful the old man's, but wonderful the man's will so hedged about; yet to be admired the eminent glory of virtue: [540] which grace was able sparingly to keep life to its times, it strengthened the languishing limbs with bonds. Who is prompt to prescribe the titles of chaste praise, who the strong things of his great virtue, who the so slippery hedges of the gullet, or who the measure in tears and groaning? 545] Who long-suffering would attempt to inquire into thy single things? [nay also he is said to have done miracles. There are those who report that thou didst gleam under heaven with various miracles, which loquacious fame does not hide, agitating cities often with such new things. These things often I myself had heard, and had given faith: now within the limit of meter [550] let it suffice to have narrated that the Father, to those splendors intended his mind, for more than thirty years, perchance for fifty, and so the conscious fame is.

ANNOTATIONS.

e. Namely the mother.

g. He goes to learn.

p. Horis, i.e. at stated hours.

q. Cristeus, i.e. crested.

r. Dedit, i.e. he gave back.

s. In the church of St. Mary of Morrone, which is a little below the hermitage of St. Onuphrius.

t. Doubtless here one or another verse is lacking: I supply one from conjecture.

u. That is, he should keep silence.

x. Because he was a monk of the most holy Father Benedict.

y. Arcentur, i.e. they are constrained.

z. Six fourteen-days, i.e. six Lents.

α. That is, macerating, boiling. So I seem to myself to have brought to some sense, what is read in the Manuscript, undas non teneras.

β. Versibus, i.e. verse by verse.

γ. He understands the spiritual little works of St. Peter, of which elsewhere.

δ. That is, although he ruled many.

ε. Tempestum, i.e. timely, opportune.

ζ. Ten times squared, i.e. one whole Lent.

η. Note that the Author here does not say, that Br. Peter had done miracles; because at the time at which he composed the present verses, he had not yet been canonized by Pope Clement V at Avignon; whose miracles the Author of this work described in the third book of this his metrical work, which begins, "Now holding the vaults of heaven" — as below he says.

θ. And so there were fifty years of his life, namely passed in the desert. Further, what seemed to us errors and to be corrected, are these:

* v. 333 hic, I read, huic.

* 339 pie gererent animo, r. pios gererent animos.

* 346 suspicit, r. suscipit.

* 348 direque, r. diraque.

* 349 Invidiosa manu, r. Invidia, magnis.

* 353 Et satis est ede, r. Ædibus & satis est.

* 356 illam, r. illum.

* 367 patteque tenebris, r. pactæque tenebræ.

* 368 quam, r. qua.

* 370 erat &, r. erit ut.

* 403 vestire, r. nescire.

* 403 Tendemus, r. Tentemus.

* 408 Subsistit, r. Substitit.

* 412 pavidum, r. pavidus.

* 417 mani, r. immani.

* 452 Magnus teque, r. Angustaque.

* 453 resurgit, r. resurget.

* 455 quibus atra placet, r. placet arcta istic.

* 466 Quoque fide lato r. Qua deleta fide.

* 467 duo, r. suum.

* 484 multa, r. culta.

* 488 Cervicalve rudens, r. Cervical vel uter.

* 508 undas, r. unquam.

* 509 Non teneras, r. Contenerans.

* 511 Sat, r. Sed.

* 529 vixit, r. jussit.

BOOK III.

CHAPTER I.

Of the approach of the Cardinals to Aquila and the coronation of Celestine.

Hitherto these things had been published through the cities, while he sowed virtue for himself, while he demanded to live enclosed, but to leave the din of the age and the fleeting world, The preface of the author writing unwillingly what follows. nor anything else: which although I would rather be able to keep silent [5] in this series of verse, because bound by love to the man before, and he showed himself placid to me thence in the Papacy; yet I will unlock what at so great a summit he did. And it is fair to narrate to the future race and votive to oneself, and also examples of dreading [10] so various mishaps of men, thus the high under the lowest, thus changed from the highest grade, or perchance disclosed. But neither is it to be believed, that the dove clothed fraud for so long a time: for to many the path of life is poverty, and to postpone the care of one's own cultivation: [15] to many to reign is an evil, to surpass all is deadly to those for whom it is. Promptly and the small one we sit, we the horse, and we cross the moderate waves by hand; of the river fearless, perchance plunged in the deep, and of the hoofed one dashed on the ground by sharp leaps. [20] Beginning therefore, associated with the Cardinal, Morro, the night having entered, where the Brothers raised the temples, descended and stayed days: and there the right side Celestine, not trusting the Cardinals, of the great future Pontiff, the order being reversed,

received Charles the King, who presides over the fields [25] of Apulia, and the lay hands try everywhere to creep into the counsels, into the heart of the divine Father of the Church. For knowing to despise riches and the quarrels of the world, he had avoided the pompous art of Law; nor did he decree to unlock the closed knots [30] of the scribes, and the band of Brothers, living under the institute of the Father, a throng not cultivated enough, but rustic, he summons laymen into counsel: on the high-sounding mountains: whereby it came to pass, that to himself he greatly trusted the laymen, whom he reckoned skilled in the art of Law or prudent. So creeps the new race, ignorant of rite, [35] while the gracious Father fears that his ingenuity, narrowed by frauds, be conquered by the Chiefs, and the doubtful comrades are rendered Brothers, lest perchance the Senate should compel him to change his proper grade; if the glory of the world should yield, as before, to the red Colleges of the Fathers. [40] Thence grave, the decreed indeed, proceeded the lordly letter of the Pontiff, by which he confessed that he could not by an epistle he excuses himself from the journey to Perugia: proceed far, while in the heaven the summer is fervid with the cold wont to the mountains: whereby neither did he wish the Assembly to be troubled, if he should hasten to stretch his frail steps [45] even to Aquila; for the torpid virtue of old age does not allow, the crops being parched with summer heat, to scale the Perugian rock by a difficult access. These things he wished the Fathers to ponder, and to inquire what might be fitting for the Church, and to unfold their vows in words. 50] He himself however, entering the vast land [with a swollen turf of Aquila, a city not full of citizens, comes to Aquila borne on an ass, but marked with certain spaces and for future hope, unswollen Morro ascended a cheap little Ass,

CHAPTER II

[55] the reins of the Kings ruling with right and left hand. At the sight of the Pontiff many were astonished, seeing him so humble, remembering God, to whom all by the example of Christ: nature pleasing offered obedience, that this animal sat quiet, when in Judea, poured out to his colonists, [60] he laid down their garments before him, and the branches cut down they brought in praise to Christ of the green olive. But others rather to bear silently the meek mind they commend, and to sit gleaming on the hoofed one with ample trappings, where lofty power demands [65] this custom for itself. Why not? but we believe thence an example could be taken, whereby fallen pleasure should know ever to have exceeded the measure of the Clergy, if the things to come the provident Father, as before, flourishing with signs should display: the people now is taken in this. [70] Certain deeds, although supported by the image of virtue, we sometimes disdain to follow, if mishap and mindless Simplicity, not a cautious hand, poured itself into them. But remaining at Aquila, the Senate not yet coming, he takes a lay Secretary, Morro set over various offices the new [75] men of Abruzzo, and a layman for himself, not by ancient custom, took as a Scribe (confidence of the Clergy was lacking) and of the Samnites the Father (to whom perchance very much fault could be ascribed) is given as Vice-chancellor to the gracious at the suasion of the Archbishop of Benevento. one. But the near perils of fraud, pure [80] who would beware, a deadly evil? when he had known the sacred institutes both of law and the decrees of the Fathers: but the same shines not, given to shine; and the man they called John of the Castle of heaven, of those cultivating earthly things.

CHAPTER III

Meanwhile the sublime Apex of the Assembly into each thing [85] ambiguous, lest perchance allured he should love delays, the Cardinals who had written that they should not be summoned to Aquila, reviewed the writings of the one asking, that he himself should attempt the journey of the Priors, and come to see, desired, the Cardinal Chiefs, whom with none persuading he should summon, absent. Lest therefore he give a nefarious [90] example, let the Lord proceed, if perchance, a star being removed, it should happen at the heights of the Roman See that any be assumed; and let him weigh the perils of disease and the expenses, if in the fervid day in the time of harvest the Curia should be forced to seek a distant city, not apt to its manners: [95] moved by a just balance, no less they confess to keep silent strong causes for these. Peter's excusatory being received, At first the Fathers wrote these things by a dread rumor at Perugia; yet the letter of the supreme Pontiff afterward received, withdrew them to write back blandly [100] these same things, confirming more, nay laying open the closed things: "O gracious Father of Fathers, what we now seem to have kept silent we lay open. Lo, it is Hard for us to be summoned within again they write to him suppliantly: the Realm of Apulia: for oblivion does not pluck away the counsels of Father Martin, and the counsel taken man by man, [105] when a great submission of prayers should demand the Gaulish Leader to come to the Realm with arms, the hand of the Aragonese insulting, through the cloisters of the Sicilian Pachynus; and Parthenope should rage suspended by new things to come. For the sacred Pope, learning to succor better [110] the mishaps of the Besieged one and the realm of the summoned one, halted, and chose not to yield to his own lands; and by the example of Martin 4 they warn that he abide not in another's Realm: although his mind to fence his own and to put the enemies to flight, more prompt, and to whom in doubt those sought things should please nor were Brothers lacking; a better sentence prevailed. [115] Nor yet is it to be desired that the Chiefs be summoned anywhere into the long, although that land be subject to the yoke of the Roman See. Let them undergo what we wrote of old, the example, the manners, the grave loss, the murmur, the want. Not the lack of care for you moves us and for our wearied old age. and they pretext old age and the heat [120] It is grave for the Augustus to proceed far in motion: but God making it (for whose faithful love and fear, Father thou wilt take on thy shoulders the grave weight of so great an honor) you may be able to have taken full labor: and we think that several ways are not lacking 125] for help, if perchance it pleases to vary the quiet. [they offer a litter. For thou, advanced, canst ascend on a horse a closed litter: nor will a long day or times make us behold the sacred Father, whom it is glad to discern. Do not wish to trouble your minds with peril [130] at the auspices of the summit: lest a subtle tongue can persuade so great an evil, not seeking the conveniences of Christ but gaping after its own, again and again we ask thee, illustrious in piety Father, and with prayers we delay."

CHAPTER IV

These things being seen, Morro, when the Elder, coming to Aquila, [135] had seen two Brothers in order, not sent by the gravity of the Fathers, but rushing of their own accord, To him excusing himself again namely Hugo of Auvergne, and a Levite born of the Orsini stock; he bade to set forth to the red Cardinals the old age of those sent, and to unfold the causes of the delay, while the summer time is hot. And he receives a second time, 140] a Prelate being sent, who preside over the Old City, [they urge that at least he leave the Realm. the votes of the Leaders, insisting that at least he come to his proper lands, if perchance he refuses to stretch the journey through the Perugian fields; and with prayers they ask the King to assist; to whom they recount the things conferred on the Father, and conferred lately [145] by the Church granting to him, while rebellious Etna wants the Aragonese; and they sing that various outcomes of peril are not lacking, and a great evil to goad the Parents. But Peter, beholden to King Charles, He persisted unmoved by prayers, and chose for the Crown Morro Aquila: and Charles, willing, not to say pomps [150] but to show his realm, and to increase the new Chiefs and the red Leaders, to ask the Powerful one, should dissemble the monitions. To despise, alas! the words of the Senate it seemed not doubtful. Would that thou hadst not been the cause of delay, while thou thinkest thou canst lift the summit! [155] Among these things, the Prelate to have sought the Assembly again, the insignia, to be consecrated with Chrism (although the burning Order the Cardinal Latinus being dead, of the Fathers had not come) is reported: thus they know how to add goads. But, the mishap God suffering (while He took away the high Pontiff from us, Latinus borne to the heights) [160] a manner was found of great novelty, and urging to spurn the prompt counsel; whereby, the gracious Prelate's funeral scarce cold, the Assembly distant, to be consecrated for him he bids Hugo the Cardinal to be made Bishop of Ostia. Morro should command Hugo, himself afterward to be consecrated, by the Father of the Samnites; and also the red insignia [165] he should take, and the mantle, with a mitre girded with little stones and pure gold, these had been to be given at Perugia by the hand of the red Levite: but so great things to the Old one and at Aquila he takes the Pontifical insignia. Napoleon confers. Then Peter transfers his names into Celestine, which the same Napoleon publishes [170] to the peoples. The subjected ones give kisses to his feet bowed down, Pontiffs, Kings, Clergy, Counts, and Chiefs: he himself however to the people with his right hand, seen from on high, sublime, the Apex showed the Seals of Christ. After these things the Red ones knew, or by the death of Latinus 175] broken in spirit, hasten to such great perils in haste. [This being known, he hastening, the Cardinals, And when the day of the Sacred Sunday famous had come into the orb, adorned with garments of byssus and comely with gold the Chiefs set about the work, and the new Prelate Hugo of Velletri poured the liquid olive 180] on the head of the Elected, to whom the white Pallia of wool, [and they consecrate him: moreover upon the altar, the great Levite Matthew offered: and the frigium gleaming with gems and gold, after the solemnities of Mass celebrated to God, on the Pope's head he placed, the crown of the people beholding. [185] And outside a lofty bridal-chamber in the open field had been built, near the temple; whereby the throng might discern this Apex sitting, the foot-crowd being too much coupled. Hence advanced on a white horse, he proceeded into the city which they called Aquila. The procession keeps the rite, [190] stretching before the Leader, driven with long shouts: and the Prelate reclined with his Brothers in order, as the ancient custom of the realm teaches, traversing the feasts. with ceremonies to be described elsewhere. We have written these things in haste, to loosen our muses, bent forward upon the footsteps of the sacred successor. [195] Not because it is our vow to catch the rewards of favor, or the praises of the work: but we know that he in the sacred City took the grade of the insignia; the Father outside: and better our spectacles shine again.

ANNOTATIONS.

h. Juda, i.e. Judea.

p. Of which above mention was made.

q. For before they had said, that for other reasons, no less grave, they wrote this, which yet they concealed.

r. Obsedes, that is, of the Realm of Sicily, of the summoned one, i.e. moved. So the little glosses: but I do not understand how Sicily is called Obsedes.

s. That Martin should not go into the Realm even in the doubt of the loss of the Realm.

t. For the Realm of Sicily (in which also Naples is comprehended with Calabria) is a fief of the Church.

u. Namely of the Curials.

x. The College responds to the reason, which Br. Peter made and alleged in his letter, why he could not go.

y. Namely Napoleon.

z. Depromere, i.e. to set forth to the Cardinals.

α. For Lord Hugo the Cardinal was made Bishop of Ostia by the Archbishop of Benevento, and afterward Br. Peter was consecrated by that Lord Hugo.

β. In the Acts of Gregory VII described by Cencius the Chamberlain on 25 May, we read that soon after the election he was clothed with a red chlamys and distinguished with the Papal mitre: but this chlamys in the Ceremonial of Cencius the Chamberlain in Cange is called Pluviale, when it is said that the Prior of the Deacons enmantles the Elected with a red Pluviale.

γ. To Peter now an old man.

δ. That is the Lord's Day, on which it is the custom for the Pontiffs to be consecrated: but Sacra is here said substantively the Consecration, just as in the French tongue the same is called le sacre perhaps, also to the Italians il sacro; but to both in the masculine, here however it is employed in the feminine.

ε. For he who is Bishop of Ostia, is also of Velletri: but only by reason of the Bishopric of Ostia is the consecration of the Pope due to him, from a privilege given to the Ostian Church.

η. In which the church of Collemaggio was constructed.

θ. The sacred City, that is, Rome. Nostra, i.e. Urban.

In the context of this Chapter what we have changed are these.

* v. 9 timenda, I read, timendi.

* 32 Moribus, r. Montibus.

* 36 Vincis, r. Vinci.

* 57 qui, r. cui.

* 59 suas … coronas, r. suis colonis.

* 63 largumque, r. largisque.

* 69 ni, r. nunc.

* 81 stila, r. scita: &, r. ait.

* 88 illis, r. ullis.

* 107 Insultare, r. Insultante.

* 114 Fratrum deerat, r. Fratres deerant.

* 117 Sedi suberant, r. Sedis subeant.

* 126 Sed, r. seu.

* 137 missis, r. missos.

* 151 temni, r. contemni.

* 155 repetens, r. repetisse.

* 163 Mandat, r. Mandaret.

* 165 Sumpserat, r. sumeret.

* 184 populo spectante coronam, r. populi spectante corona.

* 187 populata, r. copulata.

CHAPTER II.

The acts of Celestine in the Pontificate less approved by the Cardinals.

We return. So that one knowing, not ignorant of all, 200] not also unaware of sense, and the things fitting to be spoken; [not much accustomed to the Latin tongue, but wavering, or fearing others, and revering the Senate: that the Chiefs, wont to dip dyes in words, should report before the Leader with a light discourse of mothers, the counsel, sometimes while they reckon him not knowing more [205] of the Hesperian tongue: which manner nearly, always speaking few vulgar things, the Lord kept: for public answers this one never gave. To commit to great causes, that in the stead of the one reigning now this one, now another should be present and wont almost to answer through others, sounding words, as if transfused through the mouth of the Pope, [210] whether led or of his own accord light, nor believe him proud. And although unlearned in books and ignorant of the age Celestine the Apex, certain ones on the high Cathedrals he placed, and gave to a title; and the name of Patriarch he makes various promotions, one receives, and various Abbots: and perchance by compulsion, [215] or as it were, of the starry hill and mount of Cassino, he compelled, alas! the Monks to assume the habit of the Brothers, living under the law of Peter: a certain one from thence, and compels the Cassinese to his Order. while he refuses to obey, then is exiled a Monk (O how thou art deceived! although infamy defiles others) [220] thus thou alone doest more. Does it befit the Senate that those things lie hidden, which it is wont to know? Thou art to be formed by that counsel: for no force of following the counsels constrains thee, they will be able to open the eyes. Lo, the day had come, lifting to unknown summits, 225] on which Celestine demands to increase the Chiefs of the Senate, [he creates 12 Cardinals: and fulfils his vote: for twice repeated six he creates, and seven Gauls, and few Latins; five however: two Brothers staying under the law he instituted of his own; none, whom the subject land, [230] immediate to the See, bears, of the order of the Fathers Morro gave. What was the cause, what the form of creating these Chiefs, if thou desirest to know, it is grateful to set forth. It is reported, and we assent, that Charles wrote that nearly all the future Chiefs, and willing to please the King from another's suggestion almost. [235] had appointed these Gauls to shine with the Helmets Morro, and the rest of the Leaders to have concealed the red ones this; three being excepted, whom he bade to hold the secret things; namely the one of Auvergne, who long foreknowing of these had been with the King the father, and two Leaders [240] Romans. Of the other Chiefs an uncertain rumor was had even to the day of Venus, which next in course preceded the Saturday. Then all together calls the Pastor: and, as it had been constructed at the suasion of an astute minister, the Lord proceeded, giving the names in writings [245] certain to himself of the Chiefs, and requires the vote in these and the counsel of the Fathers, set apart. He rejoices thence that the King had made two: but wonderfully troubled is rendered the one of Auvergne, while he hopes to be assumed certain to the arduous things, nor, alas! does he discern the names written read.

CHAPTER IX

[250] He added to the error by dire processes harsh moreover this Morro, that when Rome had given to him the scepters of his own, and long girded he should stretch the way to the eximious City, dedicated by the blood of Peter and Paul, withdrawn, Charles and the Assembly following, 255] to Parthenope he bent his journey. But first the strict [he migrates to Naples, law of Gregory he established, by which he bade the Cardinal Apexes to undergo the Cloister, the Pastor being vacant he renews the law of the Conclave. to the Church. Once that dread law had receded of the Council, suspended before, renewed through this one. [260] Which although the vulgar praise with assiduous applause; yet sure experience teaches the truth, that mishaps hence underlie the World, and perils to the Clergy, great and urgent fears, and unspeakable crimes, not yet heaped to ancient evils, to lie upon the Spouse, [265] alas the grief, alas the tears! We suffer without murmur the savage, what we speak, a wound; a wound, a miserable wound. He confers benefices rashly:

CHAPTER X

O how multiplied forms unlearned power brought forth, indulging, granting, and making by withdrawal, and conceding both the things to fall vacant and the vacant ones; [270] assuming by prayers a certain one, to the heights of the Sees of Pontiffs, and various grades, the Senate absent, without a way. But perchance delaying, prepared to go forth, at the city of Aquila; the Samnite Father (because he the more learned and knowing to dissemble) confers among the errors one [275] chief in the saying. For when black death received either one of the Chiefs, who had professed the institute of the Pastor; the Monk, his black garments dismissed, the Archbishop of Benevento. is clothed with the habit of a Prelate, hoping to attain to redden his head: has the serpent forgotten its venom? [280] So they persuade, and the middling ones admonish, by whom that one is held bound by grave love. Who, although farther the Chiefs were dispersed, and would not see this comrade present to themselves, nor had the sacred times of winter four come on; after supper, in order the Prelate he makes a Cardinal not rightly, [285] is made a Presbyter Cardinal, the Helmet reddening his neck, within the cloisters of the house assumed by him. Nor were clouds lacking: a loosened shower had rains, and the heaven thundered a grave murmur. At the same time they convene, summoned to enroll the Reddening [290] this one among the Fathers, whether perchance they will, or perchance refuse: for several from the Order followed the Pope, who, others crying out against it who do the commands of the Father, and follow his will. Not thus do the Cardinal-sublime applaud the deed, nor second the votes, who now were coming first [295] to Parthenope; but in heart they are astonished, and send troubled words to the Leader, and choose two, who also preside in the Cardinalate, and deny such a one thus made by the star with them; and ask that the hero quickly correct the error, flexible, and serene not demand to trouble the Assembly; [300] and strong patience renders great the Pontiff, while quiet he should wish to file the deeds. When now many things had been done with various discourses, and the hope of the Presbyter goaded his panting breast; he yields on this condition at length by counsel a concord of the Brothers was made [305] in this manner: That the Lord yielded to bear the Helmet of the Cardinal, and the right long sought to the distant ones. Then a sacred session of the Leaders is made beside the Pontiff, and the discussion of the old custom once is kept, in part however: for the times are lacking 310] for such things. O omnipotent! Why thus forthwith all, [that he be again assumed. thus do they hasten to have back the man concordantly; I say. What cause I should think to underlie, I would not say safely. But fear was pressing; secretly hope added impelled the Blind one, that refusing, he should again reside in the ample [315] See of the Fathers. Nor do I praise the Leader in these things, nor praise the one sitting. But at the beginning a small plague and a tiny error grows into increase: this is plain by this error of the ways. What profits prolonged honor, what the stirred glory of the age? While thou diest, nor dost thou traverse the year with minds. [320] But yet these things themselves teach us, the times of pride passable.

ANNOTATIONS.

p. For that Decretal was very strict.

q. The Author here speaks of the fire which was at Carpentras, in the time of the vacancy of the Church after the death of Clement V, in the year 1314, when 23 Cardinals entering the conclave, when they had remained there for some time, not able to agree, went out concordantly, as Bernard Guidonis says in the Chronicle of the Roman Pontiffs in Raynaldus; yet he did not express the mishap of the fire (which hence we undoubtedly learn from him who was present), but says that it was done, a grave and great trouble having arisen among the families of the Cardinals themselves.

r. For from the aforesaid departure, the Cardinals at length after two years consenting to convene, in the year 1316 were gathered at Lyons, with previous pacts that they should not be enclosed, and that they could withdraw from Lyons whenever they wished: which yet were not observed for them, inasmuch as for the greater good of the commonwealth, which is preferred to the private, they were compelled to provide for the Church: so the same Bernard. And whatever the Author here laments, it is established that the observance of that Constitution was most useful, nor did those inconveniences ever proceed from it, which he by his grieving mind's affection forebodes, if you except that one single time.

s. That is, by resignation, as far as I attain by conjecture.

t. Understand, Churches and benefices.

u. Immediately after his promotion to the Cardinalate Brother P. (Peter) died, who was of the Order of Pope Celestine. For created on 18 September he died on 11 or 12 October. Moreover those erred who wrote that he had been Abbot of Cassino, or from a Monk of Cassino first Abbot of St. Sophia of Benevento, then Archbishop: nor less erred our Oldoinus correcting them, when he does not indicate that Peter died immediately, but reckons him among the Electors of Benedict VIII.

x. Whom namely he had deposed, catching the favor of Celestine by the assumption of the monastic habit.

y. For it was not the four Ember-times, in which only it was the custom to create Cardinals, which long since observed in the sacred Ordinations by the Roman Pontiffs, long even after these times remained in green observance.

z. For after the meal: that was done as much against custom, as that he who was Archbishop, was made a Presbyter Cardinal.

α. For some Cardinals had preceded the Pope to Naples, and these disapproved the deed. But Oldoinus from the Manuscript Soissons Chronicle adds, that on the 24th day of October Lord Pope Celestine came to Teano, and there stayed eight days, and there, six Cardinals being present, promoted Br. John of Castro-cæli.

β. That is to stand together, or rather to sit down.

γ. That is, in this manner.

δ. Renuens, that is, yielding, abdicating.

ε. For John died on the 22nd day of February of the year 1295 as Oldoinus writes: erring in this however, that he would have Peter of Aquila above mentioned substituted for him; since that one, as already said, lived not beyond 38 days in the Cardinalate: but more rightly Ughelli substitutes immediately another John, of the Capuan family, before Bishop of Connor in Ireland, on the 6th Nones of October 1295, as is had from the Register of Boniface VIII.

Pervia, i.e. that the prides of man are transitory.

Fewer things occurred in this Chapter to be corrected, namely these.

* v. 204 experii, I read, Hesperie.

* 219 illos, r. alios.

* 247 Murro, r. mire.

* 260 & duro, r. assiduo.

* 263 sinus, r. metus.

* 272 Sine, r. Absque.

* 274 Dissimulare, r. Et simulare.

* 289 cum veniunt, r. conveniunt.

* 300 en, r. &.

* 305 cessat, r. cessit.

* 306 atque, r. ac.

* 307 Quæstio, r. Quæro.

* 312 tutum, r. tuto.

CHAPTER III.

How the counsel of renunciation was taken and committed to execution by Celestine.

Now the sacred coming of the Lord, to be revered in the orb, was at hand, and the famous days, on which He of the supreme About to shut himself up through Advent, and eternal Father, from the untouched womb of the Virgin, the Son, as a spouse waits in an ivory bridal-chamber, [325] to save the human race is said to proceed. And the sublime Apex remembered, that in the sacred time it is the custom to bind the allurements of the flesh in a cave; and how far apart he should live, now held by an empty din, the Prelate. And for a cause he chose to hide himself in a cell 330] now also under a part of the house, and to see the heaven [he substitutes three Cardinals for himself: removed: for he had conferred that three now supported in the Cardinalate could, and had given as it were in his name all things that they should do; thinking to hide himself in a prison, rarely to be seen again, the Apex, with a glance. As the wild [335] cock when it hides its head, lamentable to see, believing to hide its whole body from the hunters is deceived, and is taken by hand. But the letter not yet of the Pontiff merited its bull, although the acts in figures were written; while going to the Roman Pergama, his step [340] sprung of the Orsini stock and the first Levite returns. The Lord wonders that thus all things perish, which the Cardinal Rubeus bearing ill, he desired him to be made returning, lest the Spouse to husbands be believed to have married three. The letter is therefore suspended, while the Chiefs ponder to apply various remedies [345] to the Pontiff: and a greater trouble drove away this one, although huge: a small motion is put to flight by a greater, and the little torch is darkened by the burning sun. For the Father wavering, once neighbor to Olympus now a fugitive, that he could be taken and the taken one held 350] by the frauds of the Eumenides, advanced to the highest honor, [he himself laments his own lot: had withdrawn into the narrow side of the hall of the Royal summit, and meditating to himself lamentable he says, (as the living voice of the Father taught us) "If to me to be able that whatever I wished, given under the star of heaven, [355] upon the frail souls is reported; why peace can we seek, and care for the stable salvation of life for the subjects, and are compelled, weak, to dismiss the cares of our own evil? Does the Author of the human race so command? so the right, so the lucid order of nature, and did God will it? [360] Under the summit lo, we suffer a fall. Not to know the way it bids the one willing to reign to be precipitated. The concord of the Brothers is distant: it is distant, and we are accused with many discourses thence and thence. Seeing the adverse things by changing 365] thus the mind wanders in doubts: Is it not needful to cut the rope, [and doubtful in mind and better to leave the Roman See to a Pontiff, who holding the scepters in peace may govern the Church, if it be given us to be able the heights of the Papacy to render back, and to demand again the first course [370] to the desert, and a pure life in a cave under the star?" Among these things the Apex sat down, and a small little book occurred, which Morro had as a solace of his ignorance, dwelling in the mountains, kept from of old and teaching some things of Law, taken by labor he falls upon the passage about cession; [375] or by the art of the prudent. With his fingers the Father therefore turns the volume, and gazing learns through each thing the cautious one to yield is conceded to the Clergy, and into the hands of the Prior of the Abbot: whom if any discreet desire moves of yielding, let him implore the good pleasure of the Prelate by suppliant vow; [380] and in like manner let the Prelate proceed to the Pontiff of the City. If a sufficient cause subdues the withdrawal, nor a light cause, he can unbind the bound one this one everywhere: the wings are closed by bonds, that he cannot fly though willing, uncommanded by that one. 385] Turning these things with himself he forged the acuteness of his moderate [inclining toward which genius, persuading to himself, that to yield is right. Forthwith but a great obstacle came under the edicts, while Morro ponders such things: for the near throng of the elders is beheld to have yielded by hand, as all [390] the Order teaches: but the Pope presides, than whom higher another he hesitates because he has not one greater than himself to whom he may make it. is not known. What manner then, if cession first demands? Trembling nowhere does he firm his footsteps, but bids to be summoned before him, to whom he speaks, a friend: "Scatter the darkening cloud, by which light the true [395] we may discern, and begin to firm in doubts the wavering foot. Is it not lawful for us to withdraw from the throne, to which honor obeys and the world is subjected? Say, come, and by God, and by all the stars I call to witness." But understanding also that it is lawful for him He however cautious was compelled to dissemble his mind: [400] "Why, Father, is there need of these things? What hesitation thrusts care into the desired things? Cease to burden the quiet with wishes: these things besides founded, Father, to be cared for through the world." But the watchful one was instant, until he begins with loosed mouth: "If a cause underlie, thou canst; thou canst (indubitable, a cause [405] underlying as we assert) to bind the chain to thy neck, and to demand for thyself the wonted course of living." Forthwith this pleased. "It is ours to inquire the cause," says the Apex; "nor is the cause lacking, but each thing labors goading us." He calls thence another, that more certain might be [410] the counsel. The same firmed it. The panting Presbyter rejoiced all-powerful, establishing in his heart the thing reported. So a bird from a new nest attempting to fly, if it trembles to plow the way, is firmed and dares, while it sees the mother glide very often in flight, he resolves to abdicate the Papacy [415] sitting in the place whither she wished to lead her offspring.

CHAPTER XII

And although taught he chose one part doubtful or the other, willing to return (as the bland dove, to the streams of the fowler, where the snare deceives by chance, or its breast lightly fleeing struck by arrows, [420] tends with wings to the heights of the cut-out rock) yet he lays open the secrets of the hidden bed. To some of the Chiefs, whose counsels he demands upon these things; whether indeed, the Purple which clothes with scarlet, it might be expedient for himself to postpone the rule of the See [425] Roman, to whom so great a quiet has been broken by labor about which the Brothers understanding that he is consulted, not well profitable; to whom thus, alas! a day not many threatens losses unto death. But the words secretly creep into the ears of men, and minds are lightened by the hearing: but a great part, the rustic one, of the Brothers is astonished [430] knowing these things, having embraced Peter (who could deceive the servant continual in obedience) nay more cautiously they strive to turn him by their vow, and bring forth laments. "Why dost thou drive away the sheep, cruel one? why to bites the lambs they beseech that he do it not, dost thou expose, and thy sons, Father? We a faithful throng, [435] we servants, we who followed thy institute through all things: we another, we besides thee know not any one, nor does it please even to hope: we a little plant of the Father cultivated by hand; and the sown seed thou didst tend with piety. The offspring, which thou slayest with the sickle, dost thou so leave, fierce one? [440] Will they not also (we believe thee free from the mishap) dare, the burning ones, long since to toss us with storms of faith, us an unlearned race? Fearful we shall be terrified by their daring."

CHAPTER XIV

Often these things with tears: yet secretly more swiftly all Parthenope they urge, the gates being broken, to burst in [445] into the places of the Castle, in which caves he stays. So it is done: and they bear tables, and unclose the cell and stir up the Neapolitans to resist: the sight of the Prelate, prompt to render the secure ones, that the Divine one would rather stand at his grade, than yield. 450] While they rushed seeking the house, they saw stored [whom rushing violently to him, he esteems. O how many figures the divided one suffered! For the Brothers believe thee to wander the way without light. But the Father, astonished, the elder, not willingly to be seen [460] troubled went out, downcast in face, and the citadel, through the midst the stupid tumult attempting to placate, and groaning; "Greater in mind than words however," he says, "in the archive of the heart we bear: and we confess, citizens, Peter placates the counsel dissembling. thus to give quiet to the foreseen ones, Christ granting; [465] that worthy praise to himself, peace to you, and our salvation may come forth; for the merit pour forth your hearts in prayers,

that He favor by His piety, who founds the ages." After three and two days, the Senate coming together, he commemorates first the course of life passed then on the fifth day after, the Cardinals being convoked [470] of time, and the great virtues of Christ pitying from heaven, and the gifts of God, and the tranquil fruits of leisure: which manners poverty, having obtained quiet, has, he brought into the praises of Christ shining in all things, nor attributed them to himself with pride; thereupon weeping he brings forth: [475] Defects, old age, manners, uncultivated speech, not a prudent mind, not an experienced mind, nor a high genius, warn that there is peril to tremble in the See. he asks their counsel. Wherefore humble he blandly asked the suffrages of the Fathers, and pious counsel; whether it be safe to yield, [480] and whether it may help the Church, if ignorant he flee the art. The wearied Apex had finished, awaiting the mature responses of the sitting Leaders responses of the sitting Leaders: to whom, the learned ones much, and after delays and words long pondered with labor, thus they speak; "Now, gracious Father, although high old age [485] may precipitate and be astonished at new things, yet implanted in the heart They persuade him to be willing to try himself for some time, and weighed it fosters; since our counsels benignly thou seekest; it has seemed good, that for a certain time thy strength thou be willing to attempt a little while in the See of the Monarch, not refusing the Apex of the divine summit, to the World [490] profitable, and giving thee the rewards of a famous place, if free (as we ask) to turn thy mind away from the depraved counsels, by which all evil, and a novelty harmful to the world and they promise all happier things, proceeds; let it please to desist from such things and unheard of, by which thou seemest also to stain [495] the fame of the Pontiff; and to recreate us serene. We hope, praying, the Lord thus with Christ for auspice (if, Father, the suffrages of the sacred Assembly assist) that His own spouse God Himself, whose wounds the bond of Love wiped, and the gore wiped, and the divine piety wiped [500] the wounds of the Serpent, under so great a Prince will protect, and will make placid and render her quiet. Nor does it help to conceal even now, that the bowels of the heart provided he use their counsels. bear in obedience; that (unless prudence turn these manners elsewhere) it is hard, placed in the summit, [505] not to know one's own peril, and the swelling bays to avoid for the ship, which often labors in the waves. Wherefore mayst thou bid the squadrons of the Clergy to proceed, and on that account they appoint Processions. in solemn order voices resounding into the temples, and mayst thou ask God, to whom bright lights are subject, [510] that He first inspire, liquefied with sacred love, what is better, what the Spouse wishes, or what is useful to the world." According to the words of the Fathers the Clergy proceeded in order, bringing forth canticles, and with stretched fibers a license is laid open into voices, and the solemnities of Mass each Cardinal [515] bids to be said at home. God Himself being asked often comes: so the hearts of those asking lie poured out that the applauding voice resounds; nor unaware to deceive the true, attentive, whoever is engaged in the city. Meanwhile Morro after so many counsels of the men

CHAPTER XV

520] and the repugnant minds, to turn away the words [He, feigning himself changed from his purpose,

of yielding, and far to extend his cares dissembling, as if speaking the true, and solicitous to be at leisure for other things, until those secret things of the house and the Fathers believed, that he was unwilling to dismiss this grade first. [525] And when faith was generated, and all thought, the King also, that Peter unmindful and changeable had begun the oblivion of the wonderful deed, the Sun shining through the East, on the feast-day of Lucy the gracious Virgin, on the feast of St. Lucy clothed in a scarlet chlamys, and bearing the signs [530] Celestine the Lord of the Pope, sat down together with the Fathers into the bridal-chamber, pale; and learnedly secretly he bore a closed writing (nor was its Author lacking) and beginning he forbade lest the Cardinal to him speaking should oppose, thence reading the closed things he declared to his friends: [535] "Defects, old age, manners, uncultivated speech, not a prudent mind, not an experienced mind, nor a high from the paper he recites the form of abdication, genius, by solicitous care known to us. The causes of yielding subdue, whereby to the mishaps of the world in the present willing to oppose, and the salvation of the soul [540] to seek, I yield to the burden and favor of the Papacy and the fasces, in the Assembly of the Chiefs and the hands of those beholding, lo willing and of my own accord, Fathers: but certain small things opportune for the famous Presbyter of Mass we keep, the ornaments. Leaders, succor the bowed-down world, and grants the power of electing a new Pontiff. [545] and give a Pastor, giving green pastures and offering them to the flock, right, and learned to lay open the perennial way of life, and that he correct our acts, earnestly we ask, since wandering error impelled: for in many and various ways we confess to have erred."

CHAPTER XVII

[550] The discourse of the Father being heard, sighs receive the sweet minds of the Chiefs, and tears down their faces run. Who, seeing wonders, is not bent, I say, though he had hardened? Thou refusest what every one demands, the unlearned and the prudent alike. So therefore to the one groaning [555] the first Levite responded, the Senate commanding. "Gracious Father, if so great a constancy remains certain to thy The Cardinals ask that he remove the appended condition, vows, as by the said discourse openly thou showest, nor is it given to be able to depart, but that this cup we take; let it please that a pure will [560] contain nothing for itself: the decease desires this law, that thou yield to the fasces; nor does it believe a condition to be enjoyed: and this the learned faculty of Law testifies. Moreover (that all doubt be far from the speakers) and confirm by decree that the Pope can yield. mayst thou constitute, that whoever willing for a time, a Roman [565] Prelate, to abide in the grade, can depart in the hands of the Brothers, and also the sacred Colleges of those gleaming in the Cardinalate, may be able to accept the withdrawal of the Pontiff." The Lord conceded, and established that it was lawful, each thing, as the Red one dictating in order set forth, [570] and the Decrees report it now founded in new books.

CHAPTER XVIII

Then Peter going outside, the Colleges ponder upon these things: and seeing that the cession was worthy of one willing to be assumed, they report that the placid Assembly admits and accept by renunciation. the withdrawals: and ask him, that to stand serene [575] he choose, imploring with humble vow the suffrages divine upon the people, the people being sad without a Prelate. Tears were not lacking to the words: for that languid one withdrawing thence, had changed all the habits of the Papacy, clothed his back with a hairy chlamys.

CHAPTER XIX

[580] He is made a Monk, who was Pope; and a simple Priest, the Prelate; and bowing to others, to whom the royal scepters He returns therefore to the private state, of the Empire, the sacred Diadem, and the two-horned Mitres, the illustrious Lord to be beheld, the most illustrious throng, the love of Religion, the Clergy, and the Soldier, the footman, 585] the hard farmers, the wandering merchant, and the world [to which Pontiff all were subject had obeyed, if they cultivate the laws, and have known Christ the Author of salvation as their own. Alas! the wandering mind the Gentile Parthian, and those who wish to themselves the names of Sarah, [590] nearly the whole East, all Africa, and the part under the Bear ignorant to serve God, by right subjected to the rule of the Prelate, bearing all things in Christ's stead. O Muse, although it were time that the Poet could pause from the begun things, who borne through long seas [595] now can recline in port: yet the ardor stirs of genius, the young man to intend his mind to four doubts: Could he? Because he could yield, was it not about which the Author moves 4 doubts, expedient? Why did old Morro, why did he take the insignia of the honor of the Papacy first? What is to be held greater, [600] this one dismissed, or then to have fled the thing reported when the Chiefs had given it? Why at last did the highest power permit Peter to vary, who for a great time in obedience pleased? But lest more diffusely beyond than is fitting we run, the horse we halt, one thing [605] especially having undertaken to narrate in meters, the crown of the Prelate, and the famous pomps of the Clergy through the walls, and passes to the coronation of the successor. while the new Pastor with the notable diadem of Rome shines in the sacred City: for the prides of the Realm to weave these, as it were chief, the meters wearying.

Annotations

p. Who were of the Order of Br. Peter.

q. The Author speaks. The same below is sometimes noted at a similar parenthesis.

r. That is, fervent against us, namely that they should say us to be heretics.

s. For the Neapolitans suddenly burst into the castle, and broke the gates.

t. They believed that Celestine knew not how to renounce of himself, unless he had a paper, which was as it were a light to him.

u. For such was his custom.

x. He bore more in his heart than he showed by word.

y. Cubantum, i.e. of those sitting together.

z. For every Cardinal had Mass said in his own house.

α. If we so ask God in heart as with mouth.

β. His domestic familiars.

γ. It is not easy to divine, who is here indicated as the Author of that writing. Perhaps there will be one who suspects the Cardinal Caetani: but this suspicion Stephen washes away, having before testified that this one dissuaded the renunciation.

δ. For he forbade, lest the other Cardinals impede him speaking.

ε. For Celestine wished to retain certain ornaments for the convenience of Mass.

ζ. Matthew the Red.

η. That is, to accept.

θ. He understands the 7th book of the Decretals, which they call Clementines, ordained in the Council of Vienne in the year 1313. This verse therefore is understood to have been added to the work long since composed, as perhaps several others, of which this cannot equally easily and certainly be established: wherefore neither did we take care to note them from our conjecture.

ι. For according to the truth they are the Pope's.

κ. For the Poet was a young man.

The given Papacy.

Have now the syllabus of the things changed in the context of this Chapter.

* v. 325 divus, I read, dictus.

* 326 quis, r. quod.

* 338 nec dicta, r. licet acta.

* 369 Addere, r. Reddere.

* 387 Ut licet, r. Ilicet.

* 402 funda, r. fundata.

* 414 velata, r. volatu.

* 417 columna, r. columba.

* 423 nescit, r. vestit.

* 426 minantur, r. minatur.

* 441 jaculare, r. jactare.

* 449 præstare, r. perstare.

* 460 armum r. arcem.

* 481 laceratus, r. lassatus.

* 481 cibantum, r. cubantum.

* 485 Præcipiat, r. Præcipitet.

* 486 foret, r. fovet.

* 494 videntur, r. videns.

* 497 Sic, r. si.

* 513 templisque, r. tensisque.

* 531 thalamo, r. thalamum.

* 539 preces, r. Præsens.

* 542 Pater, r. Patres.

* 553 quos, r. quod.

* 557 dato, r. dicto.

* 578 ille, r. illinc.

* 588 cara, r. cassa.

* 605 egressi, r. aggressi.

* 608 metro, r. metris.

OF THE SAME JACOBUS CARDINAL

on the Election and Coronation of our Holy Lord Pope Boniface VIII Two Books.

LITTLE PREFACE.

A work long since promised, In order somehow to fore-taste the matter of this little book, it is to be known, that the Author's intention long ago had been, to weave the Coronation of a Roman Pontiff in meter, for some exercise of genius; and because almost no Author, in prosaic style, or in verse, is seen to have unlocked the triumph of any Prince. And so when he was eager for this in his vow, and this very thing he had promised (as the other little book, on a subject hitherto untouched which he composed on the promotion and cession of Celestine, evidently insinuates) perchance not without divine auspices it came to pass, that the wonderful Coronation of our most Holy Father and Lord Boniface, by divine providence Pope the eighth, who advanced him to the honor of the Cardinalate, should occur to be described, which celebrated solemnly in the Basilica of the Prince of the Apostles of the City, he should dictate in heroic verse: for in this, the celebrity answered to the vow, the debt to the promise, and the suitable fruit to the labor. This matter therefore, advanced in grade, the Author undertakes to describe: and most worthy to be written, this also, the divine protection favoring, he completes begun. So therefore the triumph of the coronation of the aforesaid most Holy Father, the substance of the deeds being preserved, after the poetic manner is distinguished with trappings: for from long retroactive times, the Coronation of no Antistes of the Roman City so famous, so illustrious is recorded. The Proposition therefore and the Invocation being made, as is the custom for Seers, it is come to the Narration, which is distinguished into two books. For the first narrates, how the same most Holy Father elected at Naples, the things which through Celestine had ineptly passed being revoked, in deep winter, the Author divides it into two books. in a certain manner rescuing the Roman Church from servitude, came to Rome to be crowned. But the second describes the solemnity of the consecration, the heights of the Crown, and the solemnities of the procession, as antiquity decreed these to be kept. And that the aforesaid things may shine more lucidly, the chapters of each book are subjoined.

Here begin the Chapters of Book I.

Of the enclosure of the Cardinals, and the Mass, and the election by scrutiny of Pope Boniface. Ch. 1.

The assent of the election, and the assumption of the name. Ch. 2.

A description of the person. Ch. 3.

The oration of the Lord Pope among the Cardinals, when he revoked the deeds of Celestine. Ch. 4.

The withdrawal from Naples, and the arrival to the City. Ch. 5.

Here begin the Chapters of Book II.

How the Pope was prepared, and the Cardinals, and the Prelates, and the Subdeacons. Ch. 1.

How prepared he came to the Altar, and there was consecrated. Ch. 2.

With what words the Pallium was given to him by the Prior of the Deacons. Ch. 3.

How consecrated he began; "Glory to God in the highest," and of the other Solemnities of Mass. Ch. 4.

Of the arrival of the noble Romans. Ch. 5.

Of the coronation and other solemnities done outside the church. Ch. 6.

Of the coronation specially. Ch. 7.

The procession, and the order of the procession. Ch. 8.

How crowned he proceeded, and of the Kings of Sicily and Hungary, attending him. Ch. 9.

How he signed the people. Ch. 10.

Of the arches made by the Romans, and the tilts, and the Clerics meeting him. Ch. 11.

Of the Jews, and the oration to them. Ch. 12.

Of the way which the Pope keeps in the procession, and the arrival at the Lateran, and the praises which are made by the Prior of the Presbyters, and the silver money, which the Pope gives to the Cardinals and Prelates and others the Procession being finished, and the other Solemnities. Ch. 13.

Of the Solemnities which ought to be kept in the dung seat sedes stercoraria. Ch. 14.

Of the Eating in the solemn hall, and his return to the Chamber. Ch. 15.

The end of that work, with the recognition of the divine protection, and of another deed concerning Celestine. Ch. 16.

BOOK I.

Of the election of Pope Boniface VIII, and the return to the City.

Although the Seer, borne in grade, hold their footsteps unmerited, and it be given by titles for his name to grow; The Author now a Cardinal and thereby more occupied, while we enter the number of the Levites, while with the scarlet of blood the fasces; which vast license formerly, [5] is straitened in meters: for public offices ask the time to be spent in common: that is the life of the Senate. Yet mindful of the unfinished, and of the future work promised, the sacred diadem Boniface the Hero invites his own to unlock. Nor by voice are we asked, [10] or by nod: but true love, reverence of so great the coronation of Boniface from whom he was promoted he undertakes, whether genius be at hand to us, or the care of speaking this be. Will a manner be given, whereby the deeds of thy crown we can keep silent, whom in the Cardinalate thou clothest, [15] and placest on the throne of the elders; who the deeds of the Prior have written? Therefore from our hours we will steal times, nor will obedience be wholly lacking then, heaven for auspice, and given to Christ and salutary to many, God being duly invoked. especially if the Muse sing the sublime deeds. [20] But because we are deficient, with thee we trust the daring to bear into the full day, O God Himself: asked let the omnipotent Father give to be able, let the supernal Son give to know, let the Breath give flowing breasts to the begun things.

CHAPTER I.

Now the venerable throng of the Leaders, surrounded by the bands [25] of the Clergy, about to choose a new Father, had convened in the hall of the King: and the tenth light of Phoebus being shaken off, by law given, the Chiefs, the doors obstructed with marble, are shut in a prison: and the times of the elders were kept and of the old manners, and the famous Masses [30] by the Fathers, and the voices of the Leaders to resound through hymns, and discourse diffused. After these things it seemed good to proceed: the Cardinals enclosed after the custom, and scrutinizing their vote through closed silences soon they unlock, and there lay open to the men not the same spirit, but as it were conformable. For very many names of the Brothers [35] in thee convene (although others confessed another) O sacred Cardinal Benedict and Levite formerly, by scrutiny they elect the Cardinal Benedict, thou art chosen: for a worthy concord of voices indeed acceded, gracious Father (nor would one of the Fathers more readily dare another thing than these) and concealing the fault to have been reddening [40] each one submissive to thy foot gave kisses suppliant.

CHAPTER II.

So therefore weeping, and weighing the weights of the mass, he assented to bear the yoke; now taught from before what labor and merit tortures, how public the care, who assenting to his own election, the Pontiff. To roses the bloody thorn to underlie [45] he doubts not, as a Pastor conscious of the age. And when Benedict was to him from the perennial fount the name, that growing he might become, and greater in second things, and so the Hero might convert his praise assumes the name of Boniface, into the praises of deeds, the Prelate thence Boniface [50] is called. Into gracious voices the modulating spirit sounds: but the people hastens: the Soldier tries to run into the hearing; the hope of Charles, conceived by praying, failed, God pitying. These things are worthy of relation, that, both to the Father, and to himself the gifts conferred not very acceptable to the King. [55] by the Church knowing, he averts his face and countenance. Nor is it lawful to violate the Mother, but that free she may betroth a man. Let whoever cast their eyes with sinister frauds beware, and let the very subjected hand of the Powerful dread: so glory excels.

CHAPTER III.

[60] Perchance it is acceptable to fore-taste in verse the fame of the Prelate: that the foreseen poems may make the senses radiate more strongly, and the deeds be tasted with an unknown triumph. He was sprung from Anagni: An illustrious house begot him, whom Anagni nourishes on a hill, the Gaetani man. Rich, as the verses of the Seers [65] insinuate, that city was, and ancient by report: but far set before in a greater grade is reported the flourishing one, to which it was conceded to produce in our time triple plants, which by the See of Peter the Monarch subject all the Chairs by right to the rule. [70] Among whom the Lord shines forth, to whom to mount the fasces was right. And the title of the Laws having obtained from of old and most worthy of such a grade on every side; he often bore laws for causes, and struck the foe often, and rebounding crushing the darts a victor often. The man had a high mind, a fertile youth [75] and a docile genius. Clever astuteness, prompt obedience, secure prudence to speak openly to the Prelates, made the way, by which drawn on high he might grow. Hence having obtained the office of the Papal Scribe, treating all things, illustrious in dictation, once [80] he shone forth in the red Cardinalate, a Levite, a Priest, remaining the Cardinal Benedict the Hero, now at the highest summit he commands. O the piety of Christ pitying in all things the Church! by whose tears and dire wound we are healed, a race blind by evil, blinded by the offenses Christ succoring His Church, [85] of our parents; while so great an Apex, who the ages, manners, Pontiffs, Clergy, Kings, Chiefs, and Leaders, and Gauls and Englishmen afar, and frauds and threats, and the regions of lands, and had reviewed the whole world, and the state of the Roman See; a veteran in it 90] is elected; the medicine indeed being weighed, equalling [then especially needing such a man: the languors; for thee, Christ God, if the nearest to us times we foresee, he succeeded prudent into arduous things in the midst of the floods. The garden of Campania such a one brought forth, and so great an offspring Anagni produced.

CHAPTER IV.

[95] Forthwith at the auspices, gleaming with a rosy veil in a gilded bridal-chamber, surrounded by the orb of the Brothers, who considering the losses, the Prelate having begun says: "The wounds of the lacerated Mother, alas the grief! we behold, and to dread the mishaps to come we are compelled. Alas! who of us would be ignorant of such great perils, such great [100] frauds? Who under a pure Prince would doubt, that the shameless ones tried to defile the color of the Church with stains by their deceits? what Spouse, about to please her husband, will keep for him the bed and the modesty of her brow, Jesus assisting: God is He who, spouse and author [105] and head, and virtue, and also the worthy reward of salvation. brought upon her through the simplicity of Celestine, The keel of the Church indeed suffered to waver by our demerits. For to you is known the virtue of the simple ignorance of Morrone; and how openly ignorant, unbridled, taken, seduced, and inexperienced, [110] prone to every gift, he confused all manners. Nothing of weight pondered, nothing of slow modesty of care, nor a beholder of the matter had there been: nay the virtue of words lay hidden closed. Were they known to himself, Brothers, which the bull had given, to which also now compelled in mind 115] we assented? Although the judgment of the mind dictates [he rescinds his acts, to demand again the offered gifts; nor do we believe," he says, "that it be lawful everywhere for any to enjoy the things conceded without guilt. A way is to be sought, by which rightly to be able to heal the diseases, lest the venom begin blandly [120] to creep. Since indeed, when it is long for us to seek each thing which lies hidden, a like medicine draws out the poison; and the coal, vomiting its lights, may consume every foul thing superimposed; and what is under the caves, may devour into ashes. Therefore we bid to be emptied [125] of strength the things indulged, and which Morro, refusing the Senate, the Cardinal Apexes, then the highest Hero conferred, and lavished gave; as the empty series noted, the limpid one of the Writing, to which a plate of lead by a thread

had clung. Not yours by a vow to demand by chance [130] counsel, O Chiefs, is the care, or to seek a vote: lo, the excess lies open, and the expiations of the people are clear." By the will perchance of God, the orbit then renewed on the 27th day of December. brought the feasts of sacred John, on which these things were done: as they read Rome to have done, when the savage and burning [135] Domitian, the deaths of Christ-worshippers, the Lord sent his soul to hell, extinguished by unjust swords. So desiring sterile lands to produce Ceres the cultivator burns the ferns with fires, or cuts with the plow in wavy furrows made in order; [140] the wounded earth, after the seeds, casts forth multiplied fruits.

CHAPTER V.

And although heaven poured forth the winter showers, and it were the custom rather to warm again the cold marrows then hastening to Rome, with kindled fires, than to traverse the fields with motions; yet that the See of Peter, oppressed with grief, [145] could enjoy liberty and revisit its Spouse; the dwellers of the Realm being admonished with grave discourse and salutary saying, praising the faith; and Charles the second, after monitions left to the Neapolitans and the King, that pious clemency feed the subjects of the Realm, worn by war and driven by vast labors; [150] the Prelate began the journey to Capua, and the mount of Cassino; thence by the bridge of Ceprano he crossed the rivers. And when through the spread fields Anagni was sought, he is received at Anagni, and the native rock receiving the Father, poured forth [155] foot-dances, bidden to meet with palms. Thither a great part of the noble Chiefs of the ancient City had come for the arrival of the Pope to bring the Senate: but, the Senate being taken, the Prelate hastening to reach the Roman walls, leaving his homeland and citizens, [160] continued his journey, until he should discern the high City. Nor did labor, or cold, or expense burden the wearied: so great quiet was to the minds, liberty being restored. Rome, as about to receive its spouse returning from the prison of the enemy, and he enters Rome poured forth to meet him. clothed in front with crowns, [165] goes to meet, and playing the Soldier and the Knight run out into the fields: and the Clergy chanting minister their incense to the Pontiff. First the temples of the Lateran receive the new Father, forthwith the hall of the Prince of the key-bearer Peter rejoicing received him going. [170] This place, this bridal-chamber, the festal seat also for consecrating.

ANNOTATIONS.

p. After the slaughter of Domitian, the Senate rescinded his acts.

q. Saucia, understand, the earth.

r. The castle of Ceprano, the boundary of the Pontifical dominion at the river Garigliano, once the Liris, is distant from Monte Cassino about 9 miles: and hence Anagni is nearly twice the distance away.

s. Namely of Old Rome.

t. That is the arbitration of electing two Senators, about to enter the Magistracy on the Kalends of January next.

u. Sumpto, i.e. elected, namely the Senate.

In the Manuscript this verse was thus read: "Nec labor aut fessos sumptusve gravare labores" and in the margin it was noted, i.e. they burdened. But that the last word, by the defect of the word algor, which had fallen out, was substituted by the copyist, wishing somehow to supply the verse, I altogether believe: I would rather even read, they burdened. The rest which I have corrected are these.

* v. 2 sic, I read, sit.

* 3 ortu, r. ostro.

* 4 quo, r. quæ

* 39 culpans, r. culpam.

* 45 sic, r. ceu.

* 57 senili, r. sinistris.

* 60 carmina, r. carmine.

* 62 gustantur, r. gustentur.

* 93 collem r. colle.

* 92 ortus r. Hortus.

* 102 dolis, r. dolos.

* 106 mutare, r. nutare.

* 112 Spectatrix veri, r. Spectatrixve rei.

* 116 distare, r. dictare.

* 129 Hæserit r. Hæserat.

* 165 laudensque, r. ludensque or plaudensque.

* 170 sacrandus, r. sacrando.

BOOK II.

Of the coronation of Boniface VIII.

Preface

Since the things which are described in this Book by our Author cannot be sufficiently understood, The order observed in the year 1191, without an exact knowledge of the ceremonies usual in acts of this kind; besides their declaration to be subjoined below, according to the Pontifical printed at Venice in the year 1561, it pleases from Cencius the Chamberlain (who lived and wrote only a hundred years before Boniface, made afterward a Cardinal and finally in the year 1216 Roman Pontiff under the name of Honorius III) to transcribe the order of the election and the Pontifical Ordination, from the Annals of Cardinal Baronius at the year 1191: and it has thus:

[1] The Roman Pontiff being dead and buried, all the Cardinals return to their own according to the ancient custom. concerning the manner of election, But on the second day they convene in the Church, and the Mass of the dead being sung, all likewise according to the ancient custom withdraw. But on the third day all again gathered in the church, and the Mass of the Holy Spirit being first celebrated there, they treat of the election. And the will of the Cardinals being scrutinized by some of them, upon whom the greater and better part of the Cardinals shall have agreed, the prior of the Deacons enmantles him with the red Pluviale, and the same imposes on the Elected a name; made in the Lateran, and then two of the greater Cardinals lead him by the right hand to the altar, where prostrate he adores, the Primicerius with the school of the Cantors and the Cardinals singing, "We praise Thee, O God."

[2] Which being done, by the Cardinal Bishops he is led to the Seat behind the altar, and in it (as is worthy) he is placed: in which while the Elected sits, he receives all the Cardinal Bishops, and whomever he pleases at his feet, afterward at the kiss of peace. And rising from the Seat, he is led by the Cardinals to the stone seat through the portico, which seat is called the Stercoraria, which is before the portico of the Basilica of the Savior of the Lateran Patriarchate; and in it the Cardinals themselves honorably place the same Elected, after which the Elected is lifted from the stercoraria seat, that it may truly be said, "Raising up the needy from the dust, and lifting the poor from the dung-heap, that he may sit with princes and hold the throne of glory." After a little while, the Elected standing beside the same seat, receives from the lap of the Chamberlain three handfuls of pennies, and casts them saying; "Silver and gold is not mine, but what I have, I give to thee."

[3] But then the Prior of the Basilica of the Savior of the Lateran Patriarchate takes the same Elected, with one of the Cardinals or one of his Brothers. But coming through the same portico, beside the Basilica of the Savior, it is acclaimed: he receives acclamations, "Lord Celestine (namely him about whom Cencius wrote these things, the Third of his name) St. Peter has chosen." And so he is led by them even to the steps of the gate, which gate is at the entrance of the Palace to those coming from the church to the palace itself: and there the Judges, and before the oratory of St. Sylvester he receives the ferule and the keys, receiving the same Elected, lead him through the palace to the basilica of St. Sylvester. But when it is come before that Basilica (over whose arch, which is sustained by two porphyry columns, is a certain image of the Savior, which struck once on the forehead by a certain Jew sent forth blood, as today is discerned) the same Elected sits at the right in the porphyry seat: where the Prior of the basilica of St. Lawrence of the palace gives him the ferule, which is the sign of governance and correction, and the keys of that basilica and of the sacred Lateran palace: because specially to Peter the prince of the Apostles was given the power of closing and opening, and binding and loosing, and through that Apostle to all the Roman Pontiffs.

[4] And with that ferule and keys he comes to the other seat, like and of the same stone: and then he renders back to the same Prior both the ferule and those keys. he is girded with a girdle and purse, In which while he rested a little while, he is girded by the same Prior with a red girdle of silk, on which hangs a purple purse, in which are twelve seals of precious stones and musk. Which Elected indeed in those two seats ought so to sit, as if he should seem to lie between two little beds, that is, that he recline between the primacy of Peter prince of the Apostles, and the preaching of Paul doctor of the nations. In the girdle is noted, the continence of chastity; in the purse, the treasury, by which the poor of Christ and the widows are nourished; in the twelve seals, the power of the twelve Apostles is designated; the musk is enclosed, to perceive the odor, as the Apostle says, "We are the good odor of Christ to God." In which second seat while the Elected sits, he receives all the Officials of the Palace at his feet, and he is led to the oratory, the palatine one of St. Lawrence, and afterward at the kiss: and then sitting there he receives from the hand of the Chamberlain silver pennies of the value of ten shillings, and casts them upon the people: this he does three times saying, "He hath dispersed, he hath given to the poor, his justice remaineth for ever and ever." These things performed he is led through that portico to the icons of the Apostles, which came to Rome by sea with no guide, and enters the basilica of St. Lawrence: in which after he shall have performed a prolix prayer before his own

and special altar, he goes to the Papal chamber; where when he has paused at his will, he goes to the table.

[5] But after these things on the next Lord's Day, the Elected, with all the Orders of the sacred Palace and the Roman Nobles, on the following Sunday he goes to be consecrated at St. Peter's, goes to the church of B. Peter; and before the high altar, as is contained in the Order, by the Bishop of Ostia specially and by the other Bishops of the Curia he is consecrated; this being added, that if perchance the Bishop of Ostia be not present, the Archpresbyter of Porto or of Velletri ought to be present at the consecration. Which consecration being finished, the Prior of St. Lawrence of the sacred Palace places the Pallium upon the altar: which the Prior himself ought to prepare with his own hand: and at once the Archdeacon with the second Deacon gives it into the hand of the Pontiff, consecrated he receives the Pallium, and the Archdeacon alone says to the Pontiff: "Receive the Pallium, namely the plenitude of the Pontifical office, to the honor of almighty God, and of His most glorious Virgin Mother, and of the blessed Apostles Peter and Paul, and of the holy Roman Church": and nothing else. And at once the Archdeacon himself, with the Prior of the basilica, fits the aforesaid Pallium upon the Pontiff, three golden pins being inserted before and behind and on the left side, in the head of which are bound three hyacinth stones: and so adorned the Pontiff comes to the altar, and there celebrates honorably the Mass. And it is to be noted that the praises are said by the Archdeacon with the Cardinals, Subdeacons and Scriniarii, the Latin Epistle with the Greek, the Latin Gospel with the Greek, and all the other solemnities then are done as on the second feria after Easter.

[6] But the Mass being celebrated, he returns to the Palace Crowned, with a procession and the honor of arches, the representation of the Law by the Jews, he returns with solemn pomp to the Lateran, and of the censers by the Roman Clerics, and with as many casts and so great a quantity made, as on the second feria after Easter. And it is to be known that all the Cardinals, the Greeks, the Primicerius with the school of Cantors, the Prefect, the Senators, the Judges and Advocates, the Scriniarii, the naval Prefects, the school of the Crosses, and the Chaplains, receive such a presbyterium and so given, as on the day of Easter above named they receive: where a donative is lavished on each, but the Subdeacons each have single meloquini, which yet is not done in any of the aforesaid solemnities: for there are not given to them, as is found written there, even if they were thirty or more, but twelve meloquini. Also all the schools of the Palace, the Roman Clerics for the censer, and the Jews for the representation of the Law and the structure of the arch, receive such a presbyterium and so, as is given in the other coronations of the Lord Pope. The Butler moreover and the Marshal, both of the eating and of the other gifts, are remunerated likewise, except that they do not have the heads of swine prepared, nor of the claret: the Household also and the Curials have a presbyterium according to the will of the Chamberlain.

[7] But if the election was made in the church of St. Peter, after the nomination the Elected is led by two Cardinals, But if the election was made in the Vatican, singing "We praise Thee, O God," to the altar: where prostrate after he has adored, he is placed in the seat behind the altar: and there he receives the Bishops and Cardinals and whomever he pleases at his feet, and afterward at the kiss of peace: and on the next Lord's Day consecrated, the Mass being there sung with the solemnities above named, and crowned, he returns to the Palace, all the other things being done as is above narrated in order. But before he enters the Palace, he descends to the stercoraria seat: and there sitting as is the custom, some things are changed in the said order; and making the cast thrice repeated as is above said, he is taken by the Cardinals, and led through that portico to the church of the Lateran basilica: and ascending the seat behind the altar, he receives the Canons of the same church at his feet and then at the kiss of peace: which being done he goes through the Palace to the seat of St. Sylvester, and there he sits, and does all things in the same place and beforehand, as is above said ordained.

[8] But if he be elected outside the city and not consecrated, all things are done in the order above said, whether the descent and consecration of the same Elected be made in the church of St. Peter, or in the Lateran church the same Elected descend. also if elected outside the city, But if he be elected and consecrated outside the City, and come to the City from the Lateran side, all the Roman Clerics meet him outside the City clothed, with crosses and censers in procession; and so he enters the Lateran church, and all the other things are done as is above narrated, this excepted that when he shall have descended to the stercoraria seat, and going through the portico shall have entered the Lateran church; and entering it let him descend to the Lateran he does not at once ascend to the altar, or to the seat, but coming lower in the major choir before the Crosses, "We praise Thee, O God" being finished, he says: "Our help is in the name of the Lord," etc. "Blessed be the name of the Lord," etc. This being done he is led to the altar, and prostrate he prays. Who after he shall have prayed ascends the major seat, and there receives the Canons of the same church at his feet and at the kiss of peace. But if he shall have descended consecrated to the church of St. Peter, all things are done as in the Lateran church, this excepted that there is no stercoraria seat there: or the Vatican. and on the next following day the Mass being celebrated not crowned he returns to the Palace: before he enter the church let him descend to the stercoraria seat, and there sitting as is the custom and making the cast (as is above narrated) he is taken by the Prior of the Lateran, and with one Cardinal is led through the portico to the church, and does all things as is above denoted.

CHAPTER I.

Of the ceremonies of the Papal coronation made before the Vatican Basilica.

CHAPTER I.

And now the day to be celebrated by the sacred triumph of the Pope rises. Titan serene had begun to purge the heaven, and the beam of bright Phoebus from the rising The Elected, clothed Pontifically the Aquarius, conquered by the heat, recognized more strongly. [5] And the Father, gleaming with the rosy veil of dawn, enters the sacred temples of Peter: and the Mantle being left, he is clothed, girded with a girdle, the snowy Amice; and his head is veiled with a woven radiant necklace mitre, with all the sacred vestments, not his face, wont to surround the bare neck [10] of the Pontiff: and the carbuncle gleams set in tawny gold, and various gems shine on his breast, and the stole hangs cast over the lowered arms. Nor was the byssus of the tunic lacking, and the sleeved garment of the Levite dalmatic; and the capacious form of the Chasuble from the vault, [15] about to have long folds afterward, drawn together by the ministers. Horns he bears on his forehead, signifying the double law: namely the new Law of Christ, and the old figure of the other, which his own to know, which the same Omnipotent founded. The glove adorns his hand, and the ring 20] his fingers, and the Maniple girds his left elbow. [together with the Cardinals, And also the Cardinal Chiefs, as the distinct order gave to each, took the habits with no difference of dye, for the color tinging the garment in linen was alike. So therefore the day shone adorned: [25] so also the Pontiffs of the neighboring people, into the city summoned, were present at the feasts: so the two-horned throng whether by chance or of free will it were, about to see the rule of the one governing: so the small Roman band attending, girded with the Levites, rushed, and tunicked for the Realm.

CHAPTER II

[30] Adorned with these things the sublime Apex, bearing the sandals, the ornaments of the feet, on right and left sat down in the bracelets of the Chiefs: and in the midst came to the high and excellent honor of the faith, the venerable gift he proceeds to the altar of St. Peter: to Christ-worshippers, the altar of Peter, hewn of marble, [35] and bearing on tawny porphyry columns from the chisel four of silver a heaven ciborium, which time into black had turned; and under the covering of the copper poured beneath holding the sacred bodies, venerable through the whole world, of ethereal Peter, and of Paul also gracious to the Nations [40] the Doctor: where the Apex alone and the Priest alone takes the burning Chrism: for this glory befits the First. And when on bended knee prostrate to the seat, and on the gold the Lord had fallen down (and at once every fillet around of the Pontiffs suppliant on the faldstool had poured after the other ceremonies of the Episcopal ordination, [45] its breast) and had resounded with glad murmur the Turns, and they had pressed the sacred palms on the Leader's head, and the suspended book, not closed, over his head on high should be present; he, the Prelate to whom Ostia is subject, leading the Tiber into the sea, his face turned upon him [50] who was to be consecrated, and the same standing before the altars, begins to pour the liquid chrism of the ampulla upon his head, and with a short finger to compass the crown, he is anointed by the Bishop of Ostia: and to fill the hands. Why not? if the balsams sign mixed with no false deceits, but of free will green. [55] Why these mixed with oil? They note in the Prelate fame the balsam, breathing the odor of the warming citron, and the oil, that the mind shines under the light of God: for it teaches, to conserve fame famous to the people and Christ the house. Why is the spherical neck wet? [60] Why the hands? Lo, the face of works signed through the limbs, which pious, while the palms are consecrated with the bland olive. on his head and hands, But the balsam smearing the top of the head signing the acumen of reason, making the fires of the sacred Spirit. These besides, how venerable is the power [65] of him, the anointed brow teaches: and the smeared hand testifies the act of the office. Now to close the begun work the Consecrator hastened, where the mystic words gleam with dyes, and the senses lie open filled with gravity.

CHAPTER III.

The Pallia then on his shoulders, white with black crosses, [70] the reddening Levite placed, on which golden needles fixed pure sapphires: and praising the necklace, he bears the sublime gift: "Not bounded by a sure limit to be able, but receive the powers poured abundantly into every kind of men, with no difference of sex; he receives the Pallium from the Cardinal Deacon: [75] to the honor renewed of the Father unbegotten, of the Begotten also and of the gracious Breath, of the untouched Virgin Mother from the rising of the born one, and of Peter and Paul the Leaders, by the title of the Roman Church, receive this sign of so great virtue, O Apex, taken from the body [80] of the ethereal Prince." After this consecrated, sitting on the increased bridal-chamber, the highest Boniface the Hero, the Assembly poured at his legs with lowered knee, and the other Fathers he received, and kisses everywhere to the horned ones mitred bishops exhibited; clemency with a worthy countenance he receives the kisses of the foot: [85] is laid open, and the highest power with bent knee: for it befits the fasces to radiate serene to the small, and to show the man to the great, if with their nostrils they breathe pride.

CHAPTER IV.

Thus rising with these things, the canticles of the born Christ he begins, the Angelic voice and the trumpet-sound 90] he brings forth, and completes the solemnities of the famous Mass. [he begins the Gloria in excelsis, Not the other Chiefs: for the anointed Crowns not first in the feasts before the Epistle dictates the senses the throng is silent; or the Prince sings, but the new recruit tastes from the same diapason various voices, the throat being struck:

[95] then the choir resounds, doubles its wounds; this one seeks the unison, firmed on a stable hook, and the liquid voices, with wandering error in modulation, through the middle, and through all the ground, and through the heights it firms. the choir following. That Roman tone is eager; the clear Diapente [100] that one sings; that one strikes the grave fourth, the Diatesseron, slippery into voice; the swift Italian knows not to stand, himself rubbing the notes again, like clouds the drops: but in breath better the Gaulish voice, by law difficult sings before, and doubling the bindings with warbling points [105] has the likeness of bronze struck on hard anvils. Nor only the Clergy, but using the sacred garments the Patrons of causes were present; and with great tumult, while the Levite sings the high praises of the Pope, to exclaim the celebrated Praises piously after the wont.

CHAPTER V.

[110] Meanwhile, crowned with titles, with blood and arms illustrious men, drawing their name from the Roman stock, into the merited honors of so great virtue, The Roman Nobles come over: had borne themselves into the midst, and kept the feast, with a gilded gleaming toga, a band associating. [115] Of these the devout house of the excelling Bear of the Church, and bearing its lofty countenance more lowered the festive Colonna with jests, and also the mild Savelli, the elder Stephanis, the Conti, the Annibaldi offspring, and the Prefect of the city, a great omen without strength, [120] and the other Chiefs, over this the Campanian, and all the Nobility, the Clergy, the people, the commons, the learned, and the infant, and the grave matron, the youth, the one broken by years, the stranger, or the citizen, in troops to behold the triumph sacred in the porticoes, and partly to visit the temple [125] and to hear the trumpets, to confound the beats of voices. Now long it pleases to have unfolded the labors of the office, and the pious triumph of the Masses within the enclosures of the temple, to have described in meter: thence the Realm to weave for the mind and the Mass being finished, and the soul, and the rites, which the Clergy keeps from of old [130] going forth outside, the people applauding the Crown.

CHAPTER VII.

There is a space excelling by steps, paved of marble everywhere under the open sky, to which lies the lowest earth, into a square, and better perhaps into an ample way, on the steps of the Basilica of St. Peter, which great and broad lies open, and which is eminent with high [135] porticoes, and the open dens of the house to the lights. Hence it is easy to behold the Diadem of the Leader, to discern the togaed series diffused: in this place a fit throne and bridal-chamber is set: which forthwith the Hero, as before, distinguished in the chasuble varying the color, [140] sat upon, treading the benches with sacred feet. Then the elder Levite with his hand the Diadem, the ancient sign of the Empire, white with the bark of Peacock feathers, with gold woven with radiant gems fenced about in a circle, on whose top a Coal the new Pontiff is crowned, [145] and beneath the greatest of gems vomits flames, placed on his head: and it took the figure of a Sphere, receiving the frigium, once empty of the splendor of stones, but full of snowy whiteness, with a sharp top woven, now in our time increased with a gem. [150] This Caesar once holding the Roman heights, commanding the world, a Monarch great in piety, [the tiara or kingdom, such as St. Sylvester is said to have received from Constantine.] Constantine the Apex established, when first in the orb the Lord purged in the sacred font, his own Realm or Phrygium with the hands of Sylvester pressed on his head, [155] and humble performed the office of groom, by him cleansed from leprosy, the Prince admonished through dreams. Who, although on earth the successor of Peter the open and closed heaven can hold far from obstacle, yet the sacred Confessor himself lay hidden in caves, [160] zealous for the palm of martyrdom with devout breast: until borne he stood before; and heard the speaking Augustus. By the leadership of Peter and Paul, after the hated crime, and the gates posted in the crime, to Christ and the true faith and the holy doctrine also [165] baptism is given to the one to come, the miracles are clear. O immense piety of God, spacious through all! O virtue! O worthy salvation! to whom it is fair to spare these, to whom inspiring by pitying to know mishaps, and to suffer with the wretched, that men believe themselves great, [170] and Fortune brief, to the subjected to lay open a right hand innocuous; that they believe themselves to have trodden proud things, while they overcome their own minds, now bloody with slaughter.

ANNOTATIONS.

p. By a white spotting: but how this from the chisel? Or does he wish to indicate columns not simply porphyry, but distinguished with insertions of white marble engraving?

q. The silver heaven. This is the Ciborium which so often is read in the Lives of the Pontiffs in Anastasius the Librarian, and namely in St. Gregory, "He made a ciborium for B. Peter the Apostle, with its four columns of pure silver."

r. For at least a part of the small bones of St. Paul were placed in the altar of B. Peter.

s. That is, upon the carpet, in which gold was woven: which in the Roman Pontifical, where are described the rites to be applied in the ordination of a Pontiff, is thus read: "All things being prepared let the Elected come to the altar: and the mitre being laid aside let him lie down upon the faldstool, and pray." But the Faldstool is a folding and low chair, of whose etymology various authors various things. To me it seems a Lombardic word, from Falden to fold, and stoul a seat, in which for euphony's sake l is changed into r, so that Faldestorium is for Faldestolio. But Falden is a certain middle dialect between the German falten, and the Belgic Vauden: and so an etymon is had suited to the thing itself, nor far-sought.

t. But now the Pontifical concedes only stools to the rest, upon which inclined they may pray.

u. So I read, where it was written Vias, and I understand not only the Kyrie eleison, which alternately or in turns is said: but also the Litanies, which after the Kyrie eleison are prescribed, if the Choir did not then sing them, but he with the rest recited them.

x. That is, they had pressed: for the Elected sitting after the Litanies without the mitre; the Consecrator and Assistants and the rest of the Bishops place both palms upon the head, saying, "Receive the Holy Spirit."

y. Yet first the same Consecrator places the book of the Gospels upon the neck of the Elected.

z. The thumb of the right hand being dipped in the sacred Chrism, he anoints the head of the Elected, forming first the sign of the Cross, with which he may embrace the whole Crown: then he anoints the rest of the Crown. But after various prayers, which the Pontifical has, he also anoints the hands.

α. Fucis, i.e. Figuris. For the Preface which is soon subjoined, as it is had in the Pontifical, prolixly mentions the Pontifical habit, prescribed by God of old to Moses, that the following posterity might take the sense of understanding from the examples of the former ones, lest the erudition of doctrine should be lacking to any age, since both among the ancients the very species of significations obtained reverence, and among us the proofs of things were more certain than the enigmas of figures etc., more things pertaining hither.

β. The Pallium is of white wool, which the Pope uses over the other vestments.

γ. He calls figuratively the necklace the Pallium itself, which is to the Pontiff for a torque or necklace appended at the neck.

δ. The words of the Prior of the Deacons, placing the Pallium on the Pontiff, are these: "Receive the Pallium, the holy plenitude of the Pontifical Office, to the honor of almighty God, and of the most glorious Virgin Mary His mother, and of the blessed Apostles Peter and Paul, and of the Holy Roman Church."

ε. Apex, i.e. O Prelate or Pope: for in this sense the Author uses that word again and again.

ζ. The eminent Chair the Pontifical calls the throne.

η. With horns, that is, with mitred Bishops; receiving them not only at the kiss of the foot and hand but also of the mouth, which grace now is done only to Cardinals, and indeed to all, even not Bishops.

θ. That is, if they breathe pride.

ι. Glory to God in the highest.

κ. With the same: but neither thus do I grasp the sense as much of this as of the preceding verses, which I leave to a more sagacious conjecturer to explain: it seems however that something is here said to have been done by Boniface beyond the custom of the other Bishops.

λ. For the diapason is in double proportion as two to one. But these and the other following things require an Antiquary skilled in Music, by the inexperienced, however much the Notes be accumulated, not easily to be understood.

μ. Diatesron, contracted for Diatessaron.

ν. The Guerblae seem to be conjugations of several notes (ours call them hooks), although Querulis is written in the transcript of the Sulmona Codex. That Gu is put for W is most clear, but a gyre to the Germans is called Wirbel, to the Belgians Wervel, which best squares with that musical figure, which twists several notes at once as it were into a gyre.

ξ. The matter will be understood if you consult the Pontifical: for there you will read: "The prayers being said the Pontiff sits, and the Prior of the Deacons with the ferule descends to the confession of B. Peter with the Subdeacons, Auditors, Scriniarii, that is, with the Secretaries and Advocates: who being distributed into two lines, so that in each line there be of every order, they make the Praises of the Pontiff, standing with heads uncovered, the Pope and all the others sitting in their place. The Prior of the Deacons begins alone with loud voice as if reading: 'Hear, O Christ.' The Subdeacons, Auditors, Scriniarii, and Advocates respond, 'To our Lord N. by God decreed supreme Pontiff and universal Pope, Life.' And so it is said thrice by the Prior, and as often responded by the others. And these Praises are closed by short Litanies in this manner, 'Savior of the world,' and subjoining, 'Do thou help him,' and that thrice: then twice, 'Holy Mary' and 'Do thou help him': and finally once, 'St. Michael' etc., naming from each order of the Saints one or another, and subjoining 'Do thou help him.' But note, that the Advocates themselves also used the sacred garments, that is were clothed in Pluvials, as below will more appear."

π. For he who, as now, so also then wholly depended on the nod of the Pope, chosen by him: now however he is called Governor: but of old it was the dignity first after the Imperial, even when the Consuls still stood in name only.

ρ. Turmis, that is, in troops they flowed together to behold etc.

ς. That is, to the Coronation to be made by the imposition of the Kingdom, i.e. the tiara.

τ. The Pontifical: "The praises being finished, the Epistle is said in Latin and Greek, and it is proceeded in the Mass as on other occasions to the end … the Pontiff … with all, as prepared for Mass, proceeds to the platform upon the steps of the basilica of the Prince of the Apostles."

υ. For it could be called not so much a Square, as a Way, which before the Vatican basilica was once stretched, but now is extended into a most ample area and surrounded with porticoes, very many buildings on both sides being cast down.

φ. That the Pontifical Tiaras were once woven of white peacock feathers, hence perhaps you will first learn.

κ. Carbo, i.e. Carbuncle, Pyrope.

ψ. The formula with which the Tiara (which is now triple, of old it was simple) is now given, is this: "Receive the Tiara adorned with three crowns, that thou mayst know thyself to be the Father of Princes and Kings, the Ruler of the world, on earth the Vicar of our Savior Jesus Christ, to whom is honor and glory, for ever and ever. Amen."

aa. It is indicated that this Tiara was once simply white without gems.

bb. That Constantine used a gemmed diadem we have also from some of his coins: but that the Crown led around the lower part of the Pontifical Tiara has an origin of this kind, I would wish to read more certainly proved. Meanwhile I see the images of the Pontiffs, as they are now had, to express all the predecessors of Sylvester with bare head, and him first among them to be seen capped, or covered with the Tiara (which has the form of the old Roman cap): nor does the conjecture displease which long since presents itself to my mind, namely that Sylvester, either of his own motion, or by the command of Constantine, wished to assume that most known sign of liberty, because the Church hitherto groaning under the servitude of the gentile Emperors, was through the Christian Constantine in a certain manner emancipated, and made of its own right and endowed by the same Emperor with very many liberties.

cc. It is difficult to say which of the Emperors first deferred this office of honor to the Roman Pontiff, not therefore the less is the beginning of this rite gratuitously referred to Constantine.

dd. What about the leprosy and baptism of Constantine celebrated at Rome through St. Sylvester, from his Acts even in the judgment of Baronius fabulous, everywhere believed are here assumed, weighed we shall give on the day on which Constantine is venerated as a Saint, 21 May.

Besides things noted enough many: a few changed I indicate:

* v. 4 Portior, I read Fortius

* 14 forfice, r. fornice.

* 28 subestans, r. subadstans.

* 46 presset, r. pressent.

* 58 decet, r. docet.

* 63 oblimat, r. obliniat.

* 72 limine r. limite.

* 87 Est, r. Et.

* 90 complet, r. complent.

* 128 mihi, r. menti.

* 129 animi, r. animo.

* 145 cubito, r. subtus.

* 165 venturum, r. venturo.

CHAPTER II.

Of the order of the Procession from the Vatican to the Lateran.

The order of the Procession was wont hitherto to be observed thus. First the Cross; second the caparisoned horse to the right; third those carrying twelve small banners; fourth two naval Prefects, clothed in pluvials; fifth the foreign Archbishops and Bishops; sixth the Abbots of the City; seventh the Cardinal Bishops; eighth the Presbyter Cardinals; ninth the Scriniarii and Advocates clothed in silks; tenth both the Regionary Subdeacons, and the school of Cantors with the Greeks; eleventh the Subdeacons of the Basilicas, and of the Lord Pope; twelfth the Deacon Cardinals nearest the Pope, go two by two. Before the Pontiff a little apart goes the Prior of the Regionary Subdeacons with a towel; thirteenth the Lord Pope crowned goes: after the Lord Pope the Prefect of the City, clothed in a precious mantle, and shod with one Zanca, golden, the other red; and around him the Judges clothed in pluvials. But the Archdeacon, if there were one, ought to go between the Lord Pope and the Cardinal Deacons, of which Archdeacon and of the Prior of the Lateran Basilica of the Palace, carrying the ferules, it is to order the Procession; but now in place of the Archdeacon the Prior of the Deacons does that office. The Prior of the Basilica, beside the Primicerius between the Cardinal Deacons and the Subdeacons ought to go Lord Jacobus Gaetani etc.

THE ORDER OF THE PROCESSION

From the Roman Pontifical printed at Venice 1561.

First go the Valisarii of the Cardinals in their order, and then their households, and all the laity mixed as it shall please them. Then in order these shall follow: the Barber and Tailor of the Pope with red valises, in which are the garments which pertain to our most Holy Lord: the Familiars and Shield-bearers of the Pope: the lesser Nobles of the Curia and the Nephews of the Lord Cardinals: the stairs of the Pope, covered with red cloth, which a white horse carries, led by one of the Grooms, clothed in a purple garment: who after the Pope ascends the horse with that stair, goes in his order, bearing with the right hand the reins of the horse, with the left a red staff. These are followed by twelve Couriers of the Pope, also clothed in red garments, on horseback, carrying twelve red banners, two by two: then thirteen Banner-bearers of the Regions of the City, with their banners: two others, with two Cherubim upon lances, in red garments, and let all be on horseback. [Here the editor by his own judgment in a long parenthesis bids the order of the banners to be changed, and the Banner of the Order of Jerusalem with a white Cross on red, he bids to follow the Banner of the Teutonics in which is a black Cross on white: but if the Banner of the Crusade were present, a red Cross on white (because it is universal of all Christians), that by best right ought to be placed in a worthier place, that is the last.] Then the Banner-bearer of the Roman People: then the white Banner with a black Cross, which the Procurator of the Order of B. Mary of the Teutonics carries: the Banner with the arms of the Pope, which some great Noble carries: and lastly the red Banner of the Order of Jerusalem with a white Cross, which its Procurator carries. These five Banner-bearers shall have horses mailed or barded, and covered with silken cloth even to the heels of the horses with their insignia: but they themselves shall be armed, as if they were about to enter battle, the helmet excepted, with cloaks of cloth also silken with the insignia: and each Banner-bearer shall have four footmen with buckram cloaks, with the insignia of their Lords. After the Banners proceed twelve white horses without riders, adorned with golden trappings, covered with crimson, which twelve grooms lead, clothed in a red garment, and carrying a red staff in the left. These are followed by four Nobles, carrying four crimson caps upon certain staves, who are called honorary Shield-bearers. The Chamberlains then follow, riding in their habit: the lay Orators and not Prelates, together with the Barons and greater Nobles. Then the Apostolic Subdeacon, with the Papal Cross and his Colleagues, all prepared as in Mass, and beside the Cross two Master Doorkeepers with their rods. After these twelve familiars of the Pope, clothed in a red garment, carrying twelve kindled torches before the Sacrament of the Body of Christ, on foot. Then two familiars of the Sacristan on horseback, also clothed in red, carrying silver lanterns with a light before the Sacrament. And after them is led by a familiar of the Sacristan, also clothed in red and having a staff in his left, a white horse, gentle, adorned as those twelve, carrying the Sacrament, having at its neck a little bell well tinkling: and above is carried a baldachin with the insignia of the Pope and of the Sacrament, by the Roman citizens, who change among themselves thirteen times, that each Region may have its part. After the Sacrament rides immediately the Sacristan, who, as the other Prelates, has a horse wholly covered with buckram; and he and all the others are prepared as in Mass, with the paraments and mitres.

Then follow two naval Prefects, and in their absence two Nobles, clothed as the Advocates and Secretaries except the almuce: and after them the Advocates and Secretaries themselves with almuces. The Cantors then ride with surplices: then the Acolytes, the Clerics of the Chamber, and the Auditors, with surplices over the rochet: the Greek and Latin Subdeacon, and the Greek Deacon and the Latin one as in Mass. Then follow the Prelates with covered horses, and they with mitre and pluvial; the foreign Abbots, the Bishops, the Archbishops: the Abbots of the City: the Bishops assisting the Pope; the Patriarchs and the Deacons Cardinals with Dalmatics, the Presbyters Cardinals with Planetas, the Cardinal Bishops with Pluvials. There proceed two Deacons assisting the Pope and between them in the midst the Prior of the Deacons, if he himself said the Gospel. The Prior of the Deacons ought to carry the ferule in his hand, and to order the whole Procession, and that being ordered to ride in his place.

At length proceeds the supreme Pontiff, upon a white horse, caparisoned, covered from the rear part with a crimson cloth, under a baldachin, which eight great Nobles or Orators carry. When the Pope by the stair, which I mentioned above, ascends the horse, the greater Prince who is present, even if he were King or Emperor, holds the stirrup of the Papal horse, and then leads the horse by the bridle a little. If the Emperor or a King were alone, that is, were there not another King, they alone would lead the horse with the right hand: but if there were another King, the worthier would hold the bridle on the right, the other on the left: if there be no Kings, let the worthier lead the horse: and after the Emperor, King, or other great Prince has led the horse a little, let two other great Nobles be substituted in their place: and let them change. But if the Pontiff were borne not on a horse, but on a chair; the four greater Princes, even if among them the Emperor and any greatest Prince were present, in honor of the Savior Jesus Christ, ought to carry that chair with the Pontiff on their shoulders a little: but there shall be present also four strong familiars of the Pontiff who may sustain the weight; so that the Princes themselves, in sign of pious religion and reverence, rather than to undergo the burden, may seem to have applied their hands; who also shall be changed, according to the disposition of the men and the journey. Likewise also the eight Nobles, who carry the baldachin over the head of the Pontiff, shall be changed after some space, and ascending their horses shall ride in their order; and in their place noble Roman Citizens shall carry the baldachin to the Lateran, and shall be changed in turns, as we said of the baldachin of the Sacrament.

Before the Pontiff the Conservators, the Heads of the regions, and other Magistrates and Nobles of the City on foot shall go before; and Praetorian soldiers with them, girded with swords about a hundred, and carrying a staff in their hands, for the guard of the body of the Pontiff. Around the Pontiff, sometimes before, sometimes after, shall ride the Marshal or Soldan of the Curia, with two little sacks

of moneys before the chair, and shall cast those moneys upon the people, to remove the press. The first cast of moneys he shall make when the Pontiff begins to move himself, another at the Bridge of Hadrian, then in the area at Monte Giordano, thence in the area of Parione, then another at St. Mark's, afterward at St. Adrian's, and finally wherever he shall see a great press near the Pontiff: and that he may more easily be able to pass, to the transverse part he shall cast the moneys. After the Pontiff immediately follow two secret Chamberlains, holding in the midst the Auditor of the Rota the Dean, who serves with the mitre; and then two Physicians with the principal Secretary in the midst, if he is not a Prelate. Then follows the umbrella of red color, which one Sergeant of arms, the helmet excepted wholly armed, on horseback carries. Lastly ride, the Vice-chamberlain if he is not prepared, and all the Prelates not prepared, the Protonotaries, the Auditor of the contradicted if he is not prepared, and likewise the Corrector of letters (who if they be prepared, ride in the place of their promotion) and all the togaed. The Vice-chamberlain carries a staff in his hand: and it pertains to him to take care, that the order given by the Prior of the Deacons be kept in the Procession. And according to the ancient customs, the Chamberlain of the Pope does not carry the ferule, if he is a Cardinal, but his Vicar and the Vice-chamberlain: because it pertains not to the Cardinal, but to the Chamberlain. In this order therefore they proceed to the Lateran. Thus far that order: in whose description occurs a barbarous word of less known signification, Boccasinus, about which the Romans being asked respond, that it is a kind of linen cloth excelling in fineness, just as to the Belgians is that which they call Cambric; and therefore serves for forming lanterns, but is brought from the East, whence also I think the reason of the name to be sought thence from which the city of Bokhara of Asia at the Oxus river also offers itself: but I do not wish here to divine.

THE METER OF JACOBUS THE CARDINAL.

CHAPTER VIII

Therefore when after a little while it seemed good to proceed to the Fathers at the beginning, the high Cross of God, set above the high ones, 175] gleaming with a huge shaft, is borne on high. [The Cross being carried before After it the caparisoned horse, uncovered before, and veiled having obtained the back of red Scarlet, swanlike to the right is borne. The Banners follow in order to twice six: and in pluvials both and the banners, [180] the naval Prefects come; whom forthwith all the fillet of the Pontiffs white with consecrated head follows: the Roman coming swells the number, and the Abbot adds: behind these to proceed with slow step the Prelates follow, the venerable band of the Pontiffs, one part of the Senate, [185] sets about: the other part hedged in with closed planetas the worthy Presbyters to succeed in their gravity. But the throng disputes, stretched in a long order, of the Scribes, and the Learned at once, and one professed in the laws, to follow these so great Fathers; and the assembly of singers 190] with the Greeks and other men, who set the learned one [the Cantors, the sword-bearing Leader, to chant, behind the backs of the former proceed: and a like band, tunicked through the limbs, to the Pontiff of the Roman City bore the last the Cardinals, ranks, where the thread of the straight wing we kept, [195] we the wedge of the Levites, we that of the Senate, clothed with Dalmatic togas, one noble part. Forthwith there follows, mounting horses covered everywhere with white cloths, a legion, but joined the two-horned one two trumpeters, that it might be able to shine on the festal day and in the triumphs [200] it had made. In this series the Chiefs to proceed the rite teaches: this also (lest perchance it perish for the age) the monuments hold in writings; but to go by the straight path who could? It is hard to keep the maniples unlearned and learned men, where very much urges [205] the impetus, and various add themselves to the glad assemblies.

CHAPTER IX

And while it irks that delays be on the way, and the end of labor we ask, hence is the Supreme Apex, to whom so great shines The Pontiff distinguished with the tiara, glory, clothed in the lofty frigium and gold, and sitting the snowy hoofed one, under the covering of cloth, [210] and champing with its cheeks, went where the gladder air was. He was coming on the horse white to the platforms bemata, the cloth fair and gilded above, for with the point needle the plume sewn of Cyprus shines. Then the reins held the illustrious and Gaulish Leaders, and Charles the second 215] King of Sicily, and Charles a boy and an offspring with flourishing [the two Kings holding the bridle, youth, having from the maternal stock the name of King of Hungary: the right the Father takes, and the left the Son; burning in habit, whom the grape-grain reddening dyed; since indeed through the fields of the Terra di Lavoro [220] these Kings came willing to associate with the Father: yet by right: for the Sicilian holds the scepters a vassal from him in fief. And also after the custom in turn, having obtained a divided place, the Roman Old-age the Roman Senators performs this for the Chief of earth and heaven, the Minister. [225] While the consecrated Apex proceeds, whom an ample soldiery surrounds on horseback, rushing behind his back and adorning the feast, the Apulian and the Gaul, the Roman and the illustrious one, all the Campanian Nobility, following the footsteps of the supreme Prince, can anyone lay open the number in meter? [230] We are deficient, and it pleases to be conquered: to succumb to things the words please; it is willed (lest oblivion seize the mind) he proceeds under a baldachin, that with red and saffron lines the awnings veil the Leader, lest a ray cast opposite strike him; and the Companion of his side and a little apart, 235] who may bear the obedience, the precious cloth for the nose, [the Prefect of the City and others following. the Sublevite the Prior, the splendid one in his mantle, girded with one boot of gold, and girded with one of Scarlet, to be placed was the Prefect also of the gracious City beside the Apostolic one, with those accompanying him [240] the Judges, their bodies covered with the cleft Pluvial.

ANNOTATIONS.

So I think from the mind of the Author this verse can be restored hither, which lacking all sense is in the Manuscripts thus read: "Adventabat equo candens diademata palla." For footsteps to the Greeks bemata, from bao I go: that the sense may be, that he came on the horse, a white cloth being spread, even to the feet, and that beautiful and more precious than if it had been woven of gold, because sewn of Cyprian plumes or Cyprian work, of which below mentions the little Gloss at v. 87 of book 2 on the Canonization.

p. That is open in front; since the ancient Chasubles or Planetas were everywhere closed whence it was necessary in sacred things for it to be lifted at the sides by the ministers, and folded over the arms for their free use: which because it was difficult, little by little the use prevailed of girding the side of the chasuble on both sides and finally of opening it up to the shoulders, as is now done: yet there are not lacking in various places examples of round chasubles of this kind, not only painted but real and kept for the memory of antiquity or even of some Saint, as that of St. Bernard at the Scheldt near Antwerp. And so is understood what above v. 14 is — "the form of the Chasuble from the vault — about to have long folds afterward," when namely it shall have been drawn together by the ministers.

q. Because in the Coronation of the successor of Benedict XI made in the year 1303, 27 October, something was changed, and the Author himself was present at the same as Cardinal Deacon, it pleased him to interpose this Prose, which our transcript has after verse 185, I think it more aptly referred to the beginning of the Chapter: and because in the Roman Pontifical, which for the use of the whole Catholic Church printed by the Plantinian presses circulates, those things are lacking which pertain to the Ordination and Coronation of the supreme Pontiff himself, I was not loath also for the reader curious of such things to exhibit the order of the Pontifical Procession to be read, from the Pontifical printed at Venice by the Juntas in the year 1561: where perhaps even the Romans themselves will find not a few things, diverse from the present observance; just as here are found many things, anciently not observed.

A few things in this Chapter corrected I exhibit.

* v. 175 Ingenito, I read, Ingenti.

* 176 quadratus, r. phaleratus.

* 187 His putat, r. Disputat.

* 191 potuere, r. posuere.

* 193 Pontificis, r. Pontifici.

* 201 Et docet, r. Edocet.

* 240 textus, r. tectis.

CHAPTER III.

The rest of the ceremonies of the said Procession and solemnity.

CHAPTER X

So therefore going, his temples crowned with the Kingdom, the Supreme Apex, with the point of his right hand was signing the people devoted to him and desirous to see him; The Pontiff blessing the People, which exclaims praises to the Lord, and to live long

[245] desires. But the Prelate to himself enclosed could speak, while he dreads the heights of the highest mass; the cause of labor honor, fear within, glory beating without; and let whoever presides in the lofty bridal-chamber of Peter into the air, dread; scarce under such a whirlwind is life pondering the burden undertaken he is inwardly compunged. [250] expedient. O how hard it is to dispose of the reins of the world! While the Pastor does these things; the elder Levite and the Prior, and the Proto-chamberlain joined to him, here where the sacred image remains, and at length drawn forth is discerned, gleaming in aspect from the divine power, [255] the image; bearing in their thumb the empty ferules, they seek again the diffused ranks, and run back to them oftener; and they establish a law, lest perchance they wander forgetful, and they return to stand at their own rank.

CHAPTER XI

These do this: but the people had illustrated the City 260] with arches, in the old manner, by which it is the custom to go, [money is scattered upon the people, and frequent running thronged the Father going: into whom was a cast of strong coin through all things, whether of gold, or perchance the shining silver clangs, to the Consuls once it was permitted to scatter everywhere [265] every kind of coin, the gold now forbidden of our time to be cast among the crowd: the Prince holds these insignia. The people renew various games at the sports, and the commons, cutting their minds into contrary studies, is fed with the sight. A part of the youths is fed to have plucked tilts are celebrated, [270] the ample trappings with the hand, the other part of the youth roars that the haunches of the wing-footed ones are bared of garments, and grieves that the purple fillets fall from the forehead: in the field, and to break the oblique lances in their courses. [275] A part is astonished that the unaccustomed pomps of old age grow up beyond hope: so the broken day, having admired the ancient time, is compelled, envious, to extol the present. The men run to the feasts, bearing the banners of the Church, who by the lot of God is called Clergy the Clergy meets the Pontiff giving thanks, by name, offered to the various parts the fragrant incense [280] he the Pontiff offered: he received the offered, and taken into the fires brought, and at the marked hearths received the smoke in his breast; the choir chanting, while the flexible wave of smoke is raised, and the fire breathes with vapors.

CHAPTER XII

[285] Lo, over the Tiber the bridge placed of marble he had crossed, advanced on the horse; and the tower being left of the Field, the Jewry chanting, which is a little blind heart, also the throng of Jews bearing forward the Law: runs mad to meet the Leader, under Parione itself, which showed to Christ the law pregnant and full [290] under the shadow of Moses, and he having venerated the figure, gave this behind his back, having spoken with cautious discourse: "Unknown God to the Jewry, to thee once known; who once a people, now an enemy; who God and King suffers Himself to be veiled, the present one thou preferrest to despise, [295] whom thou reckonest a frail man and hopest to come; and God Himself lies hidden. The Gentiles know to come near, thou fleest: to drive away the one coming into his own savage thou fearest not: lo, for thee the pious one shed his rosy blood on the ground, whom dire thou slayest, and to believe foolish he reproaches them with their unbelief, [300] thou refusest: thou rushest about to die, because ignorant of sense: but mayst thou return, God pitying, while Christ on the altar, the Son and word of the Father, Light of Light, our salvation, hangs with stretched hands under the stock: the time will be in which He will give just things, and the merit of labor [305] in judgment will render, the Judge above the air alive."

CHAPTER XIII

These leaving, by which is also the Sacred way, by which the temples are venerated of Mark, and by which the fierce and youthful Hadrian in arms, by which the temples of Romulus lie, and the lofty Colossus, and by which the pious Clement is venerated, who is on the right to the one going, 310] proceeding the Prince, to the Lateran the highest in the orb [and he comes to the Lateran, he arrived; not the frigium, but bearing the mitre on his head, worn out by the too great weight. Then the Assembly of the rejoicing, as if they took the beginnings of the Father's feast, pomps they show, and renew games, and the brasses of the trumpets [315] clang, the breath of the sides being rebounded through the hollows. But the clarions whistle by turns, and the cymbals clash: where all things are fervid with games and applause: the drums redouble their sound, nor beaten by the blow do they learn to bear the step, but the cornets stand for thee which moved by the fingers thou singest. Therefore the trumpet clanging stirs the youth [320] and the spirits of the hoofed ones extols into the stadium: shields, lances, banners, and togas, and trappings now the crowd has, the skirmishing by the cast of the applauders, as if an end being given to the running arms. But the illustrious house of the Lateran temple rejoicing [325] resounds into praises, looses the bells, and all resound with concord; and the hard metals beaten yet drawn together by a rope tremble. So the temples through the city behind made the way for the Leader, and the First Priest There after the Praises he distributes money: the Cardinal, while the Prince tends to the sacred hall, [330] as the Levite first sang, the praises, hedged by the Judges, declaims to the Lord, and finishes the praises to him. Nay sitting on the threshold of the divine Sylvester, he lavishes the gifts dividedly to those supported in the Cardinalate, and to the other Prelates, the Clergy, and the Lay Ministers [335] the supreme Apex, his shoulders clothed with the rosy amice. These things thus, lest we seem unmindful to seek prides, and to have despised the humble house, the solemnities of the Clergy we lay open: lo, the Seat taking its name from the dung is in the square about the temple, despised a little while he is placed in the Stercoraria seat:

CHAPTER XIV

[340] seen by the new ones, because foul in place: where the greatest Hero this day perchance reclining, where first there he were not placed at his arrival; thrice he casts the missile into the people, and says teaching; "Not gold to us, and the shining silver are not to you for joys: [345] what however is, this the prompt hand attempts to scatter." Therefore he can, without fraud, piously taken from the dung be believed holding the heights, and the throne obtained from the dust, the Apex to be revered by Princes, by the divine Power thence led to the porphyry ones composed. And on such a day he is led thence [350] before the doors of the Temple, where the purple holds two porphyry Seats of native stone: upon those he reclines, and with his right hand the Father takes the ferule of the holy edifice, and the keys of the Saints, and besides the bolts of the sacred palaces; and placed on the left, he renders back the things to be kept, [355] those, to the man: and there the Father is girded with a Girdle, to which a purple purse is hung, bearing twice six precious little stones, sculpted seals, and musk, which note great presages; great, if the sense be discerned by its gravity. Thence 360] with submitted knee, the heights of the Papal roof, [he scatters coins upon the people. and the house of the Empire those who guard from their office vigilant, before the feet of the Lord are strewn: whom with kindly mouth being received, his poured hand thrice to scatter coins begins, and says: "The just one hath dispersed abundantly, [365] and given to the poor: this remaineth for ever and ever the virtue of justice." After these things led under the image, which through the liquid sea with no guide to the City came, the sublime Apex the Laurentian temples he is led to the Holy of Holies; enters, which by right merited for themselves the Chapel [370] a chief name, by the report of the Clergy and people the Holy of Holies, why not? The Sandals of Christ and the head of ethereal Peter and of famous Paul, and where the Savior and author wiped with his blood the stains of the Christ-bearing cross and the crime of the human race, [375] and other Relics, are stored in a famous ark. Before this therefore he poured tears in his breast the sweet love and piety of the man, as it is right to believe. And rising again, and pausing a little while for an hour the Prince reclined in the bridal-chamber, where the Palace he reclines at table in the Palace, [380] extends itself: and the great Leaders and the whole Senate, and the Kings, and the Chiefs to recline at other tables. And each to sit in his place: the roofed house shone with gold. It pleases to keep silent the veilings of the wall, and the garments, and the situations of the table, the gleaming cups [385] of Bacchus, the gemmed Chalices, and the dishes; in what order it was served; what manner the Kings, when they bore the Kings ministering to him. the diadems, kept: and to sit among the sacred Priors of the Pontiffs and Levites, after the first gold exhibited, so great ones standing by: [390] and how the Fathers rising from the table to pour waters began, and to the supreme Leader, and to themselves returned to the tables: again the festive Father to lead back us also under the closed roof it pleases: for much and great labor to come will approach [395] the Pontiff, and he will conquer the evil, and subject the proud.

CHAPTER XVI

The journey flowed into length, which we undertook in a narrow manner to write, while the matter unseen before brings forth placid labors with novelty: the fixed light of the mind varies The Author the work being completed to things to come, because it can set forth nothing certain, [400] unless firmed it hold a stable color, present. But it is for the fates, if indeed the deeds, if the known things the seer express: hence sitting on lofty Olympus sublime, who biddest the small to reign, binding the depressed necks to the proud, having cast the dire dart from the air; 405] thee we seek, cut down the fear (lest perchance through the fields [He gives thanks to God. poured forth, not prompt quiet, but a troubled seat occur) and mayst thou wish the song to succeed our times. Nor ours indeed, but Glory to the Divine Unbegotten, and to the Begotten alike be rendered, and to the gracious [410] Spirit, who gave the power, and the end of labor. Amen.

ANNOTATIONS.

with squibs the famous misshapen statue of Pasquino stands.

p. The whole matter the old Pontifical thus notes: "When the Pontiff has come to Monte Giordano, those Jews come to meet him, kneeling they offer the Law to the Pontiff, in the Hebrew tongue they praise the law, and exhort the Pontiff to venerate it. But the Pontiff, these things heard, responds to this effect: 'The holy Law, O Hebrew men, we both praise and venerate, inasmuch as it was delivered by almighty God through the hands of Moses to your fathers: but your observance and vain interpretation we condemn and disapprove, because the Savior, whom you still vainly await, the Apostolic faith teaches and preaches to have long since come, our Lord Jesus Christ, who with the Father and the Holy Spirit lives and reigns God, through all ages of ages.' But because it sometimes happens that the Jews are oppressed by the multitude of the people, they were sometimes wont to obtain for their security, that they do this upon the outer wall of the citadel of St. Angelo, in the corner, at the way by which it is gone to the Palace." But they who saw say that they offer the Law, not described in books to be run through leaf by leaf, but in continuous volumes of one membrane, after the ancient manner of the elders, such as some also may be seen in the Vatican Library.

q. Of the Sacred Way, most celebrated to the ancients, much eruditely Alexander Donatus discourses book 2 ch. 12: but as it is here taken, it appears to be in part that which is commonly called il Corso, and to the pomp turning toward the Lateran offers itself on the right, beside the church and palace of St. Mark.

r. The Capitoline mount being gone around in part, the Roman forum occurs, now the Campo Vaccino: in it consequently on the left the church of St. Adrian, who is wont to be painted as a Soldier, and of SS. Cosmas and Damian, once of Romulus (the Author calls it Romulean to serve the verse), and the Coliseum or Amphitheater of Titus, named from the Colossus of Nero once situated nearby.

s. From the Coliseum to the Lateran to those going by the straight way the church of St. Clement is now on the left: but it is established that in these later centuries many ways have been wholly changed by the care of the Roman Pontiffs.

t. Cornubia indeed is the name of a city in England, but the Author by a certain allusion used it, either because he believed it the invention of the Cornubians, to regulate the beat of drums to the pipe; or because he wished signified the pipe, not that straight one in the manner of a tube, such as the Germans use; but reflexed in the manner of a horn, which is commonly called Cornetta.

u. The old Pontifical here interposes the following: "When the Pontiff has come to the Lateran church, he descends in the portico of the church, and is received by the Canons of that one honorably prepared with the Cross. The Pontiff descends from the horse, and the Prior of the Lateran Canons offers the Cross to be kissed to the Pontiff, which the Cardinal Deacon takes, and places to the mouth of the Pontiff, from whom first he drew off the Tiara. The Cross being kissed the Mitre is placed on the Pontiff, and the Kingdom is given into the hands of the Auditor. Then follows about the dung Seat, as here below, and the Pontifical continues. A wooden bridge in a straight line, from the principal gate of the church to the high altar, is raised, with railings on this side and that breast-high (the height about five feet, the breadth six or seven) which is joined to another bridge, constructed in like manner, from the gate by which it is ascended through the church to those coming to the Holy of Holies, which is done, that the Pontiff be not oppressed by the multitude of the people. About the altar, from the steps and above, all things round about ought to be closed with boards, that by the bridge only they enter the chapel. The Canons therefore going before and singing 'We praise Thee, O God,' the Pontiff with the Cardinals enters the church; and before the high altar, lying down upon the faldstool without the mitre, he prays a little: then rising, he will bless the people: thence with the mitre ascending and sitting, he receives at the kiss of the foot the Lateran Canons. Then the Pontiff by that bridge ascends to the Lateran palace, by the gate which is in the church. And when it has been come into the first hall, which is called the hall of the Council, the Pontiff sits in the seat prepared for him at the stone table at the head of the hall, which is called the Measure of Christ: and on this side and that beside him stand the Lord Cardinals."

x. "But the Prior of the Presbyter Cardinals, standing before the Pope at a fitting interval, with the Subdeacons, Auditors, Advocates, and Scriniarii, makes the Praises to our Lord, as the Prior of the Deacons had done in St. Peter's. The Prior of the Presbyters and the others who make the Praises stand with uncovered head: but the Pontiff sits with the mitre, the other Cardinals stand with the mitre." This however was wont to be done at the entrance of that gate, on the first level, before it is come to the aforesaid hall: yet conveniently into this place was this act translated, on account of the narrowness of that place. "The praises being finished the Pope proceeds to the chapel of St. Sylvester." But that chapel was outside the temple, in another place than now.

y. This largition is called the Presbyterium, and in the Pontifical it is prescribed to be done after the Holy of Holies has been entered in this manner: "Thence rising with the mitre he returns to the chapel of St. Sylvester, into which entering he sits upon the seat prepared there. Then he lays down the mitre, the gloves, the pallium, the planeta, and assumes the pluvial and a simple mitre, and sitting gives the Presbyterium in this manner. To the Cardinals two gold and two silver groats. The Cardinals come, and deeply incline their head before the Pontiff, and hold out to him the open mitre, into which the Pontiff puts the money: but they, the money received, kiss the hand of the Pontiff. The moneys the Pontiff takes from the lap of the Chamberlain. The other Prelates kneel before the Pontiff, and receive in the mitre one gold and one groat, and kiss the right knee of the Pope. But the other Prelates and Officials receive in the hand as much, and kiss the foot."

z. That is, unless perchance at his first arrival at the Lateran Palace, immediately after the election he was placed there: for that it was the custom to lead the Elected immediately to the possession of the Lateran Palace, from Anastasius is most known.

α. This ceremony the Pontifical thus explains: "The Pontiff is led by the Prior and the Lateran Canons to the marble Seat standing before the principal gate on the left, which is called the Stercoraria, and there they make him sit: who however so sits, that he rather seems to lie. To whom soon coming the Cardinals lift him up honorably, saying: 'He raiseth up the needy from the dust, and lifteth the poor from the dung-heap, that he may sit with Princes and hold the throne of glory.' Rising the Pontiff takes from the lap of the Chamberlain, assisting him, as much of money as he can embrace with his fist, where however there be nothing at all of gold and silver, and scatters it among the people saying, 'Silver and gold is not mine, but what I have this I give to thee.'"

β. Of these things thus the Pontifical: "The praises being finished the Pope proceeds to the chapel of St. Sylvester: there before the gate of the chapel are two porphyry seats perforated, and there the Pontiff sits upon the first. To whom the Prior of the Lateran church comes, and kneeling gives the Pontiff the ferule into his hand, in sign of correction and governance; and the keys of that basilica and of the Lateran palace, in sign of the power of closing and opening, binding and loosing": where our Poet seems to separate the bolts of the Palace from the keys of the church. "Then the Pope rises with the ferule and keys, and sits in the other porphyry seat on the other side: and there he restores to the same Prior the ferule and keys: and by the same is girded over the planeta, sitting, with a certain red silken girdle, with a purse also silken and red, in which are twelve precious stones with musk": whose mysteries above we saw explained by Cencius the Chamberlain.

γ. Of these things because the Pontifical has nothing, and the imperfect sense stuck, from conjecture we supply the deficient verse.

δ. "Then the Pontiff girded and sitting, from the lap of the Chamberlain takes silver pennies of every kind, as many as he can hold in his hand, and scatters them upon the people saying: 'He hath dispersed, he hath given to the poor, his justice remaineth for ever and ever.' And this he does thrice." In those two seats the Pontiff sits as in the first stercoraria: or reclining rather than sitting? So it seems: for otherwise this would here vainly be added.

ε. That is the image of the Savior, once struck by a Jew as above from Cencius we read; and under the right eye and at the beard still keeping the weals thence left, Raspano testifying in the description of the Lateran Basilica: But of its miraculous transportation elsewhere nothing is read: but it is said both not-made-with-hands, and to represent the Savior at the age of twelve years, as fully Panciroli.

ζ. The oratory of St. Lawrence the same as the Holy of Holies, now together with the holy Stairs placed in another place, of old clung to the Lateran palace.

η. Sandals are called the Pontifical shoes.

θ. The heads of SS. Peter and Paul thence to the Lateran Basilica itself afterward Urban V transferred in the year 1370, as again we shall say on 31 May, at the Life of B. James the Venetian.

ι. This ark is of cypress, says Panciroli, closed with many bars, containing within itself very many little chests and reliquaries: and there placed it, who had restored the place, Leo III.

κ. Namely by internal compunction: for the Author treats not of external tears; and because of internal ones nothing can be affirmed except by presumption, prudently he added, as it is right to believe. The Pontifical only says, that the Pontiff led to the Holy of Holies, upon the faldstool without the mitre kneeling prays.

λ. For with golden crowns they ministered, namely each Charles, father and son.

This is referred to the above-placed "it pleases to keep silent … and to lead back the festive": meanwhile from the Pontifical receive the rite of this reclining. "The Presbyterium being given, of which above at verse 333, the Pontiff with the Cardinals ascends to the Lateran palace, and is led to the table solemnly prepared, and there he sits; the Bishop of Ostia giving him water to wash his hands, two Deacons holding the towel: and he being washed, and the blessing of the table being made, all sit. But the Pope sits alone at one eminent table, diverse great vessels of gold and silver being placed upon it. But at the table which is at the right of the Pope's table, sit the Bishops, and after them the Presbyter Cardinals: and at the table which is at the left the Deacon Cardinals: and on each

side successively shall be the tables of all the Prelates and other Lords and great Nobles. And the Pope shall stand, as has been said, clothed and shod, and shall have the mitre on his head: but the Cardinals shall have surplices with shirts and mantles and simple white mitres, and so they shall eat, and all the Prelates likewise. Before the Pope let the greater and nobler Laymen serve, even if they were Kings; before the Cardinals and all others their worthier familiars. The eating being finished the Pope shall wash his hands as before, and each Cardinal likewise sitting, a server pouring him water. But the Cardinals who assist let them hold the towel, one on one side and another on the other, and so let them serve one another mutually: all of whom being washed they rise, and give thanks to God. Then the Pope by two Cardinals is led back to the chamber, where the sacred garments being put off and unshod, he rests: but the Cardinals and Prelates return to their lodgings, equally with mitres, as in the eating they stood." Thus far the Pontifical, about which many things today must be changed, both for other causes, and because from that time nearly all the sacred and profane buildings about the Lateran basilica (whose ground-plan it will be permitted to see in Raspono) are changed: and in their place now nothing stands except the palace, built by Sixtus V after the edition of this Pontifical, about a hundred years ago, with the Holy of Holies also new.

The things changed by us for the sake of correction in the text are these.

* v. 249 victam, I read, vix tam.

* 278 quo, r. qui.

* 283 Argenti fumis, r. Arrigitur fumi.

* 309 prius, r. pius.

* 332 lumina doctus, r. limine divi.

* 338 sednes, r. sedes.

* 361 domus, r. domum.

* 375 ara, r. arca.

* 394 Magnus, r. multus.

* 400 timeant, r. teneant.

* 404 cælum, r. telum.

* 406 pompa, r. prompta.

OF THE SAME CARDINAL GEORGE

On the Canonization of St. Peter Celestine Three Books.

LITTLE PREFACE.

Long ago the Author of this work, concerning the religious and man of exceeding sanctity, Who once thought he had finished the work, Brother Peter of Morrone the Hermit, while he still drew the bodily airs, had completed a certain metrical solemn work, which is distinguished more seriously into three books; containing his election to the Papacy, his assumption, and his life; his governance and rule in the Papacy; and his wonderful and unusual cession of the Papacy and the highest summit. He thought indeed in these things, as to those things which seemed to touch the aforesaid Brother Peter, to have imposed an end on the undertaking. But the divine height of counsel preceding the human, the merits of the Saint being known, composed it with a far more excellent end: for it both placed him in heaven among the celestial hosts, and on earth by a famous Canonization through the ministry of the Church appointed him to be venerated, his Canonization being celebrated, whereby a more glorious goal might be given to the metrical labor. In the year of the Lord one thousand three hundred and thirteen, on the third of the Nones of May, by Pope Clement the fifth, in the eighth year of his Pontificate, existing at Avignon, examination and deliberation being fore-had, his merits requiring it, the said Brother Peter was famously enrolled in the catalogue of the Saints; in the nineteenth from the cession of the Papacy of the same Brother Peter, but in the thirteenth year of his death. These things the Author with diligent meditation revolving, he undertakes a new one, and esteeming that it fitting befits the praises of the divine Majesty, and agrees with the praises of the Saint's merits, and corresponds to his own devotion properly enough, that again he now fore-sing the same gracious Confessor in verses, the aforesaid Canonization, the faith of the deeds being preserved, in this work with the flowery modulation of meter he sets forth, which he completed in three books. divided into three books, in the first of which the death and burial, For in the first of them, in the cession of the Papacy of the same Brother Peter, once Celestine, and the assumption of Boniface the Eighth, where he had finished the old work, reassuming; he pursues, how for the quiet of his mind, and the tranquillity of the Church, the holy man hastened to come to remote regions; how found, unwilling he is led; how, and with how great benignity he was received by Boniface, and treated with assiduity; how moreover piously and holily, the Castle of Fumone situated in Campania, with the succession of Boniface, Benedict and Clement, that holy man passed to the Lord; and moreover how at Ferentino, in a certain Convent of his Order, decently, religiously, and honorably he was laid up in ecclesiastical sepulture. And because the order of the Narration required the continuation of the history, of the death of that Pope Boniface VIII, and the assumption of Pope Benedict the Eleventh to the Papacy, and his death at Perugia, and the vacancy there after the death he succinctly runs through; and also lastly of the promotion of Pope Clement V to the Papacy (who being Archbishop of Bordeaux, absent in the province of Bordeaux, yet elected at Perugia, summoned the College to the Gaulish parts; and who had decreed Brother Peter to be enrolled in the catalogue of the Saints) he interweaves opportune mention. But in the second book of these, the remission of the inquisition of the life and miracles, and its discussion, approbation, definition, 2 the Canonization or the Canonization of the holy Man, and its celebrated things, and the ancient rites, digested with great maturity (as one who was present at the aforesaid things, and as a Cardinal Levite ministered in them) with witty, veracious, and rhetorical discourse he pursues. But in the third book, the narration of the miracles of the same holy Man, The miracles are explained. as floridly as truly unfolding; and though he mentions the Life of the same saint, having now pursued it prolixly as in the preceding work, he by no means writes it in formulas; but rejoices to have written it in graceful and faithful meter. And finally the Author humbly returning to himself, recognizes the benefits conferred on himself in all his three works by God, by the merits of the same St. Peter, lest he be vainly extolled above himself; and to the celestial consortium, about to feast in that exuberant and eternal banquet of Christ the King of Kings, together with the gracious Confessor, he earnestly asks to be led in. But that the aforesaid things may shine more lucidly, the Chapters of those three books are subjoined.

CHAPTERS OF BOOK I.

The continuation of this work to the end of the other, which the same had made about Br. Peter. Ch. 1.

How when Pope Boniface elected Pope at Naples after the renunciation of Br. Peter of Morrone, wished to lead him with him, the same Brother secretly fled. Ch. 2.

Of the Coronation and Consecration of Pope Boniface at Rome, for the continuation of the work succinctly narrated. Ch. 3.

How Br. Peter was not found in the Cell above Sulmona, but on the shore of the City of Vesta. Ch. 4.

How Br. Peter, found at Vesta, is led to Pope Boniface at Anagni, and at length was placed in Rocca-Fumone in Campania. Ch. 5.

Of the death of Brother Peter of Morrone. Ch. 6.

The miracle of the Cross, which appeared at his death. Ch. 7.

Of his burial at Ferentino, and the exequies. Ch. 8.

How in the time of Boniface Frederick of the house of Aragon and the Sicilians on one part, and the King of Sicily namely Charles the second on the other, came to peace; and of certain kinships made between the aforesaid King of Sicily and Frederick. Ch. 9.

Of the Indulgence of all sins, granted to the Basilicas of the Apostles Peter and Paul every hundredth year by Pope Boniface. Ch. 10.

Of the capture of Pope Boniface at Anagni, and his liberation on the third day. Ch. 11.

Of the Creation of Pope Benedict the Eleventh, who immediately Pope Boniface being dead within ten days was elected at Rome. Ch. 12.

Of the Creation of the Archbishop of Bordeaux as Pope, who was called Clement the Fifth. Ch. 13.

Of the Death of Lord Matthew the Red Cardinal at Perugia, and his Epitaph: whose Body in the ninth year after his death was brought to Rome, and was found entire: who was the uncle of the Author of the work. Ch. 14.

Of the Coronation of Pope Clement the Fifth at Lyons, the King of the Franks being present, and the mishap which occurred in it. Ch. 15.

How Pope Clement, staying at Lyons, committed inquiry to be made about the Life and miracles of Br. Peter of Morrone, the King of the Franks supplicating this. Ch. 6.

CHAPTERS OF BOOK II.

Of the remission of the inquisition, which in the time of Lord Clement the fifth the Commissaries sent, upon the life and miracles of Br. Peter, and its examination by the Pope himself and the Cardinals. Ch. 1.

Of the pronouncement of the Pope, first in secret with the College, upon the holy life of Br. Peter and the proved miracles, that he should be venerated as a holy Confessor. Ch. 2.

Of the convocation of the Prelates in the hall, and the oration of Pope Clement to them, when he set forth to them the holy, proved life of Br. Peter, and the miracles; and the response of the Prelates, and the words afterward said by the Pope. Ch. 3.

Of the day, on which Pope Clement the Fifth went to the Church of Avignon, that he might canonize Br. Peter; and the rain which fell miraculously on that day, when there was an intense heat; and the description both of the access of the Pope, and of the Church, and also of the lights in it. Ch. 4.

A description of the mitre and paraments of the Pope, and of the Cardinals and other Prelates; and the beautiful oration of Pope Clement at the Canonization of Br. Peter, with certain ceremonies. Ch. 5.

How and with what words the Pope pronounced the Canonization of St. Peter of Morrone, invoking the Lord and the Saints. Ch. 6.

The words of that pronouncement, and of the Indulgence given in it. Ch. 7.

How the Canonization being made Pope Clement began "We praise Thee, O God," and of certain Ceremonies there kept. Ch. 8.

How Pope Clement celebrated Mass to the honor of God of St. Peter of Morrone, as of one Confessor, and of the return of each to their homes. Ch. 9.

CHAPTERS OF BOOK III.

The Proem on the miracles of St. Peter of Morrone the Hermit. Ch. 1.

Of the miracles before the Papacy: and first of the miracle of the woman, who recovered her sight. Ch. 2.

Of the miracle of the one cured from mania or madness. Ch. 3.

Of the miracle of the girl, cured from a fistula of the foot. Ch. 4.

Of the Miracle of the woman, cured from the hectic. Ch. 5.

Of the miracle of the one cured from scrofula. Ch. 6.

Of the miracles done in the Papacy: and first of the miracle of the contracted woman freed. Ch. 7.

Of the miracle of the woman, made saffron-colored from infirmity, cured. Ch. 8.

Of the miracles done after the renunciation: and first of him, who recovered his sight. Ch. 9.

Of the miracle of the Cross, which appeared at his death, of which above mention was made. Ch. 10.

Of the miracles after death: and first of the paralytic cured. Ch. 11.

Of him, who could neither stand, nor walk, cured. Ch. 12.

Of the two contracted women, cured by miracle. Ch. 13.

Here begin the Miracles, which were not placed in the letter of the Canonization of Pope Clement, and first the continuation of the things to be said to the things said. Ch. 14.

A beautiful Miracle of the leap from the rock. Ch. 15.

Of the most beautiful miracle of the Angel, appearing in the species of a soldier. Ch. 16.

Of the Spirit of prophecy, which he had before and after the Papacy. Ch. 17.

How he confessed all his sins to Boniface after his renunciation. Ch. 18.

A brief, but rhetorical, and as it were commendation of the whole life of St. Peter and his manners, where the Author speaks. Ch. 19.

A miracle or wonderful gift granted to the Author in versifying, while he described the present work of the Canonization. Ch. 20.

The end of the work, in which the Author narrates the wonderful and unforeseen progress of the whole work, and the end, and gives thanks to God and the Saint, asking to be helped by the merits of the Saint. Ch. 21.

The Author therefore premises to the narration a Proem, which, addressed in direct discourse to the Saint as if present in Heaven and hearing, he divides fourfold. For first to commemorate the Saint of the metrical work, long since composed by the Author himself about him living; secondly to bid the same describe his Canonization; thirdly the Author to be unequal to describing so great things; and lastly fourthly that, ordered, supported by the protection of the Saint, he has undertaken the insignia of the Canonization he announces. Finally craving the patronage of the same Saint, by the protection of his help he hopes to have attained the end of the work; that thus the work may shine with a golden end, which lay hidden at the beginning of the cast-forth seed, and which had grown together in the middle with a green herby color: whence it comes that allusion is made to the exordium of the whole sum, where it had been said:

— may He make the cast seed to grow; and let the gold make clear the new herb.

BOOK ONE

Of the deeds from the cession of Peter to the Canonization.

Now holding the vaults of Heaven, and a star admitted to the supernal Proposition seats, thou recallest, that I narrated the profound and wove the wonderful meter, while earthy nature concealed thy mind, while fervid in the age [5] the divine faith was, the divine hope, and while fiery with thee is the virtue to remain to thee: but now to bring forth to the world the highest things thou biddest, Father to be revered, while thou enjoyest the most sweet airs. Although therefore that I am unequal to such daring I doubt not, yet I will attempt, supported by the protection of so great a one, [10] that I may set about the Monarch seeking the cloisters again, to praise thee again as Father, now by death laid up among the stars, and an invocation. and written in Heaven. Do thou regard our affections, and help them: thy shade will profit, that the yellow gold of the produced seed may grow ruddy.

Ch. I

[15] He had yielded to the ethereal ones, to be fed by heaven and the stars, demanding again the secret deserts of a small place, (that the illustrious mind, fixed at the feet of God, the sweet After the cession of Celestine waters might taste more limpidly, ignorant of labor, of the cares of solicitous Martha, having accompanied her sister) [20] Celestine the Apex; to be wondered at by all, and unaccustomed to the world a tempter; cautious however he himself refuses, having measured the wealth of his genius, when long since the flourishing pastures with shrubs better known to him he demands.

Ch. II

But the highest summit had obtained Boniface thence [25] Apostolic, advanced by a famous honor and the assent of the Fathers, Boniface made Pope, and to be consecrated to the sacred City he hastened the journey; attempting to lead this one by monitions, whom pure and holy he thinks. But fearing lest the learned crafty fraud should take the pure one, by the successes ardent [30] he is made: for in the morning the Prelate willing to depart from Naples, learns that the one bidden has anticipated flight. Lo, the Elder, wavering at the perils of the age and again to violate the cave, under the night the quiet ones deceives and those plunged in sleep, he secretly having departed and his companions in labor [35] or his guards, driven by great windings: and with one accompanying him, who in the institute of the Father and the virtue of mind is vigorous, and was girded with the strength of youth, to the famous heights of the cell of Sulmona he tended, thinking to return and to obtain his wonted things. [40] So the painted bird, having modulated sweet sounds under the prison, learned, invaded by darts, where it is free to the Heaven, rows back into the cage: this is a wonderful thing to those seeing it.

Ch. III

But the Prelate proceeds his journey, and clever through all sends messages cautiously and conceals his withdrawals, he is crowned at Rome: [45] or what he wishes hard: and having entered first in the City, the lofty work of the Pontiffs, and to liquefy with the smeared Chrism the neck, pressed with the diadem of the Realm, and the old rites and sacred and Roman things he completes, the feasts, through Rome poured out applauding to the Clergy.

Ch. IV

Meanwhile the watchful ones learn, apt for runnings, [50] that the man returned to the cell, and seek him enclosed there: nor was it permitted to apprehend so great a Father, whether he was absent, or covered, or wonderful grace veiled the one fearing, Celestine solicitously sought, as the sure devotion of the Brothers holds. At length, much wearied by labor, [55] the solicitude learns, that he wanders on the shore of Vesta, distrusting the sea: for that more holy old Morro hastened to come to the silent withdrawals, and the hidden regions, and to visit the Greek land; that he might lie hidden, and be at leisure for himself, and beware, lest to future [60] schisms he be a cause and so great perils. But the sea fleeing the woodland one and the heaven hated, and obeying the gazes of God Himself, the gracious one and in vain having attempted to cross the sea. thrice it casts back, thrice it poured on the ground, thrice with a whirlwind of wind [65] it dispersed, and thrust the ship onto the dry sands. At which novelty the sailors are astonished, wonder, and stick fast and gaze on the Father: who he be, whither he tends, and whence departed they ask. Why not? Miracles terrify, and the venerable face of the old man, and the supported beard, [70] the flourishing hoariness, the shaggy garment, the shining unlearned Simplicity in folds, and the published fame that the yielding Father lay hidden, and the King's sonorous edict: by which excited they try to learn together, and conjecture this to be Peter, and reveal him enclosed. [75] But who could draw over so great, and so great a name? Undoubtedly the little fire is vigorous and gradually opens, and draws the erect faces of the people to the spectacle. at Vesta he is recognized and honored. On every side it is run together for the sake of seeing, and where he was about to proceed they halt, and revering him [80] they incline and bend the knee, and pluck the hairy quadruped, the rider's horse, and the braying ass, and cut before the gown; so great is the confidence in his manners. For by the merits of the just one the crowd hopes its crimes wiped, and the sick to be rendered unharmed from their languors.

Ch. V

[85] So fleeing the world, to the world he is led back. O how the honor of the world grows, and the insignia of praise are clear, and persuaded to return to Boniface while he returns to the fold, while he heaps up the urn of milk, and prefers to follow the Pastor, where he took the sweet pastures, Morro nourished in the mountain herbs, [90] and consoles the deserted Brothers with his institute.

Ch. VI

This one accompanying the humble one, and surrounded everywhere with troops and others summoned, illustrious in virtue, modest, whom the sublime Apex Boniface and the second by him benevolently received, King Charles sent to him, led him going, [95] Morro, gratefully received, giving very many things if he should desire. And in a more comely apt house first the Prelate places him, and blandly embraces the gracious one, and the Hero addresses the old man with placid discourses: and moves the pious one so far, that prompt to abide [100] in the citadel of the Castle of Fumone he wishes (and so he settled) which is borne sublime on a lofty hill to the air, not easy of step, nor pervious to war and arms: so it is fortified by situation: and there fluently to the same one things being exhibited and companions given, but breathing the celestial things and led into the citadel of Fumone [105] using them sparingly, and sparingly the food, his wonted manner ever he studies to observe, remembering heaven in his breast.

Ch. VI

And now the time was at hand, in which human lot demanded old age, and the old man heaven, and the abiding fatherland there he dies of a fever, [110] a fellow-citizen, and God a servant, rendering his rewards from merit, with gems blooming in thick gold the garlands to gird his head. With dry humors burning compels him to exhale his pious mind to the stars. [115] O happy one! treading the Papal honor and all the highest things, having surmounted and conquering luxury through all things, thou enterest the celestial soil, a cross appearing over the cell, and earthly things for the supernal thou changest, and by the end thou provest thyself to attain the palm.

Ch. VII

At whose departure, in a gleaming light to the small ones, [120] a Cross gleams in the beams. It was seen turned with a whirling; small however, because he was small, for in mind standing out that it may shine more; and to be subjected in single things to the commands, and that he is fixed to the cross to the world, and the world in turn to him it may teach, and mindful of the cross and mindful of labors.

Ch. VIII

[125] Thence the body brought to Ferentino, in an honest tomb is laid by the hands under the institute of the Brothers. and is buried near Ferentino. And in a standing place worthily solemnly the exequies being performed, while the Cardinal presides sent by the Prelate; and, "the celebrated Mass," the sublime Apex Boniface the Hero [130] learnedly says at Rome. The reverence, why not? He merited it of the Father: once he shone with the Papal diadem, and was wonderful in virtues to the world.

Ch. IX

After these things ages grateful to their vows succeed, and they return bowed down, their efforts being removed, those Boniface is reconciled to the Aragonese, [135] who had attacked the Sicilian lands now for a long time, the Aragonese; and they fence the pious peace with the sweetness of marriages, having suffered the troubled sea of wars with floods; and they laugh to this great one agitated through the world the Pontiff, and with various wonders the times are filled.

Ch. X

[140] In one of which, famous by fame, and to the ages salutary, the hundredth, he lavishes wealth, as our verses long he celebrates the Jubilee, sing, and the diffusion of our prose unlocks; learn that in the hundredth year of Phoebus crimes are wiped away; learn, if their mouths the lurking-places of the rough crime [145] bring forth contrite from the bosom, while the circle of the year turns, and through fifteen days the foreigner, and the city's dweller for thirty, the open shrines of the Fathers of ethereal Peter and of Paul also gracious to the nations the Doctor they enter, where the urn heaps up the buried,

Ch. XI

[150] he does many things, and helps many, and many burdened reckon themselves. While so the ninth year glides away, at Anagni betrayed by his own alas! a grave inundation, deadly and diseased, nor heard in our ages a plague bursts forth, and daring rushes in. Lo, he is captured sitting sublime in the high [155] Seat of Peter, the Vicar of the highest and of Christ in the City, his own City, and his own roofs, and the hands of his own, and captured by enemies. and where he was born, the treasures heaped from everywhere being snatched. Who the authors of the crime, what the cause is, or what was repaid what do we speak? The day shining and the third gliding, [160] the people learned rushed in upon the stupid ones with raging arms: these by the brain, some by the hand, some, their noses cut off, it overthrew: he is captured who the greatest of these had been; and the supreme Father, now free of the prison, forthwith looses this one; returning hastily to the gracious and on the third day freed by the people [165] City, surely sacred, surrounded by a wonderful orb, and fenced with arms. O wonderful power, disentangled from such great evils! Never thus glorious in arms, thus festive received by it, and comely with the Clergy, or distinguished was he … [170] The first Seat of the Lateran receives the Father, then of ethereal Peter, whose miracles to the age shine clear; since first to defend his servant and protect the Father is his care, more devoutly to him clinging: and to fall down at his own tomb in the temple 175] the key-bearer commands. For a little time having flowed [he dies and is buried at St. Peter's, and a day run through, prostrate on the bed panting he fell down: and having confessed the faith, and professed the true of the Roman Church, to Christ then is rendered the gracious Spirit, and knows now not the wrath of the savage Judge, [180] but the mild and placid of the Father, as it is right to believe.

Ch. XII

Rome, shaken by new things, roars, and threatens the savage work of Mars, the fear is that the begun flames break forth and shine openly, as the hidden fire the stubble and soon Benedict is substituted: easily kindles; but the clemency of Christ to such great things [185] comes, and casts waters. Benedict at the same time is received, an illustrious man: and when the Crown he had begun and the honor of the Frigium, while the year ran, he is snatched from our world on the Nones of July and the Roman See is vacant, through the Perugian heights.

Ch. XIIII

[190] And the eleventh month flowing under a great whirlwind chose Bertrand, whose times to us neither and to him Clement absent in Gaul: to bring forth is willed, called by the surname del Got. One thing it pleases to weep: now in the ninth year he presided [195] far from the City, advanced by the grades of Rome itself. And his own brother, who of Lyons and thence was called Clement, and distant borne to the heights. At whose commanding the Assembly to cross the Alps, either all, at whose summoning the Cardinals to himself [200] or part; the first Levite, prompt to proceed, fell down dying, the whole Senate being present at the exequies, worthy praise to the man: and I will lay open the memorable things of him, with a brief discourse if it is to close this in meter. If piety, if right faith, if any candid Matthew the Red Cardinal dies [205] grace to be praised to the Clergy adorned with titles, it bore thee before a Father; with thee in boyish years it grew, and put on thee all the garments of virtue. Lo, adversity shows thee strong, prosperity modest, the end prudent, the measure filled; [210] and tears confess thee devout to God, and just the clean hand, sincere love, and the zeal warming of the Church, and that thou hadst believed it to be the head, and to be the mistress, and thou keepest faith: for the Cardinalate bore thee a youth, thee born of the Bear, thee gleaming in the City, [215] and powerful in race: with many things thou art adorned, and thou adornest eloquence with grave discourse, and thou art fervid eloquent in genius and study alike, by which learned in both thou art made: deservedly thou ascendest great honors great, and in these the virtue shines under the increased name. [220] The Bear house also shines, while thou art made Levite Matthew, to whom the surname was the Red and the Cardinalate, and broken by youth and old age thou departest, and layest open to the future ones and buried at Perugia that thou diest when thou diest. Not thus is it given to all one to live, whereby cautious we may watch, and ignorant of our lot [225] and our hour, the mind itself may have leisure to ask for salvation: which thee having merited the pity of the poor extols, in the ninth year after is brought back to Rome incorrupt. and what the sacred Elistaea gave, and thy body dug up again unharmed having wondered, it poured back into thy City, the limbs in the cheeks, and the nails in the hand, and the firm hairs [230] on the head, and the limbs in the ninth Phoebus year fragrant, which played upon a stable mind and a snowy modesty.

Ch. XV

The Fathers convened beyond the Alps, and in that part where the pale and mild Saône flows into the Rhone, Clement is crowned at Lyons. and they render Lyons hedged about with its munition. [235] Here bearing the diadem of the bridle, he is led by the right rein by the illustrious King of the Franks: and a sign to be revered occurs, the diadem falling: for pressed in the narrow, and he fell under the weight of the ruinous wall, and others were oppressed, while they held the reins, [240] the magnanimous ones. To inquire what so great things mean is vain by auguries, and God knows to show the future.

Ch. XVI

He sitting in this, the King moves a great matter and the supreme Apex took it reverently, to commit the venerable deeds of Peter to be inquired afar, the Fathers persuading one [245] that same thing. By various shores we abide thence, neighboring to the sea of the Ocean; before the Crown of Bordeaux, placed at Poitiers, surrounded by a small river; and he undertakes the cause of Br. Peter to be examined. soon we discern the full bed of the Rhone, situated at Avignon; and Vienne receives the sacred [250] Council of the eighth month; and a little we delay at Avignon again. There is given the due glory to our one, which it is our vow to weave for us diffusely.

ANNOTATIONS.

p. Here, namely, the honor of the world.

q. Two hemistichs "frangi perfectius Austris, seque Deo gelidum" here ran between: which because they made no sense, and here it seemed clear without them; I preferred to remove them from the place, than to fatigue myself and the reader in them.

r. Otherwise, "and the end proves, without license." So the author in the margin, elsewhere by no means scrupulous, wherefore here I retained what was more limpid.

s. This verse, described not in its own place, I found before the last verse of Chapter 8.

t. The matter the title more clearly explains, placed in the margin, diverse from that which above is noted at the beginning in these words: "How Pope Boniface, his death heard, celebrated Mass for him": which no one else took care to annotate.

u. Namely Frederick of Aragon, having professed himself to hold the kingdom of Trinacria from the Church, and reconciled to King Charles of Sicily on this side the Pharos, that is of the Neapolitan Kingdom, peace being made in the year 1303.

x. Namely our Verses which follow: "Learn" etc., placed in the hundredth or Jubilee, a book made by the author of this work.

y. In the year 1303 on the Vigil of the Nativity of B. Mary, while Boniface in his native soil, and the city of his own origin, with his Curia resided, where he might deservedly be believed to be more safe, among his own race and people and nation, there, some of his domestics being privy, he was betrayed. So Bernard Guidonis in Raynaldus num. 41; adding, that of his capture and crime the standard-bearer was William of Nogaret of St. Felix, of the diocese of Toulouse, the Colonna being accomplices and consenting, of whom he had once deprived two of the Cardinalate, namely James and Peter above often named, after they, as Ptolemy of Lucca says, at the year 1297, on the occasion of Stephen de Colonna, who had plundered the treasure of the Pope, had scattered a famous libel against him, asserting him not to be Pope, but only Celestine: whence cited that they should appear and made contumacious, in public consistory, deputed as schismatics and heretics, deprived of the red hats of the Cardinalate, their goods also, and of the sons of Lord John, namely Agapitus, Stephen, and Sciarra, were confiscated etc. They were afterward, in favor of the King, restored by Clement V to their place.

z. The cause was, discord between Boniface and Philip the Fair King of France, whom that one had stricken with grave sentences, meditating graver ones: wherefore William, who (as St. Antoninus says) for the King of France had conducted the treaty of the capture of the Pontiff, threatened, that he would lead him bound to Lyons, that in a general Council he might be solemnly deposed. But this one also Boniface signally confounded, and showed himself intrepid in this case, having put on all the Pontifical habit, and so awaiting what the raging ones should determine about him.

α. I understand vengeance to have followed; and the unhappy death of Philip seems to be regarded, in the year 1314 met in hunting: to whom afterward the unhappiness written acceded of his three sons, consequently Kings, who all died without children before the year 1329, the kingdom passing to the Valois. The city of Anagni also from that time fell almost to nothing, as most beautifully describes Papyrus Massonius in Boniface VIII: adding that the citizens recognizing this entreated Clement VII, that, a Bishop being sent to them, he should free the people from that offense of their elders hitherto unexpiated, as also was done in the year 1524.

β. Or William? or rather Sciarra? Of this one only Antoninus says, that he was cast out of the city with his accomplices, several of them being captured and others slain.

γ. The other hemistich, "cunctos ubi ferrea texunt," I omitted, because it has no sense, until the true reading be found.

δ. That is, to be entombed for himself in the same temple.

ε. The fame of Boniface lacerated by many calumnies, not only by the French of old, but also in this century by the writers of that nation, God seems to have wished to vindicate, by the detection of his entire body, after almost 300 years, made in the year 1605, on the same day on which he had died, 11 October: whose finding's Acts see in Raynaldus at the year 1303 n. 44. It is credible that by him dying the formula of faith was repeated, which Bzovius and from him Oldoinus on Ciacconius recite.

ζ. Ceptas, that is, conceived.

η. Benedict XI was elected of the Order of Preachers, Bishop of Ostia, 21 Oct., on the tenth day after the death of his predecessor, on the very day on which the Cardinals entered the Conclave, in the first scrutiny.

θ. Elected absent in Gaul 5 June in the year 1305.

ι. Beraldus del Got, to the French today de Gout, from Archbishop of Lyons created Cardinal of Albano in the year 1294 by St. Peter Celestine, died in the year 1297.

κ. Lord Matthew the Red, Nephew of Pope Nicholas III.

λ. The Author calls it an Epitaph in the title; Urban IV had made him a Cardinal in the year 1261, so that he stood 43 years in that grade.

μ. Sacro, i.e. sepulchre, inasmuch as in ground sacred by the Christian rite: but that Perugia is called Elistaea not Clistaea, we have already said in the first work at v. 386 book I.

ν. Quosque artus, i.e. through all the limbs.

ξ. That is, in the year 1315, but in the following year was created Cardinal, the nephew of Napoleon Orsini by his brother, Matthew Orsini, died at Avignon in the year 1340; but this one's body is said to have been brought back to Rome, and first in the chapel of St. Catherine of Siena, soon in the Sacristy, now in the church of St. Mary above Minerva with the bones of Latinus Cardinal Orsini to be laid up in a marble ark; whom also the Fathers Preachers, whose Order he had professed, reckon among the Blessed, and

say him to have been illustrious for miracles according to Bzovius; whereas Bzovius alleges Ciacconius, who in his twin work of the year 1599 mentions only the translation (a certain Chronicle of the Preachers being alleged) as made into the chapel of St. Catherine constructed by himself. Where if St. Catherine of Siena be understood, it is a grave anachronism; since she only died in the year 1381, years after this last Matthew. All things therefore being weighed, I vehemently suspect, that Matthew the Younger indeed remained buried at Avignon; but that he who was translated to Rome, is the elder; and that he was translated by the action of his brother, there a most celebrated Theologian of the Order, and familiar of St. Thomas, by name Romanus; in whose favor perhaps the chapel of St. Catherine Virgin and Martyr was founded by Matthew himself; but because this one was commonly surnamed the Red, he was confused by posterity with his synonym the younger, known under the surname Orsini only: just as both Catherines are confused.

ο. Dextrarius is called by the Italians and French that horse, which is led by the hand; and so to be dextrari here signifies, to be led by someone holding the reins.

π. Of the Pope's head.

ρ. Who namely had succeeded the King in the same obedience, men of the first rank.

ς. It is an absolute nominative for an ablative, too frequent for that age: This therefore, that is, Clement sitting. So below again book 2 v. 83.

τ. Rex grande movet, understand, a matter.

υ. That is the one of Bordeaux, namely Clement, from that metropolis assumed to the Cardinalate, whence also he was commonly called the Cardinal of Bordeaux.

φ. For the city of Poitiers is placed at the Clain, a small river: which afterward plunged into the Vienne and with this afterward into the Loire, loses its first and second name.

κ. Because it lasted almost for eight months from the Kalends of October of the year 1311 to the May of the following year: the same eight months we have in the proemial Prose, and Bernard Guidonis consents, asserting the last session held in the month of May the day before the Nones, as Gabriel Cossart noted vol. XI of the Councils col. 1596; thus modestly correcting his predecessor Philip Labbe, who in the Synopsis of the Councils first published had said the Council held for a year and a half, or (as others) two years. Perhaps the error gave occasion, that it was indicted in the year 1307 for the next two years, and again the Fathers not appearing as agreed, deferred to another two years, and so only begun in the year 1311.

ψ. For Clement crowned at Lyons went around various cities, Bordeaux, Poitiers, Avignon, where he was in his 4th, 5th, and 6th year, until he went out thence, that he might be nearer to Vienne, and might more conveniently prepare all things for the future Council.

The places in our judgment faulty and therefore changed are these:

* v. 7 quæ dulcius, I read prædulcibus.

* 19 Curæ soliciti, r. Curis solicitæ.

* 44 divum, r. durum.

* 63 turbata vento, r. turbine venti.

* 77 Et trahit avectet plebes, r. Plebisq; arrectos trahit.

* 85 fugiunt, r. fugiens.

* 87 latio, r. lactis.

* 95 dantem, r. dando.

* 105 tulit, r. cibis.

* 105 moresque priores, r. morem usque priorem.

* 119 rutilans in lumine parva, r. rutilanti in lumine parvis.

* 120 insignis, r. in tignis.

* 124 Hunc, r. Huic.

* 127 stantem, r. stanti.

* 142 nostra, r. nostræ.

* 158 qualeve pensum, r. quidve repensum.

* 182 Matris, r. Martis.

* Incendit, r. Incendi.

* 227 repostum, r. refossum.

* 228 miranda, r. mirata.

* 228 res fudit, r. reffudit.

* 235 destratus, r. dextratur.

* 238 minoso, r. minosi.

* 247 positam, r. positi.

* 248 concernimus alvum, r. mox cernimus alveum.

* 252 diffusis, r. diffusè.

BOOK II.

Of the discussion of the cause and the canonization itself solemnly celebrated at Avignon.

CHAPTER I.

Therefore when the committed inquiry of great matters the men completed, and by long labors the acted Solicitude a client; the writings of the deeds in figures The investigative process, public they transmit, and seal the monuments with their own [5] Sculptures, impressed on wax; and send the loquacious little letter, which may bear the deeds, and confesses the sum. But Clement willing to inquire the things transmitted, certain men he committed; and in various ways, and many he challenges Clement commits it to the Cardinals to be examined; of the Fathers, while he asks many things, while perchance he wanders, [10] nor always do the things which are true lie open. We sweated there. Others sweated, nor was sweat lacking to any. No one sits for the Father of Fathers, while he attempts single things. This for many, and in many places, and on many days was the care. To bring forth the frail one laid up of so great a one [15] any to heaven: the See of Peter is neither deceived in these things, nor deceives: to whom alone it is given to be able to decree the judgment of so great a one. Not everywhere does it lavish the ample and immense gift, although there was to many the same spirit, and the manners merited the blessed one to be believed [20] Morro and the sacred end, and the wonderful things of his life.

CHAPTER II.

Why do I delay the ardent minds, that prompt to learn? The gifts of God radiate, now now the miracles are clear who all things being proved, of him discussed openly, and by the assembly in turn, and the life shines forth, and the proving witnesses and the counsel [25] of the Fathers confirm. Nor was the safe Apex lacking thence, to the proved ones: laying down the mitre from the top of his head, and kneeling, that a life gracious with virtues, and great miracles to heal diseases he set forth he reports of him in the secret Consistory, the man to have expended: and also having embraced both, [30] he brought forth that this one famous to the world and to be venerated by the earth was a Father, and decreed him to be called sacred-Confessor, prudently acting, and cautiously reviewing the past. In secret are these decrees. Thereupon he summons into the midst, where extends itself into the hall [35] the Palace, various Pontiffs, and all the ministers

CHAPTER III.

of the Roman See, and also the Senate being present he speaks, "And lo, we undertook immense labors, and then in public: and our Brothers alike, which we think you also to know. The things sought before lo we set forth, [40] and the life, and the sacred manners, and the things confirmed we know by witnesses undoubtedly the miracles of Peter once of Morrone; which known openly, nor do we hold them closed, to the increments of the sacred faith, and your salvation." A few things however the Apex disclosed: nay more cautiously the same, 45] and lest by saying more or perchance less he should waver, [and by the common will, he bade single things to be brought forth with a diffuse dictation. Forthwith the ardent ones, placed under the limit of the seats, the Pontiffs sing the things to be praised, and lay open the wonderful things; each sitting in his place, and alternately rising again [50] each in his place, and they ask. That the pondered judgment of the Church should proceed, all rejoicing together, all belched forth, that the worthy one should rightly ascend to the Divine ones. But the Father, the placid rumors heard, says: the canonization is decreed. "Nor is it of the vow to the See, to which alone to declare the feast [55] belongs, or to subtract from our honor such great things, but we wish to discern with the highest sayings of the Brothers: and what the pious God Himself will deign to us and will pour back, we will promptly fulfil: and bend you this with poured-out minds: the heart asks to do this."

CHAPTER IV.

[60] After all things are filed in their figures, and the digested things about to have easy delays; a little On the 5th of May he halted. And the limit being now placed to the sacred things, the glad day rises, the forerunner of the feast, with the drops of the sun bedewing the heat and with recent rains the heat, [65] grateful to the Father, and pleasing to the Clergy, and pouring back the crops, long awaited, under the threshold of the Bull bearing Phoebus before; where covered with the rosy mantle in the amice, and riding the comely hoofed one white with hairs after the wont, the Clergy going before in order he enters the temple, 70] and Clement more famous than the feasts presses on. [in the Cathedral of Avignon, There rises on the summit of a spread-out and strong rock the sacred venerable house of the Mother of God and gracious Virgin, a temple founded in no great scheme as it were in the middle of the City, so on every side beholding the Citizens [75] the place of Avignon; whose part once ruined was a Castle, now returned to common use. This House gave the burning waxes and the liquids of bees, everywhere cast across by beams, and the dripping torches glad, and at the doors poured their tapers their flames [80] in various places, which by their light showed the true beam of heaven, and that this one by his merits with splendors was in heaven supported by the divine gift.

CHAPTER V

And having entered the sacred hall of the Virgin Mother, the festive bridal-chamber is present; the glory of the feathers shines white, the Pontiff sitting, [85] golden it lies hidden to the head, and with gold is clothed the scarlet by the needle and the beauty of the mantle, and varies the rigid clothing the silken byssus under the image of the Fathers. And he sat down on the throne, more sublime than the narrow bridal-chamber: the Fathers sat down on the low seats, white, [90] and all the Prelates: under the spread dust the crowd. And hence he says: "Exult and praise Sion, because great, he holds an oration on the sanctity of Br. Peter, great, and exult; and in thy midst, because the Holy of Israel. Not by ancient nobility shining does Morro make his race, or breast knowing or doctrine great [95] him: but in the woods a long experience makes him cautious. Since indeed the suffrages of the age to the Just this one were lacking: but he was great, and the great life gave the blessed one, and the zeal warming to be fervid through all, and piety, and the humble manner, and conquering the proud [100] Simplicity, and the brightness of mind, and Poverty subtracted from the world, the wonderful strictness of himself, virtue; these made the man great and to be consecrated to heaven, if God shall assent. To us the miracles are clear, duly proved, and the Brothers knew openly, and that long [105] day and great labor discussed them. You therefore ask, and know us about to pray, that God may be present granting every good, and repaying whatever is perfect, nor let Him suffer the Spouse redeemed by blood to wander in such great things, but having pitied may direct our acts." [110] He had said, and rising, we standing by, he says and proclaims, "Come Creator Spirit filling the pious hearts," and intones, Come Creator, and he laid himself on the dust on his knees, bent, and the others also; and rises again: to whom on the head the mitre I placed with my right hand, the least Levite, but the order [115] indeed gave it. He stood thence, until the Choir completes the canticles, then he bids that the scribe unlock the wavering woven things, and read with true discourse the deeds as much at the summit and the Acts being bidden to be read, as after, and as before. The learned one lays open the dictations which the writing of the Bull holds, referring the life, [120] which shines in our meters. The miracles too the Bull holds: we will compose them also more diffusely below, to its increase by our modulation of praise, if the pious Morro assist dictating his songs.

CHAPTER VI.

When these beginnings took a perfect end, [125] and God breathed upon the wishes, and a firm judgment to the petitions; the sublime Apex begins to set forth he openly announces, his vow. "To the eternal Father, and the coeval Son, and the eternal Breath (to whom one power, the highest, omnipotent) the praise, of Mary the gracious Virgin, [130] and of Peter, and of Paul the Leaders, and of Michael and all the celestial Militia the help; and of the salutary faith the increments of the sacred, supported by the divine munition, of the Saints Peter, Paul, supported also by ours,

and by the counsel of the Fathers, and by your suasions," he says,

CHAPTER VII

135] "We Brother Peter, whom called of Morrone [Peter to be held and venerated as a Saint.

fame teaches, and famous proclaims to be lifted above the air of the Saints, by the bridal-chamber, his lofty merits persuading, we sanction worthy to be enrolled, and the Just one of the pious we write this one in the number, establishing that everywhere the people [140] celebrate for him the day of his death, and more devoutly all the assembly perform for him the feast of a Confessor, we, to whom alone this faculty for Peter is granted: moreover to the contrite and those confessing their sins, to those present he grants Indulgences: whom the year shall have given to behold the sacred sepulchre [145] on whatever day of his death, five years and five Lents, and within the octave forty and one moreover we relax, if indeed the weight placed for the crime."

CHAPTER VIII

He spoke, and thence the Father jubilating rises into the canticle, "And we praise Thee, O God," he says, and of his sonorous voice 150] the comeliness does not soothe in the image of the peacock: all [he intones the Te Deum: perform this, and glad they sing, and the following verse the Levite sitting at the left, and the Clergy in turn responds. Then the supreme Apex poured the Collect also on high, and it being completed our Amen is poured to him. "I confess" the Levite thereupon, and at the bridal-chambers reverently I compose the Apex to the lofty ones; and the blessed name of the soldier inscribed they recount. Keeping his times the Prelate lavishes wealth, and lavishes those as it pleases indulging, and by prayers the new Saint [160] he invokes, and a recruit is joined to those veterans.

CHAPTER IX.

And the throng being signed with the hand, he predicts openly that he is mindful of Peter, and that he will fulfil the solemnities of the famous Mass and dismisses the people with a blessing. the feasts, and by words he repays the deeds. For the Apex celebrates solemn, he shone with the white ones. [165] And hence with white all to be white: hence the waxen ones with flames shone, and the lights with wandering and tremulous hearths consumed the wonderful smoke, their own fuels being fed. The foundations also here give pious canticles, voices hence resound with praises, the heavenly things are filled with the divine [170] Offices: they return from then for joy glad each to his home; to rejoice is pious, to hope salutary.

ANNOTATIONS

p. So in the preceding book the last verse it is said "to us it is of the vow": yet perhaps also here it would there better be read, votum.

q. Dicere, i.e. to declare.

r. Tantis, i.e. in so great a business.

s. Summis, i.e. the extreme being heard.

t. That is so digested, that they could easily be perfected.

u. For the sun then was in Taurus, inasmuch as the 5th of May: but the sun enters the sign of Taurus about the 20th of April.

x. After the wonted manner, the Cardinals, Prelates, and the rest of the Curials going before the Pope to the church: yet they did not go prepared, but in woolen cloths.

y. For the torches and tapers represent Christ the Lord, who is the true light.

z. So above book 2 of the Coronation v. 142 the Tiara is described, "white with the bark of peacock feathers."

α. Golden, namely the crown woven before the tiara itself, and that broad.

β. Because in the pluvial of the Pope were images of the holy Fathers, of silk and gold worked and with the needle, of Cyprus or English work.

γ. The little gloss, "great low ones": that although lower than the Pontifical seat, yet they may be understood to have been great.

δ. White, i.e. clothed with surplices, as I esteem.

ε. Because he sat on the ground.

ζ. Because the theme of the Pope was: "Exult and praise, O habitation of Sion, because great in thee is the Holy of Israel." Isaiah 12, 6.

η. Because the Pope used these words, "Br. Peter of Morrone to be canonized, if it shall please God," before the canonization.

θ. In every discourse and letter the Pope calls the Cardinals, Brothers. If however specially he calls some, he calls the Bishops alone "Our venerable Brothers"; the Presbyters and Deacon Cardinals he calls in letters etc. "beloved sons."

ι. Here again superabounds for the sake of completing the verse the conjunction, que.

κ. The Pope, after he rose stood, until the choir completed the Hymn, which the Pope had begun, "Come Creator."

λ. Labantia, i.e. running: for the dictations waver and run, although not so, nor by that law as meters: but he understands the Bull described in prose.

μ. Culmine, i.e. in the Papacy.

ν. That is, the universal Church; for the universal Church is subject to him: and on that account the Pope can command, that at the death of some Saint he make a feast.

ξ. Quadrages, i.e. Lents.

ο. That is forty-five, namely days.

π. Of the penances enjoined on him.

ρ. For the Pope had not a tuneful nor placid voice: nay he sang badly, in the manner of a peacock, which sings badly.

ς. "Pray for us, Blessed Peter, Alleluia."

τ. The Deacon serving the Pope on the left side.

υ. "That we may be made worthy of the promises of Christ, Alleluia."

φ. In the order namely to the Blessing, with the Papal Indulgence to be received, the Deacon in the name of the whole people makes the Confession.

[χ]. After the wonted manner saying, "The blessing of almighty God" etc.

ψ. Because about to do of a Confessor he took the white paraments.

There follow the corrections made by us to this book:

* v. 1 Magnis, r. Magnarum.

* 13 His, r. Hæc.

* 19 en, r. &

* 38 nostriq; simul, r. nostri pariter.

* 56 dictum, r. dictis.

* 59 facile, r. facere.

* 67 Acta feres, r. Anteferens.

* 76 spatium, r. sacrum.

* 85 lactescit, r. latescit.

* 93 An, r. Haud.

* 94 Pertusve, r. pectusve.

* 97 Hæc, r. Huic.

* 104 decessique, r. discussit &.

* 105 ergo, r. idque.

* 106 omne, r. adsit.

* 112 pectore, r. pulvere.

* 113 Quique, r. Quoque.

* 114 dextris, r. dextra.

* 116 cotecta, r. contexta.

* 119 quidni, r. quin &.

* 128 summus, r. summa.

* 161 apertum, r. aperte.

* 163 repensant, r. repensat.

BOOK III.

Of the Miracles of St. Peter, both those proposed in the Bull and those certain to the Author from elsewhere.

Hitherto diffusely the praises of the great feast, in which the pious one in the empyrean, and the gleaming host above is inserted into heaven, the famous Confessor and gracious, we have composed, and the merit of his life, and the rustic things long ago, 5] afterward confirmed in certain ways: now it is right to say [About to narrate the Miracles of the Saint, the wonderful things of the man, radiant to the age with solid signs, and above nature: by which two things is made patent suffice (because often to the evil to show the true [10] is given to these) but the name only more readily to those is conferred, to whom nature itself is lacking, or the learned hand of art, or perchance the manner: for the times confirm whatever they do; but our wonderful the instant perfects. The life also not alone proves, because known only [15] to God alone is the life of man, by whom whatever work is done with intent, the more perfect end to him known, whence we ascend the ample star of heaven: nor do we desire to unlock the wandering, but to lay open the certain we are deficient; and faith very often believes, what a narrow [20] genius does not prove: to abide in the stable is grateful, and what the consecrated sentence of the See of Peter teaches.

CHAPTER II.

A woman afflicted with bleary labors, and now blind in her eyes, and lacking sight, whom no of the blind woman illumined, art could heal; trusting that by the gift of Peter the blemish [25] could be wiped from her eyes, was led to the heights of the desert: and when a small Cross, sent of the Saint's gift, she had placed on her empty lights, and anxious herself had signed with the help of the Cross, her husband carrying her; forthwith, God pitying, her lights the sight [30] receive, and she rejoices seeing, and they rejoice seeing.

CHAPTER III.

When a huge madness had so vexed the panting mind of another, that often bound of heart, the mad one restored, and with the knots of chains everywhere binding he was, lest perchance to himself, or perchance to a companion [35] he should be a hindrance; led to the spectacles of Peter mad, the bread being exhibited he feeds himself, which the Saint to him had conferred: and quiet returned, through each thing master he is made, and at no time afterward the boy feels the course of that huge or the madness.

CHAPTER IV.

[40] Lo, a girl gravely, while a putrid fistula her cheeks inveterate makes, trembles fixed with pain, the fistula cured, lest she lose her flowing foot, or the small one cut off: for the fearing physician compels the parents to tremble, so great love for children, piety, so great compassion is. [45] What the Father himself? he groans: what the Mother? she lays open murmurs: what the woman? she retains tears, but troubled pours them. It had come to Peter, the little girl carried before him: thence the pious one afflicted suffers, thence he heals. For making three signs of the Cross over the ulcers, sound [50] he rendered her, so that in a little while no traces remained of the ulcer: it is not doubtful that the clear expiations cure.

CHAPTER V.

Another whom a consuming Hectic fever makes likewise the hectic woman, weakened to recline in bed, nor to rise, although she wish it, her life suffers; by the favor of a minister [55] reclining under a cloth an hour, which Morro to her lying had sent; rising, distrusting the physician, her parent she gladdens, and rejoices in the pious one, and reveres the gracious one.

CHAPTER VI.

And the deformed scrofula on the hand, being signed by him he goes away sound, cured by him: that tumor standing above scrofula. [60] hid itself in a little while, most like to a hen's egg.

CHAPTER VII.

These things he performs dwelling in the deserts, and staying in the desert Morro; but assumed to the heights of the supreme dignity, as Pope he cures the contracted,

he ceased not from signs. A woman contracted through her limbs and not able to bear herself, carried by the help of her father [65] whence he was about to make his way; the devout signs of the Father receiving with the right hand, is cured in an hour: the faith fruitful, and the honor fruitful, the most fruitful reward lying upon his merits from the divine power.

CHAPTER VIII

And in like manner is cured, suffused with color [70] a woman somewhat saffron-colored, sick, not trusting her steps. and the jaundiced one, but the blind one being deprived.

CHAPTER IX.

After also on the throne of the Papacy's summit the Hero placed himself, the injured sight restored by the light the Cross of the Father, smeared on the eyes and hands of the powerful one.

CHAPTER X.

The precious Cross to the man, at the time of death a sign [75] flashed forth, but small, shining, turned with a whirling in the middle of the little door; not set in the posts, but in the empty air flying, until the body thence was removed. At his death a cross appeared.

CHAPTER XI.

After death holding the celestial secrets, a poor man, rich in wealth, and a powerful star, and filled with gifts, 80] he renews signs. For a man lacking voice, and trembling in tongue, [afterward the mute and paralytic is aided, and trembling in every act, nor firm in his steps, clinging to the little couch (because his members flow, nor do the joints resist) led back to the places, in which he passed his wonderful life of the desert, and girded with the Father's girdle through each [85] member, lying he rose rejoicing, and rendered praises sound, and from all knows not the perils of disease.

CHAPTER XII.

And so another had lost the conveniences of standing and walking, sensible, and the use of his swift hand (and more sadly): deprived of walking, reclining in the church by night, where the body was buried [90] of the gracious Morro, rising in the morning he finds himself sound forthwith, and confesses himself. But two women, by a phantasm of the night, drawn contracted, had lost the right side: and lying at the tomb the two contracted women. forthwith, and by the merits and prayers of the Saint they are aided. 95] These decrees Clement gave, these the Bull also with sonorous [To these the Author adds those known to him, little letters lays open. The clemency of Christ in speaking what is willed, may give the power; knowing thus to proclaim the true, as we desire faithful. For things seen by the faithful from now, nor suspect to the eyes we will belch forth, known long ago [100] to these, before whom these things had been digested, or by whom these things expended, dear to their own and to us through all.

CHAPTER XV.

For on a certain day, full of sweetness Morro and of an ardent mind, hastened to go to the lands, that being about to cross a place among rocks, that he might behold the crops, cultivate them, water them with the rain [105] honey-flowing, or perchance seek a place for the strict Brothers, or shut himself in a cave of the desert: nor would he believe anything else worthy of himself ever, in the wonted mountains not prone to run everywhere. While the ridges, with the rocky woods white on every side, 110] he goes through, two companions accompanying him; [impeded by snow, lo the snows hide the way, and the dark snow darkens the heaven falling, and pathless things meet the wearied while the summit of the hill splits itself. To proceed Morro is not able: but trusting and supported by the help of Christ 115] he leapt across, and turned stood; and his companions paternally [he leapt across it, that they wish to cross he exhorts, and more swiftly both the fearful ones he solicits, and the astonished to see the new and wonderful thing of the Father: and to these hesitating, he says, [120] "Let the son earnestly now obey forthwith there, warm with the fire of faith, supported by a staff and praying, by the merit of virtue; which prefers to subject its own and made his companions leap across. to the wishes of another's commands. Trust ye: safe is the way; and the subjected one will firm the doubtful paths." Trusting these things the youths cross over the cut-off perils, [125] and wonder at the man, nor do they know the instruments of the leap. Great is the virtue of the mind and great the power: free thou art made, if thou wilt be a servant; the servant also free is raised, if the balance falling so falls down to the lowest, so it may lift the side raised through the windy air.

CHAPTER XVI.

130] In the times, in which that old man led from the East [Likewise that returning from Lyons,

Gregory ascended the sublime honor, and ardent held the venerable Council the Rhone and the Saône surrounding the City; this one, all his wishes everywhere completed, prepares to return to his cell, returned through the fields [135] both of the city of Lucca and of the cultivated regions around Pistoia. To the man a youth, crowned in face, and on a white horse white sitting, with curls reddening with gold hair, and fortified with the point of a smooth right shaft, which he often brandished with his hand and shoulder, [140] made himself a companion to this one going, and says, "Wherefore through places suspected, and not pervious to your steps, further through a way beset by robbers, do ye tend into death, or great perils of things?" But Peter and the Brothers (for three are associated going) said, "And aided by Christ as leader we tend this way, [145] by which we hope a safe journey: let there be a formula to us and a faithful protection to his own." Then forthwith that one pledging obedience, glad departed; the going ones he exhorts. While Morro attempts to proceed the way, and by them attacked, three, to whom an uncertain doubtful one to commit his life, [150] joined themselves to him. Fearful they accompany, and those men they held suspect. It is proceeded: a narrow way they found. Then to the followers seemed apt the narrow species of the place: each invades his Companion: whom three famous serpents with foul cuirasses, thrice by miracle defended, [155] grim in their eyes, and roving in their tongues, nay with mouth cut off invade the trembling ones, and labor to devour those. Then Morro favors with piety, and the Brothers in turn pray, and each protected his own friend: and the robbers walk by the ways. But thence with quickened [160] courses, and moved by sluggish piety, of harming while the dire way offers itself with the limit closed, they invade again the safe ones with pure sweetness: whom also the divine custody pious covered so again. Then Morro attempting to precede his own 165] (for he studied to keep the bull, by which his vows followed [and led by an Angel; holy were, the strong one) is withdrawn from his companions, with difficulty that they should take counsel, because to trust the depraved is death. Lo a following youth, comely in gesture and face and cheerful returning, meets, and laying open hidden things; [170] "Did fear invade? Had I not preferred to associate in the withdrawal? Now therefore let us stretch the way, and lo me a companion: I will protect the journey, because there will be no cause of fear": and weaving the sweet things of words, the Brothers he addresses, and glad going, having embraced the reins [175] of the hoofed one, and casting the shaft far through the ample air, as a learned one, with no effort with his right he takes it up, and firms the spurs of his feet in the stirrups. appearing in the form of a horseman, A beautiful horse, and a pleasing gesture, and a comely face is the countenance, and sweet to speak, and the sincere level [180] of his manners: and those placed in the place he dismisses, the friends. "Now know yourselves to stand in safe places, Brothers," he said, and turned away disappeared. Thence serene, "Forthwith praise this Minister of the highest King, Morro says, "O how wonderful is the protection of God to His servants! [185] An Angel all-powerful, sent down from high heaven, came, and consoling the afflicted in the time of the mishap this one was; meeting not known, ever the supreme Christ is present to the doubtful ones tending more swiftly to Emmaus." And prostrate on the earth the Hero pours sighs: [190] he pours, and the oppressed ones from then the sacred visions soothe. Therefore be faithful to God, hoping; He restrains; He covers; and firms His own, nor does the Author desert.

CHAPTER XVII

Did the Father know things to come? His mind is conscious of the pure, unlocking the secrets of God foretold to Latinus; [Likewise that he foreknew the death of Cardinal Latinus and that he would be Pope,] [195] whether the death of the Father of the neighboring death, that he should believe himself rather ash, than supported in the Cardinalate; or because also he had been bidden, as to Brothers, the arduous things to all the Cardinals to write, to propose the sacred Pontiff to the See they should hasten; which unless they hastened, [200] the wrath of God would gravely rage, and the wrath fervent. And as to him death quickly came, so glory a little after also. Nay remaining Pope he prophesies things to come and that Boniface would succeed him to the gracious successor, whom Pope and now to be future he hints, and to others more expressly that also he reveals. [205] By the mouth of the Pontiff thus it goes, and others confess "O happy one! to thee a great thing is given, to thee a great thing desired the now true Elias affords to Elisha as a gift, that a twin Spirit be to thee, and the gift of speaking, and the gift of ministering miracles to us." [210] But thy simplicity, perfection, and the pure religion of mind, the devout faith, the firm hope of salvation in that one unlock themselves, that sweet, in all things truthful, all the sins committed of thy age thou layest open to whom also he wished to confess after his abdication. to the supreme Apex: which cause compelled the old man to remain, [215] after the Papal honor yielded prompt to depart.

CHAPTER XIX.

If perchance thou wouldst wish to know greater things, the life inspect: if the life, the inveterate times survey: if the times prudent thou embracest, receive the fame: Synopsis of the virtues of Peter: if the fame the odor regarded, do thou look up to the Brothers: [220] if the Brothers, mayst thou also read the institute: the institute of the desert also if thou shouldst grasp, thou wilt love greatly: if now by sweetness drawn thou art allured, measure thy strength through each thing: if thy strength, the examples of the law, follow: then perennial modesty, and candor, and the loose modesty of the tongue, [225] poverty, and strict sustenance, curbing luxury; and piety, and the humble manner, and the fraternal integrity of mind, to be imitated by thee, to be venerated by thee will occur. Do not halt thy step: but look back cautious, that the supreme Apex was chosen after the times, and that [230] so suddenly, knowing so little, by the help of so many knowing; and ruling the world's orb he knew himself, casting off the summit: that to the Brothers he confessed the hidden things: no less worthy of an encomium, nor of a lesser praise I esteem, that a fugitive, that the flourishing cause of the fugitive: [235] and that willing, and unwilling to prolong his flight summoned, hither he returned, and spurned the wrong; he avoided the inept sloth; and the old man having embraced the Eastern celestial manners, pursues them; and seeking the ancient life through the times, having performed which he enjoys heaven, and beholds ruling [240] all things God, and Christ the Leader. Not he repeats the judgment, which often is given, and the author purged what perhaps was of the Throne: and the same filed, whatever errors willing to comb, while he breathes on high.

CHAPTER XX.

And when I unfold the things conferred with the other merits of Peter, [245] I am compelled in weaving to diffuse the given gift; lest as ungrateful I be silent, or perchance proud The Author confesses, I ascribe, or perchance wandering, the gifts which I took, when the hope is to attain things greater than its merits. Lo I unaccustomed for a long time now to the Muses, [250] after as it were fifteen years, many running, undertook to narrate the holy Peter above the air. that being long unaccustomed to versify, A wonderful grace helping acceded to our small verses. Lo, long ago turning over verses very often, to have made fifteen in a glad day and at most [255] twenty, or more rarely more: now the orbit to us of forty often hastened, of Six Saturn?, to write as I could, or another slow one would write, twenty: and more feet sometimes within an hour unforeseen I, four times revolved by the circle, [260] to pour, as a slow one I marked the meters with figures. The matter not cultivated before, nor the verses long ago these the last work he completed. turned by the hand: and we gave days above all five and twenty over. Not to us the glory, to us,

but let it be to God and Peter. To men who undertake great things, [265] these things perchance would be little: we esteem them gifts. Glad in these let us praise the one placed in heaven: and thence let the heavenly fasces, the Clergy, and the people following the institute of the Father, and the situations of the world, and of the Terra di Lavoro whence sprung, and the beginnings of so great a man rise.

Many indeed and illustrious miracles Celestine the fifth did, which are not in this book, or did not come to the ears of the Author, or he was unwilling to write them.

RECAPITULATION.

[270] Now to myself now I return, and seem to see what did the highest piety of God, what the grace, or what of the supernal counsel the abiding loftiness, while it made me grasp the work of so great a Saint. Since indeed, who ignorant of these things, or what I should do, began, I sang the pious things sown of Peter; [275] ignorant, who should bear back the diadem of so great an Apex the sacred Pope, to whom the pomp at the sacred things should allude in the City, or what end should grow clear everywhere to the age of Morro, and whither our Sabas should tend even; whither a youth I should delay, eager to consume the begun thing, [280] or in what place: for (I will speak the true) we undertook, I say, this work, and twice took the twin ones Nicholas the fourth presiding, and turned the verses in their own circle: and because to crown the highest triumph with pompous trappings was the intent of the mind, to mount three hundred verses [285] there was no hope: moderation curbs such great things. Thence the grief of the delay of the Roman See: and those we wrote, as the slow fate demanded in order: and the wonderful creation of Peter occurred, wonderful: but the wonderful decease of the same Father in our [290] measures explained: nor was it permitted to take a pause, to take it, we now long ago borne to the heights of the Cardinalate. Hence our Boniface himself triumphing, in the sacred City unlocked the Apex, after the times, why not? impatient by his novelty to run through in meters. [295] I myself prostrate to pause thereupon and an end to the little book to place: nor was it permitted: for after a time laid up among the stars that sacred old man, by surname Morro, stood forth, three times five years gliding being completed. There occurred, how lofty a day, how grateful to one wishing [300] to write: nor had it been placid to dismiss to the lands, whom inserted into heaven God Himself, more powerful than all, caused to be written above the air by the hands of the Church. Thence the songs of Peter once of Morrone again, while it was permitted, while the sad Spouse vacant looks up to her friend [305] afflicted by deceits, the consolations of the mishap we composed, and the gracious one placed in heaven and to be venerated by the lands. Now therefore the pious Supernal one to ask: we can, and to bend to us the divine mind especially, that by his merits the realms gleaming of quiet [310] his, the omnipotent Father may grant, and that the coeval Son, inspiring us may the gracious Spirit give. The honor of praise, and the glory of praise, and the sonorous of praise be expended on the Three; let the glory of praise be to Peter the gracious Confessor, wonderfully giving his songs, [315] with whom joined to the heavenly ones may we reign for ever. Amen.

ANNOTATIONS.

c. That is, miracles.

e. For an hour only.

p. Namely the virtue of humility and obedience.

q. Because they did not see by what instruments, or in what manner they crossed.

r. The preceding miracle is found indicated by no other author: the following also Ailly and Maffei book 2 num. 6 have.

s. Why he should say Gregory IX (for of this one it is treated) who was Capuan by origin, led from the East, I would not grasp, unless below v. 236 the Eastern things the Author himself by a marginal little gloss interprets Celestial. He hints therefore that Gregory was given from heaven.

t. That is, at Lyons.

u. Namely Br. Peter.

x. For they were robbers or evil men.

y. The famous ones seem here to be said, the hungry ones, although the quantity of the first syllable being short opposes: for in these the Poet is not everywhere scrupulous, as has appeared by more than one example.

z. For Br. Peter and his companions helped those robbers, as friends.

α. Because a third time the robbers invaded them.

β. The Papal privilege which he obtained in the Council.

γ. So that they stuck doubtful what was to be done by them.

δ. Namely the Angel who first had offered himself to them.

ε. Stapiae, stapides, staphae, as unknown both in thing and name to the ancient Romans, are not found among the writers of purer Latinity: the origin of the word seems to be from the Teutonic stap a footstep, a step, whence stappen to fix the step, to form steps: opstappen and asstappen to ascend and descend.

ζ. For they were always rejoicing of the grace done to them.

η. For the prophecy was verified: because Lord Latinus died, and that Br. Peter himself was elected Pope: and it seemed to consonate with what was said, that he should write to all the Cardinals, as Brothers.

θ. For from the mouth of Lord Boniface the Author heard, that Celestine being Pope hinted to him that he would be future Pope after him: and also the same more expressly the Author heard from others: which it is wonderful was not observed by other writers.

ι. Namely Christ. But this unless it were so placed in the margin, deservedly Elias would be understood as Celestine, leaving to Boniface, as to Elisha, a double spirit, of teaching and doing miracles.

κ. The Author addresses Celestine.

λ. That is, to Celestine the cause of remaining at Naples after the abdication was the will of confessing to the new Pontiff, when he was elected.

μ. Again superabounds, que.

ν. That is, after the long vacancy of the See.

ξ. Huc, i.e. into the Pontifical dominion, nay to the Curia of Boniface.

ο. God did not severely judge Peter, but purged whatever perchance in the Papacy he transgressed.

π. Br. Peter himself also chastised himself, willing to expiate all his errors.

ρ. To Br. Peter.

ς. Morarer, i.e. how long I should delay to consummate the begun things.

τ. For he began at Rome, and finished at Valence.

υ. That is, the four years in which Pope Nicholas IV sat we expended in the Poetic study, intending to embrace the ceremonies of the Pontifical Coronation of any one in about three hundred verses.

φ. Pausam carpere, i.e. to cease from work: but for the sake of completing the verse the verb Carpere is repeated.

[χ]. Because not immediately after he was a Cardinal he made the work of Boniface, but several years after, namely about the year 1300.

ψ. The state, namely the Cardinalitial.

ω. After namely he had written the work about Boniface.

aa. Supernum, i.e. Saint Peter.

bb. There follows the wonted clause: "Of the famous Canonization of St. Peter of Morrone the Hermit, who of his own accord yielding the Papacy returned to the desert, the book ends. Thanks be to God. Amen." And a verse is added, used by several cloister writers after the completion of any codex: "Who wrote let him write, let him ever live in the Lord": and finally: "Lord Celestine of Aquila made the first," that is, wrote it, doubtless a monk of that Order.

But what we thought to be corrected in this third Book, these were.

* v. 25 lentum, I read lecto.

* 54 Ille, r. Illa.

* 54 nisi, r. sibi

* 77 quid, r. quoad.

* 78 tenent, r. tenens.

* 91 te templo, r. extemplo.

* 95 his r. hæc.

* 97 dat, r. det.

* 107 inquam, r. unquam.

* 108 ne, r. non.

* 118 nec nec, r. & ad hæc.

* 122 quod, r. quæ.

* 149 sed mittere, r. committere.

* 155 vocare, r. vorare.

* 160 sævi natu, r. segni motu.

* 166 inquam, r. ægre.

* 177 scapiti, r. stapiis.

* 187 atque, r. usque

* 210 perfecto, r. perfectio.

* 219 suscipe, r. suspice.

* 238 senes complevit, r. senex complexus.

* 247 munere, r. munera.

* 260 signabat, r. singulam.

* 272 pendere, r. prendere.

* 272 Sanctum tantum, r. Sancti. tanti.

* 275 tantus apex diadema reportat, r. tanti apicis diadema reportet.

* 279 moratur, r. morarer.

* 309 Præcipuam, r. Præcipue.

* 312 sonorus, r. sonorum.

Thus far those things: in which perchance the Reader will find some, which either he would not have changed, or would have otherwise and for the better changed: wherefore about the punctuations also I would have him warned, that all were formed by our judgment, and often most diverse from those which the transcript had, contrary to every sound sense: so that nothing hinders but that anyone wishing to read or correct something otherwise, may freely do it, without any respect to our punctuations; these being changed thereupon about to find something of better sense, which lay hidden from us.

THE OFFICE OF THE SAINT

Composed by the same Jacobus Cardinal.

To the Religious men, dearest friends, the Prior General, the Definitors of the General Chapter of the Order of St. Peter of Morrone, Jacobus, by divine compassion Deacon Cardinal of St. George ad Velum-aureum, health and the affection of sincere love.

The history, which long ago begun by us in heroic meter, in this time of the past vacancy we completed with devotion; the life, manners, rule, election to the Papacy, deeds in it, renunciation, death, canonization; lastly also the miracles of the holy Father, Confessor and Pontiff, Brother Peter of Morrone, formerly Pope Celestine the fifth, of your Order and especially observance under the rule of B. Benedict the Founder, supported (unless we are mistaken) by an arduous rhetorical and veracious description; and the succinct prose, unraveling the matter of the same history, to you first and to your Order we decreed to destine. But the manifold occupation of business, while it did not permit us fully to attend to the correction of the aforesaid work; was the cause, that now to you and to your Order

the same narrative little work corrected should not be sent. But lest meanwhile the little measure of our devotion be silent, nay rather under the music of sweet harmony I and your choir may jubilate with praises to the same excellent Confessor; the three Responsories, together with the Verses, the Alleluia in letter and chant, and the three Orations composed by us about the same Confessor, through Brother Peter of Romano, Prior of the monastery of St. Mary of Collemaggio, of your Order, the bearer of the present, who lately for the business of the same order had come to the Roman Curia, we destine. To the praise therefore and glory of the same Saint, what we send, gratefully receive; and apply them to his festive Office to be chanted; weighing not devotion from the gift, but (as we ask) somehow the gift from our devotion; and have him a propitious intercessor for me with God by your prayers, whom both to be asked for me a sinner, and to deign to intercede for me we trust entreated. Given etc.

RESPONSORY I.

Thee, cultivator of the desert, we venerate as the beginning of our espousal: whose flagrant simplicity of truth, or a cloud filled with the founts of heaven, flowed down honeyed and dewy. Alleluia. V. For thy wonderful sweetness in the bringing back of sinners, and drawing them back from death; ruling by word, raising by example. Honeyed flowed down etc.

RESPONSORY II.

He is made a Monk, who was Pope; and a simple Priest, the Prelate; and bowing to others, to whom the royal scepters had obeyed. Alleluia. V. The sacred diadem of the Empire and the two-horned mitres: To whom etc.

RESPONSORY III.

We unequal to thy praises, Father, demand to be helped by thy prayer: that whom we celebrate as having obtained the celestial things, we may follow thee in the humility of virtue. Alleluia. V. For every one, who humbles himself shall be exalted, and who exalts himself shall be humbled. Thee in virtue etc. Glory be to the Father.

ALLELUIA.

O happy one! treading the Papal honor and the highest things, and having surmounted whatever things, and conquering through all luxury thou enterest the celestial soil, and earthly things for the supernal thou changest, and by the end thou provest thyself to attain the palm.

Oration.

May, we beseech Thee, O Lord, the prayer of Blessed Peter Thy Confessor and Pontiff intercede for us with Thee acceptable, which may both make us imitators of his humility, and lead us to the consortium of his felicity. Through our Lord etc.

Secret.

The obedience of our devotion, O God, having pitied admit, which by the intercession of Blessed Peter Thy Confessor and Pontiff, may be rendered to Thy Majesty so much more acceptable, by how much it is supported by the interpellation of a greater patronage. Through our Lord etc.

Postcommunion.

May the celestial Sacraments taken, O merciful God, purify us, which on this present day, for Thy honor, in the sanctification of Blessed Peter Thy Confessor and Pontiff we have received reverently. Through our Lord etc.

Antiphon at the Magnificat.

Gracious Father, remember thy sons, whom sacred Religion has brought forth, and remembering teach, and the learned ones preserve, lest they perish, but go, into heaven direct the paths. Alleluia.

Antiphon at the Benedictus.

Thee inserted into heaven we ask to assist us on the lands, that we may follow the famous Father into the heights. Alleluia, Alleluia.

ANNOTATIONS.

e. That is, from death.

THE LIFE

By the Author Peter of Ailly Bishop of Cambrai, afterward Cardinal of the Holy Roman Church, with the title of St. Chrysogonus.

From the Manuscript of Rouge-cloître, collated with the edition of Lawrence Surius.

Peter, Celestine V, Supreme Pontiff (St.)

BHL Number: 6751

A. BY PETER OF AILLY.

Book I

PROLOGUE.

To the Religious of the Order of St. Celestine.

Inclined by the charitable prayers of certain venerable Fathers of your sacred Order, dearest Brothers, fearing although and trembling, I presume to write: who about whom? Surely Peter about Peter, a Bishop about a Bishop: but a small one about a greatest, a lowest about a highest, a wicked one too and a most unworthy sinner about a celestial and most worthy Pastor of your holy Flock the first and chief, nay rather of the whole once Christian Church the most holy Prelate Celestine. Whose life and wonderful deeds, now radiant throughout the whole world, while I am eager to commend to letters and with my words polluted, rather than polished, to illustrate with praises; a thing surely unequal to my strength and also to my merits I undertake: and I fear lest, overwhelmed by the weight of the praise which he merited, I rather detect the imbecility of my genius and the rudeness of my eloquence, than represent his virtues, as is fitting. But trusting in the supernal help, and the suffrage of this Saint and of your prayers, I begin the history.

INDEX OF THE CHAPTERS OF BOOK I.

The first book about those things which were written by himself with his own hand concerning his early conversion and conversation, and left in his cell, contains the following Chapters.

THE HISTORY OF BOOK I.

In which are adorned the Writings by the Saint himself.

[1] There was therefore a man laudable for exceeding virtue, in thing and name Peter, on the rock, which is Christ, firmly stabilized, and stably firmed: who upon the indissoluble foundation of this solid rock from his boyish beginnings profiting through the increments of virtues, merited to come even to the perfect man. He therefore born of Abruzzo in the parts of Apulia, more noble in spirit than in flesh, and in mind than in origin, of parents humble in worldly nobility, but noble in Christian virtue, arose. But to his father, Angelerius by name, by Mary his wife, there were, like the Patriarch Jacob, born of pious parents: twelve sons. The devout parents were free, as much as their means was, for the hospitality of the poor, and the largition of alms, and other pious works: and they asked God with assiduous sighs and unwearied prayers, that of the offspring given to them by Him He would choose some one, to be more specially devoted to His services. Nor were they frustrated of their hope: because God does not desert those hoping in Him. This one indeed of the twelve Brothers, like another Joseph, singularly beloved by God and to be foreordained to His services, the divine providence, wisely providing all things, by many indications, and wonderful and memorable signs declared. For at his birth to his mother, while the boy went forth from the womb, as if clothed with a certain religious garment he appeared. And when he had scarcely attained the sixth year, he profits in wisdom and grace: so great and so wonderfully did divine grace shine in him, that he perceived nothing holy and religious by hearing, which hidden in his heart he did not keep. Whence also bringing forth good things from the treasure of his heart, he was often wont to say to his mother; "I wish to be a good servant of God." So the spirit of liberty, breathing where it wishes, sweetly inspired into this boy the divine servitude. So the holy boy profited in age; but above his age, the Holy Spirit cooperating, more and more he profited in wisdom and grace with God and men. Wherefore his mother magnified the Lord, and in God her salvation spiritually exulted.

[2] But his father now being dead in a good old age, his wife being left with seven sons (for then the others had died) the blessed mother, and truly blessed with such offspring, decreed to deliver this her son to the school and study of letters. the father being dead he is applied to studies, But on that night, on whose former day the boy began to read, the dead father appeared in dreams to a certain godmother of his, saying to her: "My wife has resolved to deliver our son Peter to literary studies. O how well for me and for him and for many others! Say therefore to her, that if ever she truly loved me, now in this let her show it, that she constantly perfect what she began." Nor is this to be believed to have been done without a special provision of God: for the enemy of the human race, envying the happy successes of this boy, strove to impugn the holy purpose of the mother through himself and his ministers. He tempted first the boy, that he should not give his mind and effort to study. He tempted also from envy his brothers, the demon attempting in vain to impede this. as once the brothers of Joseph, and they reproached the mother, that while they labored, he was free for leisure and quiet. He tempted again a certain rich man of that land, who flattering the boy, said that he would constitute him heir of all his goods, that so through secular desires he might lead his mind away from the love of Religion. He tempted finally his mother through a certain divine, or more truly diabolical man, who persuaded her to take this one from study, and to instruct another lesser son in letters, because this one would soon die, nor would become, as she had hoped, a servant of God. But not even so could the constant and strong woman be changed from her purpose; for she remembered and thence was comforted, and thought and oftener revolved in mind, the things which had been said about the boy, and there was verified in the handmaid, what the Gospel speaks of the Lady: "Mary kept all these words, pondering them in her heart." Luke 2.

[3] But the faithful God, who permits no one to be tempted beyond what he can bear, after the aforesaid diabolical temptations, applied also divine consolations, and gave (as He Himself promises in Scripture) with the temptation the issue. 1 Cor. 10. If thou seekest the manner, hear a thing wonderful to say, and new and unusual to hear. He enjoys divine consolations while still a boy; That boy was still most simple, and now first in a short time had learned to read the Psalter. When the most blessed

Virgin and St. John the Evangelist standing beside the cross of Jesus he often saw, He seemed to descend to him, and consoling him to chant the Psalms with him most sweetly. The Angels also fallen from heaven, as his pedagogues instructing him, he saw in dreams to assist him; and if perchance after the manner of a little boy with his coevals he had been tempted by the devil to say or do something less seemly, to correct him with a sweet rebuke and pious chastisement. His mother moreover saw in dreams, that this boy was the keeper of many sheep, white as snow: which she understanding too literally, was a cause to her at first of no small trouble: but afterward this trouble was turned into admiration, and the admiration into consolation. For the son, when he was scarcely twelve years old, now as it were by a prophetic spirit spiritually expounding the dream, foretold that he would be the pastor of many good souls.

[4] But neither are the stupendous miracles to be passed in silence, which for the consolation of the mother and son the Lord deigned to do. The mother had been for the space of thirty years and more held by so grave an infirmity, that she had lost the due vigor and use of her right side. She, the mother being healed by miracle, as devout to God and full of faith, in hope of cure sets out on pilgrimage to a certain holy place, and in one night being restored to her former health is cured. Here also her son, while he was still a boy of three years, struck with a sharp wood in his right eye, is blinded. But the physicians despairing of its natural cure, the mother did not despair of the spiritual medicine: but trusting in the blessed Virgin; carrying the boy to a certain church of hers, there one night she watches and prays: and while the maternal eye amid the devout suffrages of prayers weeps, the eye of the son in the morning itself sound and without blemish is restored. What more? Another son also now grown, while he was binding the harvest, an awn of grain clinging to his eye, for many days running here and there, his and his brother's injured eye is healed, and seeking help and not finding it, day and night for excessive pain cried out. The mother pitying him, turns to the former physician, and that to this son, as also to the other, she apply a remedy, humbly entreats. And lo, the light of day coming, the younger son looks into the brother's eye: and the awn, which was in the middle of the eye, without any medicament, taking it with his fingers only, casts it out, and restores health. Again the devout mother, in a certain time of great famine bread failing her, when for sustaining the life of herself and her own no human remedy remained, fled to the divine, and now in herself and her sons experienced, succor; and turns herself to the Lord, and suppliantly prays, that to this necessity He mercifully provide. But in the morning she commands her son, that he take a sickle, and go into the field. He refused, saying: "To what shall I go? The harvest indeed is still green: I shall profit nothing": for it was not yet the time of harvest. At length however he enters the field, obeying his mother; in the middle of which so great a harvest white and ripe, as had been necessary for them, is found. Nor do I think to be passed over another memorable miracle, which happened to that same little woman. and the domestic necessity is succored. For when she was most devout to the Saints of God, and venerated their festivities with great honor, on the feast of the beheading of B. John the Baptist, because on the following day it was needful to make bread, that evening wishing to dispose the leaven she began with fear to put water into the flour: and lo, the whole mass of flour suddenly seemed to teem with worms. Then she trembling and falling to the ground, prays pardon of God: and immediately the flour returns to its former state. Great are these and wonderful works of Thine, O Christ, and whether by the merits of the mother, or of the son, or (as we piously believe) of both they are sacred, to the glory of Thy name and in reverence of this Saint, they will be to be proclaimed for perpetual ages.

[5] Hitherto therefore the boyish years being passed, henceforth we proceed to the deeds of a more advanced age. And so the holy boy, made an adolescent, so now fervid with the love of the eremitic life and of solitude, that to his heart that prophetic word might deservedly be believed divinely inscribed: "Lo, I have gone far off fleeing, and abode in the wilderness." Ps. 54., Ps. 83. And again that: "I have chosen to be abject in the house of the Lord, rather than to dwell in the tabernacles of sinners." But because at that time there was no servant of God in his homeland, Peter exhorts his companion to the solitary life: with whom he could have suitable counsel of executing his purpose, beyond the twentieth year of his age he deferred to satisfy his burning desire. But at length to a certain companion of his he opened the secret of his heart; "What," he says, "are we doing? Let us go out from our homeland, and parents and all things being left, naked let us follow the naked Christ, and to serve Him more freely let us come to a far solitude: but that we attempt nothing rashly and without the counsel of the Church, let us consult at Rome the Apostolic See." To these suasions that one acquiesced, and they began to walk together. But the journey of one day being completed, badly tenacious of the purpose he repented, and persuaded to return to the homeland and kinsmen. Why so? Surely because he had not been sufficiently drawn by Him, of whom Truth says: "No one can come to me, unless my Father shall have drawn him." John 6. But this our Peter, drawn and inspired by the heavenly Father, to the inconstant companion with a constant mind thus responded: the other leaping back he goes on alone, "I trust in the Lord, that if thou dismiss me, He will not dismiss me, who deserts not those hoping in Him." Alone therefore and destitute of human, although not of divine, consortium, he sets about the proposed journey: in which after many labors, terrors and perils, one thing is read to have happened to him worthy of relation before the rest. There was on a certain mountain a Hermit, to whom while glad and rejoicing he disposes to come, chiefly for this, that he should say himself about to go to Rome; before he entered the eremitic cell, the Spirit of the Lord forbade him, lest he lay open to him the secrets of his heart, and showed him the dishonest life of that hypocrite, and forbade him from his dangerous consortium. But in the same place on a certain other day, when the holy adolescent, the Hermit being absent, had entered his cell; and when, night being come, not without much fear, and refreshed by celestial chant, as long as he could, he had watched in prayer; weighed down with sleep, falling to the ground, he fell asleep. And lo, suddenly a great throng of Angels and Saints seemed to be present to him, and in the mouth of each of them red roses appeared: they too resounded celestial measures and sweet songs, delightful beyond measure. A wonderful thing; but what follows is more wonderful. with scant food he lives 10 days: For he heard songs of this kind for some space, even after he had been roused from sleep, and was made so glad and secure, that satiated with spiritual joy, sustained only by two loaves and two fishes which he had brought with him, he remained there alone for ten days.

[6] But after these things God, the keeper and chief companion of his ways, deferred the proposed journey to Rome, and showed him on another mountain a place, he dwells three years in a little ditch: in which he found a great rock, and under it dug a small pit, in which he might be covered, which scarcely could suffice for him to raise himself up and stretch out: and there for the space of three years he passed in great austerity of life. In this place therefore, amid many consolations of the divine goodness, you would scarcely believe, how great temptations of diabolical malignity at the beginning of his conversion, waking and sleeping, the unconquered soldier endured, and how patiently, like another Job, as good things from the hand of the Lord, so also evil receiving, with the blessing of the divine name he overcame the diverse and adverse battles of the world, the flesh, and the demon. Job 1. But to narrate all would be long, and the intent hastens to other things.

[7] These three years therefore being passed in the said place, in which he was tried like gold in the furnace, those who knew his sanctity persuaded him, initiated into the Priesthood at Rome, that he should take the Priestly Order. For which cause he goes to Rome, and there is made a Priest of God: and then he comes to the mount of Morrone, there finding a certain crypt, in which it pleased him to dwell. Of which holy guest the wonderful virtue is declared also by a wonderful sign. For when first he entered the place, he dwells on the mount of Morrone 5 years, lo, suddenly before him a great serpent goes forth: which not bearing the presence of his virtue, departing from that place, utterly disappeared. There therefore the holy man remaining for five years, from Him, of whom every best gift and every perfect gift is from above, received very many gifts of graces: and yet humbling himself more and more before God, and esteeming himself an unworthy sinner, sometime thought to leave the office of Mass, fearing to handle the sacrament of so great a mystery, by the example of the supreme Hermit, than whom among those born of women there arose not a greater; by the example also of the blessed Confessors Paul, Anthony, Benedict, and other Saints, to whom the solitude of the desert was friendly. Matt. 11. And so he often and much thinking these things with himself, that he might be able to receive salutary counsel upon these, disposed to come to Rome to the Apostolic See. divinely encouraged to sacrifice. But lo, the day approaching, on which he ought to undertake the journey, by night there came to him in a vision a certain Abbot lately dead, who first had conferred on him the habit of Religion. Whom he, adjuring by the living God, what was to be done by him, humbly asks. But he persuaded him to say Mass with fear and trembling, and so disappeared. On the same day also a certain holy Monk, to whom he was wont to confess, counseling the same thing, which the Abbot in the vision had said, drew him to the confidence of celebrating the sacred mystery. Alas good Jesus, alas with how great bitterness of heart and blushing of brow these things will deservedly be heard, by those who still wrapped in great vices, presume intrepidly to minister so great a Sacrament.

[8] Surely from this rash and damnable presumption, how studiously the humble servant of God guarded himself, and taught not to omit it on account of nocturnal pollutions: not only the premised things, but also those which follow show. For from reverence of this sacred mystery a great perplexity again arises for him, what was to be done by him, when by a nocturnal pollution his body should happen to be stained; although however his mind most pure, strove as far as it could to resist such uncleanness. And when from religious Brothers he sought counsel, whether on the same day it should be celebrated, or the celebration should be ceased from; nor was there one opinion of all, some feeling thus, others otherwise; his pious mind fluctuating in doubt, recurred to the divine help. And lo, in dreams Christ seemed to assist him, dissolving the perplexity of this doubt; and instructing him with a parabolic similitude, that if his ass, that

is, his brutal and irrational body, by an innate custom should make its own uncleanness; not on account of this his ruler, that is, his rational mind, alien from consent to the allurement of the unclean flesh, ought to grow torpid from the ascent of celestial things, that is from the contemplation of divine things, or from the exercise of spiritual mysteries. By which vision the servant of God consoled, resumed the quiet of mind and spiritual gladness, understanding that on account of an involuntary pollution of the flesh and repugnant to the law of his mind, it did not behoove him to cease from the communion of the divine Sacrament.

[9] But this example we ought not to receive without a great moderation of discretion: inasmuch as we are very dissimilar to this most holy Priest, that this may be done safely, and far distant from his perfection and the purity of his mind. Wherefore it is to be diligently considered by us, that nocturnal pollution can proceed from a fourfold cause. Sometimes from surfeit, sometimes from some previous thought of sin, sometimes from superfluity or weakness of nature, and sometimes from diabolical illusion. And although none of these of itself seems to be a sin, because since in sleep the use of reason is bound, there cannot then properly be a sin, which is not voluntary; yet sometimes pollution of this kind can be an effect consequent to sin. Therefore we ought chiefly to advert in ourselves, whether in the cause of the pollution can be found any preceding sin, whether venial or mortal. But we call it venial, if the sin ends in delight only without deliberative consent: a threefold rule is assigned. but mortal, if to the delight a deliberate consent is added. With this consideration therefore premised, a threefold rule is to be observed by us. The first, that when it is certainly established, or even probably doubtful, that the pollution has its origin from a mortal sin, then from Communion it is to be abstained of necessity. The second, that when it is established or verisimilarly believed, that the pollution had not its origin from a mortal sin, but only from a venial, because expressly it is found that consent in delight did not precede, then it is to be abstained of decency; so that he does not sin mortally who communicates, but venially, except when urgent necessity or another reasonable cause excuses. The third, that when it is certain or verisimilar, that the pollution arises not from sin, but from natural weakness or superfluity or diabolical illusion, the mind not consenting but rather resisting, then it is in one's choice to communicate or to abstain, so that he who communicates is not to be vituperated, but also he who abstains for reverence of the Sacrament is to be praised, and seems to act more safely: because it is not easy to discern, from what cause the pollution proceeds, and whether it happened without sin, or from mortal or venial sin. Yet it is special in those living holily and religiously, just as it is established this one lived, of whom our discourse is: for if such feel through the fervor of penance and devotion their heart purged from such a stain, and from its sequel infective of the spiritual taste, they have no need to be constrained by the said rules, that they may the less salutarily be able to come to the altar. If also from diabolical illusion to any one of such pollution happen, the cause of this illusion not preceding in him, but rather a contrary cause preventing, and this happen to him frequently, and especially on those days on which he is most bound to communicate, on account of this he ought not to cease from Communion; because it is a sign, that the devil strives to take away the fruit of the Eucharist, which by communicating he would receive. And to this is to be drawn that example of this saint, which we narrated above: and also another example, which about another certain holy Monk we read in the Conferences of the Fathers, to whom it was counseled in the premised case to communicate: and so the devil seeing he could not attain his intent, confounded and deluded from the illusion ceased.

[10] These things therefore, an occasion incidentally occurring, being interposed, let us return to the history. Therefore the holy man, the five years on the mount of Morrone being passed, On the mount of Maiella, because the adjacent woods had been destroyed, and cultivated by men, desiring a greater solitude; from that place transferred himself to the mount of Maiella, and there under a certain great crypt decreed to dwell. But the two companions departing from him, who had come with him, because that place pleased them by no means, he nevertheless alone remained. But they after a few days, followed him whom in Christ they loved from the bowels. What wonder? For how would they not love and follow him, who loving them in turn, if they were infirm in body, supported them: if small of heart, comforted them: if slothful or negligent, roused them: he hedges a cell for himself and two Companions: if forgetful or improvident, admonished them? O happy that society, coupled by the bond of mutual charity, to which though there was a trinity of bodies, yet to it was a unity of minds! Acts 4. To which agreed that proclamation of Apostolic praise; "They had one heart and one soul, and all things were common to them." Ps. 132. To which finally it was worthy to chant that Davidic verse: "Behold how good and how pleasant it is, for brethren to dwell in one." These three Brothers therefore being gathered in the name of the holy Trinity, not the amenity of the place, but the charity of the mind, made that deserted habitation to be pleasant. For the aforesaid crypt of that mountain, utterly rough and steep, but whence there was a level way for them to the supernal fatherland, not with a pompous circuit of walls, but with a humble enclosure, composed of bundles from the thickets and thorns, they fenced; and in it made for themselves a most poor and modest dwelling, that from it at length the most ample palace of heaven rich they might merit to enter.

[11] But the adversary of fraternal charity the devil strove to stir up for them a new occasion of temptation. For in the month of June, while a now fervid summer scorched that land, lo, on a certain night it seemed to the man of God, whose appearing fire, that the whole cell round about was set on fire. But he calling his Brothers: "Rise," he says, "quickly, and cast all things outside." But they rising, and seeing the cell burn, carrying with them what they could, fled as quickly as possible, and again began to murmur against him, that he had come to inhabit such a place: for they believed the fire had descended from the high summit of the mountain. But the holy man comforted by God, proposed in his heart to leave that place on the occasion of no adversity, even if his body should happen to be tortured by fire. O great work of virtue! by his constancy he makes it vanish, As soon as this fire of charity kindled in the secret of his heart blazed, the other fire from the place of the exterior dwelling, as if it had been a dream, vanished. But although several of his devout friends, sometimes visiting him for the cause of spiritual consolation, dissuaded that inhabitation, as grievous and difficult for them, to the servant of God; he however not reproving those reproving him, but, as he was mild and humble of heart, with a placid countenance, a tranquil mind tempering them through mild words, responded: "O dearest ones, then to this place you will come gladly and easily, when the will of coming shall have proceeded from a great fervor of devotion." Which word, as if prophetically said by the Holy Spirit, and admits more companions: was efficaciously fulfilled. For soon after, so great an ardor had kindled many of them and of other devout ones, that vying they hastened to the desert and that sacred solitude, and thereafter came to him about to leave the world. Who although, as much as he could, he refused to receive them, humbly alleging his own imperfection, and saying himself simple and less skilled for the pastoral rule of others, and therefore desiring always to remain solitary; yet conquered by charity, sometime gave assent, and received certain ones to the consortium of the eremitic and monastic life.

[12] But by many great and wonderful signs the Holy Spirit wished to declare, that He had chosen that place, as a special habitation for Himself. on account of a dove there familiar, First indeed, when the Brothers began to dwell there, a certain dove appeared, which always seemed to take food in that place, in which afterward the altar of the oratory was situated: and there often dwelling, even while the Office was sung, was so domestic to the Brothers, as if it had been reared by them. And that this apparition might be believed to be true and not sophistical, to the honor of the Holy Spirit he constructs an oratory. that Spirit of truth working, who above Christ in the species of a dove appeared; this dove remained there not for a small time, but for the space of three years, in the name of the holy Trinity, under that domesticity which was said. Matt. 3. Nor was this sign without a worthy effect. For afterward to the honor of the Holy Spirit a beautiful oratory was constructed there, and to obtain His spiritual gifts, thither very many with enormous devotion even from far parts came, to whom the consolation of the Paraclete and the grace of His munificent largity was not lacking.

[13] But how great and how magnificent gifts of graces the Holy Spirit afterward conferred in that place, we can rather admire than relate: yet a few of many the following narration will declare. For on a certain day, in which the sound of bells is divinely produced, when some from the neighboring homeland had convened at the said oratory, and the servant of God was speaking to them about the word of life, there came four men from another homeland; at whose arrival so vehement a spirit of charity blazed in him, that he could scarcely contain himself. Whence quickly the former neighbors being excluded from him, and those who had come being received, with the Brothers to render praises to God they entered the oratory together. And while they were saying the divine Office, lo, suddenly they began to hear the sound of many and great and sweetly resounding bells. Whence they greatly astonished wondered: for that place was so remote from every habitation of men, that no sound of a bell could thence be heard. But they going out from the oratory, with ears erect and eyes raised to heaven, moved by so great a novelty of the thing, devout for joy pour tears, and render due thanksgivings to God. What more? After having had with the holy man colloquies of salutary erudition, all their goods being dispersed and given to the poor, about to follow Christ poor, they take the habit of sacred Religion. But neither is that to be passed over in silence, that the sound and din of bells of this kind, not then, or only once, but very often by night and day, and that greater on the more solemn feasts: especially at the hours of the divine Office, was heard: nor only by those Brothers, but also by several others from the neighboring cities and adjacent places: nor always equal: nor by all equally: but on the greater festivities a greater ringing was heard: also at the very elevation of the Lord's body a greater bell, and one which more sweetly than the rest resounded. And when that sound was so great, and so filled the hearing, that it could scarcely sometimes without

injury be borne: yet (which is wonderful to say) the more attentively anyone accommodated his ears to it, the more remissly he heard. Whence if these things are true, nay because they are true, we can sufficiently know, that that sound was not phantastic, but truly celestial, and formed by a divine miracle. Which also from this we evidently conjecture, that by this sound it is established that some were healed from a double infirmity, namely of mind and body, and freed from diabolical infestation. O therefore true, and of true and wonderful virtue sound! which not only the ears of the body, but also the ears of the heart, and the powers of the other members, and also the virtues of minds so efficaciously penetrated.

[14] But now we, who have narrated the sounds of the celestial bells, ought also not to keep silent the voices of the celestial spirits. and the songs of Angels heard, celebrating a dedication: For there were heard there very often most sweet voices, and most suave Angelic songs, sometimes in the cell of the holy man, sometimes in the oratory of the Brothers, while they themselves sang the divine Office: but sometimes even while they themselves ceased and paused, as if bringing them help, they resounded more strongly. The holy man saw and heard there many celestial secrets, which to express singly would be long. But one among the rest by right cannot be passed in silence. For when he once at the dawn of day sat solitary in his cell, and the window being open read in his book, lo, suddenly there appeared outside the cell several glorious spirits, who going around the place, chanted the Office of dedication. Which finished, their vision immediately vanished. Afterward however to a certain one of the Brothers a certain splendid man appeared, saying to him: "Know, that this oratory was built and dedicated by God. And this sign I will give thee in testimony of the truth: for this morning, when thou shalt have entered the sacred place, the lamp, which is kindled before the altar, no one appearing who carries it, full of oil will be moved here and there." Which also was done, all the Brothers seeing and admiring.

[15] But just as this place was specially chosen and beloved by God, by the preceding signs and several other indications it is declared; so it is not doubted to have been singularly hateful to the devil. demons also seen hostile to the place. Whence several of the Brothers often saw throngs of demons, roaring in the wood about this place, and wishing but not able to enter. Moreover in a certain Lent, when the Brothers had given themselves much to fasting and prayer and other good works, as much as they could, so much the more that malign spirit tempted to subvert them: but the Holy Spirit helping them, he could in no way prevail. Who when he could not injure them interiorly in the heart, as is read of B. Job, attempted to injure them exteriorly in the body. Job 2. For on the Sunday in Passion-tide by night, before they rose to vigils, he openly appeared to them, nor is it easy to express with how great fear and trembling he struck them. But one of them, the fingers of his hands turned over, was believed to have lost their use. He cried out, and with him the rest: there was for them nowhere security: not in the cell, not in the choir, not in the church, because everywhere they saw most foul demons. But the holy man perceiving these things, praying in his cell, sent to them, saying that they should persevere in the divine office, nor succumb to these contrivances of diabolical fraud, but resist strong in faith. But morning being made all these phantasms vanished. So therefore the best providence of God dispensing it, these His servants, for the proof of their faith and the exercise of virtue, amid various consolations of the Holy Spirit, also these and very many other temptations of the malign spirit endured, like the great athlete of Christ, who says: "Lest the greatness of the revelations exalt me, there was given me an angel of Satan, to buffet me." 2 Cor. 12

[16] But these things, which hitherto piously and faithfully, Christ being witness, I have related, therefore I confess myself to revere with a more certain faith and greater devotion, faith is to be given to the above because they were written by St. Celestine. because by this holy man, not to his own glory, but to the praise of God and the edification of the neighbor, purely and simply the truth of the history being narrated, and written with his own hand, in his cell they were found. For I do not think anyone, who has even a slender sense of religion, would wish to commit so great a crime of sacrilege, as to suppose that he in this writing had lied. Far be from anyone, who lives under God, that suspicion: let the human mind shudder to hear this, because this is not the voice of a man, but of a demon. For neither did that holy man seek this or need it, that either by himself or by others he should be praised with any lies. For although many of his deeds became known to the world, because they could not be concealed: yet they are said to be innumerable, which, as is read of B. Martin, while he avoided boasting, he concealed, nor suffered to come to the knowledge of men: inasmuch as he, having surmounted human praise, and treading the glory of the world, enjoyed the conscience of his virtue, heaven being witness. But if perchance in these things, which with him as author about his deeds I have above mentioned, a rather rustic discourse offend the too delicate ears of some, upon you, dearest Brothers, will be my excuse. For you who granted to me to narrate the deeds of this Saint, ought also to have conceded this, that it might be permitted me, by his example, to despise the trappings of discourses and the ornaments of words.

ANNOTATIONS.

Book II

PROLOGUE OF BOOK II.

I am now compelled, dearest Brothers, and deservedly constrained to say with the Prophet: "Lord, I have heard Thy hearing, and feared." Hab. 3., Eccli. 15. For I have heard the Lord teaching with the voice of the Wise One, that "praise is not comely in the mouth of a sinner." Ps. 49. I have heard again through the Prophet saying to the sinner: "Why dost thou declare my justices, and take my testament through thy mouth?" I have heard therefore, O Lord God, this hearing of Thy erudition and commination, which if with the ear of the heart, as of the body, I have perceived, surely I feared. For how would I not fear, an unworthy sinner, when the holy Prophet asserts himself to fear? How, I say, would I not vehemently fear, or how, so forgetful a hearer of the premised things, or so unmindful of my condition would I be, that without fear and blushing I should rashly arrogate to myself to express the praises of this holy Peter the Confessor, and to declare his, nay rather of the glorious God in His Saint, the virtues, I who loaded with many and great sins, and still subject to the passions of the flesh, have not yet felt the sweetness of the Spirit, unworthy to taste so great a sweetness? Therefore not undeservedly I had proposed to draw my hand back from the pen, and in those things, which in the former little book are narrated, to terminate the audacity of writing. But now I see, most beloved Brothers, that the premised discourse of my narration has not yet been able to satisfy your desires; unless I also write those things, which about this holy man by his devout Brothers, veracious indeed and faithful authors, have been delivered, and in testimony of the truth confirmed also by Apostolic authority. In this therefore obeying not my own, but your will, to resist which charity forbade; trusting also in your, not in my prayers and merits, to the writing of those things secure and bold, would that not presumptuous and rash, I proceed.

INDEX OF CHAPTERS.

Here begins the second book, of those things which were done by him up to his death, and approved by his Brothers and other authors worthy of faith. Which contains the following chapters.

CHAPTER I.

His rare virtues. The Rule for his monasteries approved by Gregory X. Zeal for souls.

[1] But whence rather should I begin, than from prayer, of which in this holy man so fervent, and so continual and frequent was the devotion, Assiduous in prayer, that I may rather admire than relate it? For he was free night and day for devout prayers: and although inhabiting the earth in body, the heaven however in mind, now as it were he seemed to enjoy divine colloquies. Ps. 118. He rose at midnight with the Prophet, to confess to the name of the Lord: and the matutinal office being completed, he read the Psalter with litanies and very many suffrages, nor were lacking to the voices of the mouth the groans of the heart, and abundant rivers of tears. But at dawn he celebrated Mass so devoutly, he celebrates Mass most devoutly, that he kindled even the minds of those standing by with a certain ardor of charity. Which finished, again, as before, he recurred to psalmody and the suffrages of prayers. And then at each hour paying the office due to God, not only seven times in the day, but as it were continually he was instant on the divine praises with tears and genuflections. But if any time remained, in which he ceased from prayer, he gave it not to leisure or rest, he labors with his hands: but either to the necessity of nature, or to a useful exercise and labor. For he wrote books and bound them, or sewed his garments, or those of his confreres, that the tempter of evils the devil, might always find him occupied in the labor of good works.

[2] But that the holy man of God might be free more freely for prayer and contemplation, he compelled his flesh in wonderful ways to be subject and serve the spirit. he never eats flesh, Whence studying with all his strength to subdue it as a domestic enemy, neither well nor sick did he eat flesh. Wine also he drank most rarely, yet so mixed with water, that it seemed to have lost the appearance of wine. He always also, except on the Lord's Days, fasted; nor those things, which would taste to the palate, but those which scarcely sustained the weakness of his body, on the 6th feria he fasts more strictly: he took for food. And when he did these things daily, yet specially on the sixth feria with a stricter fast, namely on bread and water, he afflicted his flesh, exercising in himself compassion of the Lord's passion. But although he used most sparing food and drink, of them however, as of great benefits of God, he exhibited devout and abundant thanksgivings to the Lord. And as he fed his body sparingly, so he fed his soul abundantly, refreshing it continually with the reading of sacred Scripture and other holy books, as with spiritual food and drink, firmly bearing this in mind, "Not

by bread alone does man live, but by every word that proceeds from the mouth of God." Deut. 8.

[3] But although that abstinence which we have mentioned could deservedly have sufficed, yet by no means content with it the man of God, every year observed six Lents, he observes six Lents, in which he used only one insipid dish: and in three of them fasting on bread and water, sometimes on the leaves of cabbages alone without bread, sometimes he fed on raw fruits alone. Nor can it be easily enumerated or narrated, with how great austerity day and night he bound himself with the greater curbs of abstinence, with which he afflicted his human frailty as if inhumanly curbing it, so that he seemed to pursue death itself and to wish to snatch it. For one deed is delivered as done by him, which to very many perchance, as Eusebius says of Origen, will seem to be of a less perfect sense, but containing an indication of a perfect faith. For at a certain Lenten time, and one in a pit constrained by cold, as if devising stronger kinds of torments, that he might fulfil the fast more austerely, and be free for divine contemplation more attentively, descending into a certain pit, he brought in for sustenance only ten loaves and eight onions. And lo, when there the excessive harshness of rains and snows and cold had prevailed, his garments by the tenacity of the ices so clung to the surrounding walls of the pit, that for twenty days he remained immovable, yet persevering in the praises of God. And this Lent being completed, when certain devout men came, who to receive his holy blessing were then wont to come to him, they found him as it were half-alive: and thence with weeping and lamentation drawing him, and refreshing him with a kindled fire, finding still there five loaves, which had remained over, they wondered. O how wonderfully for so long a time He fed him with five loaves in the cave, who had satisfied many thousands of men with five loaves in the desert! and living on five loaves alone. Afterward however he heard a voice saying to him, and divinely teaching him: "Brother Peter," he said, "do not impose so heavy a burden on thy little ass: because if thou kill it, thereof before God thou wilt have to render account." Which heard, he thereafter somewhat tempered himself from burdens so heavy and unbearable to his corporeal frailty. But here I address thee, O wonderful providence of God. For Thou who disposest all things wisely and sweetly, why didst Thou wish to draw the mind of this Thy servant into so great and so immoderate, so to speak, penance, from which afterward by Thy pious moderation Thou didst decree to draw him back? Surely for this, that Thou mightest show the great zeal of his faith, and through this arduous, and more to be admired than to be imitated example, mightest provoke us too soft and slothful, to some kind of penance. So Thou didst stir up Abraham to immolate his son, not that immolating he should kill, but that by willing to kill, the justice of obedience might become known, and the obedience of the just one might demonstrate an example to the rest.

[4] Nor only in much abstinence, in unceasing fasts, in nearly continual vigils, he is clothed in a hairshirt, but also in other things did the faithful servant of God strive to observe an austerity of penance to be admired by all ages. For he, clothed in very cheap and rough garments, used hairshirts of horsehair netted and knotted, just as John the Baptist was clothed with camel's hair. He was a great doctor and preacher of penance: but this one was a great imitator and disciple of him: yet we narrate certain great things of the disciple, which we do not read of the master. and with an iron chain, For this one next to his bare flesh wore an iron chain, or sometimes an iron circle: this one spurning the softness of a bed, upon the ground and bare boards, or latticed gratings, clothed with a hairshirt and his loins girded with an iron circle or chain, sleeping lay: and for a pillow he put wood or a stone, or something of this kind under his head. And, which is wonderful to say, even when sick he is reported never to have used a softer bed. What more? This one in certain of the aforesaid Lenten times used a hairshirt alone for all clothing. But in certain ones a hairshirt, with a cuirass placed over it, by whose weight his flesh through the entering knots of the hairshirt was often wounded, and teeming with gore and worms putrefied. What do we say here? and wont to lie hard, Whence so great fortitude in a mortal and frail body? Whence so strong a virtue of endurance in a weak man? Surely so long and so austere a kind of martyrdom the man of God above man, not by human, but by divine virtue specially assisting him, is to be believed to have been able to bear. And therefore it could come to pass, that so burdensome a yoke not only strongly and willingly, but lightly and sweetly he bore by the grace of Him, who says: "My yoke is sweet, and my burden light." Matt. 11.

[5] It was fitting therefore, that this burning and shining lamp should not be hidden under a bushel, but be placed upon a candlestick, that it might shine to all who are in the house of God. And therefore when he had for some time lain hidden in the desert, Many companions he draws to himself: afterward he became openly known to the world. For the splendor of his virtues, and the gleaming flame of charity, and the odoriferous fame of his all-round sanctity so generally to be scattered and far and wide to be diffused merited, that to the society of his holy life, and its imitation they allured many. Whence it came to pass, that so great a multitude of Brothers, to be subjected to his mastership and to be taught by his example, flowed to him, that for their suitable habitation it behoved to construct various places. Which although they were most poor, the holy man did not cease to console the poverty of the Brothers by his visitation, and to propose to them the documents and examples of the blessed poverty of Christ, and to teach with the highest diligence the other precepts and Evangelical counsels, which he himself had fulfilled singly with the highest love and zeal, to be fulfilled. And lest the little flock which he had so gathered into the sheepfold of Christ, dispersed should perish, when the man of God had heard that all Orders, not approved by the Apostolic See, ought to be annulled, in the general Council of Lyons, then to be celebrated under Pope Gregory X; in the Council of Lyons he obtains from Gregory X the confirmation of his order: he himself as a pious and true Pastor, laying down his soul for his sheep, not sparing himself nor his labors, although weak and broken, not riding, but going on foot, two Brothers being taken with him, undertook that long and harsh journey with great peril of his life. But by the helping grace of God arriving there, beyond what he hoped, he merited to find grace in the eyes of the supreme Pontiff, and obtained the privilege of the confirmation of his Order under the Rule of B. Benedict. Which blessed God by a pious dispensation willed to be done, that the blessed Rule of that holy Father, then much, and now more by certain ones (alas the grief!) monks in name only trodden down, by the new institution of this holy Order being relieved, might be reformed for the better.

[6] in his return he is kept from various molestations. Nor by a prosperous end and fruitful event was the most regulated ordainer, and most ordered regulatrix of all orders, the will and disposition of God, frustrated. For after the immense labors of that journey, after the innumerable perils of the way, after the ambushes of robbers, from whom miraculously, a messenger being divinely sent to him in the effigy of a soldier, sitting upon a white horse and directing his way, he was rescued and freed, after also other various tribulations and molestations, which not only in himself, but he being absent also in his Brothers and their monasteries and goods, from certain Bishops of those places he endured; after these, I say, so diverse and adverse kinds of labors and perils, at length the divine grace protecting him, returned to his own, with enormous joy and all exultation he is received. And soon after, his Brothers being gathered from everywhere, in the monastery of the Holy Spirit of Maiella he celebrates a general Chapter: where the same Spirit inspiring, treating much with them about the observance of the commandments of God and the said Rule, he establishes statutes, he usefully ordained very many statutes very salutary for the reformation of monastic discipline. And from then and thereafter many places and monasteries, even certain ones which had been of the black monks, he attached to his Order. And his holy Religion grew so much, that in a short time he dedicated thirty-six places to the Lord, in which nearly six hundred Brothers and oblates, with many a devout household, sweated in various exercises of virtues and good works. he has under him 36 places. And because many devout seculars, not able to assume the habit of religion, were zealous to have the society and participation of the Order, he constituted a certain Confraternity: in which under certain salutary observances, in several cities and places, an innumerable multitude of both sexes, profiting in works of mercy and other virtues, exhibited to Christ and His members pious obediences. So God to the new vineyard, which through His servant He had planted, willed to give a great increment in so short a time, and at the same time multiplied the people, and magnified the gladness. he institutes Confraternities: For at the multiplication and magnification of this Religion the whole world exulted, and the man of God and his Brothers, as Saints, all the people exalted: inasmuch as God not only through him, but also through very many of his Brothers, deigned to bring forth many and great miracles by His wonderful grace.

[7] Nor only, as we have foresaid, but in other wonderful and unspeakable ways was there to him a great zeal of charity: with great zeal he procures the salvation of souls. not only for the salvation of his Brothers, but also of all souls. Nor is it easy to narrate, how many souls he drew out of the jaws of the devil, how many from the way of depravity to the way of piety, from vanity to truth, from cupidity to charity, from proud elation to humble subjection he drew. Whence it came to pass, that by his doctrine and example, the men and women of the surrounding places seemed nearly all religious. And if among them any strife or discord arose, if any scandal, if anything adverse to good morals were born, by his authority and counsel as it were terrified by a certain divine command, all were converted to amendment. But who would suffice to express the zeal of mercy, which he specially bore toward the poor? For he cherished them not only with spiritual, but also with corporal refection. Whence when they flowed to him from everywhere, pitying them beyond what can be said, he distributed alms. benign toward the poor, And when much was given to him and his poor Brothers, he as a faithful dispenser, following the doctrine of the Prophet, dispersed all and gave to the poor: and therefore his justice remains for ever and ever. Ps. 111. So therefore everything which he possessed, was as it were the common patrimony of all. For that he might lavish food on the needy, dowries on virgins, remedies on the sick, and subsidies on the oppressed, he commanded his Brothers to sell not only the sheep and oxen and other animals of his monasteries, but also the silver chalices and silken garments and other precious ornaments of the churches

to sell: that he might commute the prices of these things into the rewards of more precious alms. But he was unwilling that his Brothers should either abound in riches, or delight in precious things, but should hold the poverty of Christ, and that their poor life by the example of the Apostle and according to the rule of B. Benedict and the documents of the holy Fathers, should be sustained by the labors of their hands.

[8] But there flowed to him not only the poor, but also the rich, and men of all states, both ecclesiastical and secular: those coming to him he most excellently instructs, whom according to the exigency of their condition devoutly, reverently and humbly receiving, with spiritual alms, namely the word of holy doctrine, as with the food of spiritual nourishment, he strove to feed and abundantly to refresh. And although that man simple and upright was not much skilled, or endowed with great science of letters, namely that which is folly with God (because, as the Apostle says, the foolish things of the world God has chosen that He may confound the strong) yet filled with divine wisdom, he salutarily instructed all, erudite each according to the congruity of their states with special monitions. 1 Cor. 1 And when he spoke about divine things not only to the simple and popular, but also to the eloquent and wise; he attempted to bring forth words not eloquent, but strong: nor for the allurement of the popular hearing colored with ornament, but for obtaining the divine grace and glory with a rude truth simple and with a simple purity useful. Whence because the purity of his doctrine and voice, and the pure sincerity used not the powers of eloquence for the arguments of virtue, but things: therefore manifestly and evidently the divine grace was present to him, through which he provoked innumerable ones by his imitation to the works of virtues: inasmuch as he furnished examples of consummated discipline not only in word, but also in work. but without the dye of words, But this is narrated of him singularly to be admired, that there was no one ensnared in so many snares of vices, or pressed with the weight of so great sins, who, his holy face being beheld, and his honeyed words heard, did not return to compunction of conscience, or depart from his presence without the grace of consolation. And he who had once seen him, desired to see him again more ardently: and therefore so great a frequency of peoples ran together to him, that there was not to him the faculty of speaking to all; but that they might be consoled by his sight, they ascended some higher place, that a blessing being given by him they might depart: where sometimes several sick and demoniacs were healed by his prayers and merits. he dismisses them compunged and consoled.

ANNOTATIONS.

CHAPTER II.

The flight to more secret places. The supreme Pontificate admitted, and laid down.

[9] At certain times wont to speak to no one, But although the man of God on the fourth and sixth ferias of the whole year, and in the four Lents, separated from men, free for God and himself, admitted the colloquy of no one; not content with this however, not bearing that disquiet which we have foresaid, and the molestation of the popular frequency, but desiring to have a more secret life, that he might unceasingly cling to divine meditations; he deliberated to flee the multitude, and from the common convent of the Brothers, which he himself had founded, to depart to another deserted place. Which when he had indicated to the Brothers: yet wishing to live more solitary, "Why, Father," they say, "dost thou desert us? or to whom dost thou leave us desolate?" But he consoling them weeping and groaning: "Not you," he says, "little sons, do I leave, but what I dispose to do, I do for my and your utility. For I am old, and the burdens hitherto accustomed I cannot bear: but absent from you, I will always be present by help and counsel." he withdraws to St. Bartholomew of Legio, Therefore when, a few Brothers being taken with him, he had withdrawn to the most secret place of St. Bartholomew of Legio, where he believed himself unknown to men; the lamp placed upon the candlestick could not however be hidden: but much more than before, there sought and frequented by the people, he was compelled to declare to the world the works of his virtuous light. But he, loathing earthly things, thought to ascend yet to a higher and more difficult place. And one companion being taken with him, coming to the summit of the mount of Maiella, he descended to a certain crypt, thence to the mountains of Maiella. to which without peril access could not be had; that wherever he dwelt, no one might know; or knowing, might dread to come thither. And there an oratory being constructed to the honor of St. John the Evangelist, building cells for himself and two companions, he remained for several years. In which place many miracles through him the Lord deigned to show. And when not even thus he could lie hidden, and a greater multitude of men ran together there; that he might spare their labors and perils, he disposed to return to the mount of Morrone, where at the first time of his conversion he had been wont to stay. Whom the inhabitants of that place, God instigating their minds, with an innumerable multitude of both

sexes, with the solemnity of processions, with the devout offering of gifts pertaining to the worship of God, with the jubilee of praises and exultations, as an Angel sent from heaven, officiously and honorably received.

[10] Therefore the holy man there enclosed in his cell, more than ever anywhere else, lived with great austerity: and seeing himself to approach the end, he studied more and more to offer to God an odoriferous holocaust. But when he had dwelt there for the space of a year and one month, it pleased Divine providence to draw him from the cell, and to direct him to the field of a new contest, that the strong athlete might receive the crown of a greater glory. For when the Apostolic See, after the death of Pope Nicholas the fourth, on account of the discord of the Cardinals, for two years and more had been widowed of a Pastor and vacant, and they gathered at Perugia, again treated of celebrating an election; one of them, who held the honor of the first voice, named Brother Peter of Morrone to be supreme Pontiff. At which voice the rest stupefied, He is elected supreme Pontiff, the Holy Spirit inspiring and instigating, concordantly elected him: which is read most rarely to have happened otherwise. For often that malign spirit of discord impedes the concord of this election, who with blind ambition imprudently and impudently impels proud men to desire the summit of this honor. That so wonderful and unusual election therefore being made, when at it singly they exulted with enormous gladness and unspeakable joy, he alone the holy man was filled with excessive grief and great lamentation. And when at this honor of his the whole people glad, the Lord inspiring, leapt forth; he humbly strove to refuse, esteeming himself unworthy of the title of so great an honor, that he might be made more worthy: for he is made more worthy, who refuses what he merits. Nor was it enough for him to excuse himself, but secretly with one companion, to whom he had betrayed the secret of his heart, taking flight he is retained. he attempted to take flight. But surrounded by a sudden multitude of the people, when there was no hope of escaping, the Papal dignity, more constrained, than voluntary, he accepted: for he testified himself not as fit summoned to that office, but as unworthy bewailed expelled from that discipline of the monastic life.

[11] He therefore from the assembly of the monks to the supreme Pontificate snatched, he receives the Kings of Sicily and Hungary: kept the purpose of solitude through all his age with such strictness, that he relaxed nothing of the tenor of his past humility, or was flattered by the honor added to him. Whence when, the fame of his election heard, the Kings of Sicily and Hungary with a swift course had come to him, and the cell being left to the monastery of the Holy Spirit he had descended with them, and some days being passed there he disposed to go to Rome; he commanded not a great apparatus of horses, but a small little ass to be applied to him. Which the Kings admiring and the Cardinals, on a little ass he comes even to Aquila: and others accompanying the footsteps of his way, persuaded that he should not inflict this injury on the Church of God. But from the begun purpose of humility they vainly attempt to draw him away: for even to the city of Aquila sitting upon the little ass, accompanied by an honorable and innumerable throng he came. But this was done by him, not indeed with proud singularity, as if he wished to reprobate others, who had done otherwise: but with a singular humility, which from the monastic custom of holy rusticity neither easily nor quickly could be plucked away. For these magnificent apparatuses, whether in horses or in garments and other exterior ornaments, which most call pomps, (although it is lawful for Pontiffs to bear before them certain apparatuses) from the time of B. Sylvester Pope the holy Father, not only the supreme Pontiffs, but also other lesser Bishops, are to be believed to have introduced not for their own, but for Christ's and His Church's glory to be exalted: which to observe exteriorly with the moderation of temperance, humility however being kept interiorly, is not of vanity or vice, but is of virtue and merit. Whence gravely to be rebuked are those and especially monks, who under the pretext of humility, on account of the observance of this custom, proudly detract from the Episcopal state. For many things in such matters befit Bishops, which do not befit monks, or their Abbots or Prelates, as B. Bernard testifies, saying: "One indeed is the cause of Bishops, another of monks. For we know, that they, since they are debtors to the wise and the unwise, the devotion of the carnal people, because by spiritual things they cannot, by corporal ornaments stir up." But that Christ that singular humility of this His servant did not impute to Himself or His Church as an injury, but as an honor, He willed to declare by a singular miracle. For when many sick were carried after him, that they might at least be able to touch the hem of his garment (for there was of the whole people a wonderful devotion of faith toward him) a certain man carrying his son, lame in both feet, he heals a lame one: when on account of the multitude he could not come to the holy man; placed the boy on the little ass, from which he had descended: who health being received, from that hour walked firmly.

[12] In the said city of Aquila therefore, the assembly of Cardinals being called, the holy Father, on the feast of the Beheading of St. John the Baptist, he is crowned, the name of Celestine being assumed, received the Crown and other Apostolic insignia. And because dwelling on earth he was now celestial, and with the Apostle truly could say, "Our conversation is in heaven"; at his coronation, God (as we believe) inspiring, he received the name of Celestine. Phil. 3. He too, as truly Celestine, the celestial treasure of Apostolic Indulgences liberally opened. And when the Prelates and Princes were importunate to him for seeking Ecclesiastical benefices, he thought to impart not only temporal to the rich, but also spiritual riches to the poor. But then, when at the prayers of the King of Sicily he had come to Naples, he creates 12 Cardinals, there with his Curia for some time residing, he made one ordination of twelve Cardinals: among whom from his Order he chose two Brothers, that with those in the Pontificate he might have a spiritual consortium, with whom from the very tirocinium of the spiritual warfare, either in the convent or in the desert, he had had companionship. For he was so diligently instructed and inflamed with the conventual profession and the perfection of anchoretic sublimity, as it were in solitude he lives. that even in the Papal chamber and the august palace he willed a wooden cell and a narrow and eremitic dwelling to be made for himself, that humble on high, solitary amid throngs, poor amid riches he might live, and so more freely be free for prayer and contemplation.

[13] There therefore he began assiduously to think, how, this Pontifical honor as an unbearable burden being laid down, and temporal solicitude being cast off, he might go back to his ancient solitude. And when by the counsel of the skilled he had learned that this could be done by right and without peril of his soul, he so firmed his heart and mind in this, that from that purpose no one could move him. What more? When he had presided over the Apostolic See for almost half a year, at length on the vigil of holy Lucy, the consistory of his Brothers being celebrated, there he freely yielded to the burden and honor of the Papacy. The Papacy being abdicated, And the Pontifical insignia being laid down, descending from the high See of Peter Celestine, that he might ascend the celestial seat, at the feet of those over whom he had presided humbly Peter prostrates himself. O singular humility! rare indeed, but therefore deservedly precious, not only in heaven with sublime rewards exalted, but also on earth with singular praises to be extolled. Whence that between the execution of this deed and its praise and admiration, none might fluctuate with the doubtful judgment of the mind, the miracle, which on the first day after his renunciation the Lord deigned to do through him, was a sure indication. For when after his Mass a certain lame man with contracted members prostrated himself at his feet, by his blessing he heals a lame one. a blessing being received from him, he was raised up sound: which surely would not be done, if what had been done by him, the Lord as unworthy should reprobate. Let them therefore blush, who proudly detracting from this humility, have dared rashly to say, that this proceeded not from virtue, but from vileness of mind. O worthy renunciation therefore of the Papacy, which, as far as pertains to solid glory, is to be preferred to many Papal dignities! O glorious man, who if he had done nothing else worthy of the honor of memory, yet by this deed so to be admired and by few, alas the grief! to be imitated, abundantly would have commended himself to posterity! For much more of commendation and glory the rejected, than the received dignity conferred: and to him that very casting-off of the honor, than the acceptance, was more honorable: and therefore happier, because not only of a temporal, but neither of an eternal reward could it be lacking. Alas! alas! would that this example of humility to be honored these had merited to imitate, who in this our so wretched and so mournful time, have striven to pursue the summit of proud honor: not now for nearly thirty years would the Church of Christ remain lacerated by their horrendous dissension and nefarious schism. But the lamentable complaint now being omitted upon this miserable and equally to be blushed-at state of the Church, let us return to the proposed matter.

ANNOTATIONS.

CHAPTER III.

The private life: the strict custody. The death, the burial.

[14] After therefore the Papal honor, which the wretched proudly snatch or being obtained desire to retain, that happy man had humbly studied to renounce with a covetous eagerness; He returns cheerful to the desert: that greatest honor, as a deadly burden being driven away, to the sweet yoke of Christ, to be borne in his former solitude, he strove to return glad. Whence (as those who saw narrated) he fled with so great joy, and bore such signs of spiritual gladness in his eyes and brow, while restored to himself free he departed, that in his countenance I know not what Angelic shone. Therefore, as was said by a certain illustrious man: "His ascent, how mournful, and how against his own mind it was, his descent glad and spontaneous declared." But what an unworthy storm with these so worthy merits and his manners he met, let us hear. For that Boniface, who had succeeded him in the Apostolic See; which not mournful, like himself, but glad, inasmuch as ambitious, he had ascended, and whom the holy man had foretold would succeed him; when the license of returning to his cell, prostrate at his feet reverently and humbly he had asked of him, with terrible words denied it him: for he feared, lest perchance the holy man should be venerated by the people devoted to him as Supreme Pontiff, especially because it was turned into doubt, whether he could have resigned the Papacy. Therefore when from the sight of that timid and terrified, and therefore terrible man, the simple and upright man from Naples by secretly fleeing departed, that fulfilling the purpose which before the renunciation he had disposed, he might peacefully and solitarily serve God; lest either he himself or another should believe this flight guilty of disobedience or another fault, God deigned through him to do a miracle. For on the way, the Abbot of the monastery of Cassino assisting him with several others, a certain woman her daughter, paralytic in both hands, weeping crying and asking his help, By the sign of the Cross he heals a paralytic. presented. To whom he, as he was pious, mercifully compassionate, made the sign of the holy Cross: and from that hour suddenly healed, she received the perfect use of her hands. But after this, when at length he had come to his cell, before the altar humbly and devoutly prostrate, he rendered thanks to God. Whom also singly with thanksgiving, and so great exultation and veneration they received, that embracing his presence or aspect as a certain celestial benefit, no less to him, than to an Angel, if fallen from heaven he should offer himself to men, they expended veneration.

[15] Therefore Boniface, that one swollen indeed, but timid, and with the swelling of the obtained glory turgid, and with the fear of its being taken away troubled; hearing, I say, that the man of God to be led back to Pope Boniface, he flees: without his license had departed, feared, that he had migrated not to his cell, but to another place, to resume the Papacy, which he had renounced. And therefore he quickly sent after him his Chamberlain and the Abbot of Cassino: who finding him in the cell asked, that he should quickly return to the Pope, lest he incur his indignation. But he alleging the protestation, which before the renunciation he had made, suppliant prayed, that the Supreme Pontiff would permit him to live peacefully in solitude, promising himself about to speak to no men, except his own Brothers only. Which promise being received, the Chamberlain departed to report these things to the Pope. But lo, another messenger came, bearing Apostolic letters to the Chamberlain, that without delay he should lead the holy man back even unwilling. And when the same Chamberlain returned to the cell not without impetus and fury, he, perceiving these things by a relation worthy of faith, hid himself and clandestinely fled; by the example of Christ, who fleeing the persecution of Herod, willed to be carried into Egypt, and in the Gospel is read to have hidden himself from the Jews wishing to stone Him, and to have taught His disciples, that when they persecuted them in one city, they should flee into another. Matt. 2., John 8., Matt. 10. O wonderful and to be pitied persecution! He himself destitute of bodily strength, and on account of extreme old age more fit for leisure and quiet, than for the labor of journeys, to the parts of Apulia into an obscure wood, where certain servants of God were said to dwell, through hidden and unknown places, accompanied by only one Brother, most cheaply clothed he is honored by all: for the sake of lying hidden is compelled to flee. But what is stupendous, although in a changed accustomed habit, clothed in a most cheap chlamys, and hidden also by other ways which he could, he went; yet wherever he proceeded, he was recognized: and sometimes by boys, sometimes by advanced men, who had never seen him, was called by his proper name. And when in the wood with the Brothers in the time of Lent he had remained, those coming who that they might find and lead him captive persecuted him, thence he was compelled to depart. And seeing himself in those parts not able to be concealed, he disposed to cross the sea: and a vehicle being prepared, but with a badly prosperous wind, when he had sailed for fifteen miles, to the land again he is driven: and near the city, whose name is Vesta, he landed.

[16] But after about the seashore for some days the holy man had vainly awaited a tranquil time for sailing, by the command of the King of Sicily led to the Pontiff, the Captain of the said city hearing these things, detained him captured, and intimated this to the Pope and several Princes. But the King of Sicily, then dwelling at Rome, received a command from the Pope, that he should cause him to come from his kingdom to himself, and to be led securely and quickly. To execute which, he sent the Patriarch of Jerusalem and the Prior of the holy militia, with certain Religious and noble men, by royal authority. But he, when with so reverent and so great honor he was treated, everywhere also an innumerable multitude meeting him, with so great alacrity of heart by all is received, that scarcely by day, the importunity of the people opposing, being able to go out, at midnight they were compelled to set about the journey: nor yet thus could they escape, but that before daybreak again they were surrounded by the people. There were then many, who persuaded the man of God, that he should cause himself to be named Pope, saying that he by right could not have renounced the Papacy. But he of a constant mind, and undeclinably tenacious of just and right counsel, although upon this again afterward and oftener interpellated, firm in his purpose persisted, asserting that what he had justly done, even if he had not done it, voluntarily he would do. O voice of a man truly constantly humble, who the honor, through which he could have escaped so contemptible a persecution, perseveringly despises, and constitutes for himself the highest honor in the highest humility! Therefore Christ, who promises to exalt the humble, made His servant illustrious in this persecution, and glorious by many miracles: which all here I should be content to keep silent, did not admiration compel me to relate one. most strictly held at Anagni, For after he had gone out from the kingdom of Sicily, after by the said Royal messengers being delivered to the Chamberlain of the Pope he had entered Campania, by night most secretly sent to Anagni, near the Chamber of the Pope in a certain house he was most strictly enclosed. In which place, that he might show how great he was, who was there held captive, the Lord willed to declare this by a miracle. There was in that Curia of the Pope the Archbishop of Cosenza, with so intolerable a pain of the stone and various infirmity burdened, that he being left by the physicians, he frees the Archbishop of Cosenza from the stone, he himself and all who saw him, despaired of his corporal salvation. And now his household had prepared for itself mourning garments, and for its master the exequies: while he pouring devout prayers to God, through the merits of the holy man asked the help of health. And lo, suddenly, the prayer being made, he was made perfectly sound, and so fully recovered, that the following day he announced this to Lord Thomas, whom that holy Father had assumed a Cardinal of his order, to the glory of God and His servant.

[17] But whom Christ so honored and showed glorious to the world, how that Vicar of Christ dishonestly and injuriously treated, let us hear. For he had had many colloquies with the man of God, and had received so holy and humble responses from him, that he deservedly ought to be moved to compassion of him. But a mind hardened by blind ambition, is with difficulty bent. Therefore in the consistory of the Cardinals he feigned to seek counsel, what was to be done by him about that man. To whom when several said, that to the cell, which he had always desired, he should freely permit him to return, as he humbly asked; he, using the counsel not of pious charity, but of his own cruelty, deliberated to detain him in a strict prison. He was therefore sent to the castle of Fumone, and enclosed in a most strong tower: enclosed in the castle of Fumone, and six soldiers being applied, and thirty other satellites for his custody, day and night he was so kept constrained, that to no men could access to him lie open. But he asked, that two Brothers be given to him, with whom he might do the divine Office: who being granted to him, not able to bear long the narrowness of that prison, were drawn out thence sick. For so great was the strictness of that tower, that the holy man, where he had his feet while he celebrated Mass, there he reclined his head while sleeping he rested. But, for shame! so that Boniface, another Herod, kept Peter in prison: so unjustly is it decreed that the innocent man into a prison and such a prison be kept, who

lately was the keeper and Pastor of the whole Christian fold. O truly horrendous sentence, nay truly Herodian savagery! By what storm of words therefore does so impious a wickedness deserve to be overwhelmed? Surely for this monstrous crime our weak tongue fails, for which not even the eloquence of Cicero would suffice. But to be admired and with the highest praises to be extolled is the virtuous constancy of the holy man, who not only patiently, but even gladly bore the ignominy of this prison, much more than before the glory of the Papal hall. Nor on account of the wickedness of the guards or another molestation, he exercises a patience to be compared to martyrdom. did a murmur in him or a complaint resound, or another sign of impatience appear: but that word rather of spiritual gladness he brought forth; "A cell," he said, "I desired, a cell I have." O ineffable man, neither conquered by labor, nor to be conquered by death: whose virtue could not be conquered by prison, whose patience by disgrace. Let others therefore feel, what shall please; but I judge, such a prison in such a man, not undeservedly to be equaled to martyrdom. Nor can I esteem in him, who so horrendous an opprobrium so equanimously willed to bear, that also a voluntary purpose of mind of sustaining martyrdom was lacking: and this, than that, I think was for him more tolerable, by which it is easier to bear a brief than a long torment. And so what should I more rightly say of him, than what of another most holy Confessor we read written: "Although the sword of the persecutor was lacking to him, yet the palm of martyrdom he did not lose"?

[18] But after the faithful athlete had long and legitimately contended, the just and merciful Lord, willing to render to him the palm of his combat and the crown of victory, in this manner to the labors, which through sixty-five years of his eremitic life he had endured, his death being foretold, disposed to impose an end. The holy man had been wont from the Ascension of the Lord to Pentecost, out of reverence of the Holy Spirit, to be free for fasting, prayer and silence more instantly than usual, and to exercise himself to all devotion more fervently. Which observance even in that prison, in which for the space of ten months he had been constrained, he kept. And when thus on the holy day of Pentecost he had celebrated Mass most devoutly; he caused the soldiers, deputed to his custody, to be called to him, and foretold to them that the dissolution of his body impended within the next Lord's Day. But from that day he began most gravely to be infirm, and certain of death, caused to be ministered to him the Sacrament of extreme Unction. he receives the holy Unction. Which received, the holy man lay not upon a mattress or straw, but upon a bare board with a cheap carpet, covered with a chlamys. O wonderful fortitude of a sound mind in an infirm body! O strong and insuperable love of poverty and humility! But his death-agony approaching, his departure with psalms and prayers, as much as he could, against the snares of the devil he studied to fortify; and that with him assiduously they should be free in them, his Brothers instantly and humbly he exhorted. Whence when they themselves likewise persevered in the divine praises, on that very day of Saturday at the vesper hour, he saying the Psalm: "Praise the Lord in His saints": immediately the verse being completed, "Let every spirit praise the Lord," with a most slender breath he sent forth his spirit, and happily departs from life, with the holy and blessed spirits about to praise God for perpetuity. Ps. 150. O blessed death! O happy and glorious end of life! nay rather not the end of his life, but the beginning of another and better one: for now he is born, who so dies. The news therefore of his death being heard, Pope Boniface, although he greatly thereof rejoiced, yet feigning sadness, celebrated his exequies in the church of St. Peter of the City with the Cardinals solemnly. And he sent one Cardinal and his Chamberlain, who with all the Bishops and very many Religious of the province of Campania his body to the church of St. Anthony of Ferentino, which he himself had newly constructed, buried in St. Anthony of Ferentino. honorably transferred, where beside the high altar with due veneration it was buried: for it did not befit so great Relics of that Saint to lie unhonored, whom the admiration of a pure and sincere life made so venerable.

[18] But that the omnipotent Lord might prove the sanctity of his life to be grateful and acceptable to Him, He insinuated this to us by a manifold miracle. But here let it suffice to recite only two, A Cross of golden color seen before his death, which accompanied his death. The first. Certain soldiers, who guarded him in prison, related both to the Pope and to several others, that from the sixth feria to the hour of his death, they saw before the door of his little chamber a Cross of golden color, not affixed anywhere, but wonderfully hanging in the air. By which miraculous sign of the Cross it was plainly shown, that the Cross of penance, which he through the mortification of the flesh had continually borne, pleased the Lord. But also of how great merit with God he was, another miracle declared. For there was a certain disciple of his Robert of Salento, namely that one, with whom the holy man, when first he had been elected to the Papacy, attempted flight: but when he could not escape, he asked of him, whether he would wish to follow him drawn and constrained to the heights? But he, who from his master had learned to spurn the world, but Christ and those things by which one comes to Christ, to love: "I ask," he said, "that thou spare both my labor and peril, and prefer me rather the successor of a needy and safe leisure, than a partaker of a rich and solicitous glory." Which also was done: for that one going away to Rome, this one persisted in solitude. This therefore worthy disciple of his, and his soul seeking the heavens. not long after, his blessed soul, rescued from a twin prison, ascending to the starry seats merited to see. Who astonished at so great a miracle, asked, whether he should then also follow him, or do something else he commanded? But he admonished him, that he should remain in solitude: and so seeking heaven, amid the words disappeared. But this one mindful of the counsel, at length consumed by long old age, departed after his master, a great opinion of sanctity and the fame of wonderful works being left. But other nearly innumerable signs of virtues and miracles, by which the holy man before and after death was illustrious, here we omit to narrate, and to those things, which upon these are diffusely written, and by diligent examination by sure authors and veracious testimonies approved, we remit the reader. From which let it suffice to conclude this, that on account of the brightness of his miracles and merits, he is enrolled in the Catalogue of the Saints. after a long disceptation about his canonization to be made, at length by Pope Clement the fifth, he was numbered in the Catalogue of the holy Confessors, in the year of the Lord 1313 on the third of the Nones of May, but from his death, about the 11th year. And his festivity was instituted on the 14th of the Kalends of June, on which day after the labors of this life, in the peace of Christ he rested.

[20] These things therefore, God helping, to his and his most glorious Confessor's praise I have written. But whatever I shall have said less, it is necessary that it be derogated rather to my ignorance, than to his glory: for more widely the merits of his virtues and the proclamations of his praises are diffused, than that they can be enclosed by my discourse. But if anyone shall have wished to deliver his works and the honors of his works to the monuments of letters, it is certain that so great and such things are there about him, which require both a greater work and a greater workman. I however here, with as much brevity as I could, have inserted a few of many, among which also are some, which could be judged nearly to exceed the credibility of truth, unless true and sure testimonies had approved them. But that an end may be imposed on this work still in his praises, the single titles of the Saints, because as an Apostle, Martyr, Confessor, and Virgin, which singly in himself he embraced, let us briefly under a compendium gather. Therefore as an Apostle, he preached the doctrine of Christ by word and example to the peoples; as a Martyr, he endured the torments of the body and the punishments of prison; as a Confessor, day and night to prayers and works of penance most fervently to be free he studied; as a Virgin, the concupiscence of the flesh with a robust and entire tenor of cleanness and sanctity he trod down. What more? As a Pontiff and good Pastor, to the fold of Christ he desired to be of profit, he was also Pontiff, Priest, Doctor, Hermit, but to preside he despised; as a chosen Priest, a sacrifice worthy of God he offered; as an illustrious Doctor, the manners of his disciples with salutary documents he instructed; finally as a most holy Hermit, solitude, poverty and humility, and the austerity of penance with a singular fervor he was zealous for. But in this last he so preceded all, that when I hear the Monks of Egypt proclaimed, the Anchorites praised, the Hermits admired, this one however I always dare to except, nor to compare to him any of the Monks. For from infancy, after the first rudiments of faith, when he had begun to desire a greater grace of perfection, in monastic discipline, by a preposterous velocity of charity, he began almost to be perfect before he learned. Finally so great a perfection in it he attained, which no letters ever will pursue with worthy praises. In which matter since to run through single things and to number all is burdensome, for the proof of perfection of this kind I think this only to be enough, that the highest grade of the Priesthood, to which by God's judgment and with the favor of all the people he had been sublimated, for the love of the solitary and monastic life he deserted. That holy and contemplative solitude however, which to active solicitude, choosing with Mary the best part, and Founder of the Celestines. he preferred; profited not himself alone, but very many, and made for the whole Church of God a useful fruit. For from those, whom in solitude he spiritually begot, there lasts today a religious succession; which continually growing not only in number, but also in merit, by fruitful works of virtues and examples, not only feeds and recreates the militant Church, but also gladdens the triumphant one: to the participation of whose gladness may He grant us to come, who is blessed for ever and ever. Amen.

ANNOTATIONS.

on the contrary alluring with gifts, that they should manifest him to him. A certain most simple Brother moreover, who had with Celestine assiduous companionship, he bade to be cast into bonds, that there he might cause him to be consumed by a most wretched end. After these things about two months being passed in that hiding-place, when Celestine understood a certain wood in the region of Apulia to be inhabited by good and holy men, he turned thither his mind; and accompanied by one companion, the habit being changed, at length thither within four days he came."

p. That is St. Martin, Bishop of Tours.

q. Maffei says, the Saint died in the 87th year of his life: the aforecited Italian Manuscript numbers 81 years of age: and it could easily be that the numbers thus written by ciphers, were badly transcribed, at least where 1 and 7 disagree: yet so great an age seems by no means credible, nor is it admitted by any of the writers.

r. Lelius Marinus names the Cardinal of St. Cecilia Thomas, namely that disciple of the Saint himself above mentioned.

s. Maffei these things, in the Epitome of the Summary nearly all omitted, thus touches: "Nor truly were signs lacking to the dead one which had rendered him living most famous. For there was healed from dropsy, which grave he had long suffered, a certain Gerard of Velletri, when he had been brought to his sepulchre. Likewise also two Gauls, one from fever, the other from a long spasm of the hand. Also certain women of Ferentino, one of them an Abbess having utterly lost all force of one side, another Margaret a married woman having an enormous scrofula in the throat, another lacking the strength of one arm, and another being utterly blind; Leonard also a certain boy of the same city, when he had been lame three years; Marca likewise a certain girl of the same city, nine years old, when she could neither speak nor move herself on the right side. There was also healed James of Rieti a Priest, by grave want long, by graver sickness oppressed: likewise also the Archbishop of Milan, when by a quartan fever long and most badly he was tortured: likewise also Antony Bishop of Lucca, when no safety of his life was hoped by the physicians: nor less another Campanian, who on account of a bad and long sickness had lost the light of his eyes: another also from beyond the Po, when without any hope of the physicians, his breast was transfixed by a scorpion: likewise also a certain Tuscan, who most gravely sick, could not eat or drink, nor moreover speak anything. But also Antony a Carthusian monk, who by a cardiac disease for fifteen years even to the exhaling of his soul had been vexed: a servant also of a certain monastery, who while he wished alone to place a burden on a horse had been ruptured, his help being implored and the sepulchre being touched, escaped unharmed. There will be no place for speaking, if I shall wish to follow out all: but lest I omit that, which was of all the most celebrated spectacle. For Philippa a woman, born of noble birth, who now for six years had lain in bed, so that she could neither raise nor move herself in any way; when to her sleeping thrice a certain old hermit venerable with hoariness had appeared, and admonished that to the tomb of the holy man, about to obtain health, she should come, she obeyed; she bade herself to be carried; and being carried, as soon as she touched the iron chain, with which he was wont to be girded over the bare flesh, to her former health she was immediately restored."

t. That it is to be read in the 17th year above at the Bull of Canonization we noted.

HISTORICAL SUPPLEMENT

From the Italian of Lelius Marinus.

Peter, Celestine V, Supreme Pontiff (St.)

FROM THE ITALIAN OF MARINUS.

PREFACE.

[1] Among those who write the acts of their own time, and bring to light things long past, there is commonly this difference, that the former easily find faith, on account of those things which each of the readers remembers as seen and known by himself, or heard from friends and elders; the others with difficulty, unless they exhibit as it were sureties of their faith ancient and fit witnesses. And so the Life of our holy Father Celestine (to which, About to write the Life of the Saint, to be digested through all the minutiae of times and circumstances, I see no one hitherto to have intended his mind) which as most diligently as I shall be able about to explain, I have thought it congruous to teach the reader, by what helps supported I have come to write. I have seen therefore that which Dionysius Faber a Frank wrote, more than a hundred years ago Prior of our monastery of Paris; in which he professes himself to have especially followed the most learned Theologian Peter of Ailly, Cardinal Bishop of Cambrai, a most ancient author, and near to those times, formerly Confessor of Charles V King of France; whose writing Lipomanus and Surius reported among the Lives of the Saints, he reviews the Lives published by others and the Cathedral church of Cambrai most honorably keeps; celebrating the festivity of the Saint himself with enormous reverence, as Faber testifies ch. 32. The life of the same also wrote Octavian of Bologna a Celestine Monk, printed at Bologna in the year 1500, and the Neapolitan Poeta Nocturno, in Italian tercets, in the year 1520, asked by Lord Alexander a Cruce, then Prior of Bologna, and about the year 1550 Abbot General. Finally Father Benedict Gonon, a Monk of our Congregation, added to the Life published by him some Annotations, opportune enough. But not content with these, I read moreover whatever about the Saint the Historians wrote, Platina, Blondus, Sabellicus, Martin the Pole, Pandulf Collenuccio, Paul Regius, Bugatto, and others more ancient and more recent, with whom much true is to be found, certain things also from the opinion of the crowd little certain, or even from the fabulous tradition of the elders. Alfonso Ciacconius, the most recent author of the Lives of the Pontiffs, took much from antiquity, especially about the Pontificate of Celestine; certain things however, delivered without a fit foundation, without due discussion he received; to which deservedly may be preferred those things which Ptolemy of Lucca

among the histories of his time left to us, as in part seen by himself in person.

[2] A greater and clearer light brought to me the history of the stupendous election to the Papacy, and the manuscripts by contemporaries, and of the abdication which followed, minutely and most sincerely written in hexameter verses and divided into three books, by the Cardinal of St. George Jacobus Caetani, who was to the Saint himself before the Papacy most devoted; and by the same now Pope promoted to a Prelacy: who wove through whatever at Rome was done the See being vacant, and many things done in the Pontificate, with a brief narration of the life; and moreover in two books set forth the Coronation of Pope Boniface VIII, and in three other books the Canonization of the Saint and his miracles. This work is found in manuscript, and dedicated to our Order by the author Cardinal, with Father Coabbot and our Vicar General Lord Francis de Agellis; which formerly I read entire at Aquila, and afterward transcribed by himself received, with many other instructions to be related in their place. I have moreover two most ancient manuscripts, in which sufficiently minutely the life of the Saint is set forth; one on parchment, which on the occasion of a visitation I found in the Archive of our monastery of Bergonia sacred to St. Nicholas, and from the proem it is established to have been composed by one of the disciples of the Saint; the other, compiled from various tracts, having as authors various disciples of the same, according as each committed to paper what he had seen and known; in the head of which is placed that little Commentary, which about his youth and first progress the Saint himself left after him.

[3] There are also in our Congregation many other most ancient manuscripts, of which very many on various occasions I have seen, and finally the Process for the Canonization of the year 1306. and they are believed most worthy of all faith, on account of their highest conformity among themselves, and because it appears that they were made by the disciples of the Saint themselves; in a simple style indeed, but congruous with the Process formed for the Canonization, and approved by the testimony of Francis Petrarch a most grave and ancient author in book 2 of the Solitary Life Sect. 3, Ch. 18; where he mentions the works of the Saint divided in three ways, according to his triple state, before the Papacy, in it, and after it, but worthy (as he himself says) to be run through with a more sublime style. Having then scrutinized the most ample archive of the Holy Spirit of Morrone, very many helps I found there; but none more certain and more excellent than the Process, in the year 1306 by the command of Pope Clement V in order to the Canonization formed; in which were examined more than three hundred and twenty Witnesses, most worthy of faith: among whom many distinguished in condition, grade, and prelacy, many also glorying in the discipleship of the Saint himself: of which Process, although by antiquity corroded and mutilated, a copy with my own hand I described; but the Summary I found in the archive of the monastery of Collemaggio near Aquila, with the aforepraised our Vicar then there Prior, who also had himself redacted it into a briefer epitome, not undiligently read by me and collated with the original text: and to these consonate those things which are reported in the Bull of Canonization. From these and many others I have compiled the present history: to which of my own I have added nothing besides the order, the declaration, and the examination of the arguments, which I willingly submit to the Church, the Superiors, and the wiser.

[4] Thus far in the Preface Marinus, General Abbot Prepositus of the whole Congregation of the Celestines about the year 1630, What thence is to be given in this supplement. in a work then printed at Milan in Italian, with a dedicatory to the Most Serene Prince Maurice Cardinal of Savoy with the title of St. Mary in Via-lata, Protector of the Order. That is distinguished into four books, of which the first comprises the private life of Celestine, the second the beginnings and progress of the Order instituted by him up to the Pontificate, the third the election to the same and his abdication and the miracles which followed this, the fourth finally contains the persecution endured from his successor, and the death and glory which followed. From which it is the plan to excerpt only those things, which in the foregoing monuments of the Life and Acts of Celestine are not had sufficiently clearly expressed, as one perpetual Commentary upon them: wherefore no other title, than of an Historical Supplement, I have thought to be given to this collection: but what for the sake of illustration I myself have added is distinguished by [ ]: the rest are Marinus's, in sense rather than in number and order of words.

CHAPTER I.

Of the birth of the saint and his withdrawal into the desert.

[5] Born in the County of Molise, In the year of human salvation one thousand two hundred and fifteen (in what month or day of it is not found written) into this mortal light came Peter, afterward surnamed of Morrone, and then Celestine Pope V; the Christian Church being governed by Pope Innocent III, the Roman Empire being held by Frederick Roger the second of his name, and the same King of both Sicilies. That his homeland was Isernia, an ancient city of the Samnites, common opinion holds: there are however ancient manuscripts (of which the prior part is known from the Prologue to have been written by one of the disciples, and this is thought to have been B. Robert of Salento) where he is said to have been born in the Castle of St. Angelo: and the Poeta Nocturno makes Limosano the homeland of the saint: one day's journey from the castle of Sangro [which two places most closely conjoined in situation, scarce eight miles from Morrone, but more than eighteen distant from Isernia] but at once all are of the County of Molise, of old also under the name of the Terra di Lavoro that is of Campania felix comprehended; just as also sometime by the name of Apulia or Abruzzo, the Neapolitan kingdom even to Calabria was called. And hence it came to pass, that Jacobus the Cardinal book 2 ch. 6 sticks ambiguous, whether to Abruzzo or to the Terra di Lavoro the County of Molise is to be assigned, [whose head since it is Isernia, by a certain as it were chief right this Saint, as her citizen, with statues erected and public monuments she venerates, although otherwise the whole day's journey, by which his homeland from the Castle of Sangro the Saint himself indicates to be distant, the above-named places being remote 25 miles, favors more than Isernia, distant only 15 miles from that Castle].

[6] His father Anglerius, his mother Mary they were called: of whom what surname, what family it was, hitherto remains in obscurity. For that some of the nephews of the Saint are afterward found named with the addition of Anglerius, the family obscure, this is to be believed taken after the manner of the nation from the father or grandfather, but not to have been proper to the family. [So also that armorial token, which in Ciacconius and other pictures is added to Celestine, having a silver Lion, climbing on the high of a blue field, and with a red band crosswise hedged, by some one of the nephews rather afterward assumed, than before by the elders employed it can be said. For it is scarcely credible that Peter employed it in the Papacy: and he who more diligently scrutinized these things Claude Francis Menestrier of the Society of Jesus, denies that he found any certain examples of such use among the Pontiffs, before Boniface VIII, and from this he esteems the example to have flowed to the rest. scarcely is he known to have had kinsmen. ] But it is notable, that so abstracted from flesh and blood the Saint always lived, that after he departed from the paternal house, nothing with those joined to him is ever read to have had any business in any of his acts; nay also elsewhere with difficulty is found memory of any of them, and only from Lord Francis Agellis I heard, that in the royal archive of the Neapolitan Mint there is found registered, in a certain parchment Codex, a diploma of King Charles, related by Ciarlanto in the historical Memoirs of Samnium book 4 ch. 22 by which the same King testifies that he had formerly by patent letters enjoined the Secretary of Apulia and the Bailiwick of Foggia, that for Nicholas Angeleri the brother, and William and Peter Robert Angeleri the nephews of the late most Holy Father Lord Celestine, formerly of the sacrosanct Roman and universal church supreme Pontiff, and their heirs, legitimately descending from their bodies, provision should be made; for Nicholas indeed an annual income of ten ounces of gold, but for Peter and William or any of them an annual income of five ounces of gold, to be received by them in the lands or fiscal goods of the Kingdom, under due military service to be rendered by them, in contemplation of the said most holy Pontiff. Where that simply from the father's and grandfather's name Angeleri the brother and nephews of the Saint are surnamed, without any more honorific appellation of Spectabilis, Providi, Circumspecti, or the like, and that they are obliged to military service, makes an indication that altogether all even then were of plebeian condition.

[7] His father Peter while still a boy lost; his mother who took care for him to be educated in studies, could have lived even to his twentieth year, when the counsel of deserting his homeland and seeking the desert, Twenty years old he begins the solitary life, long agitated in mind, he began to commit to execution. And first at the church of St. Nicholas at the head of the Bridge near the Castle of Sangro having stayed very many days, then ten days in the eremitic cell of a neighboring mountain, the Lord showed him another mountain, where he remained for the space of three years. Indeed I confess nowhere to have found written, which that mountain was, yet in Abruzzo, where he passed nearly all his eremitic life, that this also was I can scarcely doubt. But it is credible that to that one which is called St. Mary of the altar, and is of our Order above Palena, this prerogative can be conceded. For an ancient tradition of the inhabitants holds, that when that place abounded with serpents and other venomous reptiles; the Saint there dwelling while still a youth, drove all away forever; which agrees not badly with the most troublesome temptation, which from animals of this kind at the beginning of his anchoresis he writes himself to have suffered. But the place is on the summit of the mountain, and after a triennium passed on the mountain, on the Eastern part where the Adriatic sea is looked down upon, having beneath a huge precipice, and in it a valley; out of which just as it cannot be ascended thither, so neither can the sight be let down into it without horror; which the frequent bears would augment, coming thence even to the Saint's oratory, were they not there as if tame familiarly wandering. The dwellers say moreover, that a spring gushing there by the prayers of Peter himself was elicited; and its water against every kind of diseases they experience as salutary.

[8] Here having attained the mature age for receiving the Priesthood, he was persuaded to offer himself to be initiated: made a Priest at Rome, just as he did at Rome, either because he wished to pursue his first intent, with which he had gone out from his homeland, about to take there counsel of the rest of his life; or because he desired to receive all the sacred Orders without intervals, that more quickly to the beloved solitude he might return, which without some dispensation could not be done. But because in the former place he was more frequented than he wished, he resolved to seek another for himself. And understanding that on the Mount of Morrone, two miles above Sulmona, a certain holy man had dwelt, called Br. Flavian of Fossanova (perhaps a monk of that Abbey and of the Cistercian Order) he believed it would be convenient for him also: he passes to Morrone and

near Sulmona he fell in with a youth of about fifteen years, Raynald Gentilis by name, afterward a physician of Sulmona. This one in the 80th year of his age, of Christ 1306, brought forth as Witness 23, under oath asserted, that being asked by Peter to show the hermitage, in which Br. Flavian had done penance; not only showed him the way, but even led him thither: then that being requested, that after three or four days he should return thither, he promised himself about to return; just as also he did, bringing to him some loaves. Then him indeed there he did not find, having entered the cave however he noted the place, in which the Saint seemed to have lain down, strewn with flints, and awaited his return; but on his return asked, for what cause he had been absent. "For the cause of seeking a harsher place," he said, "I went around the mountain." But Raynald, "Wait until it be winter and it begin to snow: then thou wilt experience how harsh the place is." And so he says the Saint did, and for no small time there abode, in the exercise of the penitential life which he had chosen to lead.

[9] The same Raynald added that Peter when he first came thither, was clothed with a Monastic habit and shaved of beard; now then clothed in a religious habit, but since from the relation of the Saint himself no time is found intermediate, between the Priesthood received and the access to Morrone, it does not seem able to be received, what by conjecture Faber ch. 5 interposes between both thus writing: "On his return at the monastery of B. Mary of Faifoli received with much charity, and edified by the religious conversation of the Brothers warring under the mastership of Lord Benedict, he took the monastic schema and habit. There moreover examined by the wonted probation of the monastery, to fight from afar under the yoke of obedience, not so much by human erudition, as by divine unction he had been sufficiently instructed: wherefore from the fraternal battle-line to the singular battle of the desert by the leading spirit again he returned, and leave being asked and obtained he withdrew to the mount of Morrone." Surely in these words appears a studiously affected obscurity, of one wishing to seem to establish a most brief delay in the monastery, and yet to suppose the wonted (surely of one year at the least) probation, as already long since completed: for which if any time were to be found, it is uncertain from how long a time: it could not be found except before the twentieth year of his age: which Marinus does and bids us to believe that from the sixteenth or seventeenth year Peter was made a monk, from the vow and desire of his mother then still living, and there even after her death remained. But neither does this the Saint's narration of himself suffer, as if uncertain of counsel, nor having any servant of God whom he might consult, fluctuating between fear and desire of the eremitic life, he remained in his homeland even to the twentieth year; and at length with one only privy to his counsel as companion he went out, no mention being made of any monastery, or Abbot without whose license to have gone away it is wrong to believe.

[10] Marinus recognizes the difficulty: but yet because soon it is narrated that at Morrone appeared to the Saint a dead Abbot, and whether in a monastery sometime a Novice, who to this one first had given the habit of Religion: and because the same now Pontiff in the Bull of privileges, granted to the monastery of the Holy Spirit, thus speaks; "The Order of B. Benedict, in which, while the progression of our youth began, we devoted the vows of our profession, with a singular and chief devotion we love": because these things, I say, to him seem so clear, that the entrance into a monastery and the profession cannot be denied; he thinks it consequent, that his opinion about the earlier time ought to be received. But the Benedictine Order has certain ones (whether you call them Monks or Hermits matters little) nearly in the manner of those who among the Mendicants are called Tertiaries: or rather from the beginning a Benedictine Hermit professed. who, a habit being received from the hands of some Abbot or Bishop, just as they have decreed to live outside a monastery, so also outside it perform their probation; after which they pronounce the vows as it were of some profession, bound to them equally for perpetuity (in which they differ from the aforesaid Tertiaries) as the rest living in a monastery, except that of obedience, not indeed by vow, but by exercise they lack, left to their own judgment. Such on the 21st of May we shall find St. Godric in England, a hundred years before Celestine: such also in this our age once from earliest boyhood familiar to me, this our city of Antwerp has, Lord Gaspar van Herstraten, for nearly thirty years within the very frequency of the city in a hermitage procured for himself living solitarily, and in this in which we write the year 1681 at the petition of the Duke of Mecklenburg the Catholic named Bishop of the church of Schwerin, now from the rise of the heresies widowed of a Pastor: who from the hand of the Bishop of Antwerp took the habit, and among his hands the observance of the Benedictine Rule, according to the use of the Hermits of that Order, was professed. In this manner therefore I would say St. Peter did, in the time of that triennium, which he passed in the first abode of his anchoresis; namely from some neighboring monastery's Abbot, who either came to him, or received him running to himself, took the habit of Religion, and devoted the vows of his profession; which because it was of little labor and delay, the Saint neglected to refer in his writings, equally as infinite other things, which in that triennium happened.

[11] However it be, Peter came to the Mount of Morrone about the year of the Lord 1239, His first abode at Morrone seems to have been there, in the 25th year of his age: but what place precisely was chosen by him then nowhere is found expressed: but he is known to have inhabited several at various times, whose names were St. Mary of Morrone, the Holy Cross on the higher summit of the mountain, St. Onuphrius after the first mile in the ascent above Segezano, which about the extreme of his life was founded. And indeed for the place of St. Onuphrius many make, because there is beheld his little crypt, scarcely capable of one man: but also that this situation was chosen in his last old age we shall prove below. Wherefore most verisimilar it seems to me, that the very place of the Holy Spirit, at the beginning was called St. Mary of Morrone: for there were crypts and caves, apt for an eremitic withdrawal, as may be seen in the subterranean oratory below the Choir and Presbytery; and whatever round about now is cultivated, before was thorny and woody, and so exceedingly harsh. But the Saint is known to have left the first place, where now is the church of the Holy Spirit: for this reason that being adapted for cultivation it was now less rough; and yet in the upper part of the mountain, no place is found which refers any trace or indication of human cultivation of old. Nor is it known that on that mountain there was once any church, although various ones to be built afterward the Saint took care round about; among which was the church of the Holy Cross, of which still the ruins remain, and to which he often betook himself: but in the first ascent of the mountain beside its roots he found or immediately from the beginning erected a chapel called of St. Mary of Morrone, from which our Congregation took its origin. Surely Nicholas Berardi, a mason of Sulmona, said, that Peter caused to be built two churches, contiguous to themselves and roofed with a vault, of St. Mary and St. John: which I would believe, by the succession of time the place being amplified, to have been converted into one greater church of the Holy Spirit.

[12] Here therefore daily celebrating Mass, he used the ministry of a certain lay adolescent; here he sees the sin of his absent minister, whom when sometime he had sent to Caramanico his native town about five miles to the North remote from Morrone he, conquered by the concupiscence of the flesh, fell into fornication. This his sin Peter taught by divine revelation, the one returning he prohibited from access, and bade him to have his own things: then to the one asking the cause, he objected the crime, and the one cast down on his knees clemently and paternally he corrected, a penance being imposed: after which persevering in a good purpose, he was made a Cleric; and what had happened to him with his own mouth he testified, as is had from the ancient manuscripts, and Faber Maffei and others narrate. Some disciples being there gradually gathered, it began to be called the Consortium and College; and Peter himself, Rector and Prior; just as the public instruments have of the donations, and he receives some companions and estates. made in the place of St. Mary of Morrone into the hands of Br. James of Sulmona, in the year 1251 on the 9th day of May; by Ludovic Manfred, Knight and Royal Counselor, and his wife Isabella de Luco. Whence also it is confirmed, that this is the place afterward called of the Holy Spirit: for there are donated certain cultivated and uncultivated things round about, which it is established are situated about the present monastery of the Holy Spirit. Nay also by the same instrument the donors reserve to themselves the right of pasturing a hundred goats, which they had in a house, even now near the said church, on this condition, that after their death, both the house and the gardens adjoined, and the goats themselves pass into the power of the said College: and now the Abbey of the Holy Spirit, as by a certain hereditary right, pastures a certain number of goats and sheep in that place, which the donors had reserved for their own use.

ANNOTATIONS

* nay Faifoli

CHAPTER II.

The withdrawal into the Mount of Maiella, and the rigor of the life there led, and the miracles done by Peter.

[13] In the year according to our reckoning 1244, Morrone, In 1244 he passes to the Mount of Maiella. now more cultivated than befitted his purpose, after five years there passed, the Saint deserted: and two companions being taken (whom we can conjecture to have been of the three afterward inseparable to him, Francis and John of Atri and Angel of Caramanico) he withdrew into the parts of the mount of Maiella, in the diocese of Chieti: and there (according to the relation of a certain old Manuscript in the monastery of the Holy Spirit of Maiella) first he abode, in the place which commonly is called the Wall-of-the-Bear. But when also hither to him, now known by fame and miracles, flowed many; he asked God to show him another place, and passed to Ripa-rossa or the Red Rock commonly called, where he began to construct a modest hut. But admonished by an Angel, he ascended into the mountain itself; and in it a hovel of turfs and the branches of trees he fabricated: which scarcely yet covered with a roof was, when the devil cast fire into it, so that the whole seemed to be consumed, the companions fleeing apart for fear. But Peter praying, an Angel sprinkling water brought in a caraffa or phial upon the fire,

extinguished the flames; Where a little edifice being built and the hovel being restored to its former state, confirmed the Saint in his purpose of building there a sacred edifice. Nay also a dove divinely flying, in its beak brought a paper, signifying in what place the foundations ought to be placed: and for two years there having dwelt at length it disappeared. So that Manuscript, of which I would have nothing more now said.

[14] But at the beginning that oratory was small, verisimilarly in that place, which today is called St. Margaret's; to which by many stone steps it is ascended; he recovers the book taken away by a raven, where also a little cell Peter built for himself, which now also keeps his name, and is under the major church. Of this little cell when sometime the Saint had left the window open, his manual little book, covered with a hairy hide, left in it, a certain raven took away and hid, by its innate rapacity. He returning sought the book, very well remembering the place where he had put it; then the raven being seen, understanding what the matter was, "In the virtue," he said, "of Jesus Christ I command, that thou bring back at once the book taken away." The raven obeyed, and the book immediately whence it had taken it brought back: but the Saint soon the following day, the Brothers being convoked into Chapter, narrated the deed, instructing them to praise God, by whose will at the nod of man the birds of heaven and the fishes of the sea obey. Quickly grew the celebrity of the place, and a larger oratory had to be made, whose fabric in the year 1247 was first completed. he resuscitates a workman dead from a fall, Meanwhile it happened of the workmen one to fall from on high, and crushed by the fall to expire: which when the sad companions had related to the Saint, running to the place, the cowl which he had put on he took off, and with it covered the corpse. Then all present being bidden to pray to God, he himself before the altar prostrate, after some delay rose to his feet; and his countenance being relaxed forming the sign of the Cross over the dead one, resumed the cowl; and soon life and strength being received he returned to the work, who had lain dead.

[15] There ran together to promote the fabric men of every kind, among whom from the neighboring town of Rocca-Morici was a pious priest, he causes oil to be brought forth from an empty vessel, Thomas by name; who (as all the ancient Manuscripts relate) when with his own hands he worked, on a certain day of the monks' fasting, on which nothing of foods was wont to be cooked; the Saint commanded Br. John of Atri, that he should prepare something, at least for Lord Thomas. He answered that oil was lacking: so great then was the want of those Fathers. To whom the Saint, "Is there nothing," he said, "left in the gourd?" "Nothing," said John. "Yet thou," said the Saint, "take it and bring it to the fire, perchance being heated it will drip only as much, as will suffice for making the cooking for Lord Thomas." John obeyed, and the little vessel being received heated from the fire, found it full of oil. Nor unlike is another, which from the same Manuscripts I relate, narrated by Robert of Sala, and wine for Mass; whom we call Blessed, as heard from the Brothers Nicholas of Serra, Angel and Rainald of Gesso, who were of the first disciples of the Saint. It happened sometime in the same place wine to be lacking for the Sacrifice, for the custom is not to lay up wines for the whole year, because little is needed: nor in that place is there whence it may be received. Nevertheless to the altar the Saint, furnished with the sacred garments, came; and coming to the Offertory asked for the ampullae. Which when the ministers answered to be empty, he yet bade them to be held out to him; and they about to show them empty, found them both with water and wine full, and were astonished at the miracle.

[16] Br. Nicholas of Serra, one of the first disciples, not able to keep the silence which had been enjoined on him, related, he refixes a fallen tooth, that to the Saint reclining at table one tooth fell out. But he holding it grateful and accepted, with his hand took it; and after a little prayer put it back in its place, so firmly clinging, as if it had never fallen out. But he did that so dexterously, that no one could observe it, except the next sitting Br. Nicholas aforenamed and Br. Angel of Caramanico, that one who afterward died in the prison of Boniface VIII, for this is expressly added in the Manuscript. But the anonymous disciple, the loaves given out he receives multiplied, who set down the Saint's actions and life in writings, diffusely narrates that which from the deposition of Br. James of Pacentrano, Witness 191 reported in the Summary I read about three loaves, which alone in the place of St. Margaret were remaining, distributed among as many poor; for which at the very time of dinner two unknown men brought two sacks full of loaves to the door and disappeared. But the place of St. Margaret is distant by a modest interval from the church of the Holy Spirit, from whose posterior atrium it is ascended thither by a stair of many steps of living stone, on account of the eminence of the situation; and it has a small oratory with a cell, where perchance the Saint stayed for three years, in which the fabric of the Holy Spirit was under the hands of the workmen. Whence it would follow that at the same time was done the miracle, which followed not unlike another, by the same disciple of the Saint in the manuscripts, and by Br. James in the Process and then in the Summary, which I saw, related.

[17] But the fabric being perfected (as I said above) in the year 1247, he understands the edifice divinely consecrated, that it itself was divinely consecrated (as the Saint wrote, and then to another Brother by a vision was confirmed) is found also in the manuscripts, and there is added the day on which the thing was done, the 24th of the month of August, sacred to the Beheading of St. John the Baptist in the year already noted falling on the 5th feria. There is added also that after the Introit of the Dedication was sung, "Terrible is this place" etc., there appeared John the Evangelist, about to say Mass with two others, clothed in the manner of Deacon and Subdeacon; while they performed the sacred mysteries, there came the divine Majesty with the Most Blessed Virgin and St. John the Baptist and immense splendor; but the Mass being finished, the Blessing was pronounced by the Majesty of God itself; and then three Angels going around the church visibly sang, "What was done, was consecrated, by the Testimony of the Angel was confirmed." The same thing soon the following Sunday was to another Brother, as the Saint himself related by a vision and by a new miracle confirmed, and thence by common discourse celebrated. There was nevertheless a certain Priest, James of Castellione (this place is at the river Pescara near the Abbey of St. Clement 15 miles from Maiella) who vehemently doubting of the truth of a dedication of this kind, asked a certain disciple of the Saint, in manners and life most approved, by name Roger the Englishman, that he should divinely obtain for him a greater certitude of that fact. Roger assented, and prayed: but James on a certain night deeply sleeping, about which the doubting Priest is confirmed by a vision. saw in dreams the Most Holy Benedict himself in a sacrificial habit standing at the altar in the church of the Holy Spirit, and himself ministering to him; but the Father ascending the said Confession, from a certain pyx placed upon the altar, with three fingers taking a certain powder whiter than snow; of which placing on one horn of the altar, he said, "What was done"; then on the other, "was consecrated"; and finally in the middle, "by the Angel was confirmed." But the vision disappearing that Priest awaking, related all in order to the Brothers in Chapter, and thereafter held the place in the highest veneration. But it seems, although no time is signed in the Manuscript, the thing happened after the death of the Saint himself; for otherwise that good Priest would not have needed, for a more certain knowledge to recur to the aforesaid Roger the Englishman, verisimilarly the same, who afterward about the year 1350 with the title of Provincial is found named in the foundation of the monastery of St. Jerome of Cesena.

[18] How harsh a life there the Saint led, from the very aspect of the place best, How horrid was then there the solitude? not badly however can be understood, even from the bare verbal description. Let us say therefore, that that part of the mount of Maiella, which for his habitation the Saint chose, looking to the East and North at the Adriatic sea, seems as it were to overhang it; above all the neighboring mountains and the Apennine itself raising itself, and so steep and precipitous, that when first I passed there along the shore into Apulia, it seemed to me as it were a wall, continued with cut crags. But the interior bosom to the South, where our holy Father stayed, besides other harshnesses, has many valleys, with most dense and most high woods from the bottom upward rough and overgrown; whence if anyone even to the middle height of the mountain, not to say even to the summit, ascend; and with eyes turned around consider, how far from every human habitation withdrawn he stands, through ways nearly impassable led thither, it is necessary that he shudder, especially in winter, while he beholds all things overgrown with snows and stiff with frost. And yet even today that place is inhabited by our monks, nay even is frequented by externs, wont through the abundance of snows, the vastness of the valleys, and the density of the woods to make the journey with certain instruments, which they themselves make for themselves of ropes and wood in the manner of circles, and made tie under their soles, to overcome the snows; and this that they may either satisfy their pious religion toward the place, or succor the necessities of the Fathers when there shall be need. In the month of July however and August a far other face smiles there, where the church of the Holy Spirit is; and the soil then clothed as with vernal flowers, presents a certain image of an earthly paradise.

[19] As to the clothing of the Saint, it also was most cheap and most harsh; how harsh the garment, namely over an iron cuirass, a tunic woven of threads of twisted wool, and a scapular and cowl, of the more procurable cloth which among those mountains was found. Of the color nothing is read, nor would I believe this was of great care to the Saint; but from the very cheapness of the cloth it can be judged also of the color, that it was ashen, and nearer to black than white. The tunic however was without doubt more white: because this use persevered in the order, and such are certain garments of B. Robert one of the disciples, which even today are kept for Relics. and of what color? In France however from of old has been kept the use, of wearing under the other garments a habit of lion color, and this is said to be done in memory of the first habit, which the holy Father in the desert wore: and such I saw under the other garments of a certain Br. Benedict of Evoli, in the year 1505 with a great opinion of sanctity dead. But when anything of his garments was torn, he himself was wont to repair them with his own hand; nor was he ashamed to fit to it a part of any other color, or to a worn tunic to put several pieces of new cloth, so that sometime you would call it a patchwork rather than a garment. For the most part he walked barefoot without stockings and shoes, unless he made a journey or celebrated Mass, or from the house he had to go out for some necessity. In winter

however he used cheap woolen socks, and wooden sandals.

[20] With great zeal he had in manifold ways increased for himself the Sacerdotal task: how assiduous the psalmody since to the daily Office he joined the Hours, in honor of B. Mary the Virgin more than two hundred years ago ordained by Peter Cardinal Damiani, and brought into use by Pope Urban II. Also the Lauds and Vespers of All Saints, in imitation of the Cluniacs from the institution of St. Odilo. And all this not privately, but in the choir commonly with his other Monks: which use both nearly even to these our times lasted. From the same fount it can be believed flowed the custom, that after the reading of the Martyrology at Prime and the Prayers following, a peculiar Oration be made for the Abbot General and the whole Congregation, and to it be subjoined the Psalms, 122, "To thee I have lifted up," 128 "Out of the depths," 141 "With my voice I cried to the Lord," besides the canonical hours? and 145 "Praise the Lord, O my soul," for the deceased brothers, kinsmen and benefactors of our Congregation; which although in part changed by the edition of the monastic Breviary by the command of Paul V, yet so far still flourishes (and indeed propagated to all the Nuns, by the care of Lord Celsus Amerighi our then General, and applied to reforming the Breviary) that the Psalm "Out of the depths" be recited for them. The Offices being finished he subjected his shoulders and back to wicker rods, which we call disciplines, not only on Lenten days, sixth Ferias and Vigils of the Saints (as our use bears) to expiate daily faults, and those which in our Chapter are wont to be accused: but at other times he himself inflicted on himself sixty strokes, using thonged scourges for it.

[21] His colloquies, seasoned with a singular devotion, were most efficacious for the conversion of souls, for persuading penance how efficacious his discourse, the emendation of manners, and persuading penance for sins: which it pleases to confirm from the Process by some examples. Caranea, wife of a certain Notary John Rizardi of Sulmona, related, that when her husband was a flagitious and impious man, he was sent to him, that he might commend her, deprived of the sight of her eyes, to the prayers of the Saint, of which also afterward she brought back the desired fruit; but he despised the Saint, indignant, that he would not permit the woman to come into his sight. But benignly invited to a colloquy, and amid talking rebuked about his perverse life, of which every order had been prophetically revealed to the Saint; he felt in himself so great a change, that, plainly another than he who had been, to fasts, penances, prayers and works of piety thereafter he was free: and into a part of this benefit by her husband's example came that same Catanea, after sight recovered.

[22] Peter Grassus, Notary of Charles II King of Sicily and Naples, likewise testifies, or even the simple aspect. that the Count of Montefeltro Guido, a man most illustrious in wars, who acquired for himself the Lordship of the city of Urbino, and even to these times in his posterity held it; a man as military so sanguinary, understanding that all who came into the sight of Peter, elected to the Pontificate, were translated to a better life; wished himself also to experience this. But having set out to his Coronation with other princely men, he returned with the purpose of dismissing the world and taking the habit of St. Francis; just as also he did, in no wise afterward solicited by Pope Boniface VIII to resume arms, for him against the people of Palestrina and the Colonna. But of himself Grassus himself affirms, that the first time he wished to visit him dwelling in his desert, as soon as he showed himself before the little window, from which he was wont to bless the people, asking it with a suppliant cry, even the hairs of his head bristling he trembled; and conceived so great an ardor of devotion in mind toward the Saint, that unless he had known himself bound by matrimony, immediately he would have assumed the religious habit. Peter also Thomei of Sulmona, Witness 22, related, that he saw and heard all those, to whom the Saint afforded some corporal benefit, also bore the spiritual fruit of an amended life: in which all the rest of the Witnesses assent to him.

[23] But with a great affection of charity he was borne to the subsidies of the poor, how great the care of the poor and therefore caused a little list of them to be made for himself, through pious and faithful men, in those places in which he stayed, distributing among them even unasked what was sent to him; no less liberal toward those who came to him for another cause. Thus Francis John of Rocca-Morici Witness 125, both says he saw it often, and that he sometime received money from the Saint's own hand. But to the women whom from his sight and colloquy he kept away, and to marriageable girls whose modesty he knew to be endangered on account of want, he succored through others, and that as secretly as he could. But the more he lavished, the more God provided that there should never be lacking what he might give out, nay also things given by him sometime grew among the hands of the receivers. always having what to lavish: An evident proof of this thing took sometime Lady Catanea, different from the former, who for her singular affection toward the Saint had chosen a habitation not far from his cell. For she when sometime she had received three pilgrims in hospitality, and had asked the Saint to lend her loaves, received from him two blessed (for there was not then a supply of more) of which when she and her husband and three pilgrims had eaten and were satisfied, one of the guests noticing what was being done; "What is this?" he said. "We had only two loaves, and lo we being satisfied there is even more left over than was at the beginning."

[24] Moreover for the corporal as well as spiritual help of his neighbors, By a prophetic spirit he foresees of great aid to him was the gift of prophecy, which the Author of all gifts had conferred on him, and of which various examples are brought forth in the manuscripts. Among these is, that when the church of St. Mary of Morrone was being built, one of the workmen, who under a certain cave dug out sand, meanwhile while the Saint after his manner enclosed in his cell was free for prayer; admonished through a messenger sent by him to him to go out of the cave as quickly as possible, the collapse of the cave, understood by no means in vain to have obeyed, when behind himself he saw the cave to have fallen down. Of Caramanico there was a strong and sound man, to whom coming to him Peter said, "Confess thy sins, because soon the Lord will visit thee." He returned home, and after two days thence carried out to the sepulchre confirmed the faith of the prediction. The Order being afterward increased, a certain novice of the Aquila monastery gravely tempted, and the death of certain neighbors near. revealed his internal struggle to his Prior: who sent him to the holy Father for the cause of counsel. But he having consoled him, and bidden him to migrate to Rome animated him, saying: "Go, son, in the name of the Lord, because there soon thou wilt attain thy end." Which he returned to Aquila said to many, and the event taught it had been truly foretold to him, on the tenth day after he had come to Rome, having died. James of Molisio, our Monk, dwelling near Rocca-Morici, in St. George at the foot of the Mount of Maiella, for the cause of taking consolation coming sometime to our Father, among other things heard these words from him: "Son, go, and be strengthened in the Lord: but thy soul diligently prepare and cleanse from sins, for it is near that thou be freed from the prison of this mortality." He then sound, vigorous, and cheerful gave no faith then indeed to such words; but within a few days having fallen into sickness, learned death which he had believed to be nearer to him.

[25] And these and other things related by various persons, are found to have been written by the disciples of the Saint, The hernia of one coming to him he cures absent, who orderly comprised his life: which also relate this which follows, as confirmed by the oath of him to whom it happened. At Lanciano (which is a city of Abruzzo at the Adriatic sea, on the part where it looks toward Maiella) a place most celebrated for its annual fairs, there lived a certain Notary Pamphilus: who after testimony given about various miracles of the Saint, said he had suffered a rupture in the right side exceedingly painful; from which to be cured, he delivered himself into the hands of a certain most expert Surgeon of Guardiagrele, famous for the fame of similar cures, and for more than five months remained without fruit under his care, who had cured many others similarly affected within the second or third month. When therefore both he and the physician had no hope left, and the habit of adultery he knows and corrects. remembering the miracles which through Peter were said to be done, he vowed to go to him. It was then a Thursday, and on the next Saturday he had resolved to go: but on the morning of the very prefixed day about to rise from bed, he felt himself sound. He recognized therefore that he had been anticipated in the benefit; to whom that he might not be ungrateful, a companion being taken he went out brisk, about to give thanks to his deliverer. But coming, and not admitted except the following day, when he saw him bend his knees, he said with a severe voice: "Wretched Pamphilus and unhappy: thou hast a good and chaste wife, and still with another woman dost thou defile thyself? How dost thou suffer thyself thus to be deceived by the devil? Thou sinnest mortally, and dost a most evil thing. Now therefore do penance for thy sins, and amend thyself": for he saw that infirmity to have been sent to him as a punishment of sin. Pamphilus recognized the true things to be said, but denied that he could be plucked from that custom. Then the Saint, moved by mercy, withdrew somewhat; and after a brief prayer before the altar returning, "Be," he said, "of good mind, son, I hope that thereafter thou wilt not relapse into that sin," and to the penitent imposed a congruous satisfaction and dismissed the man. But he not only abstained from the sin, but neither would afterward see the face nor hear the discourse of that woman.

[26] At what time Pope Nicholas III migrated from this life, that is in the year 1280 on the 22nd day of August, A sick disciple at Rome he heals, returning from Tuscany the Saint, in the monastery which his Order had at Rome, called of Montorio, found so gravely infirm a certain Robert a monk, a tertian fever also acceding to the disease, that he could neither move himself, nor receive from the physicians any further hope of living. This one therefore visiting and consoling; "Be," he said, "of good mind: for however weary and exhausted thou mayst seem to thyself, thou wilt not die": then he admonished that he should commend himself to God: and this said he departed, the sick man himself greatly commending himself to his prayers. The next day, when Robert expected the fever about to recur, he on the contrary began to be better: and to the Saint revisiting him the next day, and asking how he was, he said, "Well, Father, by the grace of God and thy prayers." Then Peter: "To me," he said, "no thanks are to be given, but to God and B. Bartholomew the Apostle," whose day had preceded: and by all for a miracle was held so sudden a convalescence. To the same Robert working in the fields had come an infirmity,

which not only the body but also the spirit a grave accidie occupied, and his grief appearing he soothes. and made the man useless for all spiritual exercises, which tormented him more than his disease. Therefore prostrate in prayer he began to ask a remedy from God through the merits of the holy Father. But he appearing to him through a vision, seemed to hold out an ample thong and to say, "Gird thyself, son, and thou wilt be more robust." He obeyed, and at the same time awaking felt himself more cheerful and animated than ever at other times: and more than all the rest he exercised himself that Lent, with fasts, silence, prayers and vigils, to the astonishment of all the other Brothers. Which I wished here inserted, perchance less conveniently to be placed elsewhere.

CHAPTER III.

The institution, confirmation, propagation and governance of the Order instituted by the Saint.

[27] At what time the Saint began, and in what place to receive his first companions; and who also those were, nowhere is found written. One thing is established, that their number was not the least, when from Morrone he departed to Maiella, leading only two companions, leaving the rest under the governance of a Vice-rector constituted by himself. Companions at Morrone beginning to be gathered from the year 1250 The writers then for the most part affirm, that in both places the number so grew, that when two places so slender and narrow could not hold him, he was compelled gradually to receive several others. Meanwhile with us nothing is more certain, than that the first was the place of St. Mary of Morrone, in which he began to receive stable goods. Of these the first were those estates, which we said above were donated by the pious spouses, Ludovic Manfred and Isabella de Luco, on the 9th of May in the year 1251, of King Manfred the 3rd, Indiction 15. There are found also other writings, which contain donations made to Br. Peter Vice-Prior of Maiella and Hermit there, of all the estates and rights pertaining to the church of St. Mary of Morrone, signed in the year 1263, on the 8th day of September, in the 5th year of King Manfred. Which writings, and gradually multiplied, that they may be verified with the former, a double beginning of Manfred must be distinguished, the first in the year 1248, when his father still living, but at Parma afflicted with a grave disaster, and Enzio his other bastard son King of Sardinia afflicted with captivity, he usurped the tyranny; which then his father being dead, he confirmed against his brother Conrad, everywhere held for King, except by the Neapolitans, Capuans and people of Aquino: the other, when after the death of Innocent IV, arrogating to himself the guardianship of Conradin his Nephew, again he reduced all into his power; and a rumor being scattered about the death of his nephew, in a Royal habit publicly appeared at the end of the year 1258 or the beginning of the following.

[28] According to this other beginning of King Manfred, are found letters given, first by Br. James Bishop of Valva and the Chapter of St. Pamphilus of Sulmona on the 5th of June, in 1259 the faculty is given of building a larger church, in the year of the Lord 1259 and of Manfred 1: by which to Br. James and Br. Peter Hermits (who doubtless were of the first companions) in the name of Br. Peter Hermit of Maiella (namely our holy Father) accepting; and to his successors the faculty is given of building a church, to the honor of the most blessed Virgin in the Morrone region. Understand a larger new one for that which before there the Saint had had, and which then still subject to the Episcopal jurisdiction, in the year first 1263 was dismissed free to Br. Peter Vice-prior and Hermit of Maiella: nor yet quickly completed, since even in the year 1268 Pope Clement IV granted Indulgences of a hundred days, to those about to extend helping hands to the work (as he speaks) costly. Nay neither in the year 1274 brought to an end, since even then it was so: in the Privilege of Pope Gregory X, on the mount of Maiella, to be the head of the Order. it is still called the church of St. Mary: which fully perfected and dedicated afterward bore the name of the Holy Spirit, and by Peter himself in a general Chapter was declared Head of the whole Congregation, Onuphrius of Como being elected Abbot, the former name being from then wholly abolished; so that thereafter no more mention is made of St. Mary of Morrone. But the cause of changing the name was that which we said above, and on account of which also all places thereafter constructed by him he dedicated under the name of the Holy Spirit. The title of Prior of St. Mary of Morrone being also omitted, in distributing Priors through the places Peter employed the title of Prior of the Holy Spirit of Maiella, until his Order, by the authority of Pope Urban IV in the year 1264, was incorporated into the Order of St. Benedict.

[29] The tenor of the Urbanian Constitution, directed to the Bishop of Chieti (this one was called Nicholas) is of this kind. It is in the year 1264 incorporated into the Benedictine Order: "Since as on the part of the beloved sons the Rector and Brothers of the desert of the Holy Spirit of Maiella of thy diocese, it was set forth before us, that they, who are bound to the observance of no Order, desire to profess the Order of B. Benedict and to be incorporated into it, and to be informed also by its institutes: We desiring to pursue their purpose with benevolent favor, to thy Fraternity by Apostolic writings we command, that, if it is so and their own means support them, so that the same Order can there be observed for perpetual future times; the same Order into that desert, if thou shalt see it expedient, thou introduce, and incorporate them into the said Order, without prejudice of another's right. Given at Orvieto on the Kalends of June, in the second year of our Pontificate." The Bishop soon did what had been commanded to him, and declared it done by letters given at Chieti on the 21st of June, of the 7th Indiction, in the year 1264, and that thing is in the year 1274 confirmed, of which an authentic transcript, written on the 28th of October of the same year, is kept in the Archive of Morrone. And this was the first Apostolic confirmation, after which the Order grew in the number of monks and places, which in the second confirmation of Gregory X, about the year 1274, were sixteen, and a little after thirty, and the Monks six hundred; the Saint extending his pastoral care to all things. Who although for the most part stayed at Maiella, yet at the beginnings of most of the foundations he presented himself present, not only in Abruzzo, but also in Roman Campania, at Florence, Anagni, Sculcula and Sora: nay also at Rome from time to time he was, for his own or another's devotion visiting the holy places, or satisfying devout friends; we know not however at what times precisely.

[30] The occasion of seeking the second Confirmation gave the fame widely spread, The Saint therefore having set out to the Council of Lyons: about the new Orders to be suppressed in the Council of Lyons: wherefore companions being taken John of Atri a Priest, and Placid of Morreis a layman, in the month of November of the year 1273, although in mid-winter, thither he betook himself; uncertain when, but at the least before the end of the following March, arriving at Lyons. Here in that house, which then was of the Templars, while lodging, as Benedict Gonon says in the Notes to the life, by night by an Angel it was revealed, that his Brothers ought to possess it, and there construct a monastery. But although he was ragged and in exterior clothing contemptible, yet by the supreme Pontiff he was honorably received. Admonished indeed (as Faber says) in spirit the supreme Antistes, knew something divine to lie hidden in the blessed man; nor so much to his exterior countenance, as to the dignity of the interior man he attended. where by a twin miracle before the Pope honored, But that in the sight also of the whole Council the Saint might find grace, the Lord worked about his person a notable miracle in the church of St. Paul, in which the assemblies were held. For when, the Pontiff commanding, about to celebrate Mass before him, he had taken off his cowl about to be clothed with the sacred garments, the cowl remained divinely suspended in the air at a ray of the sun, passing through a glass window: and it is established from the Manuscripts of the monastery of Lyons, that both the altar at which he celebrated, and that glass, were in veneration even to the times of the heretics, who destroyed both. Moreover the simple man blushed at the splendor of the most precious garments, which for such a ministry, on such an occasion to be performed, were offered; inasmuch as accustomed to cheap only, yet clean ones, in the desert. Therefore his spirit being not a little anxious about this, forthwith there appeared divinely brought those same simple paraments, with which the divine mysteries he celebrated, the Pontiff assisting and astonished with many others present.

[31] He obtains the Bull signed on the 22nd of March, This could have happened on the day of St. Benedict, and by that miracle the Pontiff have been moved to command the swift dispatch of the Bull, signed the following day the 22nd of March 1274, of which a part it has seemed good here to attach. So therefore it has. "Gregory Bishop, servant of the servants of God, To the beloved sons, the Prior of the monastery of the Holy Spirit of Maiella, and his Brothers as well present as future, professed of the regular life, in perpetual memory of the matter. To those choosing a religious life it befits Apostolic protection to be present, lest perchance the incursion of any temerity, either recall them from their purpose, or break the vigor (which God forbid) of sacred Religion. On that account, beloved sons in the Lord, by which the Order is exempted from the jurisdiction of the Ordinary, to your just postulations we clemently assent, and the monastery of the Holy Spirit of Maiella, not having its own Abbot, but wont to be governed by a Prior, of the diocese of Chieti, in which you are devoted to the divine obedience, under the protection of B. Peter and ours we receive and by the privilege of the present writing we fortify; first indeed establishing, that the monastic Order, which according to God and the Rule of B. Benedict in the same monastery is recognized to have been instituted, for perpetual times there inviolably be observed. Moreover whatever possessions, whatever goods the same monastery at present justly and canonically possesses, or in future by the concession of Pontiffs, the largition of Kings or Princes, the oblation of the Faithful, or in other just ways the Lord granting it shall be able to obtain, firm and unimpaired to you and your successors let them remain: among which these we have thought to be expressed by their proper names.

[32] the single churches being reviewed. The place itself in which the aforesaid monastery is situated, with all its appurtenances; the church of St. George of Rocca-Morici… of St. John of Mount-Maiella, of St. Bartholomew of Logio, of St. Cletus of Motillulo, and of St. Mary of St. Angelo Inter-montes… of St. Mary of Morrone, of St. Antoninus of Campo-Jovis, of St. John of Aquasanta, of St. Comitius of Acziano, of the Holy Spirit of Isernia, of St. Mary of Agello, of St. Anthony of Ferentino, of St. Antoninus of Anagni, of St. Leonard of Sculcula, and of St. Francis of the city of Antena… and whatever right in the dioceses of Chieti, Valva, Isernia, Anagni, Ferentino, Sora your monastery is known to obtain… Surely of your fresh fields, which with your own hands or expenses you cultivate, of which hitherto no one received, or of the nurslings of your animals, let no one presume to exact or extort tithes from you…" There follow also very many other Privileges, such as now nearly belong to free Orders and those exempt from the jurisdiction of the Ordinaries, with the subscription of the Pope himself and twelve Cardinals. On the journey in various places Peter does miracles, Furnished with these the Saint, and the various perils of the ways being overcome,

returned to Maiella in June, the eighth month after he had departed thence. But there is a fame at Florence, that in his going or return visiting after his manner the hospitals, he there signed all the sick with the sign of the Cross; and therefore that city chose him there as Patron, and instituted a feast to be celebrated with singular array and games, the magistrate convening yearly to his church there. So delivers Lord Theophilus Basilii Discourse 18, and again confirmed it to me by a letter, as said to him by the Prioress of the Nuns ministering in the hospital of St. Boniface, who affirmed that she had often heard this very thing from the mouth of the Prior a little before deceased, a most pious and learned man; and likewise from the Nuns of the hospital of St. Matthew, of which also the same Prior bore the care. It is said likewise that to him passing through Mantua was conceded by the Governor the place, which there now the Order possesses: and that at Como he celebrated Mass upon the major altar of that church, which there also our Order has.

[33] But the Father returned with gladness, and the Privileges which he had brought with him being published, and returned he placates the Bishop of Chieti, those were seized with fear who had with impunity plundered the goods of the poor little ones, and led by penance restored the things taken away: but neither did any of the Bishops dare to inflict any molestation on the Order, so solemnly confirmed. Only Nicholas Bishop of Chieti, interpreting its exemption from the Ordinaries as his own injury, so blazed against the holy man and his companions, that he thought to overturn the new Order wholly, and moved every stone to that end. Wherefore Peter, imbued with the gift of humility and patience, besought God, that He would avert the wrath of Nicholas, and render him placable. Meanwhile the Bishop falls sick, and is nearly led to the gates of death: who returning to heart, caused the holy man to be asked, that he would have mercy on him, about to be thereafter a benign protector of the new Order. But Peter commending the Bishop to the Lord by his prayers, obtained for him health not without a miracle: who corrected by the divine scourge, embracing him and his Order thereafter with the highest charity, made it immune from diocesan jurisdiction, a diploma being struck, in that same year 1274.

[34] Thence the Order being more increased, and the Archbishop of Benevento Capoferro desiring the monastery of St. Mary of Faifoli [perhaps at first called of Fagifolia, let him be Abbot of the monastery of Faifoli by Faber wrongly written of Fiesole] restored and reformed, donated it to the Saint about the year 1276, constituting him there Abbot: and under that title is found in the year already said Br. Matthew Bishop of Isernia to have written to Br. Peter of Morrone, Abbot of the church of St. Mary of Faifoli of the diocese of Benevento, and to all his Brothers, dwelling at Isernia in the church of the Holy Spirit newly constructed, of the Order of St. Benedict. [But in Ughelli vol. 8 col. 219 of Capoferro himself is found a judicial rescript, given in the year of Christ 1278, in the 11th year of Pope Nicholas III, to Br. Peter Abbot of St. Mary of Faifoli, and his successors regularly entering, on the question of watering for the use of the monastery, brought into controversy by the Steward of the church of St. Nicholas; by which it is established, that the irrigation both of the gardens and of the pastures be left to them at pleasure, provided it be done with such alternation, that the mill of the aforesaid church, in respect of which the question had been moved, cease not from its work.]

[35] Here when the Saint was, a certain peasant from Castelvecchio [this is nearly midway between Benevento and Cosenza by the way near the city of Montemarano, to a mute he gives speech whence you may understand the monastery of Faifoli was not far off, of which now the name and memory has perished] a peasant, I say, having a five-year son mute from birth, moved by the fame of the miracles which about Peter was scattered, came to him, imploring help, even employing friends as intercessors. To whom when the Saint had answered, that he was not he who could render speech to the mute, let them go and each take care of his own business; nor did the wretched father cease from prayers, but moved even the monks standing by to commiseration; moved at length even the Saint, turned himself to the altar, and bade that with him all on bended knees should recite the Our Father. Then rising he formed the sign of the Cross over the boy's mouth, and loosed the bond of his tongue, all astonished and the father moreover giving many thanks: who then after some days returning, from his stock brought two she-goats in acknowledgment of the benefit. At which smiling the Saint, the gift offered indeed he forbade to be received, but to the poor little man even an alms he bade to be given, and returns to Maiella. that he might learn the graces and gifts of God not to be remunerated with a temporal reward. But after some time St. Peter, another of his 110 disciples being there constituted Abbot for him, returned to Maiella; and so the instruments of the years 1281, 3, 4, and 6 call again Br. Peter with the title only of Prior or Rector of the Holy Spirit of Maiella. But our men seem to the number of forty, after six years of persecution there endured from a certain Simon, to have emigrated thence about the year 1285 to the monastery of St. John in the plain, at the foot of Mount Gargano, near the Castle called Porcina, of the diocese of Lucera.

[36] Meanwhile the Saint, wearied of the frequency of those coming to him in the Maiella monastery, substituting in his place there a Vicar (for no one while he lived wished to assume the title of Prior) had withdrawn to St. Bartholomew of Legio, he departs to more secret places in 1284 about the year 1284: and thence after two or three years went away to Orfonte, and there remained to about the year 1292, when he returned to Morrone, as below will be said. But when to St. Bartholomew he transferred himself, he took indeed some companions, with whom for the divine Offices and Masses he might use, yet their names nowhere are expressed: only it is permitted to presume, that they were the same, who at the last of his life are read to have clung to the Saint, and are named Francis of Atri, Angel of Caramanico, Nicholas of Serra, and Berard della Guardia. But where the place of St. Bartholomew was, on the very summit of the mountain: I would not easily determine, on account of the various manner of speaking by which the Witnesses treating of it speak: yet from all collated among themselves this seems to follow, that it was in the upper part of the mount of Maiella. Here when sometime he wished to celebrate Mass, the minister (who was the aforenamed Berard della Guardia, and who among the sworn Witnesses 190 related the deed) signified that wine was lacking: wherefore by the Saint's command the boy was soon dispatched toward the place of St. George, near Rocca-Morici at the roots of Maiella, who should seek wine. And now the hour of Tierce had come, and the boy had not yet returned, yet for Mass the Saint began to prepare himself. Admonished therefore again of the lack of wine, the empty ampulla, by his blessing he fills with wine, and that he should wish to wait for the boy sent for it; he answered nothing at all, but beginning Mass, pursued it even to the Offertory. But then a sign being given he admonished the minister to hold out the ampullae. He who had washed both, and filled one with water, showed the other empty, denying that even in the house there was wine. Again however a sign being given the Saint insisted, and the sign of the Cross being made over the empty ampulla, poured into the chalice as much as pleased him from it, now containing only as much wine, as would suffice for two Masses. Which seen the minister was so moved with the affection of tender devotion, that he ceased not from tears the whole time of the Sacrifice: but this performed when the remaining portion of wine, as about to be salutary to mind and body, he himself wished to take; again he found the ampulla empty as before.

[37] That several other miracles there the Saint worked, he heals the sick, is established from the sayings of the Witnesses; but they express none in particular; but distinguishing this place from the place of Orfonte not clearly enough, they make it probable to us, that many of those things which are related as done at Orfonte, pertain hither. For in two places at Orfonte they say the Saint was seen, of which one ought to be understood the place of St. Bartholomew, in which the manuscripts say signally there came a certain one from Castello Paterno, laboring with a most grave infirmity: whom having consoled with bland words, when also with the Cross he had signed him, within a few days the sick man recovered perfect health. But to that spring, he wards off a fire. which is called of Orfonte, and gushes in a certain valley existing between the highest summits of the Mount-Maiella, Peter Philippi de Luco Witness 57 says it happened, and that it is established by public fame, that while the Saint stayed there, that part of the mountain, which is most dense with woods, a fire seized, making a great destruction round about with the enormous din of the burning trees. Aroused by which one of the companions, and putting his head through the window, immediately full of horror began to exclaim, "What are we doing here? lo it is necessary for all to die: Come, Father, and see the deadly thing." He came, saw the fire, and to the companion said; "Do not fear: God will be a help to us, and will free us from this fire." A wonderful thing! The flame consumed whole woods, but the holy place it never touched. But before we pass to other miracles of the Saint in those places, it pleases in few words to explain when and how the governance of our Order was changed, after the Saint's withdrawal to more secret places.

[38] As to the time, no writing after the year 1286 is any more found, the Saint abdicating the governance, in which the Saint is called by the title of Prior or Rector. Whence it seems certain to us, that he from then utterly abdicated himself from all governance in some general Chapter; and that there was then subrogated to him that Robert, who in the instrument of the election of the first Abbot is called Prior of the monastery of the Holy Spirit of Maiella, without any mention of holy Br. Peter. But of what homeland that Robert was, is no more found, than of what country was the other Robert, whom of St. Peter of Montorio at Rome Prior the holy Father healed in the year 1280: but of Robert of Salento, there is no place here of thinking, in 1287 is created Abbot General of Maiella because this one had not then yet taken the habit: but at the same time others elsewhere also were Priors, as from similar writings is established, and namely Br. Sinibald, as in the year 1285 Prior in the Holy Spirit of Morrone. And in this manner the Order continued to be ruled by Priors, even to the year 1287, when on the 13th day of September of the first Indiction, into the Maiella Monastery convened twenty-two Fathers for the election of an Abbot, who that monastery and the whole Order with a worthier title might govern, presiding in the said Chapter Br. Robert Prior there, by whose hand also the instrument is had written of the election to be made the following day.

[39] But then it seemed good to proceed by the form of compromise, Br. Francis of Atri, and there were elected by common consent Br. Stephen of Calvelli, Br. Gualterius of Guardia, Br. John of Tucollis: who withdrawing to the major altar, the votes and opinions of each being heard, and mature deliberation premised, unanimously agreed

upon the person of the religious and discreet Br. Francis of Atri absent, a monk of the same monastery of the Holy Spirit of Maiella. This one when Br. John by the consent of his two colleagues had announced Abbot, according to the form inserted in the acts of the Election, after "We praise Thee, O God" was chanted, it was gone into Chapter: where were deputed Br. John of Tucollis and Br. Bernard del Como, who should ask at Rome the confirmation of the election from the venerable Prior and Chapter of the Basilica of St. Peter, to which immediately the monastery was subject. Present at all and in writing receiving it Antoninus Berardi of Caramanico a public Notary, before the witnesses Lord Thomas of Rocca-Morici Chaplain of St. Angelo of Vicenne, Lord Peter of Rocca-Morici, Lord James Chaplain of St. Angelo de Raort, James Gualteri of St. Angelo: subscribing the twenty-two Fathers, Br. Robert Prior, John the Sacristan, John of Tucolli, Gualterius of Guardia, James of Penna, Placid of Morreis, Robert of Guardia, Anselm of Guardia, James of Molisio, Roger of Monte-Rosso, Nicholas of Pacentro, Robert of Lama, Nicholas of Caramanico, Philip of Rigo-nigro, Gualterius of Serra, Peter of Aversa, Matthew of Manoppello, Peter of Rocca of Montis-plani, James of Manoppello, George of Genoa. Died a little after that Francis the Elected with an opinion of sanctity, and after him Rainald of Rigo-nigro. and among others is painted with the title of Blessed, or certainly of his own accord he abdicated, and received as successor Rainald of Rigo-nigro, who still in the year 1290 is found to have been Prior of the Holy Spirit of Morrone; and yet in the year 1293 a successor even he himself had Br. Onuphrius, the third Abbot of the Order.

Annotations

CHAPTER IV.

Miracles done in the eremitic withdrawal before the return to Morrone.

[40] The Saint at Rome raises a dead man, About to make a relation of the miracles done by the Saint, I begin from the dead raised: of which the first, happened at Rome, while there was the Saint in a certain devout place, which even now (says the ancient writer) the Order has there, and so verisimilarly in St. Peter of Montorio. There was dead a certain lay Brother, by name Placid, perhaps that one to whom the surname of Moreis, and who having accompanied the Saint into France even to death afterward clung to him. This one when the Monks wished to bury, the Saint commanding the thing was deferred to the following day. But he the others sleeping remaining alone in the oratory, beside the dead one in prayer passed the night. In the morning he performed the sacrifice of Mass; thence coming to the corpse, consigning it with the sign of the Cross, the hand being seized, with great confidence and fervor of spirit, he cried, "Br. Placid, in the name of Jesus Christ rise." And that he who had been dead rose, is had in various most ancient Manuscripts, and the same in the Process asserted Br. Bartholomew of Transacqua Witness 162, a disciple of the Saint himself, as heard from the mouth of Br. Gualterius of Sulmona, and of Br. Placid himself and many others, who at Rome then dwelt. This only between his relation and the manuscripts there is a difference, that Bartholomew says the Saint stood in prayer the whole day even to Compline.

[41] and on a journey a dead host, I remember also, that when at Rome I gave attention to Theology, and everywhere I sought out the memories of the Saint, about to take care that they should be engraved in bronze, just as afterward was done; in a certain old Manuscript I read, what also in another similar one Lord Francis de Ajellis asserted himself to have read, that to the Saint making a journey it sometime happened in the evening to enter a lodging, where he found the whole house in mourning, on account of the death of the father of the family. But the Saint with his companion, the whole night beside the corpse persisted intent on reciting Psalms; and this being past, when in the morning he had bidden the dead man to rise in the name of the Lord, he withdrew as secretly as he could, and turned aside from the public way, that he might not be recognized by those, who the miracle being recognized were about to follow, just as they did follow, but their benefactor they could never overtake. Now the miracle of the mason, fallen from the wall of the church of Maiella, has been related elsewhere: therefore there follows here immediately, the fourth resuscitated in the place of Orfonte, as the ancient Manuscripts of the archive of Bergomo have. There was labored there a scarcity of waters, and at Maiella another. wherefore two certain pious men, of those who followed the Saint, when they had noticed from a certain place of the mountain a drop of water dripping, decreed, for the convenience and refreshment of those ascending, to hollow a certain most hard rock, in which it might be received. While they do this, to one of them springing from the handle an iron hammer, with so great violence struck his forehead, that he fell down dead. The companion ran weeping to the Saint; who the cause of the lamentation being understood, bade the man to be of good mind, promising himself about to go with him; just as he did, after a little prayer in the cell; and leading his hand over the head of the one lying, and beholding the lamentable wound, he too broke forth into tears, and signing the wound thrice invoked the most holy Trinity. Nor was there delay, the man rose to his feet brisk, but in sign of the miracle bore a scar on his forehead some days afterward: just as is related in the Manuscripts seen by me.

[42] He illumines a blind girl, I come to the blind illumined, among whom first offers herself from the castle of Sangro a girl by name Trotta, daughter of Benedict, who from a certain infirmity had retained a blindness now for three years endured. She, the fame of Peter's miracles spreading more widely day by day being heard, confidence being conceived in him, because by herself she could not come to him, was led by her mother into the Mount of Maiella, accompanying her her kinsmen Francis Cavalerius and Robert de Raone: of whom the last, as more known to the Saint, going before, related to what end they had brought her. And he indeed somewhat moved, "How," he said, "didst thou bring even females? Know therefore that in these places they neither are nor ought to come." At length however he added, "I will ask God"; and blessed the girl, the sign of the Cross being formed over her. But the blessing being received, she said, "Immediately I began to see nor did I need a guide to return." And thence she always saw well, and saw well, when she herself 13th in the order of the Witnesses declared the thing, attesting to her the aforesaid two, Witnesses 15 and 16. James son of Stephen of Caramanico had utterly lost the faculty of seeing, after a grave disease endured. This one led by his father John to St. Peter, and asking mercy; by him, lifting his eyes to heaven, signed, received perfect sight, according to the testimony of Peter Berardi Guinisii, and the common fame in that place affirmed in writing.

[43] A Priest with darkened eyes, A Priest of twenty-four years, called James, of St. Euphemia in the diocese of Chieti near Maiella, by a grave infirmity had his eyes much darkened, and in vain had been under the care of physicians for a year and a half. At length his father Stephen, devoted to the Saint, brought this his son to him at St. John of Orfonte. But he said to him, "When thou sawest rightly, thou never wouldst come to me: but now blind thou standest by." Then he asked about the manner of food and the care which they had applied, "And all these," he said, "make void, because they will profit nothing: but I wish that thou lay aside those blue garments, and renounce the world, and the iniquities by which thou art held." Then he commanded that he should remain in the church, where he caused him to be covered with a certain cloak even to the hour of Matins, when there entered he himself with Br. Francis of Atri, Br. Nicholas of Serra, and Br. Angel of Caramanico, with a book and a kindled candle to recite the Office. And when he had begun to say, "Rejoice, ye just"; the Priest also began to see all things clearly and distinctly: and with them having pursued the Office and the rest of the prayers, thereafter always used sound eyes. So he himself now of fifty-two years about himself James the Priest related, Witness 43, attesting to him Peter de Lisa Witness 73, and Frederick Nicoli of St. Euphemia Witness 74; and adding that it is public fame in the towns of St. Euphemia, Caramanico and Rocca Giberti. And hence is understood, that even before the last withdrawal sometime the Saint was wont to stay at St. John of Orfonte, even from the year 1264.

[44] a one-eyed boy About the year 1289 at Caramanico a certain Sinibald and his wife Gentiluccia had a son by name Matthew, a boy of eighteen months, to whom an infirmity coming had extinguished the right eye. But Sinibald was exceedingly familiar with the Saint: wherefore he brought the infant to him, supplicating that he would render him sight. But he, "This," he said, "is the work of God, brother, nor am I of such merit: yet I will pray for him." There was there also Lord Thomas, Abbot of St. Clement near the river Pescara, who also himself

interceded for the boy with the Saint. Then he took him into his arms, saying, "May almighty God bless thee, son"; and gave the father a little wooden cross, which he should tie to the son's neck, and with it he signed him, and at the same time restored him sound to Sinibald. But from that time the boy advanced also to a greater age, had a clear eye, which before had had it covered with a film: and the Archbishop of Naples in the year 1311 inspected that eye lacking every blemish. But Sinibald the father Witness 80, and Gentiluccia the mother Witness 81, with Lord Gualterius Thomas of Caramanico Witness 63, said the thing happened in the year 1289.

[45] and another. Peter son of Sir John Lord Peter of Sulmona, a ten-year boy, for the space of a whole month suffered so grave an infirmity in the right eye, that scarcely or scarcely indeed with it he saw anything, and going out from his place he would fall outside: the physicians of Sulmona and others, after all the attempts of their art applied in vain, denying it could be done, but that the use of that eye he should utterly lose. Understanding meanwhile the boy, how great things at Orfonte God through the Saint worked, asked his father to lead him thither, because he firmly hoped there to be healed. The grandfather of the boy, Peter also himself called, set on a horse brought him to Nicholas son of James of Sulmona, a Cleric exceedingly familiar with the Saint, asking that he would present the boy to him. To the one asking Nicholas assented, and the boy taken by the hand led him to the Saint, setting forth the case and adding mediating prayers. Moved at these things the Saint, received the boy, and signed him often, very many prayers meanwhile reciting. Then he gave him three sacrificial hosts, and a little bread, saying, "Every morning eat one of these hosts with a morsel of this bread, thy knees first bent to the ground reciting thrice the Our Father." Then he sprinkled him with holy water, and immediately the boy began to be better: and when he had fulfilled what had been enjoined on him, he was wholly freed from the evil. The miracle being soon divulged through the whole city, filled with joy all who knew the boy; but he himself of twenty-four years Witness 55, and Nicholas son of James of Sulmona Witness 88, said it happened fifteen years before, and so in the year 1291.

[46] At Sulmona also there was a certain Catania, daughter of Master Benedict the Physician and wife of the Notary John Rizardi. A woman suddenly blind and deaf To her on a certain day sitting and spinning among the neighboring women came so great a disturbance and vertigo of the head, that her sight utterly lost, she did not now even see those among whom she sat, nor discern their voices; but heard them as it were proceeding from a certain cave. But they crying with a more strained voice, she answered that her head ached, nor did she see anything. A girl being therefore given her who should lead her home, from her she understood that her right eye stood out more than the left. She lay for several days amid sharp and great pains (eight or ten days her father said) as it were alienated from mind, nor did the applied remedies profit. At length confidence being conceived in the Saint, by the fame of the miracles everywhere celebrated, she was more confirmed by a vision of this kind. It seemed to her that she was in the church of St. Pelinus near Sulmona, by a vision she is admonished to go to Peter: and there beside the altar to behold an old man clothed in the same garments, in which afterward she saw B. Peter; to hear also voices of those saying, "Come to him who stands by the altar, for he will show thee the way": and the old man to take the hand of her coming, and to say, "Go through that square," pointing out the straight way by which she had to go. Then awaking she began most instantly to ask her husband, that she be led to the Saint: but he, most alien from giving faith to the wonders which were related, the prayers of his afflicted wife received contemptuously; at length however yielding to her importunity, appointed a day and a manner by which she should be led, namely tied upon a horse, lest she could fall, inasmuch as blind.

[47] So going to Orfonte he with the sick woman, in the company of Master Rainald Gentilis the Physician, James Benvenuti, Master Angel of Trano, Nicholas son of Master John, and one maidservant; her husband leading her to him, when they had come to the place, Raynald, as from earliest youth familiar to the Saint (as we saw above), together with the husband of the sick woman entered to him, and set forth the cause of his coming. But he took ill the women brought, and the more because Raynald was conscious of his custom, wherefore he bade them to be removed; John Naritus being more vehemently indignant, as one savoring only carnal things, and addressing the Saint with little reverence. But Rainald modestly excused the deed, and insisted humbly that he would deign to beseech God for the sick woman. "But thou," replied the Saint, "knowest, that this is not my work, but God's." And turned to John (for to his spiritual necessity he attended more, than to the corporal one of the wife) drawing him aside about his life, what kind he led, he asks. To whom he: "But let us," he said, "take care of that for which we came hither." Then the Saint, placidly resuming the discourse, but kindled with a greater fervor of spirit, "Hear," he said, "son"; and began to preach to him many things pertaining to the state and salvation of his soul, which were of so great efficacy that sooner were his spiritual wounds healed, than his wife's corporal eyes illumined; and converted into plainly another man, with the admiration of all, he thereafter led an exceedingly honest and religious life. he is converted to good fruit, Meanwhile sitting in a neighboring place and waiting the woman fell asleep, and saw the Saint carried to her by a great multitude of men, and over her form the sign of the Cross, as is done at the Gospel, and so her sight to be restored to her; there remaining however over her eyes a certain as it were weight, about which to her asking what she should do, the Saint seemed to answer, "Take, and bind, and put it back for thyself."

[48] At these things her husband stood by her awaking, bringing from the Saint a little wooden cross to be hung from her neck: then she herself is healed, which when she had devoutly received, and with it from head to foot had signed herself; suddenly she began to see clearly, every infirmity being loosed. Wherefore soon to Rainald John returned, narrating the thing as it had been done, and to him hastening to see it crying out from afar Catania, "Master Rainald," she said, "I see thee"; and when she wished to give thanks to the Saint himself in person, these to render to God Peter bade, and to depart home. But she: "Thanks," she said, "I give to God and to him: but certain to serve God thenceforth, I wish to ask him by what manner I can do it." But the Saint to John reporting this to him answered: "Return, nor say to anyone aught else, than that the omnipotent God has healed thy wife, but let her every day on bended knee say in thanksgiving several times the Our Father." Similar things also impressed on him said Master Rainald. But to Catania the Saint also sent two loaves, returning she is received with admiration. one round, the other oblong, bidding that with her company thence she should eat: for so he was wont to do to those coming to him. But the woman for joy and certitude of recovered health would not be carried back on the horse, but on foot descended from the mountain: at whose roots she found more than ten boys, who before had seen her blind, and led by others. These, beholding her seeing and walking by herself, with a clear voice began to say, "Blessed be God: because lo a woman, who ascended the mountain blind, returns illumined." But the miracle being divulged through the city, before she entered it, men and many women went out to meet her, desiring to understand the series of the thing; and wherever they passed, all went out from their houses, praising God for such a miracle.

[49] Catania said, that even now she devoutly kept the little Cross, The same one helps several by the little Cross received from the Saint, by means of which she had obtained health; and afterward had placed it over the badly affected eyes of many, of whom some had been wholly cured, some had felt much relief: nay also applying the same to other infirmities, she had experienced a like effect, sometime entire health being restored to the sick, and at least great solace always brought to them. She added another thing even more wonderful, namely that when she and her husband, and the others above named companions of the journey with the maidservant, in all seven, had eaten of the two loaves given by the Saint as much as they wished; there was left over more bread, than there was before they had tasted of it. Which she noticing, began to exclaim, "Do you not see the miracle? and how after we all have eaten of those loaves, and she wonders that the loaves given were multiplied. we have still more than we had before?" She gathered therefore devoutly the remnants, and even to the year 1306 and the end of May, when she said this under oath, keeping the same, still she said there was left to her of that bread. But Catania was Witness 19, and to her attested her father Witness 18, and the aforepraised Physician Witness 23: and all said the thing happened fifteen years before, and so about the year 1291.

[50] A certain woman of Ascoli in Picenum, had incurred blindness, Two blind women and drawn by the fame of St. Peter had caused herself to be carried before the cell, waiting there together with several others, seeking the Saint's blessing: who at length opening the window, signed the people with the Cross, and suddenly the woman was illumined, as the old manuscripts relate. In the city of Penne among the Marrucini, the peoples of Abruzzo, another woman, Civitas by name, wife of Richard John the late Porphyrius, in the fifth year blind, brought into Orfonte by her husband, departed not thence before she had recovered sight by the merits of the holy Father; nor did she need a guide of the way returning home, as in the Manuscript is said, the Witnesses being alleged Richard the woman's husband, Jacoba her godmother, and Matthew Nubilo, and many others. At Ortona at the sea, a certain man by name Genuensis, and an injured eye are cured, while in his vineyard he labors on the day of St. Anthony, a vine-shoot rushing into his right eye he was so gravely injured, that he saw nothing more with it; nor by medicines applied for the cure could he profit anything, the evil growing worse daily. At length he went to Orfonte, presented himself to the Saint, and by the sign of the Cross by him benevolently signed, began perfectly to see even with that eye, attesting to him Master Dominic Gregorii and several others, as the Manuscript relates.

[51] Francis Cavalerius from the castle of Sangro, having a three-year son by name Frederick, likewise a deaf and mute boy, from birth deaf and mute; a companion Robert de Raone being taken, came to Maiella with the boy to the Saint, and set forth the cause why he had come. To whom the Saint, "Why did you bring him to me, who am only a simple man? you ought to have commended him to God, and He would have afforded help: yet I hope in His mercy that He will bring aid." There was then by chance the Saint in an assembly of several monks, and Cavalerius was very well known to the Fathers. They therefore taking the boy into the midst, began to ask the father about his infirmity, about his family,

and about other things; and the hour being passed they dismissed the guests, rendering the boy to the father and saying, "Go and pray God for him." So departing from the monastery they began to call the boy by name, and he to hear and answer, in both profiting daily more and more; with however some impediment of the tongue: which clung to him even when more grown, from this that the infant once had fallen into the hearth. The same affirmed Francis and Robert aforenamed, Witnesses 15 and 16.

[52] Richard Berardus of Rocca-Morici, was greatly afflicted on account of his daughter Bartholomea, and a mute and weak girl. who born to him mute and weak, for nearly the tenth year lay in bed, able neither to speak nor to move herself. And when many molestations thence existed to the whole family, the same Richard sometime narrated to the Saint. But he compassionate of him, "Do not be troubled," he said, "for perchance God will console thee." Then the father Richard began to ask and to say: "Why dost not thou, Father, pray God to deign to console me about this daughter? because truly she is the greatest burden to me." "But I," answered Peter, "am a sinner, unworthy whose prayers God should hear: but thou art juster than I. Nevertheless go to the table, and after dinner return to me." He obeyed, and dinner finished returned to the Saint: who gave him a little crust of toasted bread, smeared with oil with salt and pepper, which blessed by him he should bear to his daughter. So dismissed and returned, he had scarcely touched the threshold of his house, when the girl her tongue's bond being loosed called him saying, "Give me the little crust." To whom the father, "I will give," he said, "if thou rise." Therefore she raises herself to her feet sound and unharmed, takes the little crust, and received eats it, speaking clearly and distinctly, and in every direction so freely moving herself as if she had never been infirm; and so she lived afterward for five years. But all these things accurately set forth Richard the father Witness 3, attesting to him the Notary Philip Witness 112, and his brother Gentilis Witness 113, both sons of Richard, brothers of Bartholomea, and their fellow-citizen and coeval Nicasius Witness 114; and they said it happened sixteen years before, and so in the year 1290. A certain Manuscript adds, that many Monks were present, I believe when Richard received the little crust to be given to his daughter at Maiella from the Saint.

Annotation

* perhaps to his paternal uncle.

CHAPTER V.

Other miracles of the same time.

[53] William de Colle, of Alto, a town of the diocese of Penne, The Saint heals a swollen knee thirty years old, related that before the Pontificate of the Saint his knee swelled up so gravely, that it rendered the whole leg useless, and the remedies profiting nothing the physicians judged this had to be cut off. His parents could not bring their mind, to behold their son thus mutilated; and preferred him to die rather than to be long tortured. When therefore placed beyond hope of human help the wretched man, on a certain night lay in bed, in which he could not even move himself; he heard and saw in dreams a woman saying to him, "Rise, William, and go to Peter of Morrone, he will heal thee." And when he replied: "But how can I go to him, who cannot even move myself from the place in which I lie?" she added: "Rise, rise: easily thou wilt go thither." At these things awaking and full of confidence, when he had set forth his vision to his parents, and persuaded them the same; tied upon a beast lest he could fall, he was brought to Maiella, where the Saint then was, accompanying him Bartholomew Simeonis of Causano Witness 160, and Landolf Simeonis of Causano Witness 161: who when they arrived, the Saint was occupied with saying Mass, wherefore only from afar, not being able to come nearer, with difficulty William could behold the Saint. The Mass being finished to those setting forth the cause of his coming, by bread given by him; the Saint said, that they should be of good mind, nor doubt. Then he gave them nine hosts with a little bread, bidding for nine days daily to take one of the hosts with a morsel of that bread. When on the same day William had begun to do this, he began also to tremble in his whole body, and as if he had suffered a swoon had to abide there the whole day. Afterward the tremor ceasing, about to set out on the way, he himself mounted the horse by himself, which before he could not have done, and returned home; then through the remaining nine days, always taking one host with a morsel, was healed; and walking very well, only some slight sense of pain in the knee he perceived: but this also within a month ceased. So William himself Witness 14; who since he adds that he began to know the Saint three years before the Papacy, we can conjecture the thing was done in the year of Christ 1291.

[54] Thomas John Gualterii of Rocca-Morici, for five continuous months remained so weak and dissolved in all his members, likewise inflated in the whole body and useless with so enormous an inflation of the whole body, that he could neither stand on his feet, nor walk, nor sit, nor touch anything, much less seize with his hands; and so whether he had to eat or drink, or to serve any other corporal necessity, he had need to be helped by others' hands in each thing: nor had the remedies copiously applied profited. Wherefore allured by the fame of the miracles which was scattered, he wished to be carried to the Saint; and by his kinsmen Gualterius de Granella Witness 92, and Bartholomew of Abbateggio Witness 93, tied upon an ass, and brought to Orfonte, on account of the multitude of men who had run thither, he could not as he was be offered to the Saint: but loosed from the ass, through the hands of those assisting he was advanced even to the rails of the altar, at which Peter was making the sacrifice of Mass, wailing meanwhile on account of the most grave torments which he bore. contrecting him with his own hands; But the sacrifice being finished the Saint came to him, and him asked about his evil heard long-sufferingly, and finally all his members handling with his own hands, the sign of the Cross he impressed on him, and prayed God. This being done, suddenly Thomas rose to his feet, and walked and ate before all there present, and crying out, "Blessed be the Lord, Blessed the Lord: Have mercy on us, holy Father, have mercy on us." But Thomas departed thence on foot, many leading him to his home, for admiration of so great a miracle. But after three days even all the swelling vanished, nor did he bear any more remnants of the evil; afterward by himself all things before the Apostolic Inquisitors he declared Witness 90, attesting also to him Leonard Berardi Witness 91, who although he was not present at the miracle, yet bore a special care of Thomas, when he was to be tied upon the ass.

[55] Gualterius de Montone of St. Valentinus, Witness 116, narrated that sixteen years before, a Baron also paralytic and so in the year 1290 having set out to Orfonte to the Saint, found there a certain Baron from Valle-prete, for seven years paralytic from the waist down, so that without another's help he could neither stand on his feet, nor move himself from place to place. Except as far as creeping upon his buttocks he drew himself along the ground; but he had been brought thither upon a horse, and lay on the ground before the altar, praying with tears, meanwhile while the Saint sacrificed. But Gualterius himself then at the same table with that noble ate: who after dinner having spoken with the Saint from him returned, the Witness himself seeing, plainly free from the disease; and by himself mounting the horse, expeditiously returned home.

[56] Blasius Rainellinus, whom some manuscripts make of Lanciano, others of Ortona, weak in the feet, was not from a certain grave infirmity perfectly healed, but there had remained to him from the soles of the feet even to the knees a certain coldness, by which he was impeded from walking, or even from standing on his feet on the ground; and this happened to him from the feast of St. Andrew the Apostle, even to the Thursday before Carnival, falling on the 18th of February. But the following night there appeared to him, as to one waking, the Saints Julian and Rufinus, illuminating the whole house with a wonderful splendor; and they said to him, "Wilt thou be healed?" But he desiring that such might be the will of God, but if not that He should quickly take him out of this world; "Therefore," they said, "go to Br. Peter of Morrone, that is to the monastery of the Holy Spirit there situated, and tell the Prior, that he give thee something of the things which were in use to him." sent by SS. Julian and Rufinus; The man did in the early morning what had been commanded him, and caused himself to be carried thither, and set forth the vision before all the Monks: and placed before the altar, in that same place and the same moment of time he felt himself healed, and glad for the benefit received returned home. There exclaim here certain manuscripts, "O how worthy is he to be honored by the peoples, whose sanctity while he still lived was published from heaven by the Saints": and hence I seem able to infer, that the thing happened while Peter still was among mortals. [So Marinus, whose conjecture is confirmed by an evident reasoning. For the Thursday before the Sunday of Sexagesima (for from this their Hilaria the Italians begin, which they call Carnival) concurring with the 18th of February, cannot be had, except when Easter is celebrated on the 1st of April, or the preceding day if it be a Leap year: but in all that time, about which there could be doubt, each happened only once, the first in the year 1274 with the Dominical letter G, the other in the year 1252, with the Dominical letters G F, nor again was there a like concurrence, except after about eighty years. But the Saints who are here said to have appeared, Julian Martyr of Sora, on 27 January, and Rufinus, Bishop of the Marsi among the Peligni, on 11 August have a celebrated cult in those parts.]

[57] a contracted woman, Granata, wife of the Judge Leonard of Sulmona, for four years so contracted in arms and fingers, that she could in no way use them, nor yet was any remedy found for the evil; understanding the illumination of Catania the blind woman, made at Orfonte in the year 1281, conceived also confidence of obtaining health through the Saint, and asked her husband to lead her thither. Which when he refused to do, fearing to be reprehended (for he knew how greatly Peter abhorred the meeting of women) she sent for herself and her husband her kinsman Philip, who should indicate to him the disease and desire of the woman. a hectic boy, This one from him some hosts with a piece of bread, and a powder made of herbs, brought, to be eaten by Granata with the recitation of the Lord's prayer: which being done, that the desired health followed affirmed the Judge Leonard himself and his wife Granata Witnesses 40 and 41. And likewise the same deposed, that in like manner through the said Philip having besought Peter for their son then seven years old Marinus, on account of an incurable hectic given up by the physicians, they received a little wooden cross, to be hung from the boy's neck, with an apple to be eaten: who at the first taste of this apple recovered, and survived for a whole six years.

[58] Bartholomew, of Pamphilus Rizandi of Sulmona

and of Gemma his wife a two-year son, by a certain biting infirmity was so corroded, both in other members, and in the face itself, that his lips being eaten through his teeth were bared, and he was esteemed a leper, the physicians abandoning the evil as incurable. and another eaten by leprosy, His kinsmen therefore, having often experienced the virtue of St. Peter, persuaded the sad mother, that she send him to him; which was the more easily persuaded her, the more certainly she knew, what had happened to her kinswoman Catania the wife of the Notary John of Sulmona. So with John himself accompanying she brought her son to Orfonte, where the Saint asked John entering to him, whether he had a son: but he, "I have not," he said, "but my brother has, whom as my own I love: but lo he is held by a grave infirmity, for which that thou make a remedy I ask." To whom the Saint, "Trust, because God will help and free him." And this said he formed over the body of the boy the sign of the Cross before and behind, but the boy within a few days fully recovered, the miracle attesting after the death of the husbands Gemma and Catania; with whom testifying together Mary Gualterii of Sulmona, said the 13th year was running, which number would reach to the year 1292: but all together deposed, that being made a youth innocently and laudably he led his life.

[59] When sometime the Saint after his manner, in the time of Lenten observance, was enclosed; a leprous matron, there came to him from Calabria a certain Priest, Simon called, from a noble matron of those parts, whom the divulged fame of the miracles had made to have confidence in him. She through the aforesaid Priest asked, that wherever the Saint stayed, she might merit to receive water in a little vessel, likewise sent for that, with which he should have washed his hands. The Priest could not speak with the Saint, but through the Monks assisting him he indicated the business committed to him: nor was there delay, a flask filled with water blessed by himself he bade to be rendered to the Priest: with which when the devout woman had washed, she was cleansed from the leprosy with which she greatly labored: and after thirty days she sent back the same Priest to give thanks. This was done by him before Master Gentilis the painter, then occupied in painting the Saint's own cell; and that he had it likewise from the mouth of a certain monk equally present testifies the author of one manuscript. Nicholas, incurable scrofula, son of Peter Balduini of Sulmona, a twelve-year boy, deformed with a double scrofula constricting and inflating the throat, after various remedies applied in vain, was led by his father to the Saint: who the boy being bidden to confess his sins to him, a little cypress cross taken in his hands signed his throat, and soon healed the evil; his parents Peter and Gentiluccia Witnesses 83 and 87, and Nicholas himself now 28 years old Witness 84, and adding that that same little Cross had been donated to him by the Saint.

[60] Gualterius Thomas of Caramanico a Priest, two years before the Papacy of the Saint suffered most grave colic and pleuritic pains, nephritic pains, to which acceded no lighter torments from the stone and gravel: and these now raging for the twelfth day yielded to no remedy. And so upon an ass he caused himself to be carried to the Saint at Orfonte, accompanying him Lord Rizard Berardi and Lord Berard Elizaei, afterward Witnesses 64 and 65: before whom pouring out prayers and tears, he asked help from the Saint. He bidding the man to be of good mind, with his hand touched the sick man, and impressed the Cross on him, saying, "May God by His mercy help thee." The Priest departed, and the following night he discharged with the urine an enormous abundance of gravel and stones, but in the morning he felt himself plainly free, and was free thereafter, as he himself related Witness 63, equally as the two aforenamed companion Priests, asserting it happened about the year 1292: and the same testify together Joanna of Angel and Alisia of Thomas, sister of Gualterius himself Witnesses 66 and 67.

[61] Laboring with a hectic Lady Florentia, of whom both in the Summary by name and without a name in the Bull of Canonization mention is made; an inveterate hectic, not only rose from her bed after she had had over herself for one hour a linen cloth, on the Saint's part brought to her by her father in the year 1291; but the same wrapping about her head, went forth into the sight of the neighbors astonished at the prodigious thing: but returned into the house when she had reclined on the bed, again in the morning without anyone's help rose strong in her whole body, and full of flesh, and surviving eight years more even bore children. So testify Giffred her husband Witness 82, the Notary Odo of Sulmona Witness 104, Gemma wife of Benedict Angel of Sulmona Witness 105. That at Orfonte also happened what in the Summary is had about the cured inguinal fistula, of Gualterius John of Casale Comitis, of the diocese of Chieti, testified Leonard Berardi of Rocca Moricii Witness 91, and Lord Oliver of Casale-Comitis Witness 153, and three others next following in the order of the Witnesses.

[62] an enormous hernia, James John the late son of Daniel a fifty-year-old, Witness 59, deposed under oath, that fifteen years before, that is about the year 1291, to the holy Father staying at Orfonte he brought certain Sacerdotal paraments, together with a chalice, by the testament of a certain deceased to be donated to him. But while he was there, he saw an old man coming thither, and crying in a nearly mad manner, "Holy Father, pray God for me." James ran to see what it was, and by sight and touch knew, the wretch to be so enormously ruptured, that nearly all his viscera with the intestines hung outside his belly: wherefore touched with commiseration of him, and seeing him badly affected by cold, on account of the rain which on the way he had endured, a certain doublet of his own he lent him for clothing and warming, and helped him so that he could penetrate into the church, where the Saint celebrated Mass. While the end of this was awaited, he saw the image of the Crucified, the Crucified meanwhile sweating; near the altar, incline its head, water flowing from it even to the feet in the manner of sweat. Which admiring, he came nearer to the same image, and applied to it the grains of a certain prayer-garland, donated to him by the Saint; which afterward he says he used with many sick of both sexes, with their notable solace. But the Mass being finished, that unhappy man asked the Saint, that he would beseech God for him: who to him through Br. Angel (of Caramanico called, as I think) sent a certain powder to be taken with food. He took it immediately before James himself, and went away together with him for four miles even to St. Sianus who this is or when he is venerated I know not and asked of him, how he was. "Well," said the other: and so it was: for there remained no trace in his body of that so enormous rupture. Which seeing James gave thanks to God, and pursued his way by another route.

[63] Master Grimald of Aquila, a mason, while the church of St. Mary of Collemaggio was being built, he heals two ruptured men, lifting a certain great weight burst, so that he could no longer work. He grieved himself, and the Monks condoled with him: but after several days he went to the Saint, and what had happened to him weeping set forth. He the sign of the Cross being made over him, gave him a certain powder, which he should use, and dismissed the man. Who the same evening at the village of St. Eusanio took lodging, but in the morning took of that powder with wine: and immediately rejoiced that he was healed, as the manuscripts have, and from them Faber: whence it is understood the Saint was at Orfonte, at the time at which the aforesaid church was being constructed. At Bucchianico also, as the same manuscripts have, a certain Simon son of Leonard, said that ruptured in the left groin sometime, by his father he had been brought and offered to the Saint: who after Mass came to him, and signing him over him prayed: which being done his flesh was consolidated, attesting to the miracle Leonard the father and mother of the boy, and also Bartholomew Gentilis.

[64] When at the Holy Spirit of Maiella sometime the Saint stayed, he frees an energumen, some from the place which is called Carceres, brought a man possessed by a demon: who coming into his sight, began to cry out and to struggle, lest he be forced to come nearer. But the Saint sitting at the rails of the altar, bade the wretch to be drawn to him, and inflicting a slap, "Go out," he said, "devil, from the creature of God." Nor was there delay; the energumen fell to the ground as if dead, and the Saint praying after half an hour rose sound; and thence devout to the holy Father lived, as the manuscripts relate. But of himself narrated Nicholas, called Zaurellus of Sulmona, he cures epilepsy, Witness 45, in the 31st year of his age; that when he was nineteen years old, he labored with the epileptic disease without hope of health; but his mother Margaret persuading he went to the Saint at Orfonte, who bade him to put his head upon certain wooden rails, and began to read from a book. But after an hour asking for holy water with a censer, sprinkled and incensed dismissed him, commanding that for a whole month he should abstain from fire and water and high places, then take no human medicine. And from that time he said he was free: the same of him asserted his mother Witness 46: but Matthew Simeonis the late son of Rainald Mancini of Sulmona Witness 123, said, he had often been present when he fell, and over him thus fallen had several times recited some Psalms; and to him attests also Sulmontina, of John Peter of Sulmona.

[65] Stephen Gerardi of Acziano furious, as is said in the Summary, with hands bound, madness, and feet tied under an ass, brought to the Saint, Valens son of Peter, cousin of Stephen Witness 51, Peter son of Alexander Witness 34, Thomas son of Peter the late John Poteti of Galliano, Gerardinus Berardi, and the mother of the furious man Velleta of Acziano Witness 35. To whom when he answered, that they should go thence, because the Saints Peter and Paul could help him wherever he was; they said, that night now impending, they dared not withdraw unless some grace were obtained. Then indeed he gave them bread, to be offered to the sick man: of which when he had eaten avidly, he began by himself freely to walk: and thence was master of a sound mind. But this happened about the year 1288, and attested to the miracle besides those already said, Odorisius John of Acziano a sixty-year-old Witness 37, and Gemma Witness 36, he the paternal uncle this one the widow of Stephen himself then dead, absent indeed while the thing was done, but for a whole month having suffered her husband thus infirm, and intent on his services. paralysis, Petruccius de Abmamonte of Rocca Moricii, for three days was so gravely afflicted with epilepsy, that although by night he slept well, yet the whole day he was as if dead without sense, and so weakened, that the physicians believed it was over with his life. This one his brothers Matthew and Raimund, tied on an ass, with great confidence brought to Orfonte, about the year 1293; whom when the Saint,

as he was asked, with his holy hands had touched, and over him had formed the Cross; he rose to his feet, and the bread given to him by him he ate, and thence was very well. But Matthew adds, even then when he deposed these things, in the year 1306, on the 2nd of June, that Petruccius lived sound in a monastic habit, but he did not add in what Religious Order.

[66] likewise epilepsy, Further on the following day, the 3rd of June, related Peter Romani of St. Valentinus, a sixty-year-old Witness 138, that twenty years and more before, when he was at St. John of Orfonte, where then the Saint stayed, he saw a noble Neapolitan, bringing a boy so gravely epileptic, that he could not even for one hour hold himself on his feet unless he were sustained: but after by the holy Father at the prayers of the parent he had been signed with the Cross, he sat, stood, ate sound. Likewise Francis John of Rocca-Moricii Witness 125 narrated, that his daughter Francisca, and a vertigo. labored with a certain vertigo of the head so, that for a whole six months she could not hold it firm. For which evil finding no other remedy, the girl being left at home, he himself to Orfonte went to the Saint, and asked the suffrages of his prayers. Peter promised benignly what was asked, and in fact fulfilled it: but the prayer being made dismissing Francis: "Go," he said, "and that God may free her, recite the Our Father devoutly." Which when on the way he had done, he found his daughter sound at home.

CHAPTER VI.

The return into the mount of Morrone and the deeds even to the Pontificate.

[67] To him returning the people of Sulmona run to meet, After several years passed in the most harsh place of Orfonte, and seeing himself not able there to keep the beloved solitude Peter, into Morrone in the month of June returned: but to him returning ran suppliant the people of Sulmona, whose matrons offered him a silver Cross with a censer of the same metal; likewise also the neighbors from Pacentrano, by common decree having gone forth with lamps and tapers and much concert, exhibited precious gifts. But a cell he chose for himself above Segezano, which now is seen destroyed, on the ridge of the mountain to the south, which he called St. Onuphrius's; and where he himself afterward made Pontiff consecrated an altar, in that most narrow little cell, which there even now is visited. That place has a most pleasant prospect into the plain of Sulmona, and the traces of cells still remaining there show that frequent monks dwelt there. and they build him the cell of St. Onuphrius, But testifies Rittus of Master Roger of Sulmona a Barber Witness 94, that when the place of St. Onuphrius was being constructed, there ran together from Sulmona and from the neighboring places vying men and women; and he esteemed himself blessed whoever could carry with his own hands either one stone, or anything else making toward the fabric. Gemma also daughter of Gualterius of Pacentrano Witness 101, numbering thirty years when she was heard, professed herself also to have been one of these: and likewise Galitia, wife of John Pilosi of Sulmona, thirty-five years old, Witness 99.

[68] while the new church of the Holy Spirit is built: Meanwhile at the root of the mountain proceeded also the fabric of the monastery of the Holy Spirit, which he thought to make the Head of the Order, and being afterward made Pontiff established to be had for future times, just as today it is, increased and endowed by the munificent liberality of certain pious Kings and Princes. Yet too narrow was the church, that it might be able to hold the people, to hear the Saint's Mass and receive his blessing, flowing from every side. And so in an eminent place, conspicuous and level before that church, there where now the atrium is, surrounded by lodgings and edifices built magnificent in appearance, he caused a platform to be raised; whence sacrificing he could be beheld by all standing on the very slope of the mountain. Hither the holy old man in the year 1293 on a Sunday, where when Peter had made Mass in the field, on the fifth not of June, but of July of the month descended with his disciples: and seeing so great a multitude, mindful of his frailty broke into such copious tears, the disciples following the example, that with difficulty could they raise themselves to their feet for the tenderness of affection. At length however rising, he offered himself to be beheld by the people, crying with great voices, "Kyrie eleison": for many wept profusely on account of the excess of devotion. Then he put on the sacred garments, prepared there by the ministering disciples; and said Mass, which he could scarcely complete on account of the affluence of tears, which not any vain joy, but the knowledge of his own vileness and the affection of charity stirred. This his notable virtue and humility on such an occasion God illustrated with many miracles.

[69] he heals a girl deprived of walking, The Mass being finished and the confession and absolution being made, in that manner in which Prelates are wont (so the manuscripts relate) he blessed the people, his hand extended expressing the Cross, and with a clear voice pronouncing the wonted formula: which was followed by an enormous congratulation, of those exulting that they had merited to receive and see him, especially on account of the evidence of the signs, in that act and time divinely shown. Among these was that which John Ricardi, called Collus of Sulmona, Witness 84, narrated about his daughter Florisenda: who in one foot for the space of a whole year so weak, that she could form no step; when it had been understood, that the Saint was about to say Mass in the open field; carried thither by the father himself, and lifted up between arms when the blessing was given; as soon as she was brought back home, set on her feet before the very house, she began to walk by the vow of the father, who with that confidence had brought her to the place of sacrifice. Benevenuta also Witness 126, wife of Gualterius Mancini of Sulmona, likewise a woman's weak foot; some days after childbirth her foot slipping had moved the left foot from its place or even broken it; to whom when the surgeon had applied such care as he could, the woman had nothing better thence, and so for a whole seven years remained deprived of the faculty of walking. She then the fame being heard of the Mass, to be said by the Saint in an open place, besought her father John of Bugnara, very friendly and familiar to the Saint, and her husband, that they would cause her to be carried thither. Nor in vain: for whither she had been brought on a beast, thence she returned on foot, at the Saint's blessing the bone, which was badly affected, being consolidated or refitted.

[70] Antonia of Pratola, on a certain night eating too greedily, was beset (as was believed) by the devil, others he frees from a demon, and began beyond custom to act shamelessly, madly taking off her clothes, and offering herself naked to be beheld by the eyes of the household, with great confusion of her kinsmen, seeking help for her from human remedies for four months in vain. She brought to the same place by force, at the sign of the Cross which the Saint formed, vomited up three coals, and dashed to the ground for a whole hour lay as if lifeless; then sound rose, and with her own returned home cheerful; as is had from the deposition of Augustina wife of John of Sulmona Witness 42, Nicholas Simeonis the late son of Rainald Mancini Witness 31, and three other Witnesses namely 30, 53, and 25. This is related also in the Summary; where what follows about another energumen, can be confirmed by the asseveration of those there present Margaret Witness 46, who was the mother of Nicholas Zaurellus of Sulmona, and Sulmontina of John Peter of Sulmona Witness 47. But Margaret added, seen to vomit coals; that she saw also coals vomited by her, but Sulmontina, that she beheld smoke coming forth from her mouth, and certain ones who with their hands handled the coals, ejected (as they said) by the said woman. About another energumen unknown to them also said Catania, wife of John Rizardi, Witness 19; Pandolf John Palumbi, Witness 69; Lord Gentilis Archpresbyter of Sulmona, Witness 71; Berarda wife of Rainald Mancini, Witness 96, Donnadabene wife of Machabeus, Witness 97; Aemilia daughter of Leonard Avelli, Witness 100; Lord Francis Gualterii the late son of Albert, Witness 127; all born at Sulmona; they said, I say, an unknown woman, brought thither by force, exclaimed, "Do not lead me nor set me before him, who burns me wholly, and than whom no better has been found from the time of St. John the Baptist." And when Peter turned had blessed the whole people, at the prayers of the same people he blessed that energumen singularly; who likewise as it were vomited coals, and remained free. But the aforenamed Archpresbyter adds, that for the whole time in which the Mass was sung, she could not be restrained, but that she uttered disordered cries, and turned herself in every direction, desiring to struggle from the hands of those holding her.

[71] Finally when the holy old man, the people being dismissed, had betaken himself to the monastery of the Holy Spirit; there came to him from those who had been present at the Mass, John Pilosus and Lord Francis Gualterii the late son of Albert of Sulmona, brothers, bringing to him a three-year boy Nicholas, and to a mute boy he gives speech, the son of John himself; who hitherto had never spoken and seemed about to remain mute. Him touching with his sacred hands the Saint, and signing him with the Cross, "Return," he said, "son, return with God": and suddenly he began to speak, and to call his father by name. But they that night indeed there remained; but in the morning returned home when they were, John calling Galitia his wife, "Know," he said, "our son speaks." Who leaping for joy, began to ask how it happened; and as she heard under oath related it, Witness 99; just as also deposed John himself, Witness 128; and his brother Lord Francis, Witness 127; and Aemilia and Gemma aforenamed, Witnesses 100 and 101.

[72] The Order being multiplied The celebrity of that day being past, when now the Order (which although it was of Benedictine profession, was everywhere called of Br. Peter of Morrone) was dispersed through several places, numbering many monks; and the Maiella monastery of the Holy Spirit, which hitherto had been chief with the title of Abbey, was situated in a harsher place, than that thither the Fathers could often be convoked to celebrate the general Chapters; the same convening at the monastery of the Holy Spirit of Morrone, decreed that this rather should be erected into an Abbey, and the primacy of the Order thither be transferred; and in place of the second Abbot Rainald of Rigo-nigro either dead or abdicating himself, they elected a third Abbot Onuphrius of Como, whom we said was already from the year 1290 and the following named Prior of this Morrone monastery. But the same is found on the last day of February of the year 1294, at Morrone the 3rd Abbot general is elected. the Apostolic See being vacant, noted as Abbot of the monastery of the Holy Spirit in the diocese of Valva (which is the Morrone monastery) of the Order of St. Benedict, and head of the monasteries of the Holy Spirit of Maiella and St. Peter in Vallebona; and to him are inscribed the Apostolic letters of Celestine V Pope himself, given in the month of September of the same year. Whence to one conferring the antecedents with the consequents, it becomes verisimilar, that that Chapter was celebrated about the middle of September of the year 1293. And to this conjecture favors, that the creation of the preceding and subsequent Abbots was nearly done in the month of September, as afterward in the Chronology of the Abbots we shall note.

CHAPTER VII.

The miracles of the Saint dwelling in the cell of St. Onuphrius.

[73] But meanwhile the charity of Peter was not idle about externs: An asthmatic is cured, for when at the time at which the Chapter was celebrated, Master Rainald of Alife had brought his son John, laboring with a difficult asthma and bent; signed with the Cross and likewise raised up by the Saint he was, and freed from that molestation, as the manuscripts have. From these also is had, that from the same town of Alife by Master Matthew was brought his five-year son, hindered in passing urine by a great stone: whom by a similar blessing healed by the Saint, the father led back home rejoicing. The Chapter being dismissed the Saint betook himself to St. Onuphrius and that narrow cell, which besides the altar scarcely holds a man, but has a window with an iron grate, through which there is a view into a larger place, fabricated for those, who wished to see him or address him through the said window. A Sodality is instituted: But although there enclosed he stood and rarely gave himself to be seen, there grew nevertheless in piety and number, the pious Confraternity of secular men which he had instituted; so that in some places a thousand heads, elsewhere six hundred gathered were reckoned, with great fruit of public example: which thing rendered Peter more famous everywhere, besides the miracles, which there done it now pleases to commemorate, one of a little earlier time being premised.

[74] Sir-Alexander Berardi of Sulmona, Witness 44, a Canon of Valva and Sulmona, A girl's ulcerated foot is healed, had a niece Francisca, by his sister Gentilitia Witness 45; who three years and a half old, while among her equals playing she throws stones, by one of them was struck on the ankle of the left foot, whence a wound was made to her, and from the wound an incurable infirmity of fistula, the skin gaping in several places. But for a whole triennium so nothing toward her cure was effected by the physicians, that Master Richard a surgeon of Sulmona Witness 50, called to the girl, as soon as he had seen the foot refused to undertake to treat it; and some lenitive medicaments being applied dismissed the girl as desperate. Much confidence in St. Peter had her paternal uncle Sir-Alexander, knowing however how much he abhorred the meeting of women, into a boy he transformed his niece by changing her garment; and so with himself led her to the Holy Spirit near Sulmona, and set forth the cause of his coming and the atrocity of the evil. To whom the saint: "Why hast thou brought a boy to me?" "Because," said the other, "the physicians despair of the medicine to be made for him, therefore I seek it from thy prayers." "But this," said the Saint, "is with God": at the same time he uncovered the foot and with the sign of the Cross thrice signed it. Then the girl began, who hitherto could not form a step, somewhat to walk, and after a few days entirely recovered; so that not even a scar or another trace of the former wounds in the foot remained. To the aforesaid attests also Gentiluccia her mother a seventy-year-old, the girl's grandmother, Witness 49; but she herself and all the others on the last day of May of the year 1306 say, the thing happened thirteen years eleven months before and more, and so in the month of April of the year 1292; whence it is consequent that this did not happen, when to the monastery of the Holy Spirit the Saint had descended, on the occasion of the general Chapter, but at another earlier one, namely by reason of the fabric which was being built.

[75] Pandulf John Palumbi of Sulmona, Witness 69, had by his brother Sermentinus a nephew Nicholas, so deprived of the light of one eye, that the boy saw nothing at all with it was established by many experiments. Certain therefore of the miracles which the Saint very many worked, to him enclosed in the cell of St. Onuphrius he came, and to his prayers commended his little nephew. To whom the Saint, taking a candle placed beside the altar, and a boy's blinded eye; one of those which had been blessed at the feast of the Purification; "Go," he said, "and from this candle form a Cross, which wrapped in a little cloth thou shalt tie to the boy's neck, so loosely that hanging from the neck it can conveniently be raised even to the sick eye, nor be it necessary therefore to take it from the neck: and doing this thou shalt recite thrice the Our Father, meanwhile often leading that Cross over that eye, for perchance God will provide a remedy." Pandulf immediately returned home: but before he did anything, for the cause of a new experiment he closed with his hand the seeing eye, and then objecting various things to the other, asked the boy whether he saw anything, before the mother herself Thomasia Witness 70. But he denying that he saw anything, Pandulf did what the Saint had commanded; and again the former experiment being taken, with the eye which had been blind the boy now seemed to see; less clearly however, said the mother, than with the other: wherefore he was brought to the presence of the Saint, and then with each eye equally saw. But to this miracle, besides the already said paternal uncle and mother of the boy, attested three women of Sulmona Berarda, Donnadabene, and Gemma, elsewhere mentioned, Witnesses 96, 97, and 98.

[76] Joannuccius, son of James the late John Cavacensis and of Aulens his wife, likewise a mute and weak boy, indeed in his whole body had been born perfect, but for a whole triennium speaking nothing seemed altogether to be mute, nor could he stand on his feet. To him brought to him at St. Onuphrius, and through a Monk companion commended, Peter sent through the same Monk a piece of candle, with a piece of bread and some prayer-grains. Which when the mother had given the boy into his hands, immediately he uttered a voice, calling his mother; and vigor being received in his legs, he began to walk; and to both he thereafter had the free faculty of tongue and feet, using the same for the eight years in which he survived, as related his mother Witness 102, and his brother James Falcus Witness 103: who also said, his brother had lived even to the very year of the testimony given 1306; whence it is gathered the thing happened about the end of the said withdrawal to St. Onuphrius, or even after the Pontificate was abdicated. Juliana, wife of Camplitus della Torre, a grave quinsy, suffered a quinsy so grave, that the tonsils being too much inflamed even the throat itself was corroded, and no remedy was now hoped from medicine applied in vain, and so the woman was believed about to die. Therefore for that devotion which she bore toward the Saint, she asked John of Bugnara, father of Benvenuta, married to Nicholas Mancinus of Sulmona (that one who is this Witness 126, as seen with her own eyes) which John frequently and familiarly was wont to go to the Saint, that for the love of God and the most blessed Virgin, he would send her something, because not otherwise she hoped to be healed. John went, and the case being set forth, took a little Cross made of a candle with a piece of bread, and a command that Juliana every Saturday thereafter in honor of the Mother of God should fast: which when she had undertaken to do, and the little Cross to her neck, the bread to her mouth had applied, she was freed from her infirmity.

[77] an ulcerated shin, Angel John the late son of Albert of Sulmona, about thirty years old, Witness 107, related, that in boyhood he suffered for two whole years a most grave wound in the left shin, and it was necessary to cut it in six places: but by his father and his paternal uncle Angel carried upon a horse to the cell of St. Onuphrius, he was received by the Saint: who the bandages being loosed touching the wound and signing it with the Cross, suddenly healed him so perfectly, that he who had come on horseback, could return on foot. But the mother of the boy Matthea a fifty-year-old, Witness 109, added, that the son's shin, when he was brought from home, was plainly withered: but since he was sixteen years old when he was cured, this could not have happened except about the year 1293. Attested moreover to the miracle Rainald Ursi of Sulmona, Witness 108. for 18 years contracted, A certain woman, Sister Gemma Incarcerata by name, from the Castle of Montebello, eighteen years contracted and thither brought, by the great devotion which she had toward the Saint was freed, as the manuscripts relate. Of his brother Angel moreover relates Francis John of Rocca-Moricii, Witness 125, that he labored with a troublesome fever more than two months: wherefore Francis himself went to the cell of the Saint, and to him after various things commended his sick brother: who gladly receiving himself about to pray for him, gave a morsel of bread to the man, and bade him to offer it to his brother to be eaten. This when the sick man in the name of Peter had done confidently, immediately he recovered.

[78] a paralytic boy. Benedict Thomas of Sulmona Witness 60, had a son by name Nicholas; who also himself twenty years old, personally appeared, in the order of the Witnesses Witness 68. This one when he was seven years old, made from the belly down paralytic, had his legs so rigid, that like wood they seemed to lack joints for bending, and had no sense of them; and for the whole year in which that infirmity lasted for him, for all the necessities of the body he needed others' hands. Many remedies to be applied his father had taken care of, but all in vain: at length remembering the Saint, doing miracles in the Onuphrian cell, he brought his son tied upon an ass thither; and there found so great a multitude of both sexes, that with difficulty could he with his son penetrate to the place where the Saint was. But when he came hither, he so dealt with Br. Angel of Caramanico, that he himself took the boy to be carried in; who there for one hour held him, then brought him back to the father, having in his hands certain dry figs, with a little wooden Cross donated to him by the Saint; and he said, "Return with that boy, and wrap this Cross in his bandages, and hope well, because Br. Peter has touched him and prayed for him." Immediately the boy began to be somewhat better, and a certain sense of the members hitherto useless: but brought back home, day by day he advanced to full health, which finally within a month he obtained, walking wherever he pleased. But the father and son testifying this, attested also the mother of the boy Aldruda, Witness 68; and likewise Rittus of Master Roger a surgeon, Witness 94; and a neighbor of Benedict, Lord Gualterius a Canon of Sulmona, Witness 110.

[79] Melioratus John of Sulmona, sixty-five years old, Witness 39, Offspring is obtained for a barren woman. narrated that he had a barren daughter, for whom, fourteen years before the said testimony, he asked Peter staying in his cell near the Holy Spirit, that he would obtain offspring for her from God. To whom when the Saint had answered, that it was just what he asked, and Melioratus had withdrawn from him; eight days after the woman felt that she had conceived, and at the legitimate time bore a son Nicholas by name, who then was thirteen years old: but afterward she ceased to bear, that the miracle might more evidently appear. The same Melioratus adds, scabies is healed, that when to his aforesaid nephew Nicholas still a yearling there came a scabies, so tenacious and malign, that it covered his whole face like leprosy, and was feared about to extinguish his sight; he sent the same to the Saint by Rainald Ursi of Sulmona: who returning home with the infant, said to Melioratus, that on account of the crowded multitude of men, for the cause of devotion standing by there, he could not indeed

by himself deliver the infant into the Saint's hands; but the people themselves having beheld him received and delivered him through their hands, until he was carried to the Saint's cell; where he kept him with himself, until Rainald himself should come and receive him. But within the eighth day from thence he was purged from that scabies, nor did Nicholas suffer anything such any more. But to Melioratus affirming these things under oath, attested another certain Witness 133.

[80] Elizabeth, daughter of the Notary Bonhomo of Sulmona, made three years old, an incurable hernia in a girl, incurred a dangerous rupture in the groin, nor could she on account of the too great tenderness of her body be conveniently cured, and so she remained another triennium; when Bartholomea, wife of Bonhomo and the girl's mother, Witness 76, trusting in the merits of the Saint, a certain neighbor of hers Master Rainald Gentilis, a friend of the Saint, earnestly asked, that he would commend to him her daughter, whom she would have sent to him, had not the Saint forbidden the female sex to be introduced to him. And when then the brother of Elizabeth herself, another Rainald, also went to the Saint, to confess to him his sins, and the penance being received had declared his sister's infirmity; the Saint asked whether he was eating. But Rainald affirming, he gave him a host which he should take, and a little wooden Cross with two bone grains from a prayer-garland, to be hung from the neck of the sick girl. Which being done and the host eaten, suddenly that rupture was restored whole. But Rainald son of Bonhomo, when he deposed these things, was a Witness 75, forty years old [and therefore it must be that these things were done at the beginning of the resumed habitation at Morrone. To the same, and indeed to the cell of St. Onuphrius, came Master Andrew Bartholomei of Sulmona, Witness 117, and to a man: from an unlucky fall ruptured about the member so gravely, that he could not conveniently walk, nor was a remedy hoped from art applied in vain; for it could not be cut in so dangerous a place. And when he had shown the rupture itself to the Saint: "See," he said, "son, lest perchance because young, thou be also a sinner, and this happened to thee divinely, that thou do penance and correct thy life"; then into the rupture, signed with the Cross, he impressed his finger, and dismissed the man: who from that time feeling himself sound, divulged the miracle through the whole city, and to affirm it came his wife Bartholomea a fifty-year-old, Witness 118.

[81] an epileptic boy, Odorisius, son of Benedict the late son of Eustace of Sulmona, sixteen years old, suffered the evil of incurable epilepsy: wherefore his kinsman James of Pacentrano, who then Odorisius being dead deposed this, Witness 72 a sixty-year-old, led him to St. Peter, at Morrone, where it is called Vallanitium, dwelling, and with the boy bending his knees said: "May it please, I beseech, Father, this youth, who suffers the falling sickness, to enchant." But he placidly: "Not so," he said, "son, speak not so: I know not to enchant": and the sign of the Cross over the boy he made, and another contracted, who thereafter never relapsed. Mary Gualteri of Sulmona a forty-year-old, Witness 21, said that her son Lawrence, contracted from the fifth year of his life, she carried to the spring, gushing beside the Saint's cell, and in it in the name of God and Br. Peter washed him: but washed and drawn out from the spring, his feet now loosed from that contraction he walked to Sulmona, whence hung from her neck the mother had brought him: but afterward of another disease he died.

[82] A year and a half, says Dionysius Faber, and the ancient manuscripts confirm, From every side it is run to the Saint. the Saint remained thus enclosed even to the Pontificate; whence it follows, that not long after the general Chapter celebrated at Morrone, that enclosure began, to end about the middle of July of the year 1294. But if some miracles are related, as done a whole two years earlier in the place of St. Onuphrius and the Holy Spirit, these only prove that he sometime was there before his enclosure, for the sake of directing and ordering both fabrics. Meanwhile innumerable men ran together to him, because (as Master Stephen Briccii of Capua a surgeon, Witness 10; and Manfred Gilberti of Luco, Witness 38, said) they were borne with a great affection of devotion to behold him, their own affairs being therefore intermitted, and beholding him they exulted with spiritual joy, and were moved to tears and lamentation: which was a special prerogative, divinely conceded to the Saint. even in troops, Hence it is read, and this very thing related Master Nicholas Berardi a mason of Sulmona, Witness 56, that to Peter enclosed at Morrone came Charles II King of Naples, and his son Charles Martel King of Hungary. But because he could not hear nor address individuals, therefore he had made for himself a window, through which he might impart his blessing to those asking; and he reckoned himself happy (as says Benedict Thomas Witness 60) who could even behold him: nor to any other one was seen at that time so universal a devotion of the peoples, as says Lord Gualterus Thomas of Caramanico a Priest Witness 63. Whence it came to pass that the ways leading to him were always full of people going and returning, as deposed John of Acziano Witness 37. And Master Peter Thomas of Sulmona, the ordinary Physician of our monks in the convent of the Holy Spirit, added, that whatever man of evil life gave himself into his sight, immediately was moved to penance.

[83] But it will be worth the while to hear Peter Grassus the Neapolitan, the Royal Notary, and more than the place could naturally hold, Witness 8: who after praising the life of Peter, as harsh, holy and exemplary, "Hence," he said, "it came to pass that from neighboring and remote places frequent the people ran together to him: so that sometime to the going and returning multitude the ways and paths were narrow. But as often as the Saint showed himself to the people, scarce any was present, to whom there did not break forth tears and sighs, proceeding from internal compunction. But it was especially wonderful, that when the brow of the mountain, and the level on which the cell was constituted, scarcely held a hundred men, yet without any one's injury there were sometime gathered to three thousand men: nay also through that path, by which it was ascended thither, men and women of the last age ascended like youths, swiftly and expeditiously. Nor was the confidence less, which everywhere in his intercession and prayers the peoples had placed, than if he had been already then canonized." and indeed here in an evil time. But adds Francis Gualterii the late son of Albert of Sulmona Witness 127, that at that time in those parts there was almost no discourse except about B. Peter. But that concourse not only was made in pleasant and placid weather, but also in mid-winter; so that it was needful for the citizens of Sulmona to come with mattocks and hoes to level the way through the snows. And John Pilosus Witness 28 asserts, that even he sometime performed that office of leveling the way: and John Pilosus asserted, that it was a care to him, that all the snows be taken from the middle of the streets.

CHAPTER VIII.

The election of Peter as Pontiff, the coronation at Aquila, and other Acts there.

[84] Meanwhile by the death of Pope Nicholas IV the Apostolic See made vacant, After a long vacancy of the See, on the 4th of April of the year 1292, drew apart the votes and minds of the Cardinals, manifoldly discordant about the election of a new Pontiff; until at length, God wonderfully working, upon Br. Peter of Morrone the suffrages convened, in the year 1294 on the 5th day of July: which signed by a public instrument were brought to Morrone. The original charter of this instrument is today kept in the Apostolic archive, within a little box, lined inside with silken cloth, by the care and expense of Lord Penia of good memory, in the year 1603 brought thither by the command of Pope Clement VIII, Peter being elected since hitherto it had been kept in the archive of the Holy Spirit of Morrone, hanging from it the seals of each subscribing Cardinal in red wax from a white thread. It had, for a certain cause, been brought to Rome, and had come into the hands of the aforesaid Lord Penia then Auditor of the Rota, a most erudite and most pious Prelate. Hence when it had come to the knowledge of some Cardinals, and they desired to see it; Lord Penia requested it from the Fathers of the Morrone Monastery, and received gave it to Cardinal Fachinetti; he delivered it to the Cardinals Bellarmine and Antonianus, then Baronius had it, and finally Pope Clement VIII, who having commended with many praises the memory of the holy Pontiff Celestine, and the example of the abdication made by him, bade it to be put back in the Apostolic Archive; saying, that it was there to be kept more safely, and with the convenience both of the holy See itself and of the Order of the Celestines.

[85] The news of his election being received, the holy Father went to Aquila. he comes to Aquila: By what way he went thither is not found written, yet by a verisimilar conjecture it can be said, that he passed the plain of Pratola and Rajano, and the mountains succeeding to that plain: since it is read that he descended from the ass at Castelvecchio, which first after the said mountains occurs: and that this his descent gave the convenience to a rustic, carrying his son weak in both feet, of placing him on the empty beast, and receiving him sound. On the same journey, near the burg called Aczano, only one league distant from Aquila, by his blessing the holy Father healed an epileptic boy, by name Doricellus, son of Berardellus the late son of Jordan of Aczano, as from the mother of the boy Gemma they related themselves to have heard Velleta Witness 35, and Odorisius John Witness 37, both of Aczano. On what day the Saint came to Aquila nowhere is found expressed, where the Cardinals being invited, it is verisimilar however that a little before or after the beginning of August he arrived there. Here while he awaited the Cardinals bidden to come to him from Perugia, he created various Ministers of his Curia, all subjects of King Charles, and first a Scribe or Secretary a certain layman Bartholomew of Capua, the Vice-Chancellor the Archbishop of Benevento, and others. But the Cardinals, who had invited him to Perugia, fearing lest on the way he should delay, or perchance decline to come to Perugia, by other written letters asked him, that after the manner of other elected Pontiffs he himself would come to the College of Cardinals. He should consider that they would have to be exposed to the perils of diseases, if all were forced to so long a journey, amid the excessive heats of that time: and how costly and harmful it would be, if at the time of harvest the whole Roman Curia were to be transferred to a remote city, and one less apt to its rites and manners. They protested also that there were other grave causes, which it would not be fitting to commit to letters, dissuading the journey.

[86] But the letters of their Legates being received, and made more certain of Peter's mind, they greatly excuse themselves. again they wrote to him, then first calling him Father, far more submissively and modestly than before; excusing however the journey, because it seemed hard to all and by no means safe to deliver themselves into the power of King Charles, by entering his kingdom, on account of the diversity of opinions which had been in the College even from the time of Pope Martin IV, in bringing aid to Charles against the Aragonese; nay it had then been decreed, that the Pontiff with the College should not depart

from the city of Rome to succor others. "The Fathers ought not," they said, "to be drawn to any place whatever, even remote, although that Kingdom be subject to the obedience of the Apostolic See." Let him deign to remember, what they had before written, that it was to be guarded against, lest a new thing pass into an example for posterity, against ancient usage; let him consider the losses about to come to all, the complaints of the peoples, and the want of provision in those places through which it would have to be passed at harvest time; nor let him esteem that his old age and health were of little care to them, at such a time to be exposed to no doubtful peril; yet they trusted that God's help would not be lacking, for whose love he had accepted so troublesome a burden. They added that he could even be carried in a litter, and to one coming by short journeys there would be less peril; and that they themselves were prepared to await his arrival even a longer time.

[87] But he himself constant in his purpose, Scarcely had Peter received these letters, when of their own accord came to Aquila two Cardinals, Hugo of Auvergne and Napoleon Orsini; whom the holy Father commanded, that they should write to the Cardinals the causes for which he was unwilling at such an age and at such a time of year to come to Perugia. There came moreover the Bishop of Orvieto, sent by the College with other letters, by which he was asked, that, if not to Perugia, at least he would come to some place of the Ecclesiastical State. Through the same legate King Charles was asked, that mindful of the benefits received from the Apostolic See and the sacred College, he would persuade this very thing to Peter; it was indicated also that it could be, that for various causes about to come up he would still have need of the help of the Fathers, whom it would not then be expedient to have offended. And he indeed feigned that he would comply with them, but it quickly appeared that the prayers of the Cardinals were of little care to him, nay rather that he did this so that for his own convenience he might keep the Pontiff with himself. Peter therefore remained firm in his purpose, and with the counsel of the Cardinals who were present, the Cardinal of Ostia being dead, decreed at Aquila to receive consecration and to be crowned, even if the others absent should either refuse or delay to come. While back and forth the letters pass, there dies at Perugia on the 10th day of August the Cardinal Latinus Bishop of Ostia, the first author of the election, and long since known to the Saint and well affected, inasmuch as wont to send to him and his monks every year a liberal alms. This death being understood, and the impediment being removed which the absence of him brought, on whom by office it lay to crown the Pontiff, Celestine substituted for him Hugo a Presbyter Cardinal, and bade him to be consecrated by the Archbishop of Benevento Bishop of Ostia.

[88] At the same time Peter received from the hands of Cardinal Napoleon Orsini the red pallium and other insignia of an elected Pope, there he causes himself to be declared, one being assumed for this in place of Cardinal Matthew the Red not yet present, to whom as first of the Deacon Cardinals it would otherwise have been to be deferred: and his name being changed he was called Celestine, Cardinal Napoleon proclaiming him. Then vying all, as well ecclesiastical as lay Prelates and Princes, came to the kisses of his feet; and the whole people, who almost infinite had run together, the Pontiff with extended hand blessed: but a new and new throng succeeding, it was necessary for him often to return to the window, and a cry being raised to impart the blessing to those asking it. And all these things I would believe were done after the feast of the Assumption of the Virgin, unless one prefer to think them done on the feast itself: when also was designated the day of the future consecration the 29th of August, sacred to the Beheading of St. John the Baptist, and the same in that year, having the Dominical letter C, a Sunday. This determination being heard, the Cardinals, who still seven remained at Perugia, seeing all things to be performed without them if they delayed, changed their counsel, and one after another, having said nothing to each other about that matter, came to Aquila, namely, Gerard of Sabina, Matthew of Porto, John of Tusculum, Peter of St. Mark, Matthew Orsini, and to be crowned in the church of Collemaggio. James Colonna, and last of all in coming Benedict Caetani. These and the rest assisting, on the said day he was crowned in the most capacious, if any other, and most elegant church of St. Mary of Collemaggio near Aquila, which the Saint himself had taken care to be built. Then brought forth to the infinite multitude of the people, standing on the level before the aforesaid church, then most ample, but now far narrower with the walls of vineyards and gardens drawn round, he received the auspicious acclamations of all, and blessed them.

[89] The ceremonies of consecration and coronation being performed, all the Clergy and the whole Curia solemnly led the new Pontiff to Aquila, borne on a white horse, the Kings of Sicily and Hungary holding the reins on this side and that. But Celestine remained at Aquila the whole month of September: at which time King Charles, wishing his affection toward the Pontiff to declare, on the 30th day of September donated to the Morrone monastery of the Holy Spirit the Castle of Partola, and to the monastery of St. Mary of Collemaggio certain other castles and estates, with most ample privileges for both places: which also Celestine increased, the spiritual jurisdiction of his monks being increased, through many places and towns, independently of the power of the Ordinaries. But on the preceding day, namely the 29th of September, where he grants a perpetual indulgence, in favor of the church where he had been consecrated, he dispatched the following Bull. "Among the solemnities of the Saints, the memory of St. John the Baptist is so much the more solemnly to be honored, by how much he, proceeding from the womb of a barren mother, a fountain fruitful with virtues and sacred eulogies, the lip of the Apostles and the silence of the Prophets, on earth the presence of Christ, the lamp of the dark world, the darkness of ignorance having arisen, by the heralding of the word and the wonderful sign of indication announced (on account of which his martyrdom, enjoined at the regard of an impudent woman, mysteriously followed) We who in the beheading of the head of that Saint, in the church of St. Mary of Collemaggio of Aquila of the Order of St. Benedict, received the insignia of the diadem placed upon our head, with hymns and canticles and the devout prayers of the faithful desire to be more venerably honored. That therefore the festivity of that Beheading in the said church may be extolled with chief honors, and the devout frequency of the people of the Lord may be the more devoutly and fervently honored, by how much there the suppliant petition of those seeking the Lord will find for itself the gems of the Church, gleaming with spiritual gifts, about to profit it in the eternal tabernacles; all truly penitent and confessed, who from the Vespers of the Vigil of that Festivity, even to the Vespers immediately following the Festivity, shall have come to the aforesaid church annually, of the mercy of almighty God and the authority of His B. Apostles Peter and Paul trusting, we absolve from the guilt and penalty, which for their crimes and delicts committed since baptism they merit. Given at Aquila on the 3rd Kalends of October, in the first year of our pontificate."

[90] How grateful to the divine majesty this kind of institution was, confirmed afterward by various miracles, by the frequent miracles thereafter He manifested: of which here I will relate some, as they are found in the old manuscript, by an author professing himself to write them with the highest faith. At Rocca-Moricii of the diocese of Chieti, many years being passed after the Indulgence given, there lived a certain Notary Firmus by name (but the Notaries in those places are above the crowd lettered and wise) afterward also made a Priest. This one while to Aquila from every side it is run together for the aforesaid Indulgence, and he himself in the market played, having in his hand a crossbow, a bow, asking the people whither they went; and understanding that to Aquila for the Indulgences, "O foolish and fatuous people!" he said. "Do you not see yourselves to lose the labor of the journey? So is there an Indulgence from guilt and penalty, as I shall be able to fix this dart in that living rock." And this said he armed his bow, and directed the dart at the rock; but directed it penetrated so deep, that unless by a violent hand drawn out, it could not be removed thence. Glad at once and astonished at these things the people praised God; but the Notary turned to himself, hung that rock with the dart cleaving to it from his neck, trembling and weeping; and joining himself to the rest going to Morrone, there publicly confessed the sin of his incredulity, before the Monks and all the people; and showing the rock transfixed by the dart, left it there to be kept under a key, for the memory and instruction of posterity.

[91] those despising it being punished, At another time two Brothers of the Order of Preachers, sent out to collect alms from village to village, fell in with a like throng of pilgrims, going to Morrone for the cause of the Indulgence, and tried by every means to persuade them not to labor going in vain. But on the following day, when they wished to pursue the journey begun, suddenly blinded they sought a guide of the way: whence admonished they said to each other "By a just judgment of God this has happened to us, because yesterday we hissed at the Indulgence, to which that people hastened." They vowed therefore, that if they recovered sight through the merits of St. Peter, they themselves also would come thither to gain the Indulgence, nor speak any more contemptuously of it. But heard by God and His Saint, they received the former faculty of seeing, and fulfilled their vow. The ancient author adds, that never or rarely does the anniversary of that Indulgence recur, which is not honored by some notable miracle. But the Saint, afterward existing at Naples, on the 28th day of November granted many particular Indulgences, to be obtained on certain days by those, who should visit the churches of the monastery of the Holy Spirit of Sulmona and of others depending on it, which churches from his name in the Papacy are commonly called of the Celestines.

[92] or those making it doubtful. [Nor only the truth of that indulgence, says in the Italian Life Tellera, did God will to be proved by miracles, but also its value: for it is related that Br. Vincentius Frederici, a famous preacher of his time, present at Aquila on the anniversary day of the recurring Indulgence, asked the Superior of the monastery, that the sermon to be held at first Vespers be committed to him, which he easily obtained. But when the day before he had indicated to some of the citizens, that with strong reasons he would prove their opinion who maintain, that Indulgence is not greater than the usual Plenary one, and indeed antiquated in the general Councils, and so the custom of promulgating it to be abolished, the fame being scattered through the city of words so rashly said, so stirred the commons against him, that from laying hands on him he could scarcely be restrained by our Fathers. But he from that time seemed to have lost all human sense and memory: so that when some of his friends, wishing to recall him to themselves, sometime read to him verbatim the Hail Mary, he could never repeat the words. Meanwhile he seemed to be urged to death by a deadly infirmity which had come upon him, but in this a lucid interval being granted by the Saint, he himself recognized his fault; and the Saint being invoked he received sense and memory, and so much strength that he could through the middle of the city suppliant to the church of Collemaggio go on foot, a rope tied to his neck, and there beg pardon. Which he indeed obtained, not however health: since the disease growing worse he returned to his homeland, and not long after exchanged life there with death; about to give an example to others, too easily wont to hiss at the Indulgence of Celestine, that they beware the indignation of the Lord and His servant about to come upon them, unless they repent.] Now these things being said as in passing, let us return to Celestine.

[93] He indeed had learned the Latin tongue, but by long disuse had lost the faculty of speaking promptly and elegantly;

He provides for vacant churches: hence he more willingly used the vulgar idiom: and the Cardinals, esteeming him unlettered, spoke in the same language with him in the consistory. Yet he made public speeches only most sparingly, and now to one now to another of those assisting enjoined that they should say in his stead and name that which was to be answered, just as today many Princes are wont to do in public audiences. But because through the long vacancy of the Apostolic See also many churches, not only Cathedral, but also Patriarchal and notable monasteries were vacant of Prelates, he took care to provide for them as soon as possible without respect of persons. Striving also to provide for the necessities of the Pontifical dominions in both states, he instituted Governors and Legates. And a specimen of this solicitude is extant in the History of Bologna of Cherubino Ghirardacci the Augustinian book 10, he sets over Romandiola where the Noble man Robert de Gomay he constituted Governor of the whole of Romandiola, by a Brief given at Aquila on the 5th Ides of September; which even for that reason it pleases here to insert wholly; and that it may be understood that Celestine, although he lacked the fallacious and fraudulent prudence of the age, and through the same was often himself the son of light deceived; was yet not inept for administering public affairs, but provident and prudent. So therefore, after the formula of the wonted salutation, to Robert already said the Pontiff writes.

[94] "Although by the demand of the Pastoral office's debt, of the state of all the lands, in which the Roman mother Church obtains the principality, by preserving them for the next successes, we are bound to provide; yet about the land of the province of Romandiola, hitherto vexed by the long molestations of wars, agitated by strong storms and lacerated by the dire incursions of dissensions, so much the more cleverly we extend the art of intent consideration, and so much the more readily are rendered about the state itself happily to be directed solicitous, by how much more specially to us and the same Church it is known to pertain, that by the remedy of our provision suffraging the aforesaid province may feel the sweetness of stable tranquillity, and rejoice in the events of Rectorial prosperity. Lifting therefore round about the eyes of our mind, thy person adorned with the insignia of strenuousness, endowed with discretion, and distinguished with the titles of manifold probity, to execute in this part the desire of our heart, we have thought to be chosen. And therefore thee in the said province of Romandiola and in the parts of the city of Bologna, Bertinoro, and their appurtenances general Rector in temporals we have thought to be established; in those committing to thee fully the office of Rector of the province, of asking nevertheless and receiving, in our name and that of the Church itself, the cities, castles, fortresses, and any places, and all goods and rights, which in those parts pertain to us and the Church itself, and which are due to us and the Church itself; and of defending them and preserving them for the Church, of disposing also, ordaining, commanding, punishing, imposing penalties, and exacting those imposed, of mandating, and moreover of doing and executing all and singular in the aforesaid parts, which pertain to our and the same Church's temporal jurisdiction, and which thou shalt know to be expedient for the prosperous state of those parts; and of restraining the contradictors also and rebels, with the temporal discretion which befits, appeal being postponed, the plenary power being expressly given thee by the tenor of the present. So therefore the office of the aforesaid Rectorship and the other things committed to thy diligence, as an industrious, faithful and strenuous man, constantly and solicitously pursue, that by the laudable execution of thy office and of the others committed to thy industry, grateful to God and to us to be commended thou mayst appear, and our and the all-round grace of the Church more abundantly to obtain mayst merit."

[95] But learning that the Rectors of the same province and their officials, at various times of the Rectorate, and he bids the fines imposed by others to be moderated; made condemnations and inflicted various penalties, for whose satisfaction or payment the means of those condemned did not suffice; "We," he says, "although we wish not to pass the excesses of the delinquents unpunished, yet by a pious meditation pondering, that in the Ark of the covenant the Rod was contained and the Manna, wish upon penalties and condemnations of this kind that moderation and due temperance to be observed, that the delinquents being punished with congruous chastisement, the alleviation of mercy be by no means lacking, nor to others be given matter of delinquency." And so to the same Robert by a Brief, likewise signed on the 5th Ides of October, he commands, that the excesses, injuries, offenses, delicts, conditions of the persons or places being more attentively pondered and considered, he study to moderate the aforesaid penalties and condemnations, as according to God by the judgment of his discretion he shall see to be done, upon these making full and free power for him. Then on the 3rd Ides of September to Master Peter Archpresbyter of the Church of Buclanico of the diocese of Chieti, in spirituals Peter the Archpresbyter, Legate by himself chosen for the same parts, he caused thus to be written: "Since thou art held endowed with discretion and circumspect with solicitude, we have thought it worthy to depute thee to our and the Church's services, whom thy merits represent to us as industrious and faithful. Desiring therefore that the state of the province of Romandiola and of the city of Bologna, Bertinoro and their appurtenances be prosperously preserved, and their affairs be salutarily directed by the Rector, to thee in the same parts the jurisdiction in spirituals by Apostolic authority we have thought to be committed, even to the good pleasure of our will." Finally on the same day writing to the Archbishop of Ravenna, the Bishops, Abbots etc., and also all the Noble Powers or Rectors of the Province, he commands, that the same Peter benignly receiving, and treating with due honor, in all things which pertain to the same jurisdiction take care to attend and obey him.

CHAPTER IX.

The various constitutions of Celestine, the setting out to Naples.

[96] He renews the law of the conclave: By what reason he provided for the government of the city of Rome itself, is not found expressed: it is verisimilar however that he sent thither Matthew Cardinal Orsini, a man of great experience; whom we find to have been at Rome when at Naples was the Pontiff. But considering the paucity of those who then were Cardinals, and the small concord among themselves, the liberty also which they had arrogated to themselves of changing the place the See being vacant, and of making the election where and when it pleased; desiring to remedy both evils, first he decreed to increase their number, so more easily about to have faithful ministers, by whom removed from those contentions the Ecclesiastical affairs would more easily be cared for. And so after the Ides of September, the King knowing it and only three Cardinals, he creates 12 Cardinals, Hugo of Auvergne, Matthew Orsini, and James Colonna, the rest being summoned into the Consistory, and their opinions being required, he named twelve Cardinals; the King rejoicing, at whose suggestion most were believed to have been chosen, and among these Franks seven; rejoicing also Cardinal Caetani, whose nephew by his brother Benedict among the other five was one; not likewise the Cardinal of Ostia, seeing frustrated the hope, which for a certain nephew of his he had had. The law also of Gregory X passed in the Council of Lyons, about the rite and form of holding the conclave, suspended by Pope Adrian V, and abrogated by John XXI, he renewed; which afterward Boniface VIII, no mention of Celestine being made, inserted in the sixth of the Decretals title On Election, Chapter "Where peril." But that it was truly the work of Celestine, recognized Jacobus the Cardinal of St. George: who although he vehemently disapproves the counsel, as most full of peril, on account of those things which Clement V being dead in the year 1314 happened at Carpentras, the conclave while the Cardinals were in it being burned and their houses despoiled; yet its very observance even to the present time, never intermitted, shows it was plainly most useful and necessary.

[97] Afterward he began to think about the Congregation which he had instituted to be more and more stabilized, [he confirms the statutes of the order instituted by him, and increases its privileges,] led by a great hope of the whole Benedictine Order being reformed to its example. Therefore there at Aquila on the 5th Kalends of October he conferred on it ample privileges, which everywhere are extant in the Bullaries, writing "To the beloved sons Onuphrius Father Abbot of the monastery of the Holy Spirit of Sulmona of the diocese of Valva, and his Coabbots and Priors and Prelates, of the monasteries, priories, members and places subject to the same monastery of the Holy Spirit, and their convents, colleges and Brothers of the Order of St. Benedict, present and future for perpetuity," with this beginning: "Although we pursue with paternal affections all Orders, planted in the field of the sacrosanct and universal Church, and solicitously intend to their tranquil and prosperous state: yet the Order of Blessed Benedict (in which, while the progression of our youth began, we devoted the vows of our Profession) with a singular and chief affection we love, and with the zeal of a sincerer and stricter charity we are affected about it: and to the happy increments of its stability and promotion expending solicitous help and labor, we hope in the Lord, that the same Order, from ancient years founded in the charity of divine praise, through the zeal of your solicitude … restored, will be able to reassume the brightness of its own lost light, in the power of the highest light (which is Christ). Desiring therefore that about the aforesaid Order the affection of this our charity may shine forth through the effect of work, the Statutes, Constitutions, Institutes and Ordinances, in the same Order made for your salvation, by Apostolic authority we confirm, and those canonically to be made hereafter we will and command from then inviolably to be observed."

[98] This hope afterward he more promoted, on the occasion of the Naples journey turning aside to Cassino, and he aggregates to it the Cassino monastery. where Thomas de Rocca then for the twelfth year was Abbot having exhorted the monks that they would suffer the Cassino monastery to be aggregated to the Congregation instituted by him, and at the same time admit a habit, of the same color as that of the comrades of the same institute. But how this succeeded, Arnold Wion found written among the Cassinese, and indicated in the Annotation to ch. 9 of book 1 of the Lignum vitae, asserting that in the exposition of the Benedictine Rule, written by Lord Richard a Monk there, upon ch. 21 of the Rule about the Deans of the monastery, thus is read: "In the year of the Lord 1294 in the month of October, the 7th Indiction (nay the 8th already begun from September, but Celestine and Boniface his successor are not found to have noted the years of the Indiction) Lord Pope Celestine V, who before was called Br. Peter of Morrone, a man of great sanctity, came to the Cassino monastery; and wishing to unite the said monastery to his Religious Order, induced the Monks for the greater part, that they should receive the habit of his Religion, which habit was of camel color and of most cheap cloth, and he sent of his monks about fifty. First we had been black, and he changed the name of the Dean, who after their coming was called Prior. yet he did not constitute a new Abbot there: The next feast of St. Lucy coming he renounced the Papacy in the city of Naples, whom there succeeded Lord Boniface VIII, who first was named Lord Benedict Caetani, a man of greatest science and probity, of Anagni: and he revoked all things done by the said Celestine, except the Cardinals whom the same Celestine had made: and I was one of those revoked, who had been made Abbot of the monastery of St. Justina of Padua." [Thus far Richard, whence Wion and from him Marinus introduce Angelerius II, of the Order of the Celestines, the 62nd Abbot, as in this very year instituted, and in the following year in the month of March dead. But who after them wove the elogia and series of the Cassinese Abbots Marcus Antonius Scipio of Piacenza

in the year 1630, retains Thomas the 60th Abbot among the living even to the Nones of June of the year 1296; to whom in the same year and month was substituted by Boniface Pontius the 61st Abbot, and the sixth month after dying he received a successor in the year 1297 Angelerius, of the number indeed of those whom Celestine had directed to Cassino, but consecrated by Boniface: to which author, having followed public documents, we so much the more certainly believe, by how much in Richard we find less any mention of an Abbot changed or constituted by Celestine.]

[99] he fosters the zealots of Franciscan poverty, And on this occasion let what has been said about the Order confirmed by Celestine suffice: who while he still stayed at Aquila, certain ones of the Order of Friars Minor zealots of primigenial poverty, as Mark of Lisbon narrates part 2 of the Chronicles book 5 ch. 27 and following, of whom the chief were Conrad of Offida, James of Todi, Peter of Monticulo, Thomas of Trevi, and others, esteeming the elevation of Celestine to be their occasion, with the consent of Br. Raimund, not long before created Minister General, decreed of their number to be sent to him Br. Peter of Macerata and his companion Br. Liberatus, who had been familiar to him before the Papacy, and had greatly proved their zeal to him, that from his Holiness, in the name of all the Religious wishing to live in a stricter observance of the Rule, they might obtain the faculty of living outside the obedience of the laxer ones; so that these, using the privileges conceded to them, could not be an impediment to themselves, wishing to keep to the letter what by professing they had vowed. But Pope Celestine, who had known many Saints of the Order, and exempts them from the obedience of the Order. a sincere man and a most studious emulator of Evangelical poverty and humility, their petition being understood vehemently praised the counsel, commanding Br. Liberatus and his companion, that they should try to lead as spiritual a life as they could, according to the Rule of St. Francis or even more: adding that he himself also had wished to introduce poverty of this kind among his own, but because he desired them to be multiplied, he had thought it congruous to concede to them property of temporal goods. And so he absolved them from the obedience of the Order, with the faculty of similarly absolving others, and joining them to his observance. But in the letters dispatched thereupon, he commanded, that to them as to himself obedience be given; for the good however of peace to be kept, he willed that they be called, not Friars Minor, but Poor hermits: whom others afterward called Hermits of Lord Celestine. Beyond these he gave them commendatory letters to Lord Napoleon Orsini, Cardinal of St. Adrian, a liberal man and benign promoter of pious causes. Which so prosperous beginnings of the reformed observance, although they were almost dissipated after the abdication of Celestine, yet from these the Clareni had their origin, who even today persevere, says Mark, writing about the year 1560.

[100] At Sulmona he creates one Cardinal, These and other things being performed Celestine had decreed to migrate to Rome with the whole Curia: but Charles, more studious of his private convenience than of the common, persuaded that he should first go to Naples. Which when it had been indicated to the Cardinals and approved, several of them, lest all setting out together they should make all things at table and lodging straiter for themselves, went thither beforehand: but Celestine himself gave himself to the road and sought Sulmona at the beginning of October. But when he was here, it happened that one of the two, whom of his Order Celestine had created Cardinals, died, Peter by name: in whose place when he, not waiting for the ordinary recurrence of the Ember-days of the next December, nor a consent of the Cardinals being sought, or account of the absent ones being had, in the very monastery of the Holy Spirit had substituted the Archbishop of Benevento; this was the beginning of the grave molestations which he suffered. At the same time and perhaps the same day, sacred to the Holy Martyrs Dionysius and his companions, was made the dedication of the high altar in the church of the Holy Spirit, whose anniversary continues to be held festive for the whole Order, and the faith of the deed is found described in these words: "These are the Relics, which are stored in this venerable high altar of the Holy Spirit of Morrone, and at Morrone he dedicates an altar, which Celestine V consecrated, under the name of our Lord the Savior 1294. First of the wood of the holy Cross, of the milk of B. Mary the Virgin, of the Apostles Peter, Paul, Andrew and Thomas, of Stephen the Protomartyr, of Cosmas, Felicissimus, Anthony and Agapitus the Martyrs, of Gregory and Leo the Pontiffs, of Agatha Virgin and Martyr, of Restituta Virgin. And in the same year died a certain Cardinal, and it was on this 9th day of October: and the following day was dedicated the altar of St. Onuphrius in the cell: and there is here and there a plenary absolution of all sins, granted by Pope Celestine, to all visiting this church annually." But after some days passed at the Holy Spirit with his monks, as it is right to believe, he celebrated also at Sulmona in the church of St. Pamphilus the sacred office of Mass: and there, just as before and afterward on the journey, he did various miracles, of which some I will now commemorate.

[101] Setting out to Naples He retraced the same way by which he had come, and passing Rajano (it is a place in the valley of Sulmona) on the same or rather the second day of the begun journey he healed that contracted Amata, brought to the public road by her father, of whom elsewhere it is said: and when to the Holy Spirit near Sulmona had come Angela, also elsewhere mentioned, for a whole four years swollen in her whole body and useless, by Thomas her husband she caused herself to be led thither upon an ass: but the Pontiff had already gone to Sulmona for the cause of celebrating Mass. Anticipating him the husband, before he reached the Cathedral church, his wife taken from the ass placed before the doors. This one therefore crying out with a loud voice and saying, he heals a sick woman, "Holy Father, help me for I am sick," the Saint entering and going out benignly regarded, and singularly blessed. But after the throng had passed, Thomas wished again to place her upon the ass; but she now free and sound wished to go on foot, and went: and the miracle perhaps she herself also testified after the death of the Saint; certainly testified, from the same castle of St. Euphemia whence she had come, Lord James Witness 46, Frederick Nicolai Witness 74, a leper, Peter de Lisa Witness 86. From the parchment manuscripts also it is had, that William a royal Knight, in the whole body a leper and in face and neck miserably deformed, likewise went to meet the Saint; and the blessing being received immediately appeared changed in the whole countenance, and led his deliverer thence even to Naples, joined to the others accompanying the Saint.

[102] Lady Mary Gualterii of Sulmona, Witness 21, and a contracted man, had a son Lawrence, five years old, when the Saint said Mass in the fields before the church of the Holy Spirit, and thence had remained even to the eighth year of age, contracted in his members and deprived of walking. Him she, when she heard him now made Pontiff to be there, carried on her shoulders to the spring, near his own cell, and in it washed: who immediately healed returned on his feet to Sulmona with his mother, but was dead when Mary deposed this before the Apostolic Judges in the year 1306. The same promotion being heard, a certain surgeon of Capua, by name Master Stephen Bricii, for the great fame of sanctity which was spread about, he appears in dreams to one desiring to see him, desired to see Celestine; and when in this desire he had fallen asleep, in sleep there appeared to him the Saint, kneeling at the seashore: from whom Stephen asked the indulgence of his sins, and that for the sins of the people he would beseech the Lord. But the Pope answered, "Gladly I will do, but do thou also pray for me." To whom Stephen, "But what can I say?" "What," he said, "God shall inspire thee." Then Stephen, the sleep still lasting, conceived a certain form of prayer; and soon awaking, and fearing lest it should slip from his memory, called the maidservant, that she bring him ink and a pen; and these words he wrote, daily thereafter devoutly to be recited, "O God who B. Peter, a Monk and Hermit, and dictates a prayer to be said for himself: to the Papal dignity, not by human, but by divine provision, didst deign to sublimate; grant, we beseech, that as Thou didst constitute him in the flesh for Thy holy services humble and faithful, so the same Thou mayst cause in mind to attain celestial glory, and that we for his merits from the snares and judgments of infernal and earthly things may be freed. Through our Lord etc." So he himself related Witness 10.

[103] The Judge Antonius de Aversana, a Physician of Capua, Witness 12, about a certain man of Maddaloni related, he illumines a blind man, that having his eyes covered with scales he had utterly lost the faculty of seeing; to cure whom called himself, he had in vain tried his art on clearing those eyes, with which he saw nothing for a long time (Faber and the Manuscripts number four years) and this before Peter was created Pontiff. But when he passed through Capua, the same physician saw that same man of Maddaloni all cheerful and rejoicing, as if he had found a great treasure: who being asked whether he saw well, "Most excellently," he answered, "I see, and this I attribute to the sanctity of Br. Peter." Likewise Master Stephen Bricii aforenamed, asserted that he saw the same man, and heard him say, that he had been blind; and publicly before many professing that he was then illumined, when the holy Pope over his eyes the sign of the Cross in particular formed. Rizard de Pelegra, servant of the Saint in the Pontificate and perhaps also before, Witness 5, and cures a mute, says he saw a boy of the town of San Germano, mute from birth: who when he had been healed by the Saint's blessing, all the people ran to the boy, desiring to hear him speaking and answering.

[104] It is credible that about the end of October Celestine came to Naples, Arrived at Naples and received in the new castle, where he found the Cardinals vehemently moved, on account of the promotion of the Beneventan, made without consulting and absent them; for pacifying whom this reason at length was entered, that the Beneventan should renounce the Cardinalate, with the confidence of receiving the same the rest consenting, which also was done. But whether there he did anything in favor of Charles, no one explains: but he lodged in the Castle, as they call it, new above the sea, where within a certain hall of that most ample palace even now sculpted is seen the renunciation of the Papacy, there made. The Lent of St. Martin then approaching, that same and the time of the Lord's Advent about to pass in a stricter silence and penance (for the Lent of the holy Cross, on account of the distractions of the journey, he had less been able to observe) he caused a wooden little cell to be fabricated for himself in a more secret part of the palace, which besides himself and the altar scarcely held anything. But into this enclosing himself lest it should be needful to be disturbed for any business, he builds a cell for himself for withdrawal. to three Cardinals he had delegated all the necessary power, to treat any causes whatever: whom although no one names, we can presume that there was one of each of the Orders, and verisimilarly Hugo of Auvergne Bishop of Ostia, Benedict Caetani Presbyter of St. Martin, and one of the Deacons perhaps Jacobus Caetani himself in place of the absent Matthew

Orsini the first Deacon: for the Beneventan discharged the office of Vice-chancellor. But before upon this delegation the Apostolic letters, already made, were confirmed by the wonted Bull; returning from Rome Orsini disturbed the counsel, lest for one three Popes should be said to rule the Church.

CHAPTER X.

Celestine, the Papacy being abdicated, after the election of Boniface VIII, secretly flees from him to solitude.

[105] While in this manner the Cardinals altercate, The frauds of the Curials being noticed, Celestine himself began to notice, that many things by the ministers of his Curia by fraud against the laws and Canons were committed; and sometimes one and the same favor to two or three persons conceded, many also less worthy promoted; and what is graver, there were found certain blank charters, for whatever favors it pleased to be inscribed, already bulled: which although in the courts of Princes, however watchful, are nearly ordinary vices; he however attributed to his own old age and inexperience more specially each thing, and was anguished in mind more than can be said. I believe also that then there came into his hands, and increased his solicitude, a certain letter of B. Jacopone, which among his rhymes printed in the vulgar tongue holds the fifty-fourth place. and a letter of B. Jacopone being received, For in this that notable contemner of the world, and whom before Peter had greatly esteemed, admonished him; that he should see again and again, that he, elated by the Pontifical dignity, had been brought to the Lydian stone, where his sanctity examined, whether true or feigned, would be made plain; that he had been placed for a target, at which the eyes of all would be directed; and that the Roman Curia was to be likened to a furnace, in which gold is tried and the dross discerned. That it was indeed a great unhappiness, if anyone should lose God on account of such a morsel; and that he had taken on his neck a yoke, by which perchance he would be drawn into eternal damnation: finally let him beware of the frauds and tricks of the curials and flatterers, looking to nothing other than their own conveniences.

[106] Impelled by such monitions exteriorly, and agitated by an internal conflict of thoughts; he puts his hands into a book, he thinks about abdicating the Papacy: which he himself in solitude had written, and for his own private solace had brought from the desert, containing a Psalter, and certain collectanea from Canon law, with a tract about vices and virtues, and various examples and sentences of the holy Fathers, by himself digested by titles: which book even now is venerably preserved in the monastery of Collemaggio [but now also under the title of Opuscula is had printed at Naples, in the year 1640 by the care of Celestine Telera of Siponto] whence it appears Celestine was not so inexperienced as some esteemed, but rather in the Canons as well as the Scriptures versed conveniently enough. But there seeking something for his instruction in this crisis, and he reads what he himself had written upon that matter: on folio 99, under the title On renunciation and the numbers 130 and 133 noted in the margin, he found these very words. "A simple benefice anyone can renounce as he wishes: but a Prelacy not except for cause and license, namely on account of humility and a better life, on account of conscience of crime, weakness of body, defect of science, the malice of the people, and the irregularity of the person. But a Bishop cannot renounce except into the hand of the Pope: but another renunciation ought to be made into the hand of him from whom is held the institution." On folio 121 also under the same title and marginal number is found written; "Likewise if anyone wishes to renounce, let him call the Superior by a messenger, that he receive the concession of him." [Those words are had now under one title together edited p. 419 of Opusculum 11 part 2 ch. 6] and are extracted from the sacred Canons in the Decree at Cause 7 question 1, and in the Decretal of Gregory On Renunciation Chapter "He admonishes"; and specially related in the Decree of Innocent III Chapter "Except when formerly."

[107] But all these did not solve the doubt, which afterward also the Schools and Universities distracted and tortured, whether these fell into the renunciation of the Papacy, to which there is no superior dignity, which the places already signed suppose. But after by the effect itself it became plain, what counsel Celestine had agitated with himself; a fame was scattered through the city (as deposed Peter Grassus the Royal Notary Witness 8) that divinely there glided to Celestine these voices of Christ, "What does it profit a man if he gain the whole world, but suffer the loss of his soul?" And hence perhaps was born the more shameful fable, believed by Genebrard and others, as if by an evil fraud someone through a reed had sounded to him sleeping that he should abdicate the Pontificate. The manner of the deed and the whole order of the deliberation most clearly set forth Jacobus the Cardinal, and how after some days the Consistory of Cardinals being convoked, he set it forth to them; who first absolutely dissuaded the cession, then asked at least so little a delay, until a public supplication of the clergy and people being appointed the divine will might be more certainly inquired. What thence followed we have from Ptolemy of Lucca who was present at the Procession, made about the feast of St. Nicholas [verisimilarly the day before, that is the fifth of December, then falling on a Sunday].

[108] And now Celestine seemed to think all other things, whether truly bent by the prayers of the peoples, especially Benedict Caetani, or rather by a prudent dissimulation wishing to lull the troubles arisen among the people: when Cardinal Caetani being summoned more secretly, again he consulted him: who (as says St. Antoninus part 3 Tit. 2 ch. 8 before art. 1) knowing the desire of the Pontiff about resignation, persuaded him, that before he proceeded to this, a Constitution being edited that it is lawful for the Pope to abdicate himself, to remove the scandals which could happen, he should first make a Constitution, by which it might be declared, that the Roman Pontiff could when he wished for his salvation yield to the Papacy and renounce, inducing the example of Pope Clement, who created Pontiff by B. Peter renounced the Papacy, lest that be drawn into consequence and example, that by the will and election of a predecessor a successor in Ecclesiastical dignities should be instituted: whence Linus sat after Peter, after Linus Cletus, after Cletus Clement then received the See. This pleased Celestine, and a Decree upon this he edited, which is had in the Extravagantes On Renunciation book 6 where Boniface says. "Since some curious ones, disputing about things which do not much profit, and to know more than is fitting against the Apostolic doctrine rashly seeking, into a solicitous doubt, whether the Roman Pontiff, especially when he recognizes himself insufficient to rule the universal Church and to support the burdens of the supreme Pontificate, can renounce the Papacy and its burden and honor, seemed less providently to deduce; Pope Celestine V our predecessor, while he presided over the government of the same Church, wishing upon this to cut away the matter of any hesitation, deliberation being had with his Brothers the Cardinals of the Roman Church (of whose number we then were) by Apostolic authority established, that the Roman Pontiff can freely resign… The aforesaid Constitution therefore being made, on the feast of B. Lucy following in public consistory before all the Cardinals he laid down the Papal mitre, and the other Papal insignia, publicly renouncing the Papacy and all its right."

[109] Thus far Antoninus, who would that, or another for him, he does this in fact on the 13th of December had related the Constitution itself verbatim! Certainly what seems to indicate it read to the Cardinals the day before St. Lucy, does not accord with the relation of Jacobus the Cardinal, saying that the renunciation itself happened unexpectedly to the Cardinals, and that then first at the suggestion of Cardinal Orsini was made mention of a Constitution to be founded for the future: which being written by Orsini himself, and signed by Celestine and the rest of the Cardinals of the Order, first the renunciation was accepted and perfected. Its formula, we know not whence taken, first brought forth Ciacconius of this kind. "I Celestine Pope V, moved from legitimate causes, from a preconceived formula. that is, for the cause of humility and of a better life and of an unharmed conscience, by the weakness of body, the defect of science, the malignity of the people, and the infirmity of the person, and that I may repair the quiet of my past consoled life, of my own accord and freely yield to the Papacy, and expressly renounce the place and dignity, the burden and honor; giving full and free faculty from now to the sacred assembly of Cardinals of electing and providing, only canonically, for the universal Church a Pastor." There are however those to whom this formula is suspect, or at least seems interpolated from the little book above alleged [but since nearly all the same things are related by Cardinal Stephaneschi --- "Old age, manners, uncultivated speech, not a prudent mind, not an experienced mind, nor a high genius ---" I do not see, except only the Malignity of the people, which can be called into doubt, because Stephaneschi does not mention it: nor is it unlike the truth that all those causes, which he himself in his little book had once noted, the Saint for his humility believed in himself sufficient for abdication; although truly they were not in so pregnant a degree, since from what has been said it is established, that he was not altogether mediocrely lettered and lacking the Canons.]

[110] The renunciation being performed, it is credible that the Saint betook himself to some cell, Boniface the successor being elected where what remained of the Advent fast he might complete, and await the event of the future Election, that he might confess his sins to his Successor, and receive full absolution from him. And there was elected indeed on the Vigil of the Lord's Nativity Benedict Caetani, called Boniface VIII: who first benignly received Peter: but having in mind to lead him away with him to Rome, or at least outside the dominion of King Charles, by no means held it grateful, that he asked to be dismissed to his desert: [nay rather he seems to have commanded him, and this Cardinal Stephaneschi insinuates that he should betake himself to Rome, committing the care of leading him to the Abbot of Cassino. he bids him go to Rome. This one certainly accompanied him, nor could he have done it Boniface being unwilling, much less would there have followed that honorable and numerous company of Cardinals and Princely men, which ch. 33 Faber describes, if against the express command of the Pontiff a flight had been secretly entered. This leading therefore, in appearance done for the cause of honor, was truly for the caution of custody ordered by Boniface. Which Peter understanding, and esteeming it to be against the faith given to him, or at least beyond the intention with which he had yielded to the Papacy; he resolved that it would be not only without crime, but even with impunity for him, if to King Charles's kingdom and his wonted solitude he should betake himself: nor would anyone dare there to inflict on him molestation, where he was about to have such a protector.] However it was, the intention of flight then still hidden God freed from all suspicion of fault, when at his blessing passing through Casalenovo, he healed a girl contracted in both hands. He, a paralytic being cured, But the Abbot desiring to experience the girl's cure more fully, threw two silver Carolins on the ground, bidding her to gather them for him: which the girl with hands loosed and free did just as if she had never been contracted by paralysis.

[111] But when to San Germano, at the foot of

the mount of Cassino situated, it had come; by a nocturnal flight he deceives his guards seeking again the cell: and there in the hospitable house of that monastery the night was to be passed; to a certain Priest good and long known, Peter revealed the secret of his counsel, adjuring that he should open it to no one. This one fulfilled not only faithfully what he was adjured, but also extended help: for a beast being provided that same night secretly he led him into his own house, verisimilarly disjoined from the common way, with one only companion, where he passed that day; but by night again fleeing, carried on a horse, he sought again the former cell of the Holy Spirit. But the citizens of Sulmona and the rest of the dwellers met him coming with incredible exultation: and to all the sick their physician seemed to have returned, among whom John de Lisa a paralytic ran thither borne on an ass, but afterward Witness 175 deposed under oath, that by the blessing and touch of the Saint he was healed. The same affirmed his wife Gemma, Witness 176 in the Summary of miracles after the renunciation. whence he is to be drawn out Meanwhile Boniface, from the city of Naples as best he could extricating himself, at the beginning of the year 1295 met the Abbot of Cassino and the others, who to lead Peter to Rome had gone before; and his nocturnal flight being understood, he dispatched after him his Chamberlain, not Thomas, but Theodoric of Orvieto; who found Peter now brought back into the cell, and heard him rendering the cause of his withdrawal by a reasonable answer. One Manuscript adds, that Peter immediately laid aside the garment which he had used more delicate, namely white, and took a cheap tunic such as he was accustomed to. [But this seems to have been done at the very Renunciation. Cardinal Stephaneschi seems to indicate, when he says that the Saint on that day --- "had changed all the Papal habits, clothed his back with a hairy chlamys."]

[112] Meanwhile the Chamberlain had departed, but by a messenger meeting him with new commands compelled to return, when he could not find the Saint, for some months he lies hidden, the two most simple Brothers found in his cell he led to questioning; of whom one being sick, when he could not follow, was dismissed; the other to Anagni, whither the Pontiff had appointed, was brought and consigned to prison: whom indeed Angel of Caramanico I find named in certain Manuscripts. But the Saint after passing in his hiding-places the months of January and February, betook himself to a certain wood of Apulia, in a cheap habit and the cowl which he was wont to wear being laid aside, with one companion, who seems to have been Thomas of Sulmona, for he both afterward followed the captive, and being made Prior of the Holy Spirit gave testimony about the miracles done on that journey. He related moreover, and again fleeing is everywhere recognized. that when on a certain evening they sought lodging in one of the castles they met, all the boys, who at that time (as is wont) in the streets and squares played, suddenly all together and often began to cry; "Br. Peter of Morrone, Lo Br. Peter of Morrone, Lo that holy Br. Peter of Morrone." On another day, when in a certain town they stayed, the Parish-priest of that place saw them, and following to the lodging where they had turned aside, said to the Saint, "Surely thou art Br. Peter of Morrone." But on the fourth day coming to the wood whither he tended, they found an eremitic cell, in which lived two Hermits; one an old man and weak in health, the other a youth; who although they had never seen the Saint, yet recognized him, and saluting said, "Surely thou art Br. Peter of Morrone," and joyfully received him. There was then running the time of holy Lent, begun on the 16th of February; there therefore the Saint enclosed himself even to Palm Sunday, falling on the 27th of March, because the Easter of that year was celebrated on the 3rd of April.

[113] perceiving himself again sought, The fame meanwhile of the Saint, lying hidden in that wood, breaking forth by I know not what way, came to a certain Abbot of the Benedictine Order and black habit of the monastery of Corata: who whether for the cause of devotion, or from the zeal of exploring and gratifying King Charles who had bidden Peter to be sought and led, ran thither with seven monks; and scrutinized the whole wood indeed, but that he found the Saint, as Faber believed, is not verisimilar. But what that wood was, neither is it written, nor easily wouldst thou divine: for they say that to one going from Abruzzo into Apulia the whole region appears woody. Yet before thou enterest the plain of Apulia, through the inland mountains, among the very mountains about Aricia there is a great wood, which extended even to the plain is inhabited by many Hermits. There are also other woods there, both that which is of St. Leonard, and that which has the name of the Incoronata between Foggia and Cirignola, equally frequented by Hermits; which since it is four days' distant from Morrone, but near the monastery of St. Mary of Corata, gives a conjecture nearer the truth, that it is that of which we treat. about to cross the sea Here therefore by the aforesaid Abbot understanding himself sought Peter, did not believe it safe to remain there: but began to think about crossing the sea. One therefore of the companions faithfully clinging to him (whose names would that they had been commended to memory!) he sent to the monastery of St. John in Plano toward Mount Gargano, near the castle of Porcina (which the title of Abbey being suppressed he had once joined to his Order) and consulted the Prior of that place: who approving the counsel, treated about the fare with the boatmen near, that they should have a ship prepared at his nods.

[114] Holy Saturday was being kept and the second of April, when to the wood returned the companion, he passes to Mount Gargano: and announced what he had done. Therefore delaying no longer, the Saint bade farewell to the Hermit hosts, and to the aforesaid monastery of St. John on the very Paschal Monday came: but it is a day and a half's journey between it and the wood of the Incoronata. Whom when the Prior and Monks saw, who about forty then were there, they broke into lamentation, as the disciples of the Saint himself write, and it is of itself very credible: and among them Peter passed nearly a whole month, awaiting weather opportune for sailing. When such at length seemed to shine, and he was now about to embark, again the sea rose, as if refusing to bear so great a treasure outside Italy. driven back to land once and again But on the sixth day after, when it now seemed pacified, and the Saint had ascended the ship, again the sea cast him back on the shore, five miles from the city of Vestia, where for nine days they remained hidden; until at length, fame betraying them and the suspicion of the sailors themselves, he was revealed to the Captain of the place and led into the city, and there detained until Boniface being consulted, what he wished done with him, should announce. That delay was not useless to the people of Vestia: at Vestia he is apprehended. for the Judge James Pasquitius Witness 7 narrates, that among many, running for recovering health to the Saint, there had come also a certain one called Judge Thomas, son of the Judge Lawrence, bearing a grave abscess or hardened tumor in his neck, for which the physicians could make no cure: whom he both saw freed, and from himself heard by the merits of the Saint this conceded to him. It is said also that near the city is a well, at which the Saint was captured (and perchance already captured there for the cause of rest somewhat sat down) whose water devoutly taken, by daily experiments is found to be a useful remedy for various diseases.

CHAPTER XI.

Celestine drawn back from flight is illustrated by miracles, and shut up at Fumone holily dies.

[115] Charles having followed Boniface to Anagni, had obtained from him the investiture of the Sicilian Kingdom on the 25th of February; wherefore from the same, To be led to Boniface in the month of March the crown of the same Kingdom at Rome having obtained, he not difficultly obtained, that he should take care for Peter to be led to him safely and honorably, as his disciples write the deed, just as if even then he had been Pontiff. But what to those suggesting, that the dignity, as not rightly laid down, he should resume, he is said to have answered; this also from his mouth one of the disciples says he heard, who committed the rest of the holy Father's life to letters. But from the miracles which happened on the way, thou mayst easily understand, the journey from Vestia was to Rodi, thence to Foggia, and hence perhaps to Troia (for Lucera still the Saracens held [says Marinus, but is mistaken: for it had been recovered by the Christians in the year 1266]) then through Valle-gaudii and the Beneventan borders; finally to Maddaloni, Capua, Teano, Miniano, Venafro, Aquino, San Germano, Florentino, Anagni. he does various miracles on the way: [These miracles have already been described partly from the Summary in the Sylloge, partly from Maffei in the Annotations to the Life by Aliaco: and of these indeed the first about Peter the paralytic, cured at Valle-gaudii, by Marinus is said to have happened on the 7th day of June, as also about Mary the energumen, and the faith of Peter of Cremona Witness 1 is alleged. But on the 9th day at Capua two boys are said to be cured, one deprived of speech, the other of walking, of whom the same Maffei. To the cure of Raimund of Vairano suffering scrofula, from the ampler Summary, is added the faith of Raimund himself Witness 211, and of another Witness 215: and the cure of Robertina, likewise scrofulous, is said to have affirmed Witness 213, and three others next following in order. The man of Venafro also Peter, for himself freed from blindness, appeared Witness 207; and to him testified together his father Nicholas Witness 209, the surgeon Simon de Casale Witness 207, and Nicholas of Lady Terentina of Venafro Witness 208. John also the asthmatic in the castle of Florentino cured they affirmed they saw, Witnesses 248 and 9. But the Castellan whose arm was cured Maffei says, Faber and others say was the Prefect of a certain tower of Capua, placed at the bridge in the exit of the city toward Teano. And it suffices to have indicated these things briefly, and to have remitted the reader to the aforecited places. The rest which can be added from Marinus, now receive.]

[116] he heals a contracted hand, Of Argenti there was a certain one, having one hand paralytic and contracted, which by his touch the Saint healed. Which when more evidently he wished to prove Peter Grassus the Notary, Witness 8 there assisting, more curiously explored the cured hand of that man; and considering the joints of the fingers, he saw in the skin outside the lividness of the skin, and in the palm of that hand, to which the contracted fingers had been, five cavities impressed by them. But being asked by Grassus how it had happened to him, he answered, because before he had had the fingers contracted within the palm, which he had begun to extend touched and blessed by the Saint. But Grassus added, that there was public discourse about many miracles done on the way, of which indeed he himself was not an eyewitness, yet by no means doubtful faith he said he had. But Peter of Cremona Witness 1, said, that in the castle of Altavilla of the Beneventan territory he saw one contracted in hands and feet, who presenting himself to the Saint was cured, with the greatest admiration of the Witness himself, seeing him extend his hands, and walk without impediment: the same mentions an energumen at Burgo-novo freed by the sign of the Cross.

[117] But from the Manuscripts and Faber, besides

those already mentioned, he illumines a blind man, it is had, that on the 8th day of June, the Wednesday before the feast of St. Barnabas, a certain man of Maddaloni deprived of sight, received the light of his eyes, meeting the Saint in the square: and that on the following day the 9th of June, a public harlot of Capua, for the cause of jest rather than of devotion meeting the Saint, he converts a harlot, as soon as she heard his voice, was so greatly moved inwardly with compunction, that seriously averse from the delights of the flesh, with a mind of most severely chastising her past sins, she withdrew into solitude, where the rest of her life she holily passed. There are those who add, that in the same city also an energumen was freed. he frees energumens, But at Teano a certain Nicholas, mute for fifteen years, was given speech the sign of the Cross being made: and from malign spirits were absolved, a woman and a boy. At Miniano, a place situated above the public road between Teano and Venafro, now destroyed, while there the Saint was lodging, there was a girl crippled in her hands and weak in her whole body. About this related Philippinus Surrentinus of Capua Witness 11, that he saw her brought to the Saint, who being asked prayed for her and blessed her: and that the sick girl at the same moment extended her hands, and freely walked. But to Philip attested together Peter of Cremona Witness 1, Peter Nicolai Malapeze of Venafro Witness 206, Nicholas of Lady Terentina Witness 208, Nicholas Malepeze of Venafro Witness 209, and Br. Thomas of Sulmona Witness 171. Certain manuscripts add that a sick woman, he cures the sick. who the Saint passing had been exposed upon a bed in the square for his blessing, the bed being left went home sound. But while at Aquino the Saint was, there saw and testified that he saw William Estendard Constable of the Kingdom, who had been bidden to lead the Saint, and deliver him to the ministers of Boniface as soon as he had touched the Pontifical dominion; a woman, long before vexed by a demon, before all the people freed by the Saint. But also very many other things happened, of which (as says the disciple above alleged) a reckoning could not be entered; especially after the Saint was delivered into the hands of the Pontifical Chamberlain, on account of his precipitous haste.

[118] As much as from the reason of the journey we can gather, the Saint came to Anagni about the middle of June; shut up at Fumone in a cell designated by himself, where although to Boniface consulting about him some persuaded that to his desired solitude he should send him back; to others however this seemed exceedingly dangerous, on account of the minds of many averse from the new Pontificate, and the scruples clinging to several about the value of the renunciation made by Celestine. A cell therefore to him desiring it, in the Castle of Fumone strong for custody a cell, such as verisimilarly the Saint himself had designated, to the form of that which at Morrone he had had, he bade to be made: and strictly kept where about the middle of August he was enclosed, never thereafter heard to complain either of the narrowness of the place, or of the severity of the guards, prohibiting all from access to him except a few Brothers, and those by turns walled in, because so great straits their health could not bear. These although nowhere are named, yet not without reason can we presume, that among them was Br. Berard of Colle alto, afterward Abbot, Bartholomew of Transacqua, and Thomas of Sulmona: whom with the hope of future reward the Saint was wont to console, if ever he saw them bear with a more dejected mind the molestations of that prison, and the slight humanity of the guards.

[119] But with how great reverence he pursued his successor Boniface, even from this it is plain, explorers being sent by Boniface, which many authors write to have happened a few days after his enclosure there. They say, that the day before the Beheading of St. John the Baptist (this feast the Saint was wont to keep more devoutly, on account of the several benefits received divinely on that day) to Boniface himself there appeared the holy Forerunner, with a terrible countenance threatening him grave menaces, if he should hold Peter straiter than he himself wished: certain other Manuscripts have, that to him sleeping the Saint himself Peter showed himself in a Pontifical habit. Either could have happened; but by either or one of the two vehemently terrified Boniface, having summoned to himself Theodoric the Chamberlain, and a certain Cardinal trusty to him, bade them at once to go to Fumone, and see what Peter was doing. They go, and ask the Prefect of the rock and tower. He answers, that he himself within was acting modestly. But entering they find him occupied in beginning Mass, to be performed by the funeral rite, and pronouncing the words of the Confession: which much they wondered at, both because so early, and because by such a rite on a feast-day he did it. They waited reverently until the sacrifice was completed, they see at Mass an elevation; and during it saw a thing more stupendous. For while the Body of Christ was elevated, they beheld likewise elevated into the air the holy Priest, more than half a cubit from the ground, and rays of divine splendor over his head remaining even to the end of Mass. But that finished, and thanks given to God, turning to the Pontifical messengers Peter benignly saluted them, and asked the cause of their coming. But they, the man's sanctity already otherwise experienced, humbly prostrating themselves to him, the cause, which either truly they knew not, hidden from them by Boniface himself; or feigned not to know, giving none certain, pretexted all other things. But then full of a prophetic spirit and illumined by God: "I know," he said, "that Boniface on my account has greatly labored this night: but say to him on my part, that he act without solicitude and intrepidly what is of his office: I content with my lot live, and I beseech God for the salvation and prosperity of his Beatitude."

[120] They were astonished that the cause of their coming was known to the Saint: and the death of the King of Hungary, but the Chamberlain says he also wondered at this, that earlier than usual and indeed a Requiem mass he had said. But the Saint somewhat hesitating, and as if dreading to communicate the revelation divinely made to him with others; at length, "I know," he said, "very well that today is kept the solemnity of St. John the Baptist, specially to be honored by me: but this night the Lord signified to me, that the King of Hungary, my dearest friend, loosed from the bonds of this mortality, passed to immortal life; but I hastened to offer an expiatory Sacrifice for him, lest he be longer detained in Purgatory, from which I merited to see his soul freed at the time of the Offertory: moreover I wished to anticipate your coming, lest by it his help should be deferred." When these things were related to Boniface, suspended in expectation of his messengers, they vehemently serened his mind: but he noted the day and hour of the revelation made to Peter, and learned its truth by other messengers afterward brought to him at Naples. Meanwhile to the governance of the Order in the year 1295, in the month of May or rather September, renounced Onuphrius of Como, and received as successor in the Abbey of the Holy Spirit of Sulmona and the Generalate John of Tutulio, who had been present at the first general Chapter, and afterward from Pope Boniface VIII on the 3rd day of June obtained a new Confirmation of the Order.

[121] Nine whole months at Fumone in custody the Saint had passed, when there he prepared himself for death, On the day of Pentecost being sick by the fast wonted of that time, which from Easter runs even to Pentecost. But on a certain Sunday after Mass said he felt himself sick, with a troublesome abscess of the right side: which the physicians summoned by the guards judged deadly. Wherefore the last rites being given, and gradually failing, at length he expired amid Psalms, with his last voice sweetly chanted, on a Saturday toward evening, the 19th of May. Of the Miracle of the Cross, a Cross appearing before the cell, appearing in the cell a great part of the day even to the hour of his death (there are also those who say it began to appear the day before) Witnesses before the Apostolic Judges were Rizard de Pelegra, who had ministered to the Saint himself; Gregory de Silva-muri of Ferentino, one of the soldiers then deputed to his custody, Witness 293; Landulf Rainaldi of Silva-muri, of the diocese of Florentino, Witness 314; and Doctor Nicholas Verticelli, a Canon of Naples, Witness 9; who said, that having set out to take care of the exequies with the Cardinal of St. Cecilia, he heard it everywhere affirmed, both by the ministers and by the soldiers, set to the service and custody of the dying Saint. But those who were present with him were not permitted to go out of the cell to see that Cross, he piously dies. as the manuscripts have: nay neither after the death of the Saint, wishing to indicate it to the other Brothers, was it permitted them to go out; the guards asserting that they had a command, that they should suffer no one to learn the death of Peter, before a messenger had returned from Rome to the Pontiff, dispatched in the very moment, in which the Saint delivered his soul to the Creator.

[122] In his sacred skull, which every year twice is exhibited to the people to be beheld, A hole made by a nail in the skull, in the church of St. Mary of Collemaggio near Aquila, above the right ear is manifestly discerned a quadrangular hole, by no means natural, but such as would leave a fixed by violence ordinary nail, which the people of Abruzzo call Brixianum, the Lombards de Quadraginta. Hence a tradition was born, both in the Order and in the city, that that nail was driven by the soldiers to hasten death for the Saint: of which tradition a monument even today survives, in a certain most ancient chapel, dedicated to St. Peter Celestine of the church of St. Mary of Maiella among the Peligni, where the life and miracles of the Saint, in a work exceedingly ancient as it appears, are seen depicted: and among other pictures under the very arch is one, it gave faith of a violent death: representing the Saint, kneeling before the altar before the Cross, with a book in his hand; and behind a man, clothed and long-haired in the old manner, who with one hand holding a nail, with the other a hammer, seems to drive it through his head: the Monks, who behind at the door are depicted assisting, shuddering at the enormity of the deed and averting their face: and over that picture are read written words, affirming the Saint to have died by this kind of death.

[123] and the nail with blood is still found, A similar fame and tradition holds, that that nail was withdrawn by the monks there present and diligently preserved; and that it is that very one which we have received not many years ago to have been by this reason found. The very Reverend Father Abbot Lord Francis de Agellis, a most diligent observer of our antiquities, among many other things which he suggested, deigned also to signify to me; that in the year 1597 wishing more curiously to inspect the Relics, which were known to be within a chest inserted in the wall of the chapel, in honor of the most holy Virgin Mary standing at the right side of the major Altar, in the Abbatial church of the Holy Spirit near Sulmona; he bade the wall to be broken from within, beneath the monument of the family of the Cani of Sulmona; and drew out thence a chest containing the Body of B. Robert of Sala, to whom soon after his death the Saint appeared ascending into heaven, and among those holy bones a round pyx, of the measure of nearly half a palm, painted everywhere with colors with a lid. Which opening Lord Francis aforenamed, found full of various and minute Relics: among which was a nail, half a palm long, tied within a little discolored

silken cloth, with particles of congealed blood, of a tawny color. To me explaining these things, congruent with the hole. he said, there was present Father Jerome of Nicotera, of great curiosity and experience in like things; who as more skilled also judged it to be blood: and this very thing affirmed Tiberius Monti, a most excellent physician of Sulmona; and Marius Veluci, a surgeon of great age and experience; and all agreed in this opinion, that this was the nail, by which the hole had been made in the sacred head. And therefore, says the same, for the cause of greater certitude, when I set out to Aquila for the Indulgences about the middle of August of the aforesaid year, I brought that nail thither, to try whether it truly squared with the hole: and before Bartholomew Crispus and other Nobles of Aquila, while the Relics were being put back, exhibited to the people, I applied the nail to the hole: which precisely entered even to the head, ferruginous in that part with which it touched the cranium, which was believed to have existed from the blood there adhering. Thus far he: but I myself saw among the other Relics the aforesaid nail in the church of the Holy Spirit of Sulmona, tied together with those very particles of concrete blood, and the hole made in the cranium I inspected several times.

[124] That he died however by other than a natural death, [It is however exceedingly difficult to believe, that what about the Saint's last disease everywhere by the authors of the Life was written and believed, was all fabricated and by the knowing ones divulged to dissemble a cruel deed; whether from the proper malice of the Prefect or of the guards, or (which would be graver) by a secret command of the ministers of Boniface himself, one would say death was hastened for the Saint by that reason. For however great the fear is said to have been, which could have moved those favoring the Bonifacian party, to guard against lest the longer life of Peter should confirm the faction of the Cardinals opposing the Pontiff, James and Peter of the Colonna, it scarcely appears credible. openly in published libels affirming, that Boniface was not the true Pontiff, inasmuch as Celestine being alive and not able to renounce being introduced over him; however great, I say, was a fear of this kind, the mind nevertheless shrinks from believing a crime, which would not much avail to remove that fear, and would more gravely stir up God to vengeance, especially since to an old man already decrepit and soon to be consumed by hardships death seemed to be at the door. But that anyone was so wicked; that even Boniface being alive either the atrocious fame could be suppressed, or breaking out from elsewhere could be refuted as a calumny of the Colonna; or could it even thus be concealed, Boniface being dead, when now the body had been elevated from the earth; and Witnesses were heard summoned from everywhere to instruct the cause of the Canonization; among whom there seem to have been some present at the last agony of the Saint? Meanwhile there remains to be devised some verisimilar cause of the bored cranium, if not in life, at least after death, which I would rather leave to a happier conjecturer: provided only Boniface be not accused, against whom his adversaries lying very many things, in the Council of Vienne prolixly heard, never brought forward anything such, much less proved it.]

CHAPTER XII.

The burial of the Saint near Ferentino, and the miracles which followed it.

[125] Whatever part in the death of the Saint Boniface had, there is scarcely one who doubts but that he rejoiced at it, as thence about to possess his See more securely: but that he sent to the Castle of Fumone to take care of the funeral his Chamberlain Theodoric, with the Saint's disciple Cardinal Thomas, The body being composed by the Pope's Chamberlain, all say, but so, that they seem to say at the same time they went. But that the authors cannot be so understood, appears from the deposition of Witness 9, Nicholas de Verticellis, narrating, that when with his Cardinal, of whom he was Auditor, they came to Fumone; they found the body within a wooden chest placed on a platform, and together Theodoric the Chamberlain, and a soldier of the ministering ones one, from whom he understood the apparition of the Cross seen before the cell. First therefore at the message sent from Fumone ran thither by the command of Boniface Theodoric, and the body at once composed, as befitted: but there came with his household Thomas: who after dinner there with the others taken (as Nicholas relates) departed to the church of St. Anthony near Florentino, about to dispose all things for the office of sepulture to be performed most splendidly. Meanwhile there were present summoned from the whole vicinity Prelates and Clerics: who leading it and the Chamberlain ordering the pomp, the next day, that is the 21st of May and the Monday of the week, the sacred body was brought to the aforesaid Church; where the Cardinal awaited it, already clothed in the sacred garments to celebrate the exequial Mass: during which happened a great miracle, which the aforesaid Witness recites in these words.

[126] While the funeral about to come is awaited clothed in the sacrificial paraments the Cardinal, he bids the gospel to be sung by a monk spitting blood, turning himself to the Prior of the place he asks, Who is about to sing the Gospel: and when he answered that it was of his own judgment, the Prior, the Cardinal to a certain one of the Monks standing there, "Clothe thyself," he said, "that thou sing the Gospel." To whom the Monk, "Very many," he said, "my Lord, are the days that I have vomited and vomit blood"; and suddenly before all began to spit exceedingly copiously. Nevertheless the Cardinal: "O thou wretched one! Have confidence in the virtue of the divine power, and pray its majesty, that by the merits of this holy Father it restore health to thee. Come, clothe thyself, sing the Gospel, and thou wilt be healed." Hearing these things the same Witness, who himself also had long been gravely affected in the left side, who is soon healed and another of pleurisy. nor could conveniently lean upon it, began within himself to pray God more devoutly, that to him also by the merits of the same holy Father He would deign to succor. And fixing his eyes on that Monk, who as he had been bidden signing himself had put on the Diaconal Dalmatic, never removed them from him while the Office lasted, nor saw him even once eject saliva, much less blood: but neither thereafter, whether at the dinner at which that Monk and the Witness himself sat, or through the many days in which the Cardinal there stayed, did he see him suffer the least distress; but on the contrary heard him publicly profess, that he was plainly sound. Verticellius himself also felt no labor thereafter in the affected side, but that he leaned on it at his pleasure without pain. But it is to be grieved that he forgot to express the name of that Monk.

[127] Buried was the body of the holy Father beside the high altar of the same church, The sepulchre of the body deeply dug in that place which even today is in veneration: and indeed very deeply, if it is true what Christopher Landinus says upon Dante, that Boniface commanded, that to ten ells the earth be dug, lest it could easily be seen or found. But he himself at Rome in the Vatican church, perchance on the same day as at Florentino, celebrated the exequies of Peter, as of his predecessor, solemnly. The fame of his death and burial soon scattered stirred up the minds of the wretched, who to penetrate to the Fumone prison had not dared to betake themselves, about to seek from the dead, such miracles as they remembered the living one to have worked. Among the first was a certain man of Velletri a dropsical, Gerard of Pedemontio, a dropsical man coming, recovers. who lying in the Hospital of the Holy Spirit at Rome, the death of the Saint being heard, went away to seek the sepulchre; and on the next day from the exequies celebrated coming thither, received health; and returning to Rome, everywhere to those he met preached the virtue of the new Saint. But the Manuscripts add, that there acceded as a witness to this miracle Nicholas of Bucchianico a Monk Priest, who met Gerard still sick on the Roman way, then saw him sound at the place of St. Anthony. But of Margaret of Florentino cured from six scrofula, after the chain of the Saint was applied to them by Cardinal Thomas (who stayed some days at the sepulture), [By the touch of the Chain, with which the Saint had girded himself, scrofula are cured,] testimony said four Witnesses namely 306, 7, 9, 10.

[128] Of Lady Laetitia of Clement Abbess in St. Matthew of Florentino, by a vow made of going to the sepulchre, cured there from a continual and intolerable fever, paralysis, Witness 250, who on account of the lost use and sense of the whole right side had lain a year and a half in bed, testified Nuns brought from the same monastery and co-testifiers, 251, 2, 3, 4 and 5, Lady Flos, sister of Lady Laetitia herself, Lady Sophia, then (that is in the year 1306) after the same Abbess. Romana, daughter of Nicholas the late son of Matthew of Florentino and of Philippa his wife, not only her right arm dead, but also her whole side bore. This one how from other remedies long tried in vain she had hoped health, from the sepulchre votively visited related, eight witnesses affirming it 225, 6, 7, 244, 5, 6, 7, 8, and 308. contraction But a third time thither it behoved to be carried by his mother Jacoba Leonard, son of Ambrose Claricii of Florentino, who for a whole triennium contracted and lame, had his left foot dead; and this testified not only the father and mother of the boy, but also Lord Bartholomew Abbot of St. Salvator, Lord John de Rosella Abbot of St. Apollinaris, John Rizius a Knight of Florentino, and his wife Romana. Of the contracted woman of Fresolone, but anonymous, deposed Witnesses 207 and 8, and likewise 230 and 231 with 240. and other diseases. Just as also of Laetitia, daughter of Leonard, for six years contracted, deposed Witnesses 269, 270, 1, 2, 3, 4. Likewise could be reviewed Witnesses, five, six, or seven, who attested the miraculous cures of James son of Mary Nicholas of Patera, of Mary Ferraria, of Palma Landulf of Patera, of Br. John of Bucchianico Silvestrini, of Petruccius son of Lady Bellucia.

[129] A certain woman of Florentino, devout to the holy Father, By the dust of the sepulchre a blind woman is illumined; for a long time had lost all the light of her eyes; and when by herself she could not come to the sepulchre, she sent her godmother to the church of St. Anthony for herself, about to ask something for the love of God from the Monks of the place, which the Saint had either had in use, or at least sometime had touched: "For if I obtain this," she said, "I am certain that I shall be illumined." The woman went, but obtained nothing: wherefore sad in mind, lest she should return wholly empty to her godmother, she took something of the dust of the sepulchre; and returned cast it into the eyes long blind. But these immediately opened proved the great faith of both women: of whom the former coming to the sepulchre to give thanks, related the order of the deed, as in the manuscripts is found. From which also is had about another woman, likewise of Florentino, whose son now seven years old, neither grew nor spoke, but with a sad voice continually wailing afflicted his parents; until the mother placed him on the Saint's sepulchre, asking for him health or death; and obtained health, which she could wish good.

[130] Hugo a servant of Br. Michael, Prior in the monastery of St. Bartholomew of Trisulto, of the Carthusian Order in the diocese of Alatri, when in a certain village of the monastery he wished alone to place on a beast a heavy weight of grain, brought to it a ruptured man is healed, he incurred so great a hernia that for all labor he was useless. He signified therefore to

the Prior the mishap; who pitying the poor little man, sent to Alatri to a certain Master surgeon, if perchance he could cure him. But he the evil being seen answered, that there was need of incision: which when the servant sad had related to his patron, "Trust," he said, "son, and commend thyself to God and to St. Peter of Morrone." He vowed therefore a certain votive offering together with a candle to be carried to the tomb; and from that hour began to be better, and the vow being fulfilled stood forth wholly free; thus testifying five Carthusian monks, likewise a sick Priest, Peter being invoked, among whom the Prior himself Br. Michael Witness 261, and Br. Deodatus Witness 322. A certain Priest of Barraneri, James of Rieti by name, for three years had lain sick, and the infirmity was aggravated by a poverty by far the greatest; whence wearied of life, he often invoked death. And while amid these straits on a certain night he is engaged, leaning on his little bed he began to recall the many things he had heard about the miracles of St. Peter of Morrone, and to pray God that by his merits He would succor him; afterward however he fell asleep, and during his sleeping a copious sweat bursting forth from his whole body dismissed him sound and cheerful, as he himself afterward with his mouth related, and the manuscripts have.

[131] In the Roman Curia there was a certain Prelate, by name Antonius, formerly Chaplain of Cardinal Gerard of Parma Bishop of Sabina, and the Bishop of Luni at Rome sick unto death; but lately promoted to the Bishopric of the city of Luni, who fallen into a most grave infirmity, was placed beyond hope of life by the physicians. Which when Cardinal Gerard and his other friends bore grievously; he himself to him through his Chaplain commanded, that he should not cast away hope, although all human things failed, but commend himself to God and to St. Peter. The sick man obeyed the counsel, and the prayer being made began immediately to be better, and within a few days recovered, with the great joy of the Cardinal himself and of others. But the Bishop, for the cause of fulfilling his vow coming to see the holy body, celebrated Mass there; and donated a cloth, woven with gold, to be spread on the sepulchre. So all the Manuscripts and Faber ch. 44. The time the manuscripts do not express, but from the number of the year 1202, in which Ciacconius says the Cardinal died on the Kalends of March, we understand this was done earlier. Likewise from the time at which at Anagni Boniface stayed, we gather it happened about the year 1303, which the same Manuscripts narrate about the Archbishop of Milan Francis Fontana of Parma, and the Archbishop of Milan. created first in the year 1296; that suffering a quartan fever, he prostrated himself before the sepulchre, and from the day after the next no longer suffered it: but he added, that in another also certain infirmity of his he experienced the present help of the Saint, and therefore to him more familiarly as to his own proper physician recurred.

[132] A man noble in family, and Praetor of one of the Lombard cities (they call him the Podestà) in a certain battle transfixed by a dart, sent out by a crossbow, and amid the hands of his servants lifted to a safer place, likewise one mortally wounded, was believed by the physicians summoned to cure the wound not able to be preserved. This being understood the man raised himself up, and vowed that if it should happen to him to escape the present peril of death, he would go on foot to the sepulchre of the holy Father Br. Peter of Morrone. Nor were the prayers vain: he recovered as he had wished, and fulfilled the vow, as the Manuscripts assert; but the time and the man's name and the city over which he presided they keep silent. If however thou consult the Milanese historians Corio and Bugato, thou wilt find all the cities of Lombardy from the year 1250 even to 1310 and the coming of Henry of Luxemburg the Emperor, to have burned with civil wars, seditions, and factions. A certain Curial of Etruria, by name Vita, in the company of very many others most devoutly came to the sepulchre of the Saint: for he said that at Anagni he had suffered a most grave infirmity, gravely sick, so that he could neither speak, nor eat or drink, yet he was consistent to himself in all his senses, nor did he lie in bed, but stood and walked, requiring medicine for his evil, but finding none. At length he remembered the venerable Peter, who had once healed him from another infirmity; and vowed with tears to visit his sepulchre, and suddenly recovered and received speech. To all therefore he began to preach the author and speed of his cure, for which to God also gave thanks as many as knew him. So the Manuscripts.

[133] In the year one thousand three hundred and six, on the feast of the Annunciation of B. Mary, and a woman paralytic in one side. Leo of Guarcino and his wife Mary, citizens of Florentino, brought their little daughter Mary a nine-year-old to the sepulchre of the Saint, who the use of the whole right side being lost, so that she could neither move nor extend her hand or arm, had also lost speech, and this had lasted for her now three months. But as soon as she touched the sepulchre, immediately extending her hand and arm she began to speak, as the same Manuscripts assert the parents to have testified. And these and several other miracles, done in the church of St. Anthony, were not related in the Process; for this reason that the Witnesses who upon these ought and could have been heard, were farther off. Meanwhile also elsewhere various miracles happened, especially in the cell, monastery, and church of the Holy Spirit near Sulmona, where a certain chain of the Saint is kept, such as was found with the dead one; or perchance that very one thence translated from Florentino, for I understand here there is no more. The examples placed in the Summary, those only here I will repeat which in the Process are had more distinctly explained, from the sworn depositions of the witnesses.

[134] In the year 1298 a twelve-year boy, by name Thomas, son of James Thomas, A paralytic boy is healed the late son of Luke of Caramanico, dissolved with paralysis, could neither walk, nor stand on his feet, nor speak at all; besides he suffered certain other infirmities, nor by any human remedies (which for the space of about two months had been applied) could be helped. At length the boy's father, devoutly affected toward those places of the desert which the holy Father by his presence living consecrated, placing his sick son on an ass, with Merita his wife and the boy's mother, brought him to the place of the Holy Spirit near Sulmona. But before they came to the monastery, James seeing the Saint's cell, on the brow of the mountain not far distant: "See," he said to the boy, "the place where the holy Father stayed, and sign thyself with the Cross." The boy looked up to the place; and although with difficulty, his hand moved and lifted as he could he led into the Cross, which before he could not have done. Afterward in the neighboring water, to which the surname Sancta has been given, at Morrone touched by the Saint's chain: him stripped of garments they washed wholly: but without fruit. At length come to the Holy Spirit they asked the Monks, that if they had anything of St. Peter's things, they would put it upon their paralytic; because they doubted not, but that he was to be healed by his merits. They answered that they had with them a chain, with which over the bare flesh the Saint was wont to be girded, doing penance in the desert; and it over the boy's head to his neck, and through his members they led. Which being done he stood on his feet, and to walk and to speak began, to the astonishment of all: just as also he himself, now nineteen years old, Witness 78, attested to his parents narrating the aforesaid, Witnesses 61 and 2.

[135] In the year 1299, on the 8th day of July, happened that illustrious miracle, with which the relation of miracles concludes Maffeus Vegius, in the Notes to Chapter 3 of the Life related, about Philippa wife of a certain noble of Palena Richard de Pratis: and it is had in the Process confirmed by eight witnesses, among whom were Br. Robert of Cinquemiglia of the diocese of Valva 147; and 148 Br. Berard of Colle-alto of the diocese of Penne, Abbot of the whole Order; and Br. Thomas of Sulmona, Prior of the Holy Spirit. But the Manuscripts add, that when the miracle was done there present besides the Prior already said, Br. Ventura the Cellarer, Br. John della Rocca the Portioner, Br. John of Coraya the Sacristan. Master Nicholas of Sulmona, Master Gerard of Veneria, Master Adam Ferrarius, Thomas della Marca, and Ricciard de Pratis, the husband of that woman accompanying her. So also of the twelve-year boy Thomas's freedom from a demon, after he had been girded with the aforesaid chain by the Monks; and how immediately the vigor of his whole body being received, he began to walk; the same one being freed an energumen, set forth the boy's mother Sulmontina Witness 119 and three following in order, John, Nicholas, and Bartholomew, all sons of the same Sulmontina, of whom the last accompanying his mother, with his own eyes saw all things: and in the Summary is added also Br. Thomas the Prior of the place. But they said on the 2nd of June of the year 1306, that about six years it was that the thing happened.

[136] The Judge Leonard of Sulmona, Witness 40, A ruptured man Peter being invoked is cured: after the death of the Saint said it happened to him, that through a hernia of the right groin which he had incurred, the intestines, flowing down into his scrotum, caused him great pains for two years: which however for shame he dared not seek a remedy from art, trusting that by the merits of him he was to be healed, to whom living he had been very familiar. When therefore on a certain night toward dawn he was thinking greatly about his sanctity, and pondering the miracles testifying it; he applied his hand, as he was often wont, to the affected part, putting the intestines back into their place whence they had descended: in which act he manifestly felt the hernia firmed and consolidated for him; and suffused with a wonderful consolation, scarcely could he form so much voice, that to his wife Granata, the same afterward in place 41 testifying, he might say, that by the merits of St. Peter of Morrone he was cured: and thence he was well.

[137] Master Rainald a Physician of Sulmona, an eighty-year-old, Witness 23, by the touch of a little Cross given by the same one related, that in the year 1304 passing through the church of St. Mary at the Rock of Aldunus of Sulmona, he saw there a great multitude of men and women; and to him asking the cause it was said, that there had been brought thither by force Marsicana, wife of Nicholas of Coliana, agitated by a demon. He entered therefore, and beheld that the woman averted her face, and twisted her body, lest she should be forced to behold the images of the Mother of God and the Saints set before her, and with difficulty could be held. But he passed to a certain estate of his, whither he had directed his journey, and thence returning still there found the same throng with the same woman. Then remembering a little wooden Cross, which he had with him once received from the Saint, with it he signed the demoniac saying; "In the name of our Lord Jesus Christ of Nazareth crucified, and by the merits of Br. Peter of Morrone, the beset woman is freed: may God free thee": and he added the Lord's prayer, and so departed. But a little after he heard the people passing and rejoicing that that woman had been freed: and seeking the manner of the liberation, he understood; that she having been forced to vomit, soon from the vomit had made the sign of the Cross for herself, and had departed immune from all vexation: which that he might more certainly know he himself sought her, and found asked her, and saw her form the Cross without any impediment, nor doubted to attribute this received to the merits of St. Peter.

[138] Nicholas of the city of Penne, a youth of twenty years, through a certain disease which had come upon him, a paralytic is healed from the Nativity feasts of the year 1295 even to the last Sunday and the same the 29th of May of the year 1306, was so contracted in hands and feet, that he could not stand on his feet, or in any small degree advance a step, except with a staff, and this also with difficulty; and if without a staff he strove ever so little, to stand, immediately he had often experienced that he fell back to the ground. Meanwhile he had heard the widely scattered fame of the holy Father's miracles, and toward the places of the solitude cultivated by him had begun piously to be affected. Wherefore, just as he was, contracted and weak, from the town of Roxano (which is of the diocese of Penne, and distant from Sulmona twenty-four miles) betaking himself hither, he had had necessity to expend two whole months on a way by no means long, both because he had exceedingly slight strength, and because he needed another's help. Moreover Paul de Ursa (which was a Castle near Sulmona on the mountain near the church of the Holy Spirit, now destroyed) Paul, I say, de Ursa, Witness 115 examined on the 2nd day of June, asserted, that he had Nicholas himself for ten days in his own house, until he went to the church, not so much going along the way, as dragging his weak body. When therefore the Monks had seen him, and heard him setting forth the grave inconveniences of his infirmity, and the fervor of devotion which had brought him thither; they placed him upon an ass and tied him, to be led up to the cell of St. Onuphrius, where the Saint had dwelt. It was the Monday penultimate of the month, passing the night in the Saint's cell. when the sick man came to the mountain: and there he passed that night. But sleeping he seemed to himself to see the Saint, clothed in white, and venerable with a long hoariness of beard, who handling all his members extended and solidified them. At these things the vision disappeared, and awaking from sleep Nicholas heard the beat of the bell sounding for Matins at the Holy Spirit: and raising himself on his feet, without a staff he began to walk through the cell: but because the night was dark, not daring to go out, he awaited the dawn: and day being made sound and vigorous he descended from the mountain, his staff being left there, and giving thanks to God, who by the merits of the holy Father had healed him: which also the Monks did, beholding him safe and unharmed, and they kept the youth with them some days, meanwhile while the fame of the miracle allured many to see him. There was then at Sulmona the Archbishop of Naples with the Bishop of Sulmona, by Apostolic Commission intent on hearing the Witnesses in order to the Canonization of the Saint; before whom the youth himself, Witness 130, on the 3rd day of July set forth all things, attesting to him the aforesaid Paul de Ursa, and Matthew de Abmamonte of Rocca Moricii Witness 95. The Summary added other Witnesses to these, namely 170 Br. Robert of Salle, 172 Lord Nicholas Archpresbyter of Ursa, 188 Br. Benedict of Colle of Maiella, 189 Br. Rainald of Cesso of the diocese of Chieti, 200 Br. John of Rocca-cambii, and 170 Br. Thomas of Sulmona.

CHAPTER XIII.

The Canonization of the Saint, the miracles, and the veneration of his Relics.

[139] After the passing of the Saint from this mortal life, his Order grew in the number of places and persons: The Order being dilated also into France nor did it stop in Italy, but also penetrated into France in the year 1304, under the auspices of King Philip the Fair: who built an ample monastery, in the desert of Ambert near Orleans, under the title of St. Mary: to which after four years he added another under the title of B. Peter on Mount Sciattri. But in Italy by John Pippino was founded the monastery of St. Bartholomew in the year 1302 at Lucera-of-the-pagans in Apulia; and at Maiella of Naples the monastery of St. Peter, where also the founder himself lies buried, and the Generals being changed thrice, with an honorable epitaph. Moreover John of Tucolio, with whom the governance of the Order was when the Saint died, in the year 1298 confirmed in office, still bore the title of Abbot in the year 1300 on the 7th day of August, when he was constituted by Thomas Cardinal of St. Cecilia a testamentary executor. But in the year 1301 in the month of May was substituted for him Abbot Berard del Como or (as other instruments have) de Como: and he is found named in the Apostolic letters and privileges of Benedict XI, in the year 1304, in the month of March; but in the following May departed from the dignity, having obtained a successor Berard of Colle-alto of the diocese of Penne: under whom by the authority of Pope Clement V in the year 1306 was formed the Aquila Process, to which also he himself appeared Witness 168.

[140] For Boniface VIII being dead, there had succeeded in the year 1303 Benedict XI; who toward the memory of Br. Peter, most illustrious for miracles, far better affected, it was begun to be treated among the Cardinals about canonizing him. But the death of the same Benedict, following in the year 1305, took from him the faculty of bringing into effect the excellent will, which in the Bull of Privileges granted to the Order he had testified. But when his successor Pope Clement V, and crowned at Lyons in France, had there constituted the Apostolic See, under Clement V more fervently it began to be acted in the business. There still lived, of those who had created Peter Pontiff, Br. Hugo made by him Bishop of Ostia, John Buccamazzi of Tusculum, Matthew and Napoleon Orsini, James and Peter of the Colonna: but of those whom he himself had created, John, Presbyter Cardinal of SS. Marcellinus and Peter, Br. Robert the Frank with the Title of St. Potentiana, Landulf Brancatius of Naples with the title of St. Angelo Deacon Cardinal, William of Bergamo with the title of St. Nicholas in the Prison Deacon. There lived also Theodoric formerly Chamberlain of Boniface VIII, the cause of canonization being taken up to be treated, more equitable to the dead than to the living one he had been, then Cardinal Bishop of Praeneste: nor is it to be doubted but that to this cause greatly favored the aforesaid two Colonna, badly treated by Boniface, but restored entire by his successors. Chiefly however to it inclined of himself Clement himself: wherefore to the examination of the cause he deputed the Archbishop of Naples [James of Viterbo of the Order of the Hermits of St. Augustine, by Aloysius Torellus reckoned among the Augustinian Blesseds Century 2 ch. 50] and the Bishop of Valva or Sulmona Frederick; who while the business was being treated dying, the whole cause was committed to the Archbishop alone by an express Brief.

[141] They began to exercise the judgment entrusted to them at Naples in the year 1306 on the 13th day of May; and pursued the examination through other places thereafter, the sworn Witnesses are heard, namely at Capua on the 25th of the same month, in the Castle of Sangro on the 27th, at Sulmona on the 29th and the following days; on the 4th of June in the monastery of the Holy Spirit, and again at Sulmona on the 6th day; finally at Florentino and in the monastery of St. Anthony, where was the sacred body. But examined was first indeed the chief Knight in the Neapolitan kingdom Peter of Cremona, the second William Estendard Great Constable of the Kingdom: 288 was Br. James of Pacentrano of the Order of St. Dominic, besides other Religious, Canons, Priests, Doctors, more familiarly known to the Saint once. There were also examined many of his disciples, conscious of several of his actions, and long engaged with him: among whom the chief Berard of Colle-alto, partaker of all fortune with the Saint, Witness 168; B. Robert of Salento, then having 26 years, of which 17 he had passed in the order admitted to him by the Saint at Orfonte, everywhere surnamed Sanctulus, who had served him in his cell continually for two years and ten months, afterward also illustrious for miracles, Witness 170; Robert of Guardia a sixty-year-old, having in the Order 35 years, and for seven continuous years engaged with the Saint at Maiella, Witness 143; Thomas of Sulmona, numbering 35 years in the order also himself, then Prior of the monastery of the Holy Spirit, Witness 171; Bartholomew of Transactum or Transacque, of the age of 55 years and 40 in the Order, in which he had always been in the company of the Saint before and during the Papacy, Witness 162; Robert of Cinquemiglia of the diocese of Valva, 147; Benedict of Colle of Maiella, 188; Rainald del Gesso, 189; John of Rocca-Cambii, 200; Francis of Chieti, 305; Anthony of Florentino, 306; Francis of Olivala of the diocese of Perugia, Prior of St. Anthony near Florentino, 307; Gualterius of St. Eusanus, 315; Deodatus of Castellione, 322; Gregory of Isernia, 144; Nicholas of Palumbano of the diocese of Chieti, 197; Berard of Guardia, 190.

[142] While this examination was being made, it was taken care that the bones of the Saint's body should be more honorably placed, the bones are elevated, to be visited by the Inquisitors. Wherefore in that same month of May they were drawn out of the sepulchre, in which hitherto they had lain unmoved, by Bartholomew Bishop of Ferentino, Witness 288: to whom depositing about their sweet fragrance, attested in order consequently heard, John of Caudillo a Canon, Rofrid of Lord Peter of Florentino, Nicholas of Florentino, and the Judge Nicholas of Caserta; who added that then for his devotion he led around the sepulchre a certain girdle, and keeping it with him, when on a certain night he was tortured by most vehement colic pains, he girded it about his body, and soon was healed. So the examination being made when Pope Clement had received it, and Peter is declared a Saint in the year 1313. to the Cardinals and his Auditors most learned men he committed it to be sifted; just as they did in various places successively, at Montpellier, at Vienne, and at Avignon. But how accurately all things were done, can prove the copy of the Process which I myself saw with my own eyes, where in the margin were noted the difficulties, to be weighed by the consultors, and then to be referred to the Pontiff. He finally in the year 1313 on the 5th day of May, pronounced Br. Peter of Morrone to be a Saint, and the other things wont to be done in the Canonizations of the Saints did with the most solemn rite, which the Cardinal of St. George present saw, himself a part and minister of the pomp, and accurately described. The title of Pontiff was omitted, and the name of Celestine which in the Pontificate he had borne, because he had renounced all their honor and burden together. [But Clement afterward Pope IX in the year 1668 bade both to be restored to him, and the Office under the rite of a Semidouble to be inserted in the Roman Breviary commanded, with a proper Lesson 4 for the 2nd Nocturn, and the Gospel "Behold we have left all" for the 3rd Nocturn; and this new Oration: "O God who didst sublimate B. Peter Celestine to the summit of the supreme Pontificate, and who didst teach him to postpone it to humility, grant propitiously, that by his example we may merit to despise all things of the world, and happily to come to the rewards promised to the humble."]

[143] After the Canonization various monasteries, churches, altars were built and dedicated in the name of St. Peter; who soon is illustrated by new miracles, also many miracles done in various places, of which however the memory perished, the care of noting them being remitted (as after a cause is gained is wont to be done). Some however, vindicated from oblivion by writings even today surviving, it pleases to gather. A certain Monk of the monastery of Mons Castus, that is of Sciattri, in France, which in the year (as has been said) 1308 under

the name of Peter was founded, in a certain Tract written by way of an Epistle to a friend about the Life of the Saint, Chapter 16 thus begins: "But now certain miracles, which in the parts of France after his Canonization are reported to have happened, I wish to recite, and being invoked he stops a fire, although perchance thou thyself also hast heard them." [But would that what he wrote in Latin, in Latin also it had been permitted to obtain: now what we can from the Italian rendered again into Latin receive, until for a Supplement of the work the original context those communicate who have it,] "On a certain day this monastery a flame had seized, and the roofs and neighboring buildings being already consumed, it threatened destruction to the church itself, in which some of the Relics of St. Peter is kept. This one of the Monks (as he himself and many others related to me) taking with devotion, when no other remedy now remained among human things, carried around the church: and suddenly the fire stopped, nor touched the church, although the nearer to peril, because it was for the greater part still covered with straw and reeds or rushes, a material surely prepared for catching fire."

[144] That miracle must have happened the time next after the Canonization, he preserves a woman in dangerous childbirth, since the church was still so lightly covered. About that which follows, as one of the miracles done in France, thou mayst doubt whether it pertains hither; unless thou wilt believe, that the chain with which the Saint was girded was either divided into parts, of which one fell to this monastery; or not always the same, but according to the variety of places sometime was changed, so that several places have a whole one. But the miracle itself is thus narrated. "A certain woman in childbirth was in peril, because long laboring she could not bring forth the fetus: wherefore confidence being conceived toward the Saint she caused to be brought to her the chain, with which over the flesh living he was girded: and soon without inconvenience of herself or her offspring happily she bore. At Orleans also an honest woman, by name Catholica, pitying her daughter, for some days and nights placed in a like crisis, vowed every year to keep the vigil of the Saint with a fast, if her daughter should happily bear, and soon became guilty of her vow, the fetus which tortured the mother being brought forth." Finally the same author subjoins that he knew many feverish, as soon as they had touched or kissed the Relics of the Saint, freed from fevers; some also to whom health came, immediately as they had entered the Order, or some church dedicated to him.

[145] In another most ancient manuscript, which now is with the very Reverend Lord Abbot Francis de likewise another the dead fetus also being resuscitated. Agellis, it is read (and something similar I remember to have read elsewhere) that there was at Pratola, which place is only two miles from the Sulmona monastery of the Holy Spirit distant, a woman, placed amid the labors of childbirth; whom the neighbors, gathered to help, much feared, for this reason that the fetus being driven crosswise, she herself appeared lifeless and dead. Wherefore with a strong cry they invoke the Saint: immediately the dead fetus being ejected, the woman in childbirth was out of peril. But the women not content with this, having already once experienced the efficacy of their prayers with the Saint, began also to demand for the dead infant life, at least until it should have received baptism: which they likewise obtained. But the people of Pratola are exceedingly devout to the Saint, to whose monastery by right of patronage and dominion their castle pertains: and therefore under his name they have their principal church.

[146] As to the succession of the General Abbots, after Berard of Colle-alto, under whom the Process had begun to be formed, again in the writings of the year 1310 I find Berard de Como, surely now the second time; the manner being now introduced of renouncing every triennium. And this year must have been the last to him of his triennium, when he received as successor Manerius de Ursa, named in the writings of the years 1311 and 12. But he either must have died or renounced before the triennium was completed, since on the 27th of January of the year 1313 is noted Abbot Benedict of Colle: under this one therefore the canonization was celebrated. Thence we have in similar public instruments, in the September preceding elected for the 4th day of May 1314 Matthew of Comena, for six whole years even to the 20th of May of the year 1320, who is found, in the year 1318 to have bought from Tama of Colle-Petri for the price of two hundred and fifty ounces of gold the castle called Rocca-casalis: and in the very 20th year of that century he received as successor Matthew de Sallis; when also for the better governance of the Order it was established, that it should not be lawful for anyone thereafter to prorogue the magistracy, and that he who had discharged it, should thereafter cease from it for nine years. According to which law in the year 1323 was elected John of Sulmona, and in the year 1326 John of Bugnara.

[147] But amid these successions the Order grew with various accessions in Italy: At Bergamo the Order is received, for in the year 1311 was founded the monastery of St. Nicholas near Bergamo, near the gate of St. Catherine, by the author William Longo de Aderario a Cardinal; and at Milan through John Visconti, Archpresbyter of the Metropolitan church, in the year 1317 in the month of March the See being vacant for Aycardus was only designated in the following September were granted to ours houses, which before the Servites and Brothers of the penance of Jesus Christ had inhabited; and in them under the name of St. Peter was erected a monastery, now called of the Celestines: and elsewhere other dwellings were acquired. But the last-named John of Bugnara's Prelacy made memorable to our history the Translation of the sacred body from Ferentino to Aquila; and the body of the saint is brought to Aquila. of which indeed the annual recollection on the 15th day of February even now is held festive by the whole Order: but it was done in the year 1327, as in the Lessons then to be recited is declared.

[148] There remains nevertheless with the people of Ferentino, not only the memory, but also the cult of St. Peter; together with the heart, which with great veneration is kept in the church of the Nuns of St. Clare of the Franciscan Order: but how it was there left and found, public fame in this manner narrates. The heart left with the people of Ferentino After, the body being taken from the church of St. Agatha, those two Monks had departed, to whom that business had been committed; the soldiers deputed for custody, saw in the morning the lamp extinguished, which was wont to burn before the ark: which when by no ingenuity they could again kindle, they easily suspected what it was: and others greater than themselves being summoned for a nearer inspection, and the keys of the sacred ark being brought, it pleased the chest to be opened. Which when it appeared empty, there was at once a running together to the Bishop of the city: it frees the city from a siege; and because then nothing else could be done, the sense of injury remained within the walls of the besieged city, which however was not altogether the highest, because they believed only that the holy body had been received to St. Anthony's. The siege therefore being loosed, it was gone thither by the Bishop; but he found nothing, however diligently scrutinizing all things, except the heart of the Saint [perchance long ago, the body being disemboweled, separately buried, and by a miracle hitherto hidden preserved from common corruption. For if it had already long ago, in the first elevation of the sacred bones made in the year 1306, the flesh being consumed been found incorrupt, so eximious a miracle could not but be related in the Process; where with so singular a care is noted the fragrance of sweet odor, flowing from the sepulchre, a thing in like cases nearly ordinary.] But it is said by tradition, that on the occasion of founding and of the founded monastery with the people of Ferentino sometime running thither, and being asked to remain, he was wont to answer; "My little sons, if I depart from you, the heart however will remain with you": which to have been said by a prophetic spirit, was first by this case understood.

[149] The heart being found, the Bishop returned to the city, thinking it sufficient to repress the popular sedition. and every year processionally it is borne to the church of the Order, Nor did his hope deceive him: for the loss, which they saw to be irreparable, the people of Ferentino consoling by that pledge; it being deposited in the church of St. Clare, they decreed to venerate the feast of the holy Father every year with a public procession, in which the aforesaid heart from that church to our church of St. Anthony is carried by the Clergy of the whole city, with a most devout concourse of inhabitants and dwellers, not without military guard; for it pleased, for security as well as pomp, that from each house some one be chosen, who armed should exhibit his presence. But after before the sacred Heart there deposited Mass has been solemnly sung, it is led back in the same order to the monastery of St. Clare, the bells of the whole city meanwhile sounding. Indeed about that Procession I had long since heard: but the manner in which the people of Ferentino retained the heart, I first learned by a letter of the Reverend Father Michael of Bologna, formerly Prior at St. Eusebius at Rome, who writes that he understood this very thing last in the elapsed May of the year 1619, from the Vicar of the Antonian monastery, and two other notable citizens of Ferentino, saying that it is so held at Ferentino, and in that region, from universal tradition and fame. where are other relics of the saint. There are kept also with those Antonian Fathers certain other Relics of the holy Founder, and namely one of the jaws (I do not remember whether the left or right) thither verisimilarly by the Aquila Fathers sent back for their solace; then also a precious Mitre, the Pontifical Cingulum, a Stole and Maniple: of the hairshirt also and of the shoes there is some part. In a little oratory besides joined to the church, into which the Saint was wont to betake himself to pray, is kept a Cross of antique wood, an instrument (as they report) familiar to Peter for expelling demons. [At Avignon also in the church of the Order, dedicated under the name of St. Peter, there is a part of the lower jaw, of which another part is at Paris, taught Lord Richard Joseph de Cambis, Toparch of Farguez of Avignon.]

CHAPTER XIV.

The body being translated to Aquila, the Saint declares himself in many ways the Patron of that city.

[150] The body being received by the people of Aquila, and in the church of Collemaggio most honorably placed, At the body exposed at Aquila for some continuous days their presence there successively exhibited men chief in religion and dignity in the Clergy, especially the Bishop [Philip Ughelli calls him in the series of Bishops, the author of the new Cathedral to be built from the foundations] to whom it was a pleasure to show again and again the sacred Relics to the devout and frequent people, and to apply them to the sick running together from every side; because him still living whose so efficacious virtue they had experienced, they hoped no less his beneficent mind would be after death. So in the manuscripts is said a certain Nicholas, whose hand was contracted, received it for his uses sound, when he was brought to the ark of the Saint's body: and visibly and perfectly before it was healed a woman, lame in the left foot from her very birth. A matron also of Aquila, coming by herself to the anniversary Procession of the Saint on the day of the Translation, under it recovered the sight, which she had lacked for many years. On the same

day Gentilis, several are miraculously healed, son of John of Saxo (it is a castle of the Aquila territory) who for two and a half years was so cast down with a grave disease, that he could not move his members for weakness, not even for the necessary offices of nature; brought to the same ark, suddenly recovered. A certain girl of Capistrano, by name Philippa daughter of Thomas the late son of Simon, contracted in body, and having her hand and one foot twisted, returned home unimpeded. And a boy of Saxo, called Stimulus, by the touch of the chest received hearing, lost for six years. For as many years deprived of the use and sight of the right eye remained Bernard son of John of Caporciano, and coming to the same opened it clearly seeing.

[151] A certain girl of Paganica, which also is a castle of the Aquila jurisdiction, by name Joanna, energumens are freed, for a whole twenty-two months vexed in a horrible manner by an unclean spirit, not only was not permitted to form the sign of the Cross, but neither to hear the Lord's prayer, the Angelic salutation, the Apostles' creed or anything of the kind. Yet as soon as drawn to the ark she stood, the ferocity of all the inimical power being conquered, with her own and others' great consolation, she appeared freed. But also of other many women, vexed by the devil and in this Translation cured, the manuscripts testify. But while before the ark the devout people most frequently stands by, one of the Bishops there present, with a raised voice exclaimed, "Is there even now here any sick one, who desires to be healed?" And soon there was exhibited to him one mute, deaf and lame from birth: to whom the faithful Bishop applying the mouth of the Saint, and touching his ears, opened the same; likewise also loosed the bond of his tongue, and unfolded his hands and feet in the sight of all, magnificently praising God therefore. A certain one also deprived of his eyes in war, brought into the midst, and the blind are illumined. and touched by the Bishop, recovered the same perfectly. Which understood other blind ones, not able for the throng to come thither, began to cry: "O St. Peter, would that we could see, what now about thee we hear miracles!" and all were illumined. As many finally as merited to be touched by the sacred bones, with whatever infirmity they were held, were immediately healed, as the author of that Manuscript has. But the author of the Bergamo Manuscript adds, that the Archpresbyter of Prætorium (but Prætorium is a castle of the diocese of Chieti) struck by enemies on the head, had lost his speech, and at the celebrity of this Translation could even sing Mass.

[152] Moreover that anniversary solemnity, not only in the church of Collemaggio and our Order is celebrated; The Minorites neglecting the feast of the Translation are rebuked but by all the inhabitants too of the city of Aquila, ecclesiastical as well as regular: only the Friars Minor disdained to do it. Therefore on a certain night the Saint appeared to their Sacristan; and reprehending him because his Brothers did not keep the feast of his Translation as the others, struck him; and bade him that to the Brothers morning being made he should show the bruises left from the striking, to prove the certitude of the vision. Which when he had done, they themselves also took up that feast to be performed with all reverence. But from that time the Sacred Body is kept, the bones even now breathing the same sweet odor, within a silver chest; and every year twice is shown to the people, namely on the 19th of May on which he died, and the 29th of August on the feast of the beheaded Forerunner, on which the holy Pontiff was consecrated. Nor only is there that most ample and most costly temple, which he living if not completed, was altogether begun; but also there was erected afterward a singular chapel, and in it a noble mausoleum, for the custody of that sacred treasure. I remember also that I understood, that the dwellers village by village all were wont every year processionally to come to honor the Saint's feast each under their banners, with a certain quantity of wax: and to that end now also is seen outside, above that little shrine, a certain as it were wooden portico, with the insignia of each castle, and a nail to which the votive wax was hung. But that custom ceased, a certain sum of money being substituted in place of the wax: but by what utility or necessity this was changed, I leave to be considered by others, to whom the manners and conditions of that region have become better known.

[153] Moreover when the city of Aquila, by the King of Aragon was pressed with a most strait siege, The besieged city is divinely freed and the citizens could not resist so great an army, they turned to the celestial protection: and bearing the keys of their city to the chest of St. Peter their tutelary Patron, in these words tearfully prayed: "St. Peter, thine is the city, guard it: lo we deliver the keys to thee." Nor was the supplication of the devout clients vain. For the holy man appearing to certain of the citizens; "Do not doubt," he said, "nor dread: mine is the city, I will guard it." But the following night their tutelary Patron Celestine, the Leader of the hostile army with a terrible rebuke, blows being added to him, so gravely chastised, that in the morning he could not go out. But the Soldiers coming together to him he protested, that he had been so bitterly scourged by a certain Hermit, that he could not even rise. What besides? A great number of armed men suddenly, as if springing from the earth, loosed the siege: and by the citizens, the Leader being slaughtered in his bed and the shepherd struck, the whole flock of enemies was dispersed; and a great slaughter being made, the city was freed from its enemies. With so great affection therefore that Saint, Celestine I say, do the people of Aquila love and observe, that it can seem incredible to those who have not known them present: and this they show especially in this, that in all the coins and money which they strike, on one face they express his image, but on the other they engrave the insignia of the city and the whole commonwealth. Thus far Dionysius Faber, concluding the Life composed by him, but the circumstances of times and persons being omitted, which it will be worth the while to know more distinctly.

[154] That siege, which Faber mentions, the Leader being Braccio of Montone of Perugia, lasted twelve whole months, in the year 1424, through the years of Christ 1423 and 24, and is described both by Bernardino Corio at the end of the fourth part of his history, and in a peculiar book by Angelo Fonticulano or of Fontecchio of Aquila: who also explains the help afforded to the citizens by the Saint. In the year 1418 Martin V, made Pontiff in the Council of Basel, had come into Italy; and against the Neapolitan Queen Joanna, defamed by the loves of John Caracciolo, had instituted as King Louis of Anjou: a little after by the work of Antony Caraffa reconciled to Joanna, against the same Louis, had conciliated to her as a helper Alphonsus King of Aragon; whence a most bitter war between both Princes arose, within the very borders of the Neapolitan Kingdom. Vehemently seeing themselves pressed therein Joanna and Alphonsus, chosen by the Queen as son and heir, on account of the eximious virtue and fortune of Sforza, the Leader of the Louisian party; his most valiant rival Braccio of Montone of Perugia they hired for themselves, offering him with the title of Royal Constable the cities of Capua and Aquila, and certain other citadels. Through this one in the year 1422, the Sforzians being driven from the Neapolitan siege, freed indeed from peril were Joanna and Alphonsus; but he, distrusting the faith or constancy of the Queen, after imprisoning Caracciolo her lover, tried also to reduce her into his power; which did not succeed for him, Sforza coming to the help of the Queen and the city: by whose merit Joanna reconciled to Louis, the adoption of Alphonsus being rescinded, transferred it to him, the deed being approved by Martin the Pontiff.

[155] When therefore to Joanna and Louis, as their true and legitimate Lords the people of Aquila adhered, Braccio, who claimed either the dominion of the city, or the governance of it and the whole of Abruzzo for ten years from the prior contract with Joanna and Alphonsus, and bore ill the Prefect of the city constituted by himself driven out by the citizens; when some places round about being occupied he could not by force obtain the city, in its siege he consumed the whole summer of the year 1423, with so great pertinacity, that King Alphonsus could call him away thence by no promises: but through the winter to Chieti and Ortona betaking himself, which had been delivered to him as a friend of the Queen, he left the city beset by a firm garrison. Meanwhile the Queen, by the help of the younger Sforza, assumed in place of his dead father, not only recovered Naples, but also hoped the Aquila siege could be loosed by her men, Pope Martin and Philip Maria Duke of Milan bringing help to that matter, and a great army being collected under the Captain General of the Queen, James Caldora. Braccio nevertheless, the citizens being saved who had run out for booty as he was of an undaunted mind, urged and pressed the people of Aquila so vehemently, that brought to the extreme peril, they had now almost no hope left in human subsidies. Yet the very extreme despair making them courageous, when they had understood the beasts of the Braccians to be wont to be pastured beneath Rocca-cambii; going out by night with their leader John of Mattalica, and through the ridges of Mont-cannium advancing, they placed themselves in ambush about the aforesaid rock; and an enormous booty of oxen and horses being made, with eighteen captives, by the same ridges they were returning; when the Braccians, placed between Ocra and Paganica, detected them. But having overtaken them near our monastery of St. Lawrence, by the monks reduced to Collemaggio empty, they would have stripped the people of Aquila not only of the booty but also of life, had not the firmly closed monastery, whose entrance to be forced needed a longer delay, suddenly lain open, opened by a certain Monk, whom (because thereafter nowhere they saw, and it was established all the Monks were absent) they believed to have been St. Peter; and so they were withdrawn into a place, whence they could defend themselves and the captured booty.

[156] Afterward by night there appeared to Braccio a cowled Monk, and the enemy being routed. and threateningly bidding him to withdraw from the siege, seemed to have struck him with a staff: which he, although awaking he still felt the blows, received contemptuously; and continued to urge the besieged more instantly, who therefore offered the keys of their city to be held by the Saint. But in the same year 1424 on the Kalends of June, there came the army of the confederates with the Queen into the Aquila territory; and four miles from the city, two from Braccio's station having pitched camp, on the next day at the twenty-second hour they joined battle, in the plain of the field named from the Bath; whose victory finally yielded to the army of the Church, the people of Aquila bursting out from the city, and Nicholas Piccinino who had been bidden to prohibit the passage being put to flight. For struck by the unexpected onset of these from the rear, those who fought, the Braccians, were defeated: and their Leader captured and wounded the next day expired amid the hands of his enemies. More wonderfully also and more evidently appeared the presence of the Saint protecting his own at the monastery of Collemaggio, in the year 1520, when a supplication was made by the people of Aquila, In the year 1520 [whose narration we have received from the Manuscripts, and have collated with the Paris edition of Faber, and with the Italian interpretation of Marinus. But it is such in its original Latin tongue, after the Bull of Canonization described.]

[157] When, the above Canonization by the supreme Pontiff Clement V being made, when the monastery was in peril very many miracles were proposed to you, Brothers, which after the death of the Divine Peter Celestine, our Father, it is most certain to have happened

; from which not only the sanctity of a most entire man, but also his relation into heaven and among God's elect to all might more easily become known; it seems not altogether absurd, to add to that opinion and reckoning another miracle to the foregoing, which most recently of all done, was proved by very many most worthy of faith, and confirmed by the diploma of the Apostolic Notaries (of which a copy we will soon set before you). But that happened at Aquila, in the year from Christ's birth 1520 about evening, when a public supplication of the people of Aquila was made to the monastery of Collemaggio, near the very city built once by the Divine Celestine himself, in which place living he had assumed the Pontifical crown, whose body also is translated thither. But that supplication for this reason chiefly was made, that a certain Cardinal Armelinus, at the persuasion of the Count of Aquila (who however a little after at Naples thrust into prison died) sought the administration of the aforesaid monastery of St. Mary of Collemaggio, and contended that its dominion in commendam (as they call it) be given to him by the supreme Pontiff, panting after the revenue and money rather than the spiritual ministry. to fall under a commendam, When at this thing the Brothers and indeed the whole commons conceived the greatest grief, they fled to the divine supplication. This first from the supreme Pontiff of heaven and of the lands, then from the Most Blessed Father the Divine Peter himself demanding, that what in this matter was to be done they might receive: nor truly the most holy edifice, so long before piously and religiously instituted, so foully and miserably to collapse would they suffer. But at last, on that very day of the supplications, the Saint himself appeared before all, in diverse places and with diverse vesture, in that form and manner which in the diploma itself is contained. Whereby it came to pass that by that vision, not only the Count of Aquila, but also the Cardinal most vehemently terrified, desisted from the undertaking, and intermitted the begun counsel; thinking it not safe, against God and the Saints themselves rashly to contend.

[158] The assertion of a public Notary about the aforesaid apparition. "To all and singular about to inspect, read, and hear the present. I the undersigned Notary make faith, how in the present year of the Lord one thousand five hundred and twenty, in the month of June, but on the eleventh day of the same month, the eighth Indiction, On the 11th of June the Saint appeared over the church, the Most Blessed confessor, St. Peter Celestine, whose most sacred body in the church of St. Mary of Collemaggio, of the city of Aquila, is religiously laid up, with the greatest and wonderful splendor appeared to several persons worthy of faith, at the hour of Vespers, in the frontispiece of that church, above the great wheel window existing in the middle of the said frontispiece; clothed in a white garment and habit, with a black cowl, with a shining Papal mitre on his head, holding in his right hand a certain very long privilege, in which letters seemed and appeared, but could not be read: and he beheld the city of Aquila, and with inclined countenance seemed to make the sign of the Cross. Then departing from that place, he came to the corner of the said frontispiece, above where the Relics are wont to be shown and the blessing given to the people at the time of the plenary Indulgence. Afterward he was seen to be snatched away, and came above the small bell-tower of the major chapel of the said church. Likewise the following day, namely the twelfth of the present month, at the same hour, and likewise on the 12th day. in the same place, he appeared with a Sacerdotal vestment, namely with a white camisus and a planeta of various colors, with a camauro or Papal mitre having three crowns, and with a Pastoral staff in his left hand, and in his right with a great privilege, in which were letters of various colors, which by no means could be read; thrice going and returning, with a grave and noble gait, from one to the other corner of the said frontispiece. Then he was seen to descend onto the summit of the roof of the said temple, and gravely going ascended into the small bell-tower of the major chapel of that temple, where three bells hang: of which one twice with the hammer of that bell he struck. Soon he ascended a little above, and three sparks of a fiery color descending from the air surrounded him; and immediately a most white cloud appeared to him, and he with it departed. And then there were the greatest thunders, with an enormous abundance of waters, which for nearly the space of one hour flowed down: and a great lightning was sent forth from the air, by which two houses of the city of Aquila were struck and shattered, yet without any harm; and on the same day he was not seen any more; as from the sayings, depositions, and attestations of several Witnesses, by Lord Evangelist Faustus Doctor of decrees, and Secretary of the Most Reverend Lord Bishop of Aquila, rightly and with oath examined, and by the undersigned Notary, both in the acts and writings and annotations, more clearly and more seriously appears; to which and which that in all and through all relation may be given, I have set my wonted sign, with the impression of the seal of the Lord Vicar of Aquila. Hippolytus Balneus of Aquila Notary, by command, with my own hand wrote, the eleventh of the month of June."

[159] Thus far the ancient relation, to whose illustration Marinus opportunely suggests, Who then was the Count of Aquila? that the one there without a name called the Count of Aquila, was Louis Count of Montorio, of the Aquila family called Camponisa, Governor of the city for many years under King Ferdinand and Charles V, of whom what the counsel was, in that negotiation which for Francis Cardinal Armellino he had instituted, no one would easily say: yet his unhappy end gives a great suspicion of an affected tyranny, or of another less right intention, for bringing which to effect he had hoped to be of profit to himself the favor of that Cardinal with Pope Leo X, who had both assumed him into the Medicean family, and created him Vice-chancellor of the Holy Roman Church, and set him over the Tarentine, Hierax, and Oppido Churches in the Neapolitan Kingdom; a man otherwise praised, but accused of immoderate cupidity, which afterward he saw chastised under Clement VII, all the wealth which he had collected being lost in nearly one day, in the lamentable sack of the city. Perchance also the Count was doing this, to remunerate the work, bestowed on him by the same Cardinal before, in favor of his son John Francis; for whom still an adolescent in the year 1515 he had obtained the Bishopric of Aquila, and preserved it, although that one refused to receive the Sacred Orders, by a peculiar privilege of the Pope thus tolerated for eight years, when he received a successor from Pope Adrian VI John Cardinal Piccolomini, changing the Ecclesiastical habit into the Religious as Ughelli writes, and renouncing the Episcopal title and grade. But the city of Aquila, wishing a grateful memory of those Apparitions to be left to posterity, by a public decree of the Senate sanctioned, on the day of St. Barnabas their anniversary a supplication to be led yearly, from the Cathedral church to the monastery of Collemaggio: and the bell, above which the Saint was beheld, is thence believed to have obtained a peculiar virtue against the aerial powers, stirring up lightnings and thunders.

[160] Certain elders of Aquila and living at the time at which the thing happened, what the cause of the anniversary procession, among whom is named Caesar Tartaglia, and one of the family Castella, related the same things often to Abbot Francis de Agellis; but varying in the cause of the supplications instituted at that time, which they said was the plague and war, with which the city of Aquila was afflicted. But nowhere have I found, that in that or the following years even to 1524, any grave mortality lay upon that city or other places through Italy: but neither does any war seem to have existed before the year 1528, if you except a certain incursion of seditious Spaniards from Sicily, through Apulia and Abruzzo about the sea even to Ripa-trasona of the Ecclesiastical state, where about the Tronto they were repressed. [It is however sufficiently wonderful, nay scarcely credible, what the authors of the Order have, that the supplication was instituted for the cause of averting the Commendam from the monastery; since without the consent of him, who then administered the Bishopric, and indeed of the Count himself doing all things for his adolescent son, such a supplication could not be made, and this one seems, if he conspired with the Cardinal, about to oppose himself to a public comprecation against his counsel to be instituted. on the very day of that apparition. Wherefore just as I would not deny, that the peril of undergoing servitude was, the monks praying, dispelled by such an apparition; so I would doubt whether the apparition itself did not give the first occasion of instituting the aforesaid supplication: or if some was then made, it could have had as a cause at least the fear of contagion, as pestilential as warlike, sprung up from somewhere.] And these are the things which to the honor of God and His Saints, especially of Peter Celestine, with much zeal I could gather; asking them, that this my labor may profit the readers to acquire divine grace and everlasting glory. In the monastery of St. Mary the Assumed, called commonly New of the Celestines, of Mazenta, of the Order of St. Benedict, on the day of the admirable Apparition of St. Michael on Mount Gargano, the 8th of May, in the year 1619. Lord Lelius Marini of Maleo of Lodi, Abbot of the said monastery etc.

[161] Let us add from Benedict Gonon, that Gregory XIII Supreme Pontiff venerated St. Peter Celestine wonderfully, Gregory XIII piously affected toward the Saint. and that he might always have him in mind, took care to have his image excellently painted for himself, which he placed in the ambulatory hall of the Vatican. And when the Jubilee in the year 1570 was celebrated at Rome, and the citizens of Aquila, coming thither with solemn pomp, brought his holy head, to those about to enter the Basilica of St. Peter he reverently went to meet, and offered the Apostolic See to the Head there to be placed, that the Saint might in a certain manner reassume it, as more diffusely narrates Peter Crespetius in a sermon on St. Peter Celestine: who also testifies that he saw and read, in the Meduntine monastery of his Order in France, his excellent book on the perfection of the Religious. His Opuscula, Which book if it is diverse from the fifth Opusculum of the same Saint, in which are had collected from the Lives of the Fathers their more useful sentences for the instruction of Monks, I wonder how it escaped the knowledge and diligence of Augustine Telera of Siponto Abbot of the Celestines, who restored all the little works of the holy Father to the autograph copies, and collected into one fitting volume edited at Naples in the year 1640, under the auspices of Maurice Cardinal of Savoy Protector of the Celestines. and the Mausoleum. Vincentius Spinellus, about the end of the Life composed by him says, that the sacred bones at Aquila are kept in a silver-gilt chest, which is enclosed in a marble Mausoleum notably wrought, and that Philip III King of the Spains in the year 1610 solicitously acted, that he might obtain a part of that sacred treasure, to be brought to the Escorial sacred treasury, and that he had his example before his eyes when about to die he wished to have passed his whole life in some desert rather than in a kingdom.

OF ST. YVO PRESBYTER

OF TRÉGUIER IN ARMORICAN BRITAIN.

A.D. 1303.

PRELIMINARY COMMENTARY

Yvo, Presbyter of Tréguier, in Armorican Britain (St.)

BY THE AUTHOR D. P.

Of the Processes for the Canonization and the old Summary of the Life thence received, and our more recent Supplement from the same with the Miracles: of the Life edited by Maurice Gaufredi, and the writings of more recent ones: and of the habit and patronage of the Saint.

[1] The diocese of Tréguier in Armorican Britain

brought forth this holy Presbyter: the same had him as an Official or ecclesiastical Judge irreproachable first, In order to the canonization, then as a parochial Pastor of souls as long as he lived; and his body when life was ended it laid up in the bosom of the Mother church, which he had taken care to be restored; and finally in the sixty-fourth year after his death it publicly elevated his bones to be venerated, under the Pontificate of Clement VII, after he had enrolled him in the Catalogue of the Saints. That elevation was made not long after the Canonization, (which was celebrated in the year 1366) celebrated at Avignon, in the year 1366 on the 29th day of October: which day under the name of the Translation not only in the church of Tréguier is venerated, but also in other dioceses of the same Armorican Britain. But chiefly festively is kept the 19th day of May, on which he died: when also in the ancient and more recent Breviaries of those parts three Lessons of the life are proposed, with this Oration: "O God who didst make Blessed Yvo, Thy Confessor, to shine by works, signs, and virtues in Thy Church; grant, we beseech, that by his merits and prayers we may receive Thy benefits." But the Saint died in the year 1303: for this proves the character of the Sunday after the Ascension, when concurring with the 19th day of the month of May, when Easter had been celebrated on the 7th of April, the Cycle of the moon 12, of the Sun 24, the Dominical letter F.

[2] For the aforesaid Canonization, even from the time of Pope John XXII by Apostolic Commissaries, the Process made in the year 1330 which we give, in the 27th year after the death of the Saint of Christ 1330, Processes had been formed: which from the Codex of the church of Tréguier itself, at the instance of Lord Grangier Abbot of Liverdy and of our Father Antony Veijusius, to be described took care a certain Theological Canon of that church, in the year 1665. There were contained in them the depositions of two hundred and forty-nine Witnesses: of whom fifty-two about the virtues of the living and dying one responded nearly, and their sayings are had entire: the rest about the miracles chiefly informed, but their sayings for the greater part were torn from the codex, which damage however is somehow supplied by the Summary of miracles, transcribed at the end of that Codex. But this Summary was read to the Pontiff and the Cardinals and Prelates assisting him, with the Summary of the Life thence then taken, after the Summary of the life, from the already said depositions taken, which already before faithfully transcribed we had received and in the first place we give, as the most ancient monument of all: to which to verify and confirm we produce in order through several Chapters digested the words of the Witnesses themselves, confirming the single things and more clearly explaining them: and finally we give another more recent Life, at the request of Bishop Christopher and the Chapter of Tréguier, and so after the year 1464, from the same monuments compiled, by Br. Maurice Gaufridi of the Order of Preachers, from a parchment Codex, which by the gift of the Reverend Father James Dinet, formerly Provincial of France, we have.

[3] and the Life composed by Maurice Gaufredi from a Manuscript. There precede this last Life in the already said Codex the Acts of Canonization, comprised in eleven Collations, of which the arguments in few words we exhibit, because to history they do not greatly make, and the ever-growing mass of the present work compels to omit the less necessary. If anyone a curious collector of Anecdota wish to give those Acts to the public light, and at the same time to exhibit a specimen of canonization usual in the 14th century, to him what we received gratis we offer gratis, namely the use of that parchment codex: in whose end also is found the ancient Office of St. Yvo, the Acts of canonization and the lessons of the proper Office being omitted. with nine Lessons of the Life sufficiently prolix, by the same (as it seems) Maurice Gaufredi ordained: after which follow six other Lessons, perchance on the feast of the Translation to be recited, about his virtues pertaining to the governance of souls, which are as it were a continuation of the preceding, nor however reach to the death of the Saint, and all are taken from the aforesaid Life, with this peculiar exordium. "The splendor of the glory of God the Father and the author of salvation the Lord Christ, who the rays of His admirable brightness, to illustrate the hearts of the faithful and to put to flight the darkness of sinners, in all the courses of the present life with His wonted piety ceased not to send forth; most lately in these days exhibited a new star of His grace, the most resplendent Yvo, the illustrious Confessor of His name."

[4] But nothing of all the things said hitherto seems to have gone forth the bounds of the diocese of Tréguier, The author of the Rouge-cloître Manuscript using a Summary rendered into Breton. and to have been carried to outsiders, except the Summary of the life; and this very thing perchance rendered into Breton, which others again made Latin. And so it seems to have received Gillemann, in the monastery of Rouge-cloître of the Canons Regular near Brussels; whose transcript that it has perished to us we would grieve the more, if for its lack it had behoved us to give the Life, which with the wording everywhere changed, edited Laurence Surius; but having obtained the very fountains, we have no need to follow the streams: and for this cause also we pass over that, which at Douai in the year 1578 was printed by the press of John Bogard, among the Syntagmata of ecclesiastical antiquities, and Boetius Epo, composed by Boetius Epo Rordahusaurus a Frisian Doctor of Laws, and recited before the students of both Laws in the same University. The author prefaces twice in the exordium, that those things which he is about to say, the most faithful patriotic Annals of the Bretons relate, to which testify most ancient manuscript monuments, speaking in a Semi-French Semi-British speech, of which with me, he says, by the concession of someone there are copies, now also at Paris committed to the press: for in Latin it has not yet happened to me to know the matter. So he: but to us those Breton things to see likewise has not yet happened. Hope would grow, that from these (which we would believe immediately received from the mouth of the witnesses, as afterward they were rendered into Latin) could be supplied, those things which in the Latin Version brought to the Pontiff happened to be torn off and abolished, if having used those Epo had something more than is contained in the Summary of the life: but now we are compelled to think, that this Summary only, rendered into Breton, was printed at Paris, and before lent to Epo.

[5] No more had others, nor even those British writings, From these Surius and others received their things. but only the lucubrations of Epo and Surius, who afterward wrote about St. Yvo; namely Antony Perez Doctor of Laws in an encomiastic oration, before the Fathers of the Society of Jesus at Louvain in the Oratory of the Marian sodality held in the year 1621, when there was dedicated the notable image of the Patron of the Jurisconsults, painted by the Belgian Apelles Peter Paul Rubens: likewise the Clerks Regular of St. Paul at Naples, in the same year offering to Decius Cardinal Caraffa their Archbishop a Life written by them in a more diffuse style, of the common Advocate of the poor and the Patron with them of the Oratory of charity of St. Mary of Porta-nova. About the same time, namely in the year 1623, Peter de la Haye, Toparch of Kerckingant, of Morlaix in Britain, took care to have printed a certain small tract about the Life and miracles of St. Yvo, in the Breton and French tongue at the same time, Albert le Grand, having used also the Tréguier archive, which we have not seen; we believe however the author had something more from the archive of the church of Tréguier: certainly had, he who indicated that Breton-French little tract to us, Albert le Grand, in the Lives of the Saints of Armorican Britain, edited in the year 1636: and he had the same things which we all, somewhat also of ampler light from the present knowledge of the places, wherefore sometimes him in the Annotations we shall use. Yet this author knew not and others after him, when they alleged Peter de Natalibus, that not of this one, but of Henry of St. Ursius, who printed the Catalogue of Peter in the year 1443 at Vicenza, is that Appendix, about the deeds of certain Saints unknown to Peter. It is treated in that Appendix §18 in few lines about St. Juno Presbyter and Confessor a Briton by nation, he wrongly alleges Peter de Natalibus. and about his penance, hospitality, devotion, plainly those things are said, which appear to be understood of St. Yvo. But, the day of death being confused with the day of the Translation, it is said, that the Saint his last day happily passed on the 6th Kalends of November; where also thus, on the 4th Kalends, Henry ought or wished to write. Albert alleges moreover St. Antoninus in the 3rd Part: but in this one I find nothing else than tit. 24 ch. 9 §18 these few words, "At which time also (namely the 20th General of the Minors William) was canonized St. Yvo."

[6] Tenfold more authors, who with praise mentioned St. Yvo, The Franciscans enroll Yvo among their Tertiaries: Arthur of the Monastery alleges in the Franciscan Martyrology, and among these many more recent of the Order, who enroll him among the Tertiaries. Nothing indeed do I wish detracted from these: especially since the whole Order of Minors (to which St. Antoninus seems to favor joining the mention of Yvo with his history) since, I say, the whole Order of Minors has assumed him to be venerated on the 27th day of October under the rite of a Semidouble Office, as a Presbyter of the Order of the Penitents of B. Francis. I cannot however not observe, that in so great a number of Witnesses heard about his life, in whom also some of the same Order of Minors, not even one is found, who said anything such about him. He indicated to the Guardian of Guingamp, that when he was Official of the Archdeacon of Rennes, and there heard the book of Sentences, and of the Bible in the house of the Friars Minor, on account of the divine words which he heard, he began to spurn worldly things and to seek heavenly … but in the tenth year after, conqueror of the sensuality hitherto repugnant, he assumed cheap robes, namely a tunic with large and ample sleeves and an epitogium, sufficiently long and entirely honest, of white cloth; not gray, as Albert says: nor did he gird himself with a rope after the Franciscan manner, but with a girdle, which was of a slender woolen binding (as says she who kept a part of it for Relics) and used corded shoes after the manner of the Cistercians or Preachers: for which Albert, with no good faith, substitutes the Sandals of the Minors. In the exercise moreover of hospitality he was seen toward the Preachers and Minors more peculiarly affected. All which since they do not show, why the Minors should rather arrogate Yvo to themselves, than the Cistercians or Preachers, and besides nothing can be elicited from the sayings of the Witnesses; it must be confessed that those things were read, not with his own, but with others' and little faithful eyes by Gonzaga, when in part in the Convent of the 20th Province of Tours he wrote, that "it becomes clear from the informations, made upon the canonization of St. Yvo, that he received the habit of the third Order in the Convent of Guingamp," since not even this is had from them that he was ever in that convent, nor did its Guardian himself depose anything such.

[7] More clearly and more evidently have a right in Yvo, both the Jurisconsults, and the curators of Hospitals, to whom he shone forth by a singular example. The Jurisconsults in Belgium and Italy celebrate him as Patron. And so both to that Neapolitan Oratory, of which above we made mention, most justly he was chosen Patron; and at Rome the nation of the Bretons already long ago in the year 1511 (beside a certain ancient church, which had the name Scropha) under the appellation of St. Yvo built a hospital, for

the poor pilgrims of their nation; to which afterward in the year 1558 was granted that same church to be restored, and to be possessed with the cure of souls; just as it possessed it, until, desiring its more certain conservation to be provided for, Henry III King of France obtained from Gregory XII; that it should be subjected to the Sodality of St. Louis in the City. There the Feast of the Patron is most solemnly every year renewed, the college of the Consistorial Advocates convening to the sacred rites and a Latin Oration, to be pronounced by some notable Rhetor: of which various ones printed at Rome we have: and the same is done at Antwerp and elsewhere in Belgium by the Colleges of Jurisconsults, even of those who with the highest power declare the law to the Provinces. Of this matter we are about to say something more at the end, on the occasion of the Relics translated to the Oratories of sodalities of this kind.

[8] But as all those rely on a great right, to claim Yvo for themselves as Patron, because either for some time he discharged the office of Judge of causes ex officio and Advocate of the poor out of charity, which chiefly ought also to do or always acted the host with private hospitality: yet none ought rather to propose him to themselves for an example and patronage, than those whose institute and order, higher ones being excused, he held even to the last day of his life. The parochial Presbyters of rustic souls, whom the common people call rural Curates: of whose kind I know not whether you would find any other, except perchance a Martyr, enrolled among the Saints besides Yvo. For most of them not so much by the free election of their own will divinely powerfully impelled, the Presbyters of rural Parishes. as by another's destination, and the necessary obligation of education received from the Church driven to the sacred Orders, and thence moved to the cure of souls, often before they have well learned to take care of their own; while alone among the laity Clerics, among the unlearned lettered, celibate among the married or about to marry, they are bound to live according to the condition of their office without external helps to sacred study of letters, to the guardianship of chastity, to the discipline of manners; with which others abound under the eyes of Superiors, among the examples of domestics, according to the proper rules of a more religious institute exercising the Presbyteral duties; these chiefly ought to take care, that to the life of Yvo, as to a mirror, they should adjust and compose their manners, form their domestic discipline, execute the Sacerdotal offices, as publicly necessary to their flock as privately dangerous to themselves, unless with pure hands and a holy intention they be handled, which to them devoutly worshiped and by imitation expressed St. Yvo will be able to obtain.

THE SUMMARY OF THE LIFE

From the Manuscript Process verbatim compiled in the 28th year after the death of the Saint.

Yvo, Presbyter of Tréguier, in Armorican Britain (St.)

BHL Number: 4626

FROM THE MANUSCRIPT OF TRÉGUIER.

[1] Yvo Hælorii of memory to be cherished, Presbyter of the diocese of Tréguier, of noble, The studies of St. Yvo, faithful and Catholic parents, from legitimate matrimony procreated, a future Saint, from boyhood taught his first letters and instructed in Grammatical things, at Paris heard the Logical things, then fourteen years old or thereabouts; and there was a scholar in the Arts and sometime determined: and afterward heard the Decretals and Theology there. And twenty-four years old or thereabouts was at Orleans in the Study, and heard the book of the Institutions from Lord Peter de Capella, and from Lord William de Blavia the Decretals: and was instructed in the Civil law: and was of good disposition and well profiting in study, and of honest conversation: and very devoutly frequented Masses, and said also his Hours. Reading the Lives of the Saints, when he found anything of perfection, as far as he could to imitate it he wished. and offices: And when he was Official of the Archdeacon of Rennes, he heard there the Fourth of the Sentences: and from then continually he began to spurn worldly things, and to seek heavenly ones.

[2] And he was in life a wise and lettered Official, first of the Archdeacon of Rennes, and afterward of the Lords Alan and Gaufrid Bishops of Tréguier. In which Offices he held himself holily and justly, doing swift justice to each one, without choice and difference of persons; and the litigants and others having dissension to peace and concord as far as he could he reduced. the patronage of the poor, For the poor, widows, orphans, and other miserable persons he asked gratis, and fostered their causes, and to their defense offered himself, even unasked: whence the advocate of the poor and miserable persons he is commonly called, and among other things he said gratis a matrimonial cause of a certain poor woman. And a poor Squire, called Richard le Roux, who had a cause against the Abbot of B. Mary of Relec and had not whence he could conduct it, the said Yvo gratis sustained the said cause out of regard for piety and obtained in it: he wished however before he should receive the said cause to be conducted, that the said poor Noble should swear, that he believed he had a just cause.

[3] the cure of souls, In the church of Tresdretz he was Rector for eight years and ten years of Lohanec. His Hours he said without defect, and as it were continually he carried with him the Bible and the Breviary. The confessions of his parishioners he heard most willingly, and to them the Body of Christ and other ecclesiastical sacraments most devoutly ministered. And he carried on his breast a silver pyx, in which he kept the Body of Christ, which he ministered to the sick. Every day or nearly so he devoutly celebrated Masses, the assiduity of prayer, unless detained by infirmity or another great impediment: and frequently, before he celebrated, before the altar, and elsewhere also outside Mass, with bent knees, joined hands, he prostrated himself in prayer: and with groans, sighs and tears, his hood inclined and his face hidden, prolixly and devoutly he prayed: and he wept many times even during Mass, and also outside Mass. He was very assiduous in prayers: he expended time in vigils, prayers, and exhortations.

[4] He likewise passed many nights as it were sleepless, and scarcely or never slept by day or by night, the sparingness of sleep, unless wearied by the labor of study or prayer or journey and weighed down with sleep. the hardness of the bed, And although he could have had delicate beds and lain delicately, he slept however clothed in his garments, and never or rarely unshod. At the village of Saint-Martin a little straw beneath him on the ground, and for a pillow a book sometime, sometime a stone at his head he had; and a quilt punctured, cheap, and black, with which he covered himself sometime in time of cold. And at his church of Lohanec he lay in a like manner upon a hurdle, composed of thick and knotted rods or staves: and near his bed he had a Cross with the image of the Crucified. And when he was lodged even with the rich of the country, the hosts caused a good bed to be made for him, yet the said Yvo did not lie in it, but clothed lay upon the ground, and took a little sleep.

[5] When he was Official of the Archdeacon of Rennes, the eight-year struggle between sense and spirit, he began to spurn worldly things and to seek heavenly ones: and many times he had a disputation within himself between reason and sensuality for eight years: but in the ninth year reason dominated sensuality: and he began to preach. But in the tenth year he gave away his good robes for the love of God: and for fifteen years or thereabouts before his death he changed his life wholly; the change of garment, and for the cause of humility he assumed a habit, a tunic and epitogium of white coarse cloth, called burel or cordet of small price and value: and corded shoes after the manner of the Cistercians or Preachers he used. He wore a hairshirt next to the flesh, and over the hairshirt a coarse shirt of tow: and covered it as much as he could, lest by others it should be seen.

[6] frequent and strict fasting, At Orleans in the Study he began to abstain from flesh and from wine, and on the sixth feria he fasted; then of the age of twenty-four years or thereabouts. While he was Official and with the Bishop of Tréguier, he ate coarse bread and pottage only, and drank water alone, and thence was of great austerity and abstinence. He fasted on bread and water for eleven years through the whole Lent and the Advent of the Lord, and from the feast of the Ascension to Pentecost, and on the fasts of the Four times, and on the Vigils of B. Mary and the Apostles, and other fasts indicted by the Church. And thrice in the week, namely on the fourth and sixth feria and Saturday, on bread and water he fasted: but on other days once in the day bread and pottage he took, except on Sundays, and the feasts of the Lord's Nativity, Easter, Pentecost, and All Saints, on which he ate twice in the day. And the bread was coarse, of rye, oats, barley, bran or a mixture; and the pottage of peas, beans, herbs or turnips with salt, without other condiment for the most part; and sometimes (though rarely) a little flour being added, and sometime butter. its rare and modest remission But on the day of Easter he ate sometime one egg or two, almost continually drinking water: but when he was with the Bishops, or (though rarely) overcome by the instance of friends, he put a part of wine in the water: and of flesh or other common foods, which among the fragments for alms he set aside, he feigned himself to eat. And in the last Lent before his death, out of piety and compassion for a certain poor sick man, Yvo by name, now a Hermit, whom he then nourished, he ate sometime pottage, that he might induce the said sick man to eat.

[7] Nor on account of poverty or want did he do such austerity to his body in foods and garments, great humility, since he had a good church and a good patrimony, of which honorably he could be sustained. But he was humble and benign, and conversed humbly, and spoke sweetly: and walked with head inclined and eyes downcast, his hood drawn before. And although he could have good garments and a good horse to ride, he wore however humble and abject garments, and went to preach running through the places on foot. He rejoiced more to be with the poor than with the rich, and treated the poor humbly: and showed humility by gesture, words and humble deeds. Worldly honors he fled: and among other things in a certain place, where a great multitude of people was wont to convene once in the year, although they wished rather to hear his preaching than that of anyone else; yet he wished to defer to the Friars Preachers who were there present: and said humbly, that he was not worthy to preach in their presence.

[8] He was also of great patience in adversities and reproaches to be sustained and the austerities of life. and the patience of the Saint, Sometime others blasphemed him, and although he was noble by birth they called him a scullion: and he patiently and with a cheerful countenance bore it. The lice going about his neck or upon his garments he did not permit to be taken away, but put them back in his bosom, saying that they ought to be left in their carcass or warren.

[9] He was also peaceable and quiet and spoke little except of God and words of salvation, his care of guarding sacred things. nor was he angered, but what he spoke benignly and patiently he said.

And yet several times he lay in the sacristy of the church of Tréguier, for the custody and defense of the sacred things and other things of the church, which the men of the King of France wished to take, on the occasion of the hundredth and fiftieth of movable goods from the Bishop and Chapter of the church of Tréguier, to which the said Yvo by all means and ways which he could resisted. And when a certain servant of the King had taken the horse of the Bishop of Tréguier from the Episcopal house, and was leading it; the said Yvo snatched the horse from the hands of the said servant, and led it back to the Episcopal house.

[10] Liberality toward the poor, In the Study of Paris the portion of flesh, which was placed before him at table, he gave out to the poor. At the time when he was Official of the Archdeacon of Rennes, to Derian who was afterward a Preacher, and to Oliver scholars he gave every three days two pennies, and invited them on the annual feasts to eat, as on the Nativity of the Lord and on the feast of Easter, Pentecost, and All Saints, when the Archdeacon was not in town: and the food being prepared he opened the great gate, and the poor entered and he ministered to them, and afterward went to eat with the two aforesaid. And at the time when he was Official of the Bishop of Tréguier, whatever came to him of the emolument of the seal and also of his other goods, and his garments and furs, before he put on the garments of burel, he gave out to the poor. And he was of great compassion toward wards, orphans, widows, and other miserable persons; and he helped them with counsel, aid, patronage, and alms: he nourished poor orphans, and paid the salary of the masters from his own.

[11] He rejoiced more to be with the poor than with the rich, and familiarity with them: and the poor humbly and mercifully treated: for he was a man of great piety, compassion and mercy. The poor flowing to him he received with himself to eating or dinner; and to them water for their hands, and the things necessary for eating with his own hands he ministered: and with them sitting on the ground, the more deformed even being placed beside him, he ate coarse bread and pottage and drank water. But the Mendicant Religious he often refreshed with good food and wine, and charitably treated. To the poor indifferently he kept hospitality, giving them food and a bed: for he had caused a house to be made for them, and made a fire also for them in time of cold.

[12] solicitude for clothing them, Several times and especially in winter time he bought or caused to be bought cloths, of which he clothed the poor of Christ, and at other times gave to them of his own garments. And among other things it happened, that the same Yvo had caused a tunic to be made for himself, and said to a certain poor man, that he should put it on with the hood: and the poor man bashful put it on, and so with the hood and tunic aforesaid the poor man glad withdrew. Pathonada and Rivallon her husband with four children, before the death of Yvo for eleven years or thereabouts, came to the house of Yvo himself, for alms to be received and to be lodged there for the love of God: whom the same Yvo with great joy received, and the said eleven years or nearly so in his house kept, and provided for them through the said time both food and clothing.

[13] and hospitality for receiving them, Moreover whatever as well of ecclesiastical goods as of his patrimony he could have, indistinctly he gave out to the poor; and to them as well in bread as in money, grain, and other goods he made many and large alms: and so many poor flowed to him and followed him. It happened that he sometime gave out an oven-baking of bread to the poor in pieces. And when at harvest time he caused his grain to be threshed quickly, to be given to the poor; a certain Alan said to him that he did imprudently, that he so gave out grain, which if he reserved at another time would be worth more. And the said Yvo answered, that he was not certain whether at that time he would be alive. And a year being revolved when Alan about the grain reserved by him had answered, that he had gained the fifth part; Yvo said, that he expected a greater gain, of his own which at harvest time he had delivered. the care of the sick and dead: The sick, especially the poor, he frequently and most willingly visited, and consoled and comforted them, and with holy words and examples induced them, that they should receive the Sacraments of the Church, and to those who needed he ministered the necessaries. To the dead he gave shrouds, and with others he carried them on the bier, and buried them with his own hands.

[14] He was a man of great chastity, holy life, and honest conversation, chastity and modesty, and for such was deputed and held. He had modest eyes: his words, signs, and works, life and conversation indicated sanctity and honesty, cleanness and purity, and nothing contrary to them: nay he abhorred the sin of lust. By his holy preachings, exhortations, and examples, men and women, that from carnal and other vices they should abstain, and to the guardianship of chastity he informed: and so many were converted to good, and became better and more honest.

[15] To the preaching of the word of God assiduous, most frequently and as it were assiduously he insisted: the assiduity of preaching. and by the license or command of the Bishops of the places, through several churches and diverse places, and frequently sufficiently distant from each other, running on foot, sometimes twice or thrice in the day he made sermons; a copious multitude of people, to hear his preachings, from diverse parts flowing together. For he was in preachings exceedingly gracious, and the people wished rather to hear him, than any other preacher: and they followed from parish to parish, or from place to place, to hear again his preaching. And when he went preaching through several churches in one day, he returned wonderfully wearied and fasting, although he had been invited by several. and the copious fruit from it, But when he wished to begin to preach, before the sermon and after with bent knees and joined hands he prayed devoutly, sometime also weeping: and he wept also sometime in the very preachings, with so great devotion, that he sometime provoked many of the hearers to tears. The people of the country were wont to be raw to good and prone to wantonness; but through his good preachings and exhortations, holy doctrine and as it were continual instruction, and through his examples, which by deed, word and work he displayed, he recalled many from their perversities and errors: and the country and persons were reformed for the better. A treater and reformer of peace, the discordant he recalled to concord, and for this very frequently he labored.

[16] Full therefore of discretion, science, goodness, and virtues grateful to God, whence great authority with all. he occupied his time in good works, and in no way idle. The works of charity and mercy solicitously he fulfilled, he visited the sick, was free for the sustenance and defense of miserable persons, recalled the discordant to peace, and did other good things which he could. And honest, humble and benign, of great patience and penance, to the celebration of Masses, prayer, preaching, and the study of the divine scriptures assiduous, a good example of sanctity by word and work he demonstrated: and he was a man of great authority and reverence. And although he himself spurned honors, all however rose to him, and went to his preachings: and especially his parishioners loved and revered him as a father, and commonly and publicly a holy Presbyter he was called. The senses also of the one beholding him on account of his sanctity were changed, and on account of his great grace scarcely could men be separated from him.

[17] He aspires to death, Three weeks before the said Yvo departed, he said that it was not long that he had been very sick and had believed he would die, which he greatly desired, provided however it pleased God: because just as anyone would rejoice, who had conquered his foe or enemy, so he would rejoice at death, since his enemy by the grace of God he believed he had vanquished. In the week in which he departed, he was so sick and weak that he could not sustain himself, nay sometime he was sustained by some assisting, remitting nothing of his strictness and so he celebrated Mass in the chapel of his village of Saint-Martin. Three or four days before his death, John Rector of the church of Franchet, with Yvo Official of Tréguier, found him clothed in the tunic and epitogium, with his shoes or boots, in his bed, namely upon the ground, and he had a stone for a pillow at his head. And when the said Official reprehended him because he so lay, and had not beneath himself a quilt or at least enough of straw bedding; the same Yvo answered, that he was not worthy to have it, and that what he had sufficed for him.

[18] On the third day before his death he confessed in his wonted bed, and the confession being made and clothed by those assisting he preached, and charged Jabret that he should go to his church to forbid the people to come to him; and saying to them that he was in a good state: because the people, hearing his infirmity, were already beginning to flow to him, and especially from his aforesaid church. On the Friday before his death he lay upon a little straw, clothed in his tunic and covered with a punctured quilt, black and miserable: and he had his hood over his head extended. And when Derian said to him, "You are not cured"; he answered, "God knows and sees," and extended his joined hands toward the image of the Crucified, which he had before him.

[19] and the extreme Unction being received, On the Saturday after the feast of the Ascension in the evening the extreme Unction very reverently and devoutly he received: and before his sight in the window he had a cross with the image of the Crucified, which as it were continually with devotion and reverence he beheld, and the one doing the office of extreme Unction, responding to each thing. And there ministered to him this Unction Hamo Vicar of the church of Tréguier, of and in whose parish the same Yvo was; standing by Gaufrid a Presbyter and many others, at the village of Saint-Martin in the manor of the said Yvo, in the aforesaid bed of a little straw on the ground in which he lay clothed in the tunic, and holding his drawn hood over his head. Which Unction being made the same Yvo lost his speech: most piously he departs. and beholding the Cross which was there placed before him, his hands at times being joined, and devoutly and frequently signing and fortifying himself with the sign of the Cross, the dawn of the following Lord's Day coming, as if he gave himself to sleep, he breathed forth his spirit; twenty-seven years it was, on the feast of Pentecost or about, just elapsed, as is believed the Sunday after the Ascension. And Yvo was at the time of his death of the age of fifty years or about.

[20] A great concourse to the body of the dead And on the same day the body of the said Yvo was carried as it were at the same hour to the church of Tréguier, a copious multitude of the people also running together, touching

and kissing with the greatest devotion his feet and hands. And after it was carried to the said church it was stripped of the robes, with which it was clothed, namely the tunic, epitogium, and shirt aforesaid: and the shirt was placed among the relics of the church of Tréguier. And while his body was on the bier in the church of Tréguier, a copious multitude of the people of men and women with the greatest devotion touched and kissed his body, and caused rings and other ornaments to touch the same body, believing undoubtedly that Yvo himself on account of his merits would be a Saint. And whoever could touched him, or his things, or the bier, some with a hood, some with their hands, as best they could. And there was the greatest multitude of poor, contracted, weak, and blind, bewailing his death.

ANNOTATIONS.

The things which would occur more frequently to be noted, let the reader seek them in the following Process: here we add only a few things.

THE PROCESS

Formed in the 27th year from the death of the Saint.

Yvo, Presbyter of Tréguier, in Armorican Britain (St.)

BHL Number: 4625, 4627

FROM THE MANUSCRIPT OF TRÉGUIER.

CHAPTER I.

The exposition and confirmation of the whole Process made by the Commissaries and Notaries.

In the name of the Lord. Amen.

[1] We Roger of Limoges and Ayquelinus of Angoulême by divine permission Bishops, and Armericus by the same permission Abbot of the monastery of St. Martin of Troarn of the diocese of Bayeux, Three Apostolic Commissaries Commissaries to inquire about the life and conversation and miracles of the memory to be cherished Lord Yvo Hælorii Presbyter of the diocese of Tréguier, and deputed by Apostolic authority to the things written below, make known to all, That in the year of the Lord one thousand three hundred and thirty on the twenty-third of the month of June, the thirteenth Indiction, declare, that in the year 1330, in the fourteenth year of the Pontificate of the most holy Father and Lord Lord John by divine providence Pope the twenty-second, in the city of Tréguier, in the house or manor of the late William de Tornamina, formerly Treasurer of the said Church of Tréguier, in the presence of the witnesses underwritten the Reverend Father in Christ Lord Yvo, by the same compassion Bishop of Tréguier, exhibited and presented to us two Papal letters, one open and the other closed, with a true leaden bull on a hempen thread bulled after the manner of the Roman Curia; and a certain Procuratorial document, sealed with the seal of the Chapter of that Church of Tréguier. Which Papal letters with the reverence which befits, and the Procuratorial document we received humbly and devoutly: of which open Papal letter the tenor follows in these words.

[2] John Bishop, servant of the servants of God, to the venerable brothers the Bishops of Limoges and Angoulême, by the command of John 22, and to the beloved son the Abbot of the monastery of St. Martin of Troarn of the diocese of Bayeux, health and Apostolic benediction. The souls of the Saints exult and rejoice in the heavens, who imitating the footsteps of Christ in the harshness of life conquered the vices of the flesh. The eternal Creator surely exults, when His creature of the human race, through the triumph had over the bonds of the flesh, He beholds to have merited the palm of glory. The Angelic throng of the heavens exults and not undeservedly, when an inhabitant of earthly things, the darkness of earth being put to flight by the worship of faith and the splendor of devotion, made a citizen of the celestial fatherland and a fellow-countryman of the supernal citizens it beholds. It befits therefore that all Christ-worshippers should exult with enormous joys, taught of the virtues of St. Yvo, when anyone for the name of Christ the worldly allurements being spurned, raising himself on the wings of virtues so profited, that he received through the course of the present days the prize and a habitation on high. Surely formerly, which not without the jubilation of praise worthily glad we relate, the beloved son the noble man John Duke of Britain, and very many other persons of great reputation of those parts, both to Pope Clement the fifth of happy recollection our predecessor then living, and to Us, by the death of the same predecessor, by divine disposition assumed to the summit of the supreme Apostolate, of the merits of sanctity and life, with which the memory to be cherished Yvo Hælorii, Presbyter of the diocese of Tréguier, while he was in human affairs is said to have shone forth; and of the miracles, which at the sepulchre of him, whose body in the church of Tréguier rests, the Lord of virtues is reported continually to work, by their letters bearing laudable testimony, by special envoys and letters humbly supplicated us, that of this kind of life and miracles by Apostolic authority we would command inquiry to be made: and subsequently the same Duke and certain other persons of great esteem of the same parts, by the instance of the aforesaid supplications, with repeated turns by their letters similar prayers upon the premised things to us humbly thought to be presented, that of the life and miracles aforesaid, which not only were continued but were magnified assiduously, by diligent inquiry certitude being had, and asked by the Princes, we would decree him to be honored on earth, whom in heaven the Lord honored. And lately our dearest sons in Christ, Philip the King and Joanna the Queen of France illustrious, and many Archbishops and Bishops and Abbots and other Prelates of the kingdom of France, also the University of the Doctors and Scholars of Paris, and the same Duke by other their letters, and moreover our venerable Brother Yvo Bishop of Tréguier, and the beloved son the noble man Guido of Britain, with the zeal of eximious devotion personally coming to the Apostolic See, to the hearing of our Apostolate by devout insinuations brought, that the same Yvo Presbyter so while he lived subjected his own judgment to the divine commands, so the delights of the world being despised and worldly affections altogether relegated immolated himself a host grateful and acceptable to God, that through his great and preeminent merits many and evident miracles the Lord works.

[3] Although therefore it be worthy that with human praises he be reverently extolled on earth, proceeding to information; whom the loftiness of divine providence on account of the merits of his life willed to be honored; and We through this kind of great testimonies have received no small information of the premised things; wishing however upon these to proceed with all the caution we can, and all maturity in this part being kept solicitously to investigate the truth; to your Discretion, of which we have full confidence in the Lord, by Apostolic writings we command, that you or two of you, in the place or places where you shall see it expedient, of the life and conversation and miracles of the same Yvo Presbyter, and the other circumstances touching this business, according to the form, which we send to you enclosed under our bull, inquire more diligently the truth; and what upon the premised things you shall find faithfully redacted into writing, under your seals, by fit men to the Apostolic See send; that by your inquisition faithfully instructed, as the matter demands and shall have seemed expedient, more safely in that business we may be able to proceed. Given at Avignon on the fourth Kalends of … in the fourteenth year of our pontificate.

[4] To all about to inspect and hear the present letters, the humble Chapter of Tréguier health in the Omnipotent Savior. by the Bishop of Tréguier as Procurator of his Chapter, Know that we causing the Chapter to be celebrated, a diligent treatment being had among us and the utility of the aforesaid Tréguier considered, the reverend Father in Christ and Lord, Lord Yvo, by the grace of God and the Apostolic See Bishop of Tréguier, our Procurator we make, constitute and ordain and special envoy, to promote and procure in the Roman Curia and elsewhere the business of the canonization of the good memory Lord Yvo Hælorii formerly Presbyter, giving to the same our Procurator plenary power and special mandate of promoting the said business, also of procuring and all other and singular things, which about it shall have been necessary and also opportune, excepted and removed from the same our Procurator the power of obligating and burdening us and the goods of the said Church of Tréguier, as far as our interest is, which to the same Procurator by virtue of the present Procuratorial document we do not concede nor give: holding ratified and firm and about to hold whatever about the said business, in the manner and form aforesaid, by the said Procurator shall have been acted and done: and this to all whose interest it is we signify by the present letters, sealed with our seal, which in and for the Chapter we use. Given on the Saturday after the feast of the Conception of the blessed Mary the Virgin, in the year of the Lord one thousand three hundred and twenty-nine.

[5] Which Papal letter and Procuratorial document being read and by us understood, the Papal letter we opened, we received the Witnesses produced; and it being secretly read and the contents in it heard and seen, the same Lord Yvo Bishop of Tréguier, an oath of calumny and of telling the truth being taken from him as the matter demands, produced before us many Witnesses; and oaths being received from them on the holy Gospels of God in form of law of bearing witness upon the contents in those Papal letters, with each of them secretly and apart upon the life and conversation and miracles of Lord Yvo and the other circumstances touching this kind of business, according to the form given to us, as best we could, we inquired more diligently the truth: whose names and sayings in their depositions within are contained. Then a certain people of the church, city, then a crowd of more than five hundred, and diocese of Tréguier and the neighboring parts, in a great multitude and throng of five hundred in number, as it appeared and beyond, appeared before us: and thence withdrawing apart, and deliberation and treatment being had among them, afterward coming back before us, with hands raised toward the church of Tréguier and to the Saints, by their oaths unanimously and concordantly testified and said, that it had been and was public voice and fame in Britain, England, France, Spain, Gascony, Normandy and in the land of Languedoc and many other neighboring parts, that Lord Yvo, at the time in which he lived and even to the time and at the time of his death, had been and was a good and faithful Catholic, and a holy man, and of a good holy life, testifying of the public fame: and of honest conversation: and that in his life and after his death, at his invocation and on account of his merits, many miracles had been done and daily incessantly are done through him: moreover for greater caution, the venerable and religious man Lord Merianus, Abbot of the monastery of the Holy Cross of the Order of St. Augustine of the diocese of Tréguier, there present, by the command and will of that people there present,

an oath being first taken from him on the holy Gospels of God the book being bodily touched, upon his soul and upon the souls of all and singular of them, testified, and attested all the aforesaid. And upon those public voice and fame, also with many other witnesses first sworn, we inquired more diligently the truth: who deposed, as in their depositions more fully is contained.

[6] We also, the church of Tréguier, where is the sepulchre and the body of the said Lord Yvo rests, and that they had seen in person the concourse of pilgrims, often visiting, both knew and saw in great multitude, on account of the devotion which they found and find toward the same Lord Yvo and to his sepulchre, pilgrims running together: and many blind, contracted, demented, furious, and also several others languishing with various and diverse infirmities remaining there, and St. Yvo for their sight and health to be received most devoutly invoking. We saw also there ships twenty-seven, as it appeared, of silver, which therefore we could not clearly discern since they were hung on high: and also waxen ships ninety in number and beyond, and many other waxen images of eyes, hands, arms, shins and feet: and also many shrouds, waxen breasts, crutches or wooden supports, and an abundance of votive offerings: and many other waxen votive offerings, round about that sepulchre existing or hung, in sign and memory of the miracles there once done, at the invocations of the said Lord Yvo, as it seemed and was publicly said. Some also of our familiars, by their oaths taken before us by them, said before us, that on their first coming to Tréguier they visited the sepulchre of the said Lord Yvo, and with great diligence inspected and noted it and the stone in which is sculpted the image of the head of the said Lord Yvo to be kissed, in memory and devotion of the same, and all his other circumstances; asserting, they heard also witnesses of the elevated sepulchral stone, that from that coming hither the aforesaid stone was and is miraculously, not by the ministry of a man, elevated by two fingers and beyond. And this they know, as they said, because it was then more pressed down, and with some greater gravity and inclination it was kissed than now, and certain of them measured this: which also certain others by oaths taken before us asserted to be true. Of this kind of elevation it was and is there public voice and fame. Moreover there appeared the beloved in Christ Peter Hermon, John Rachel, William Petri, William of the mount of B. Michael, Derian of Tregrom, Alan Peralti, Yvo Camentarii, Vicars and Presbyters of the said church of Tréguier; and Hamo Nicolai and Yvo Nicolai, Clerics of the said city of Tréguier; and oaths being taken from them and any of them on the holy Gospels of God bodily touched, and the Ministers of the church of Tréguier of the plurality of miracles. they said and each of them by their oath before us, that from the time of the death of the said Lord Yvo and about they had been Vicars and Presbyters of that church: and through that time they had seen and heard many blind, lame, demented, furious, contracted, weak, and infinite sick, with various and diverse infirmities afflicted; and also certain dead, who at the invocation of the said Lord Yvo frequently, namely the lame walked; the blind received sight, the demented, furious, contracted, weak and very many other sick received health: which however on account of their plurality and multitude and the ignorance of the persons they could not singly express the single things, as they said, or even declare.

[7] And in testimony of the premised things we the aforesaid Commissaries to the present letters, together with the signs and subscriptions of the Notaries underwritten, our seals have thought to be appended. Given on the fourth day of the entering month of August, and they take care that all things be duly signed. from the said twenty-third day of the month of June by us duly continued, in the Year, Indiction, and Pontificate aforesaid, there being present the venerable men Masters James Brachi-fortis of Angoulême, William Sambuc Canons of the churches of Autun, and Bartholomew de Cella, Prior of the secular church of B. Mary of Gratay of the diocese of Bourges of Toulouse, and several others called specially and asked as Witnesses to the premised things.

And I Dalemant of the diocese of Limoges, public Notary by Apostolic authority aforesaid, present at the reception and all the other things superscribed, when they were said and done, together with the aforenamed Witnesses and public Notaries underwritten was present, and the present Process with my own hand wrote, by the command of the said Lord Commissaries, and into this public form redacted, and with my wonted sign signed it asked and required.

And I Peter de Clousello, Cleric of Angoulême public Notary by Imperial authority, was present at all and singular the premised things, together with the Notary and Witnesses aforesaid, and to this Process, written with the hand of the said Notary, I subscribed myself by the command of the said Lord Commissaries, and the wonted sign in the present Process I appended.

And I Roger Potin, Cleric of the diocese of Bayeux, public Notary by authority of the sacred Empire, was present at all and singular the premised things, together with the Notaries and Witnesses aforesaid, and to this Process with my own hand I subscribed myself, by the command of the said Lord Commissaries, and the wonted sign in the present process I appended.

ANNOTATIONS.

p. The monastery of the Holy Cross, near the town of Guingamp built in the year 1135.

q. There seem here again to have been placed, the same things as at the beginning, the names of the Commissaries.

r. Tarabinta, perhaps a Breton word, elsewhere not yet read.

s. The transcript simply Tholos.

t. This one then alone below ch. 9 at the end is found to have signed the depositions of the first 52 Witnesses.

CHAPTER II.

The birth of St. Yvo, his Studies, offices, the gratuitous patronage of the poor.

In the name of the Lord amen. There follow the depositions of the aforesaid witnesses, Among the witnesses heard from the 23rd of June to the 4th of August; sworn and examined upon the life and conversation of the good memory Lord Yvo Hælorii Presbyter, buried in the church of Tréguier, by the Reverend Fathers in Christ, the Lords Roger of Limoges, Ayquilinus of Angoulême Bishops, and Aymericus Abbot of the monastery of St. Martin of Troarn of the diocese of Bayeux, by Apostolic authority Commissaries deputed: which examination was begun on the Saturday, on the vigil of John the Baptist, and was completed on the Saturday after the feast of B. Peter in Chains, at Tréguier in the year of the Lord 1330.

[9] The first Witness, the discreet man Master John of Villa-Senis, and a Jurist, Parishioner of Plebs-parva of the diocese of Tréguier, the first the Master of the Saint himself, of the age of 90 years, as he said and by the aspect of his body appeared, a witness produced, sworn and diligently examined, upon the life and conversation of Lord Yvo Hælorii Presbyter aforesaid, by his oath deposed … that Lord Yvo was procreated of faithful and Catholic parents and of legitimate matrimony. he testifies the nobility of his birth, Being asked how he knows the premised things, he said, because he knew the father and mother of Lord Yvo, whom he saw several times in the church of Tréguier and outside conversing Catholicly, and that at the solemnization of their matrimony he was present, by which matrimony subsisting Lord Yvo was born. Being asked about the names of the said parents, he said that the father was called Hælori, but the mother Hadou: which parents also he said had been Noble. He deposed also that the aforesaid mother of the said Lord Yvo said to the same Witness on a certain day, the sanctity of the son revealed to his mother, of which he said he did not remember, that Lord Yvo would be a Saint, because so to the same mother in dreams it had been revealed. Being asked about the place in which the mother said these things, he said in the house of the parents of the said Lord Yvo, which house is called Villa-Martini, of the parish of Tréguier; the father and mother aforesaid and the said Lord Yvo standing by: and he said that it was fifty years or about, that he heard the premised things. He said also that he knew Lord Yvo from his boyhood and that he had conversed with him at Orleans, Tréguier, and elsewhere, in the same chamber, bed, and schools; and that he himself taught the said Lord Yvo his first letters, and sometime instructed him in Grammatical things and the civil law in the aforesaid places: in which places also he saw the aforesaid Lord Yvo bearing himself honestly and greatly profiting in the study of letters. and his studies at Orleans: Likewise he said that Lord Yvo and the Witness himself heard at Orleans the book of the Institutions from the good memory Peter de Capella Cardinal of the sacrosanct Roman Church, whose Lord Roger, now Bishop of Limoges, was nephew, and from the Lord de Blavia, formerly Bishop of Angoulême, the Decretals, whose Lord Ayquilinus, now Bishop of Angoulême, was nephew, the Commissaries of this business.

[10] Witness 3 Yvo Sueti, Cleric of Roche-Derian of the diocese of Tréguier, of the age of seventy years, others of the study at Paris, said that he had been at Paris for a year or about continuous, in the same chamber and in the same place, in the society of Lord Yvo, fifty years are elapsed or about: and that both heard together

Logicals: and that then Master Yvo was fourteen

years of age. So he, too indistinctly as to time,

which much more accurately expressed Witness X, Henry

Ficheti, parochial Clerk of Pemerit-Gyeudi

of the diocese of Tréguier, of the age of LXXX years or thereabouts, saying

that it is sixty years or thereabouts, that he himself

knew Master Yvo in the Paris Studium, and of his progress there, where he was

first a scholar in the Arts: and he saw him afterward

sometimes determining, in the Street of Straw,

and afterward saw him hearing the decretals in

the street of Clavus or Brunellus. And these indeed simply give testimony

to his honest conversation there; but Witness

XII, Radulph Portarn, Clerk of Lammeur

of the diocese of Dol, of the age of LX years, after he said that

he knew the same Master Yvo in the Paris Studium

hearing Theology, added, that it was then

commonly said, the hardness of his bed and abstinence from meats by his compatriots and others who knew him, that the same Master Yvo did not lie

in a bed, but on the ground with a little straw, although

he had a good bed in his chamber, as the same

Witness once asserted he had seen. Likewise he said that

it was also commonly said by those who associated

with him, that the portion of meats which was set

before him at table, he distributed whole

to the poor. Asked in which chamber he then dwelt,

he said, that he did not well remember: he believes nevertheless that

it was near the house of the Hospitallers.

[11] Witness XVIII, William Petri, perpetual

Vicar in the church of Tréguier, aged L years, said, continued at Orléans,

that he associated with him at Orléans for two

years or thereabouts in the Studium, in the same chamber: and that

then he was beginning to abstain: because sometimes his companions

ate meats and drank wine, and he himself abstained, and also at that time fasted on Friday:

nor did he see that he ate meats or drank wine:

and then he was of the age of XXIV years or thereabouts. He said also

that he gladly went to Masses and sermons, and commonly

said Matins and the Hours early in the morning.

Likewise that he himself, who daily and continually went with

him, never saw him disturbed with his companions, with notable modesty, nor

swear by God nor by the Saints, nor utter any unseemly

word, nor ever saw in him

any sign contrary to chastity. Similar things deposed

Witness XXXV, Yvo of Tregoezel, parishioner of

Plebs-parva, of the age of LV years, having stated beforehand that he had been with the same

twice in study at Orléans, not however in the same

house: but he frequently saw him and associated with him,

namely the first time for two years or

thereabouts, and the second for two years and a half.

[12] Witness II, Made Official, he bestows the emoluments of the seal on the poor, the discreet man Master Hervey of

Contrevan, Sacristan of the church of Tréguier, of the age of LV years

and beyond, said that when he was Official, of the third

part of the Seal of the Court of Tréguier, which to the same

by reason of his Officialate k belonged, and of his other

goods he made large alms to the poor: and that

he terminated common causes by peace or concord,

so that whatever cause, unless it were matrimonial,

or such that it had to be terminated by judgment, scarcely

at the third term came into his hands. To this, as to the

fruits of the seal, attests Witness XVIII, because he frequently saw

him receiving money for the seal, and

immediately, once received, he distributed it to the poor. But Hamo

Nicolai, Witness VIII, Clerk of the city of Tréguier,

aged L years and beyond, he pacifies litigants, confirms that the parties litigating before him

he with all his efforts called back to peace and concord with one another:

because he saw and heard this many times

when he was then Apparitor of the said Court. Indeed Witness XXXII,

Dionysius Jameray, citizen of Tréguier, aged LX years, adds,

that he never saw him disturbed in anything nor

angered, except when he heard that anyone unjustly

moved against his neighbor; and then he was angry

with him who unjustly strove to lead a bad cause,

and compelled and induced him by his holy and

peaceful words to concord.

[13] By his own experience proved this Witness XIII,

Geoffrey of Insula, those opposed to peace parishioner of Ploegaznou

of the diocese of Tréguier, aged LXXVII years, because when for a long

time he had litigated with Master Radulph Portarn, Clerk

of Lammeur of the diocese of Dol, and James his brother,

sons of the wife of the said Geoffrey, and no one could conform peace

between them; on a certain day, when the same Geoffrey

and his wife and the aforesaid sons were in the church

of Tréguier, Master Yvo said to the same Geoffrey these similar

words: Geoffrey, for the love of God make peace, you

and your wife with the sons of that wife: because I (if

it please you) will amicably arrange between you and them.

And then the same Geoffrey answered and said to Master

Yvo, by these words or the like: Lord Yvo,

we want no peace, the Mass of the Holy Spirit said, he softens them, except that which law and justice

will give us. And then Master Yvo said to the same Geoffrey

and his wife, Wait until I return to you,

because I am going to celebrate the Mass of the Holy Spirit,

and I will pray God that I may be able to reform between you the bonds of peace.

And the Mass of this kind being celebrated by Master Yvo,

he returned to the aforesaid spouses, who

could in no way contradict his will,

as he said. Nay rather they said to him, Lord, concerning the discord

which is turned between us, do entirely

your will. Whence it seemed to the same Witness, that through

the prayers of the same Master Yvo their wills were changed,

and that God willed that through him peace

should be made between them. Similar things immediately before had said the aforesaid

Radulph, Witness XII, adding expressly, that Master Yvo

afterward made good peace and concord between the parties,

and terminated this kind of controversy with an end pleasing to each of the parties,

which was concerning certain movable

and immovable goods.

[14] he patronizes the poor without charge, Witness III, named in n. 10, said, that

Master Yvo was the defender and patron of widows, orphans,

wards, the poor, and other wretched

persons, without charge. And he saw and heard many times

that he offered himself to them, saying: I will help you

for God's sake. And specially he remembers a certain widow

by name Levevez, of the parish of Peverit, who litigated

with a certain usurer of the said place called Rivallus

Hardel, by reason of a certain garden or l Courtil. Of which

Levevez Master Yvo conducted the cause unto the definitive,

freely, he himself seeing, hearing, knowing and assisting the same

woman, who was of his lineage. Witness XXX, Geoffrey

Jupiter, Rector of the church of Tredudel of the diocese of Tréguier,

aged fifty years, likewise said, that

he saw a certain poor noble, called Richard

le Roux, of the parish of Tredretz, who had a suit

with the Abbot of Blessed Mary of m Relec of the diocese

of Léon. against more powerful adversaries; And while by pretext of poverty he could not

conduct his cause, he came to Master Yvo, and besought

the same, that for God's sake and out of regard

for piety he would help and foster him in his justice

against the said Abbot, who was striving to take away

his land from him; and he could not defend himself, being

as it were stripped of all his substance. And then Master

Yvo asked of the same whether he had a just cause.

He answered, that he so believed, and of this was

ready to assure him by his own oath:

which had to be done before Master Yvo would intermeddle

in the aforesaid cause. And this kind of

oath being made, immediately Master Yvo began to conduct the cause

of the said poor man, and brought it to an end, and won the aforesaid cause,

defending the said poor man's justice.

The same, as of that of which in those parts there was public report

n, said Witness XXXI, Alan Thomæ of Plebs-Loci

of the diocese of Tréguier, of the age of LXX years; adding, that it was necessary

also that Master Yvo should hear witnesses, who knew

the said cause to be good for the said poor noble.

[15] Lady Oliva, widow of Lord Olivarius Arrel, Knight,

of the parish of Plebs-magna, of the diocese of Tréguier, aged LX years,

Witness XXXIII, said, that she saw that Master Yvo conducted

without charge the cause of a certain poor man against the aforesaid Lord Olivarius

her husband, and brought them after a long litigation

to concord. Next to this matron Witness

XXXIV, John of Quoitfrec, Squire of the parish

of Plebs-Petri, aged L years, who knew Master Yvo

for three years before his death; recalls that

he conducted without charge a matrimonial cause of a certain poor

woman, called Daughter Manoy, of the parish of

Lohanec, of which daughter's own name he does not remember.

Of the same woman perhaps spoke Witness

XIX, the Religious man Brother Peter, reproaches sometimes endured for this cause. Abbot of the monastery of

Begar, of the Order of Cistercians of the diocese of Tréguier, aged

LV years, when he said, that he remembers, that a certain woman

sought a certain young man in matrimony,

of whose names he does not recall: and Master Yvo,

knowing the said woman to have a right, sustained her cause

for the love of God. And from this the said young man said

reproachful words to Master Yvo, calling him a o Scullion

or [p] Truant: which Master Yvo, the very

Witness being present, bore patiently, nor did anything for this

answer, but only smiled: and the cause

of the said woman, of his parish, in the accustomed manner he defended.

And when he had not whence to pay the memorials, of which

he was in need; he asked the Notaries of the Court in which they litigated,

that they should write those memorials for the love of God,

and to this he induced them. Likewise Witness XXXV aforenamed

above, said, that most gladly and most frequently

he sustained the causes of such persons without salary, in

the Court of the Bishop of Tréguier and in other Courts of the country, as

the same Witness who speaks saw many times and heard.

And he remembers that once he saw Master Yvo defending

the cause of a certain poor widow woman,

called Adelicia Hamonis of the city of Tréguier,

in the Court of Lord William of Tornamina, against the son

of Prigentius of Plœsal. And then the Advocate of the adverse party

said many reproaches to Master Yvo, who said: Do not

say reproaches to me, and I foster a just cause.

In like manner Witness XXXVII, Yvo Hatoicy of the city

of Tréguier, aged L years, saw and heard, that Master Yvo

sustained the cause of a certain poor man, called Constritin, against the father

of the very Witness, for the reason that the said poor man,

as he believes, had a just cause.

[16] It is fitting here from the often-praised work of Albert le Grand on

the Life, deeds, death and miracles of the Saints of Armorican Brittany, from her own mouth he convicts a girl denying the marriage.

to add two cases, not unlike the foregoing,

which it pleases to believe from a faithful author, though unknown to me, taken.

He once judged a matrimonial cause in

favor of a certain young man, claiming a certain girl

for himself in marriage: from which sentence when she had appealed

to Tours, to the Official of that place; he, having admitted

Yvo to the session, and the acts being discussed, finding nothing

whence the marriage could be established, asked

the Saint, what had moved him to bear such a

sentence. He indeed, Because she herself,

he said, confessed to me that there is a marriage. Then

the man of Tréguier before all asked the girl;

who boldly denied the deed. But when also

S. Yvo had asked her, She confessed the matter to be so.

The man of Tréguier flushed at this inconstancy; and

she, Altogether, she said, I deny that he is my

husband. To whom the Saint, Come here, daughter, did you not

confess to me that you had taken him as husband? Nay, she says,

he is my husband, and I am his wife; nor while

I live shall I have another husband. At these things astonished

the man of Tours, and marveling at the sanctity of Yvo shining forth in this

act, withdrew from the chair, that he himself might confirm his own

sentence. In the same city another matter

happened exceedingly wonderful, a widow about to be unjustly condemned to 1200 gold pieces when he had set out thither from a like cause,

from a sentence of his, borne against her in favor

of an equally noble youth. The Saint was accustomed, coming to Tours,

to use the lodging of a certain widowed and rich

inn-keeper; who when this time she saw him, beginning to weep,

Ah! she said, dear guest, I am utterly ruined,

through a certain impostor, by whom tomorrow I shall be condemned

to a fine of one thousand two hundred gold pieces, without

any fault of mine. Pitying her, Yvo

bade her trust in the Lord, and set forth her cause; this he

would, to the best of his powers, win for her, if it be just. Two, she said,

months it is, that two men, merchants in appearance,

lodged with me, entrusted to me a certain bag,

very heavy and locked with a key;

adding that I should not return it to either of them except with the other present,

which I promised them I would keep for them. Five

or six days after, while I stand at the door of my house,

the same men passing with three or four

others said, Hey, hostess, prepare for us supper

for the evening: and so they passed on. A little after there is present

one of them, and says, Lady, for a little while

show me the bag; for even now we are about to pay our debt

to those merchants whom you saw. I, suspecting nothing

evil, handed over the bag; nor afterward thenceforth

did I see it or him again. In the evening returns the other, and

asks, whether I have seen his companion; No, I say,

since I handed the bag over to him. Then he: The bag? I am ruined,

he says, the most despoiled of all who live: this

you had not promised us, the two delivering it to you: therefore I

straight to the Bailiff, Yvo taking up the cause, to prosecute you as guilty of bad faith. He went

to the Lieutenant of the Bailiff of Tours, summoned to

judgment, on oath affirmed that there had been enclosed in that bag

one thousand two hundred gold shields, with several documents of the greatest

importance: and behold, the cause is brought thither, so that on the

morrow I am to be condemned. The account heard, the Saint

asked that he be furnished his Advocate, who being brought,

when he had understood all the same things, obtained

that he be allowed to plead the widow's cause for her. He appeared therefore

in judgment, the adverse party also appeared. Then

Yvo to the Judge; There is brought into the cause, he said,

for this widow, after applying the greatest

diligence she could, found at last the bag of which

it is treated, about to exhibit it when by justice she shall be held to.

Then the patron of the plaintiff: Unless, he said, it be exhibited

at once, in vain is this delay now thrown in to the

sentence now about to be borne. But Yvo: The cause, he said,

is such: To the hostess, receiving the bag, it was enjoined,

the plaintiff says, that she should not return the bag to either except in the presence of the other:

let him therefore bring the companion, and to both

(as it was agreed) the bag will be returned. The judge deemed a fair thing

asked, and the plaintiff saw himself caught in his own fraud; and pale

and trembling so bore himself, that to all he came into suspicion

of evil deceit; and being cast into prison,

other and other indications coming in, it was detected

who he was, and he being convicted of having had in that bag nothing but old

nails and other scraps of iron, on the third

day was hanged on the gallows. Thus far Albert, with

whom be the faith of the fact, until another more certain author be found.

ANNOTATIONS.

p. Truanus, by many Trutanus, is taken for a wandering beggar.

CHAPTER III.

The humility and austerity of S. Yvo in dress

and in the use of the hair-shirt.

[17] Witness XXIX, the Religious man Brother Guidomanis

Morelli, of the Order of Friars Minor of the

Convent of Guengamp, After an eight-year struggle of flesh and spirit, aged LXV years, said that

he himself asked in secret of Master Yvo, while he was sick

in his house of Villa-Martini, how he began so

strict and holy a life. Who with great difficulty

answered the same, that when he was Official of the Archdeacon

of Rennes, and was hearing there the fourth book

of the Sentences and the Bible in the House of Friars

Minor, on account of the divine words which he heard, from

then he began to despise worldly things and to desire heavenly things:

and many times he had a great disputation within

himself between reason and sensuality: and in that disputation

and combat he stood for eight years. But in the ninth

year his reason was lord over sensuality; and he began in

his robes to preach to his own. But in the tenth year with perfect

reason he ruled himself, he changes his garb: and gave his good robes for God's

love, and assumed cheap robes; namely a tunic

with sleeves wide and ample without b buttons, and

an c over-cloak, fairly long and entirely decent, of

white cloth called d Burell, that he might bring back the Lord's sheep

to the love of Christ. Moreover Constance, wife

of Stephen the Irishman of the city of Tréguier, aged LV years, Witness

XLV, said that before the said time, namely when he

changed his garment, on a certain day, of which she does not remember,

she saw Master Yvo clothed in a tunic, super-tunic and

over-cloak of Persian e, with a hood of the same cloth

lined f, and shod g with boots, entering the House-of-God

or Hospital of Tréguier. Whom a little after she

saw going out of the said House or Hospital without hood

and super-tunic, bestowing his precious garments on the poor, with bare feet, going hastily

again to his house of Villa-Martini, and

holding a flap of the over-cloak over his head in place of a hood.

And then the said Witness and her mother went to

the said Hospital, and found that Master Yvo had given

to one poor crippled man the hood, and to another certain

the lining of the super-tunic, and to another the super-tunic,

and to another certain blind man he had given those boots: all which

aforesaid she asserted she had seen, and from the said poor heard.

So also Witness XVI remembers he had heard

many times, in the time when he dwelt in the manor h

called Treguern near Villa-Martini, that when

Master Yvo was Official of the Bishop of Tréguier, and had

from the same good furred garments, he gave the furrings of those

garments to the poor, wearing the garments themselves

for some time without them, and feigning he had done

something else with the furrings.

[18] To this point makes also Witness XXXVI, Derianus Tregrom,

Priest of the diocese of Tréguier, of the age of L years and beyond,

who knew Master Yvo first at that time when he was

Official of the Bishop of Tréguier, for them assuming cheap and coarse ones, saying, that then

he was clothed in the robes of the Bishop … and that afterward

the robe which he had from the Bishop of Tréguier

he distributed to the poor, as he heard said: and assumed

of coarse white burell, and i high large and laced

shoes, and a k shirt made of tow, coarse

and rough: and such a garb he wore until

the time of his death for fifteen years or thereabouts.

Asked how he knows the aforesaid; he said because he saw

him so many times, that he could not remember the least of them,

both living and dead in the aforesaid garb.

And in nearly this manner speak very many Witnesses

concerning the form and color and quality of the garb, after his entire conversion

assumed, whom to name singly would be long.

The same witnesses likewise agree in describing the hardness

of his bed, which until death the Saint kept. But

that he kept it much before he changed his garb,

proves Witness XVII, Alan of Rocha-Hugonis, accustomed even before to lie most hardly. a Domicellus

aged LX years, who saw him Official of the Archdeacon

of Rennes: and when Lord William of Tornamina,

the Lord of the same Witness, together with the very Witness,

were making passage through the city of Rennes;

the same Archdeacon invited the same Lord William.

And when Lord William and the very Witness were in

the house of the said Archdeacon, the household of the same Archdeacon

led the very Witness to the place where Master Yvo

lay, and showed the same his bed, and

said: See the bed, where lies Master Yvo

the Official, who is of your parts. And they uncovered

on one side the bed: in which bed were

scraps of wood upon the ground, and a little straw

above, with a certain coverlet of small value

of l hemp. But afterward the same Master Yvo,

having laid down the office of his Officialate, came to the house

of his origin in the diocese of Tréguier, and at length was called

as Counselor of Lord Alan le Bruc, then Bishop

of Tréguier. And Master Yvo and the same Witness for the space of ten

years or thereabouts associated together;

and then he saw that Master Yvo changed his garb.

[19] But under that humbler garb which all saw,

his hair-shirt, of what kind the Saint covered a hair-shirt: of which many Witnesses

spoke from hearsay, some also from sight: yet no one

more distinctly than Witness LI, Hamo Lobero, of the city

of Tréguier, of the age of LX years, who said by his oath,

that once while he who speaks and Master Yvo

were coming from the village which is called m Lanvalon of the diocese

of Tréguier to the city of Tréguier and it was raining hard,

Master Yvo took off his over-cloak, which was

very wet: and then he who speaks saw the hair-shirt,

which he wore about his flesh. Asked,

how and by what part he saw the said hair-shirt, and on what occasions seen, he said

that he saw it from beneath; because while he took off the said

over-cloak, the tunic raised itself, and then by the

lower part the hair-shirt somewhat appeared, which was

of brown hairs. Asked, how much time it is

and of the place, he said, he does not well remember, but it seems to him

that it was in winter; it is fully forty years

and beyond, in the house of a certain poor woman, whose

name and also the name of the place he knows not, yet that house

is near the road by which from the village of Lanvalon

one goes to the city of Tréguier. So also Witness IV,

the Noble man, Lord John of Pestuven, Knight, Lord

of the same place, aged L years, once after the celebration

of Mass, when Master Yvo was putting off the priestly vestments,

saw the said hair-shirt in the chapel of the manor of Guezet,

which however displeased him greatly. But Witness

XVIII already named above in n. II, asked how

he knows that Master Yvo wore a hair-shirt; said

that once his Lord the Official of Tréguier,

called Yvo, visited Master Yvo in a certain infirmity

in a certain manor of his called Villa-Martini,

and then the same Official put his hand upon the breast

of Master Yvo, as is the custom to feel the sick: and

then the speaking Witness saw through the n neck-opening the said hair-shirt,

which he wore next to his flesh.

[20] Likewise Witness III said, that once he saw by chance

through the neck-opening of the same Master Yvo the hair-shirt which he wore

next to the flesh: which when Master Yvo perceived, full of lice immediately

he covered and hid it. He said also that he saw

many lice, coming out of the said hair-shirt; and

that many times he wished to remove them for him from his garments, but

Master Yvo did not permit, saying; Let them be in

their o warren. In like manner Witness V, Geoffrey of

Loanno, Rector of the Church of Rupe-Deriani of the diocese of Tréguier,

aged LXX years, said that many times he saw Master Yvo,

putting his hand into his bosom through the hood-opening, to bring back the lice

into his bosom, saying his bosom was

What moreover was done with that hair-shirt, explaining, Witness

II afore-named in n. 12, said that he heard said by

the Religious man Lord Peter, Abbot of the monastery of S. Mary

of Begar, that he had it from a servant of Master Yvo, afterward kept for Relics in the Abbey of Begar.

when the same Master Yvo sent him secretly by the said servant,

in the week in which he departed, to a certain Recluse

dwelling in a certain reclusory near Rocha-Deriani;

and that the said hair-shirt is still in the said Monastery

[p] of Begar. The most humble man would not, namely, die in it, lest

what he living desired to remain hidden, should, he being dead,

become manifest to all.

[21] But over the hair-shirt either always or at intervals

he wore a shirt of very coarse linen called [q] reparo,

as Witness XXXV speaks, or, as others nearly, of tow: as also his shirt of hemp,

for this firmly believes Witness XI, Yvo Auspice,

formerly a continual servant of Master Yvo for the space

of twelve years before his death, now a hermit

dwelling in a certain reclusory [r] near Guengamp,

aged LX years, who likewise said that the aforesaid shirt

he saw washed once by the wife of the brother of the same Master

Yvo, which before the washing he saw so covered

with lice that it was a horror to behold: and that

the aforesaid shirt was soft or light by reason of its age:

but it being washed Master Yvo did not resume it, but to a certain

poor man distributed it. There assents another formerly servant

of Yvo, Witness XX, Hamo Tolleflam, of the parish

of Plessin of the diocese of Tréguier, a Recluse of good fame, of the age

of LX years or thereabouts: who said that for four

continuous years and more he was his servant, and after

certain pilgrimages which he made, visiting in the

Jubilee year and otherwise the thresholds of the Apostles Peter and

Paul, visiting also Blessed James, twice he associated

with him at intervals for two years; so that

when he returned from the last pilgrimage of the seven

Saints [s] of Brittany, he found the same Master Yvo sick

of the last infirmity of which he died. which thereupon, still wet from washing, he would put on.

And then when he himself dwelt with him, once while

Master Yvo preached and put his hand into his bosom

he saw the said hair-shirt; and the shirt he saw almost daily,

but whether the hair-shirt was beneath daily, he knew not.

He said also that once he gave his tunic

and his coarse shirt of tow, which were full

of lice, to the mother of the said Witness to wash, and remained

with the over-cloak next to his flesh. And while the said mother

wished to put the said tunic and shirt to dry,

Master Yvo did not permit; but took the aforesaid:

and he believes that he put them on thus wet,

and through the whole night lay in the same: because

he said, that he had no other garments at home, and that

in the morning he saw him celebrating with the same.

[22] Likewise the poor little Dathovada, Witness XLIII,

widow of Rivallo the jester of the Parish of Plebis-prisiac,

of the diocese of Vannes, of the age of LXXX years, who with her husband

and four children for eleven years before his death

continually dwelt in the house of the same Master Yvo, being lodged

there for the love of God, said that she sometimes washed his shirt,

and saw so many lice in the same

that it was a horror to behold: which shirt

Master Yvo had dried by night somewhat at the fire,

and immediately put on the whole still wet or damp.

Likewise she said she had seen and known for fifteen

days before the death of Master Yvo, that he wore the hair-shirt

very heavy and rough: and when by

it he was too much weighed down, he laid it aside one day and

resumed it another. Until indeed, foreknowing his death, he

altogether laid it aside, as has been said: but the shirt of very coarse

tow made (as says Witness XVI, the Noble woman

Lady Theophana of Pestuven, and his belt of wool likewise. parishioner of S.

Michael on the seashore of the diocese of Tréguier, aged LX years)

was found put upon the same Master Yvo when he was dead;

and according to the assertion of Witness XXXVI, was placed among

the Relics of the church: and of this very one Witness XVI, the aforesaid

Lady Theophania, had one scrap and a part

also of the belt, which was of a small woolen band,

which aforesaid she keeps and guards honorably, as she said, in place

of Relics, on account of the sanctity of the upright

man.

ANNOTATIONS.

p. The Abbey of S. Mary of Begar, otherwise Begardum or Pure Wood, of the Cistercian Order, 5 or 6 leagues from the city.

q. Reparo, perhaps so called a coarser linen, because from it are made certain coverings of garments or other things, which we wish to keep better preserved.

r. Reclusagium, otherwise Reclusorium: where some recluse or enclosed person dwells: thus Inclusagium also and Inclusorium is said.

s. The Seven Saints of Brittany are the seven Bishops who came from Greater Britain into Armorica, namely SS. Corentinus, Paulus-Aurelianus, Tugdualus, Briocus, Maclovius, Sampson and Paternus: each of whom is venerated on his own days: concerning whom our Fr. Peter Champion, consulted by letter, answered:

To them the piety of our forefathers consecrated many altars everywhere and some chapels, among which the principal church of the city of Brest, now Parochial, formerly only a chapel. Celebrated and frequent otherwise, especially in the age of S. Yvo, was the pilgrimage to the seven Cathedral temples of the cities of which they were Bishops; but whether also to some other place in which they are venerated together on a certain day, I have not yet found out.

CHAPTER IV.

The hardness of the bed, and the meagerness of food, the assiduity of fasting

practiced by S. Yvo.

[23] But how and how hardly the Saint lay, Witness II says he has experienced, Yvo accustomed to a most hard bed at his own home, affirming

that for three or four nights he lay with Master Yvo

in the place of Lohanec; and before they went to bed

they kept vigil through the greatest part of the night by reading and

dwelling on divine conversations. He said also that he firmly

believes, that at the time when he was overcome by sleep

Master Yvo went to bed, for love of him, sooner than was wont.

He said also that when Master Yvo went to bed in

his bed, which was in a certain a baletum next to the church

of coarse rods or knotty sticks woven together

with a little straw, covered about the head with a certain

covering of small value; he put off his over-cloak,

and put it on in reverse order, putting his feet

through the openings of the arms. He said also further,

that that bed was so hard, that his sides

ached him sorely; and that it was so full of lice,

that he had to withdraw, after he had lain with Master

Yvo in the said bed for three or four nights;

nor would he return again to lie there, because

he could no longer endure a life so hard. The aforesaid

servant of his too, Hamo Tolleflam, Witness

XX, said that he slept little, because almost the whole

night he spent in vigils, readings, prayers, and

exhortations: and then when he was

overcome by sleep, he saw him lying for many

times within his church of Lohanec, clothed

and shod, upon a certain stone tomb:

he saw him also lying there upon a certain hurdle,

woven of rods or coarse sticks, with

aforesaid, by her oath asserted, many times

she had seen, that when he was weighed down by sleep, his arms

placed about his breast and folded in the manner of a cross,

sitting and leaning on his breast over the books,

his head a little inclined, and not otherwise, he slept.

And his servant Yvo Auspice, Witness XI, said,

that scarcely or never did he sleep by day or by

night, except when he was so wearied by the labor of study or prayer

or journey, that he could no longer

keep awake: and then he slept clothed in his garments, and rarely

unshod, and upon the ground with a little straw beneath

him, for a pillow having one of his books,

sometimes with the tablets, and sometimes a stone at

his head.

[24] But this hardness not only at his own home did the Saint

observe, he lays aside commodious ones prepared elsewhere. where also, as his former servant Witness

XXX said, sometimes he lay in the chair in which he studied;

but also when he went to preach through the

villages, and lodged with the rich of the country, the said

hosts caused a good bed to be made for him; but

nevertheless he never lay in a bed. And while he was in the chamber,

after many prayers and vigils, all clothed

upon the ground he lay, and there took a little sleep,

and immediately rose to prayers: and the very Witness,

who speaks, slept in the bed made for Master Yvo.

But if there were not present a servant, whom he might place for himself in the

bed, then in the morning the bed was found, made

as before, by the household of the house, as Witness IV asserts,

having frequently experienced this in his mother's house. Who

also relates what happened to Maurice of Monte, formerly

his Squire the lettered, now dead, otherwise the Laureate. when in the company

of Master Yvo he was returning from the pilgrimage of S.

Ronanus b and they were in the village which is called Landelau.

It is better however to set this forth in the words of his sister, once also found upon the stone of S. Elau. Lady Theophania,

Witness XVI noted above: who said she had heard from the said Maurice,

that when Master Yvo and the said Squire

were in one chamber in the aforesaid village, and the same Squire

slept in his bed, and believed that Master Yvo

also slept in his bed; the same Squire heard a certain

voice three times saying thus, Arise,

because the Blessed one lies on the stone. Which being heard by the said Squire,

awakened from sleep he felt beside him, and

could not find Master Yvo there. And rising swiftly,

and going to the cemetery of the said place to a certain

hollow stone, in which S. Elau c had done

his penance while he lived, he found the same Master Yvo

sleeping on the same stone. Likewise he said,

that, although Lady Constance his mother and she herself also

many times for him caused a good bed to be prepared,

he lay on the ground clothed and shod, as

she firmly believes, with a little straw beneath him:

because they always found the bed in the state in which

they had left it.

[25] Now as concerns the manner of his diet, his servant already twice

alleged Living on coarse bread and pulse, Hamo, said that he was of great austerity

and abstinence, when he was associated with

him: because he ate nothing but coarse bread and herbs

or beans without any condiment, except that sometimes,

but rarely, he ate or feigned to eat

of butter on account of guests. He drank also cold

water, nor did he eat except once in the day,

except on Sundays, because then he supped a little.

He fasted also on bread and water three days in the week

and throughout all Lent. he often fasts on bread and water. But in the last Lent before his death, moved by compassion

for a certain poor sick man called Yvo …

whom he then nourished for the love of God, he ate sometimes,

but rarely, herbs or beans for the love of the said sick man,

that he might induce him to eat. He said also

that during those times, although he was continually with him or

nearly so, he never saw him eating meat,

cheese, or fish, or anything else except as he expressed above;

except on the day of Easter, because then on account of the solemnity

he ate one egg or two. During

those times also he did not see him drinking wine

nor beer, but only cold water.

This Yvo just before named was Witness XI, who for twelve

years had lived with him, from whose words are excerpted

all things that are had in the life concerning the particular fasts of the Saint

and are not here repeated; asked why in the twelfth

year Master Yvo did not fast on bread and

water, as in the prior eleven years; he said

it was because the said Witness, who was and had long been sick,

and was not yet quite cured, was unwilling to prepare

unless the same Master Yvo ate of the potage.

[26] But Hamo, pursuing his testimony, said

that once he sent the speaking Witness to Lohanec

to seek bread, because there was no bread in the house: sending away more delicate bread,

which Witness brought bread, and it was too delicate,

as it seemed to Master Yvo, and therefore he said to the Witness

speaking, You wish to have delicacies: did you not find

coarse bread? Who said: I found a certain

bran bread, which is worth nothing for the sustenance

of a man. And then Master Yvo sent back that bread which

he had brought, and said to the speaking Witness that he should bring

that bread more coarse, and he set himself at table,

and the poor round about. And then, while they were

at table, there entered a certain small bird through the window, he is refreshed by the sight of a little bird sent from heaven.

the very Witness seeing it, and it placed itself upon Master

Yvo. And then said the aforesaid Witness, Lord, see

the bird beside you upon your garments. And then Master

Yvo took the bird in his hand, and looked at it in

his hand for a long e pause. The bird moreover was, as

he said, of snowy color about the neck and about the breast, but

above it was green and resplendent, as it seemed to him.

And when he had looked at it for some while, he let

it go away, saying, Go in the name of God. He said also

the same Witness, that he firmly believes, that it was some

sign coming from God, on account of the good life

which he led; and also because on that day he was fasting

on bread and water; and because also never

in that house, nor even in those parts, nor before

nor after, did he see a bird like to that: and on account of the manner

also of its coming and departing, because it did not depart unless

dismissed f, though he had held it long in his open hand.

[27] Another favor, done to the Saint on occasion of fasting,

related Dathovada, now thrice named, He spends seven whole days fasting: when she said

that Master Yvo stayed in his chamber twelve days,

and for seven days was there eating nothing

nor drinking, that by herself or the household

of the same or any others, whom she might have known,

was ministered to him. After which seven days when

he had gone out of the said chamber at the instance of the Bishop of Tréguier,

who at the request of Master Yvo, believing him to have died,

came thither personally; in so good a state

and countenance he appeared, as if every day he had eaten good viands

splendidly. But the daughter of the same Dathovada, Amicia,

Witness XLI, aged XLV years, narrating the same matter more fully,

said she had seen that Master Yvo for seven days

at one time and for five at another shut himself in his chamber, and another five;

and stayed there without bread and water and any other

temporal food. And when for nearly the said seven

days he had been thus shut in, the very Witness and her mother, believing

that he had died, not being able to enter to him,

went to the Bishop of Tréguier.

Who hearing this, together with certain other Canons,

came to the place of Villa-Martini; and when the chamber

where Master Yvo was he could not enter, Yvo Conan,

the brother-in-law of the same Master Yvo, broke the window

of that chamber, to see what this was. And he saw,

according to what he afterward reported, the same Master Yvo

dwelling on prayers: to whom it displeased greatly

that he had entered, saying to the same entering one, as he reported,

I would rather that you were sick at present. And she firmly

believes, the very Witness, in no way emaciated thereby. that for the said twelve days

he was sustained by heavenly or Angelic food, for the reason

that a little before the entry of Master Yvo, she had been

in the aforesaid chamber and there was no bread there, nor water,

nor other temporal food: and she saw him entering

the said chamber, and carrying nothing with him, nor

during the said time did she see anyone ministering anything to him,

or having entrance or access to him,

nor during the said time the same Master Yvo going out of the said chamber:

and yet his countenance at the going out was not

in anything changed.

[28] The aforesaid law of abstinence, moreover, not only at home,

but abroad too he constantly kept: Even at another's table he keeps the same abstinence, as is plain from the words

of Witness VII, who was Peter Arnou, Priest Vicar

of the church of Tréguier, of the age of LX years: who said

he had had acquaintance of the same Master Yvo, fifty years

it is or thereabouts; and saw him many times and at divers

times eating in the house and at the table

of Master Theobald le Bruc, formerly Cantor of the church

of Tréguier, uncle of the said Witness. And when before

Master Yvo meats, fish, and other viands of divers

kind and wine were set; he nevertheless ate

nothing but bread and herbs or beans or peas, cooked

with salt without other condiment, and drank water: though

sometimes he feigned as much as he could to eat of the aforesaid

viands, and to drink of the wine, others being commonly

served. Asked if in other places he saw

Master Yvo making this kind of abstinence,

he said yes; in the house of Lord Alan le Bruc formerly

Bishop of Tréguier twenty times or thereabouts, as

also in the house of the aforesaid Cantor: which Lord Bishop

and Cantor and the other banqueters did not eat

of the herbs, peas, or beans, which he himself ate,

because these were specially prepared for him and apart g.

But at his own home Master Yvo took the same sometimes with salt, especially from wine,

sometimes without salt, as said Witness VIII, Hamo

Nicolai, Clerk of the city of Tréguier, aged L years and beyond;

affirming that he knew them so prepared for him, because many times

he tasted of them, and as insipid to himself he rejected

to eat them. But Witness XXXV above named,

said, that such things he saw more than a thousand times, because

he associated with him sometimes for one, and sometimes

for two weeks and more; and then he sent

for wine for the use of the said Witness: but although the said Witness

many times asked him to drink of the said wine,

never at his prayers would he drink, except once, and

a little.

[29] Of like indulgence some examples, as most

rare, admitting his little drop rarely. are alleged by the Witnesses: among whom the fourth praised in n.

19, after he had affirmed that he saw him a hundred times

and more in his father's house thus eating or

drinking, excepts, that sometimes on great solemnities,

at the great request of Lady Constance his mother,

he put in water some of his wine which he drank,

overcome by the prayers and instance of the said Lady,

as water is put in the chalice, when it is ministered

at Mass. He said also that Master Yvo received meats and other

viands, which were offered to him at table,

and yet ate nothing but bread with herbs;

but the said viands he divided in pieces, and put

in alms among the fragments of the poor. And these things

he saw in divers manors of his father's, at Pestuven,

and at Glomel, and at Guezet of the diocese of Quimper.

And he induced the aforesaid Lady Constance to abstain

from meats on the fourth day of every week,

who from then abstained. So also Witness XXIX confesses,

that for love of him twice or thrice he could have tasted wine,

up to the quantity of one small glass in

all the times. And Witness XXX in general says, that

when he was with Bishops or his rich friends,

overcome by the instance of their prayers, he put, but rarely,

so much of wine, as water is wont to be put in wine: and thus

he did for ten years before his death,

but in the aforesaid tenth he never drank wine.

Sometimes also, as says Witness XXXIII, he ate

or feigned to eat of fish, by the instance of others

overcome, against his free will.

ANNOTATIONS.

CHAPTER V.

The daily exercises of S. Yvo, his conversation and fruitful preaching.

[30] Geoffrey of Loanno, Rector of the church of

Rupe-Deriani, aged LXX years, Witness V, said, Associated daily with the Saint for three years,

that for three years before the death of the same Master Yvo,

Geoffrey of Abbatia, now dead, formerly Procurator

of the church of Tréguier, and the very witness swore

to each other, that on all days of the week, except

the days of Saturday and Sunday, they would come to the house

of the aforesaid Yvo, to hear the reading of the Bible

and his sermons, and to see and imitate

his life and conversation, as much as

was possible for them. Wherefore every week to

the house of the same Master Yvo, called Villa-Martini,

they came together, and the readings of the Bible and his sermons

they heard, on the days as above, festal days

excepted. And then the same Witness saw, who at his table

also ate, that Master Yvo ate bread of rye, he sets forth the order of the whole day kept by him.

sometimes of barley, sometimes of oats, sometimes

bread of a the vassals with herbs or peas or

beans cooked in water without any condiment,

and without all other pottage, except that

sometimes he ate b turnips cooked with flour. Likewise

he said that every day he celebrated Mass early in the morning

in his chapel, which he had in the said place of

Villa-Martini, and frequently before the consecration

he wept most bitterly. After Mass he read the reading of the Bible

to them, and afterward to the poor who were then present

he distributed alms of bread and of those things he had.

Then he preached the word of God until

the hour of noon: and at noon he took the aforesaid food,

with the very witness and Geoffrey of Abbatia and the poor

who were then present. But after the meal

he entered his chamber for study

and prayer: and there until Vespers

he stayed: and afterward went out of the chamber, and

said his Hours together with the said Witness and Geoffrey of Abbatia:

which read, he gave them sacred admonitions

incessantly until the darkness of night.

[31] Witness V said, Master Yvo was in prayer

most fervent and devout, He was endowed with the gift of tears, because at length and

long he prayed with bent knees and joined hands, and wholly

prostrate on the ground, his face covered with the hood;

and this the very Witness saw many times in the church of Tréguier,

and in his chapel and house of Villa-Martini, and

many other places. Witness XI said, that frequently

before he celebrated Mass, before the altar of the said chapel

with bent knees and clasped hands he prostrated himself in prayer;

and with great groanings and sighings

and tears at length and so devoutly prayed, that his garments

before his breast with tears he very greatly watered.

And in his Masses, after the Elevation of the Lord's

body, he wept most bitterly, sighed, and groaned.

And likewise he groaned and wept oftener when the word

of God he wished to begin to preach. Witness VIII said,

that he saw him many times celebrating Mass in the church

of Tréguier and in his chapel: especially at Mass; and likewise before and after it. and at the beginning

of Mass he said the Confiteor: and after the washing of hands

while bowed he approached the altar to say the Canon,

he saw him bitterly weeping: and otherwise himself

frequently he had seen with knees and joined hands prostrate

on the ground, his face hidden by the hood, praying,

sighing very greatly, and groaning, and oftener

saying, Create in me a clean heart, O God, and

renew a right spirit within my bowels. Likewise he said

that every day he celebrated Mass, unless he were

weary from the fatigue of journey, or detained by infirmity.

Witness XX said, that before he clothed himself in the priestly

vestments, he prostrated himself on the ground next to

the altar, and there long and devoutly prayed, and tears with

great abundance poured forth: and in the same manner he prayed and

wept, and longer, when he had celebrated: but this he did

as secretly as he could, lest by any

he be seen. Nor was that religion of Yvo without prodigious favors sometimes. For to this point makes, from the Summary of Miracles,

what William Balch, Witness CLI, asserted,

that when Master Yvo was at the Elevation of the Body

of Christ, there appeared a brightness very swiftly surrounding

the Chalice, and after the Elevation the same brightness

vanished.

[32] That he kept the aforesaid cleanness of heart always inviolate,

can be gathered from the concordant deposition of nearly all the Witnesses,

of whom the first said, he firmly believes,

Master Yvo was a chaste man, for the reason that from

boyhood he was associated with him; and by sign, word,

or deed, or otherwise in any way the contrary in him

he could not perceive, although about this many times he had given

curious effort. Likewise Witness VI, Alan Soyen,

Clerk of Tréguier, aged LX years, said, Adorned with most chaste morals, that many times for many

times he was associated with him in the society

of Lord Geoffrey of Tornamina formerly Bishop

of Tréguier, well for seven years before the death of Master Yvo:

and that never by sign, word or deed

could he perceive him ensnared in the vice of the flesh: and

that by all the household of the Bishop and any others whatever,

who knew him, he was reputed chaste.

Likewise Witness VII speaks, he loves to associate with the chaste, adding, that thus by abstinences

and austerities he tamed his flesh, that to

the sin of incontinence he could in no way be inclined,

and that about this never was an evil word

heard concerning him. Indeed Witness XLIII, Jalretus, son

of Rivallo, of the parish of S. Peter of Lohanec, aged L

or thereabouts, believes that none would have dared anything

unseemly to say or do before him. Witness XLII

said, that he saw many, who were reputed chaste and

honest, whom Master Yvo greatly loved and with

them associated: and specially a certain Hamo

Tolleslam, and Yvo Annezy of the parish of

Lohanec at that time, and many others of whose

names at present he in no wise remembers. Finally

Witness V asserted, that he heard the general confession

of the same for three days before his death, and from the sin

of the flesh and from any mortal sin found

him free and exempt. Witness IV the public report concerning him

confirmed, and induces various persons to keep chastity, by this that he saw him the Confessor

of Lady Constance of Restanel, his wife, who

called and chose him as her Confessor on account of

his goodness and honesty: and that the said Yvo

induced many damsels by his good words and exhortations

to chastity, among whom Azelicia, sister

of the Lord of Murus, and many others, of whose names

he does not remember. Witness XLVII said, that chastity in his preachings before the other virtues

he commended. He said also that all manner of

men or women, beholding him, on account of

his great humility and sanctity were attracted,

and also on account of his great grace scarcely

ever could be separated from him. And this he knows, because

he was often in his society: and it much displeased him

when Master Yvo withdrew, and on account of his goodness

he would have wished that Master Yvo had been with him continually,

if it were possible for him. Nay also Witness XXXI,

Alan Thomæ, said, that not only in himself

was Master Yvo chaste, but also the speaking Witness

and his wife, to vowing and keeping chastity

and continence he induced, by his holy words

and examples: and so the Witness who speaks, as he asserts,

and his wife kept continence, for twenty-five

years or thereabouts.

[33] But she whose name is written above, Azelicia,

seems to be different from Adelicia, of whom and of her companion in the chaste

purpose Witness XLII makes mention, Amou Ville-Gouffi,

of the parish of Ploeguiel of the diocese of Tréguier, aged LV, when

asked from whom he heard, that Master Yvo sometimes

did not eat the whole day when he came from

preachings, said that from Adelicia, formerly

daughter of Homo Deote, and Roaudelina formerly called

of the Church of the city of Tréguier: also formerly incontinent: who were called

Sisters of Master Yvo, because he had converted them to keeping a holy

life and an honest one: which words seem

to indicate some stain of a prior life. Certainly Witness

VIII deposes, that persons lewd, of whatever

sex or condition they were, very greatly

he reproved: and William Harausan, parishioner

of Lohanec aged LX years, Witness XXII, adds, that in

his preachings against the sin of the flesh he preached

chiefly. Of this zeal moreover the fruit can be believed

that Geoffrey Crabanec, of whom Witness XXXV makes mention,

who before was and was reputed an evil ribald c, and

after the exhortation of Master Yvo became and is today

he knows, that Master Yvo so converted him; he said

that he heard Master Yvo frequently admonishing

and exhorting the said Geoffrey, that he should lay aside

the evil life which he followed: which Geoffrey to Master

Yvo and his words, he being present who speaks, in word

and deed afterward acquiesced. The same he did with many

others as he heard: and also it is said and is the report,

that the people of the whole country are better than before

they were, on account of his good sermons.

[34] So also Witness XLIII added, that the people seeing

him, and by preaching corrects the morals of the whole region; on account of his holy words and chaste and

honest deeds, were converted to good, and more honest

and better in all things became; so that after

Master Yvo began to preach to the people of the country, they became better than before they were by double, as

is commonly said through his country. And Witness

XLIV, Derianus of Boisaliou, of the parish of Villa Mariæ-insulæ,

dependent or now united to the church of

Lohanec, aged LXX years, added, that before the people

of his whole country were very rude to doing good;

and he saw them then more prone to lasciviousness

than now they are. But far more expressly Witness XLVI,

Senguitus Yvonis, of the parish of Lohanec, aged LX

years, said, that when Master Yvo came to the said parish,

in it were many dishonest men, on account of

the defect of the preceding Rector, who about the profit

of souls cared nothing or little. But as soon as

Master Yvo entered the said parish, he began to his parishioners

to preach the word of God: and so usefully he preached,

that the good and honest he formed for the better;

and the bad or wicked and dishonest, by his holy

and good preachings, he led back to the way of salvation;

and also public lechers and usurers he induced

to perform penance, great sinners too and their evil morals

he changed for the better, making them fast

on bread and water on certain days and times, and without

his holy doctrine and almost continual instruction,

and by his holy examples and works, which

he set before them by deed, word and work.

[35] And among the rest the Witness who speaks recalls,

of Derianus of Villa-Silvestri, a noble and rich man, who

was commonly said to be an oppressor of women, converting them to penance, and a violator

of virgins, and a homicide: whom to such a state

Master Yvo brought back, that he went to Rome on foot, his sins

bewailing, and doing penance. And

when the said Derianus had returned to these parts, large

alms to the poor he made, and also the Hours

early in the morning he said daily, though he was joined in marriage. Likewise he recalls of another, called Autredus

Rimenton, a Clerk, who was very lewd, and

very dishonestly lived: whom to a holy

life by his preachings he brought back; and also

made him of his own accord set out on pilgrimage to Rome:

and when he had returned, Master Yvo made him by his good

admonitions be promoted to the Priesthood. Who afterward

long lived, always doing good works: and also

on bread and water fasted the Lent. by private exhortations he profits much, Witness

XXXVIII, William son of Armonel, parishioner

of Treleveon of the diocese of Tréguier, aged XL years, said, that

moved by mercy Master Yvo, when he saw any person

desolate or wandering from the way of truth,

to him alone preached to this end, that he might

lead him out of error. Whence on a certain day saw the Witness

who speaks, the same Master Yvo the word of God

preaching to a single good woman, called Helion, of the parish of Treleveon in the house of the said woman, then

desolate concerning a certain loss which she had had. Moreover

Witness XLIV said, that once he who speaks and

Master Yvo and certain others went together on pilgrimage

to Blessed Virgin of Quintin of the diocese of Saint-Brieuc; and

then one of their companions, by name Thomas, on account of

the exhortations and preachings, which Master Yvo had made to them

on the way or road, made himself a monk

of the monastery of Blessed Mary of Begar.

[36] But as concerns the frequency of public preachings,

and more by public preachings, Witness II said, that Master Yvo followed

preaching Lord Geoffrey of Tornamina Bishop

of Tréguier while he visited his diocese: and

that before the same Bishop and by his mandate

he preached publicly to the people the word of God. Witness

V said, that sometimes in one day in three churches,

distant one from another by one league, he preached,

to which he went with him; namely from Villa-Martini

to the church of Rocha-Deriani, and from the said Rocha to the church

of Plœsal, and from the said church of Plœsal to the church

of Plœc; from which churches he returned sometimes

to his house fasting, though he had been invited by many.

Likewise Witness VIII saw many times and

heard, which he set up several on one day in divers places: that sometimes, when he had preached in

the church of Tréguier, on the same day he went preaching to

the church of Tredarzec the word of God there, which

church of Tredarzec is distant from the church of Tréguier

by one mile. And thence on the very same day he went

preaching to the church of Plebe-magna, which church

of Plebe-magna is distant from the church of Tredarzec

by one league. He said also, that he was so

gracious in his preachings, that very many

who had heard his preaching in one place, followed him

preaching to another place, and

that they wished more to hear him than any

other preacher. He saw also sometimes, as

he said, the same Master Yvo in his preachings

weeping most bitterly, and the same speaking (although

he himself had a hard heart) and many others by his devout

preaching provoking to tears. Indeed

Witness XXXV said, a frequent hearer following him. that he saw and heard him preaching

on a certain Good Friday in the church of Plebe-parva,

and it was said by many that on the same day he had preached

in seven churches: which seemed likely;

because after the aforesaid preaching, which

he had made in the church of Plebe-parva, the same Master Yvo was

so wearied that he could scarcely sustain himself, nay it was necessary

that the very Witness who speaks should sustain him. Nor wonder:

for, as said Witness XXXI, he went to preach always

on foot, though he could have a good horse, if pompously

he had wished to live. Nay rather Witness XVII said,

that for one who went to hear the sermon of some

other, even a Bishop, there went twenty or

thirty or thereabouts to the sermon of Master Yvo. On foot

however he always went: but it happened, as Witness XXX said,

that on a certain Friday Alan then Bishop

of Tréguier, sent for Master Yvo, and likewise a

palfrey transmitted by his messenger. Which d palfrey

received by Master Yvo, he kept it, saying

to the said servant, Go, because at once I will follow you. And while

he wished to take up the journey, he ordered the very Witness, who then was

his Clerk, to mount the said palfrey, and Master Yvo

after him went preaching.

[37] Witness XXII added, that he preached the word

of God, as often as he found those to whom he might preach: accustomed also to preach in the crossroads, and

many times he saw him to the farmers and other workmen, while they were

at their work, preaching. Witness XXV, Hervey

Oucheval, Canon of the church of Brelevenez of the diocese

of Tréguier, aged LV years, said, that he always had good words

in his mouth: and when he found any gathered together,

he always said to them something of the Life of some Saint.

To this end, namely, as Witness XIX said, he always has something ready from the Lives of the Saints. he wrote

also Flowers-of-the-Saints, the very Witness present,

who also on the other part wrote. Yet not at all neglecting himself in this,

when he found anything of good

or of perfection in the Life of some Saint (as adds

Witness XX) as much as he could he wished to imitate it,

as Blessed Martin in liberality toward the poor,

and Blessed Augustine in charity, and so of other Saints.

Moreover (as deposes Witness XXXVIII) he said to laymen

who knew not letters, that they should frequently say

the Our Father, and this in his preachings publicly

he preached. And as Witness IV said, he said very

frequently in his words, Jesus Christ the Son

of God.

[38] Lord John of Pestuven, Witness IV, said, that

he himself saw and heard most frequently Master Yvo

preaching publicly to Clergy and people the word of God, and to one despising to hear it he foretells punishment,

in churches and in roads, and specially at S. Corentinus,

in the Cathedral church of Quimper and many other

places, the license of the Bishop of that place first

had and obtained. Asked in which roads, he said

on a certain Saturday, about the month of August,

about a year or thereabouts before his death, when the same

Witness was going on pilgrimage on foot from the manor of Guezet to

S. Ronanus to the city of Quimper, together with

his father and mother and three sisters of the same, namely

Theophania, Plaisota, and Beneventa, and with the very

Master Yvo and many others. And when Master Yvo saw

Lady Constance, mother of the very Witness, wearied by the journey,

he remained at a certain crossroad and began to them

preach the word of God. And while he preached, it happened

that a certain Squire on horseback, called formerly

Lord of Coitpont, was making passage thereby with a certain other;

and that the companion of the said Lord of

Coitpont descended from his horse for the sake of hearing the preaching.

And when the Lord of Coitpont had passed on,

caring not for the preaching, said Master Yvo;

Behold, that one who passes is full of the art of the devil: that if

there were here four wenches e with the devil's tabor f,

he would gladly have remained; and he would not remain to hear

the word of God: but I pray God, that his flesh for this

before death may do penance. Likewise he said, that

within fifteen days following after, and being a penitent, when invoked he heals him. the said Lord of

Coitpont was stricken with a paralytic infirmity in his bed,

and there was for a year and more. And he

so suffering there came a certain nephew of the same so sick man

to the mother of the very speaker, narrating to her the aforesaid

infirmity; and asking her, that if she knew any remedy

for this, she would give it to him. But that

Lady, returning to memory of the words of Master Yvo,

which he had said in the aforesaid road; said that she counseled,

that the Lord of Coitpont should vow himself to Master

Yvo, saying that (as she firmly believed) for the reason

that he had not wished to hear his sermon in the road, when

she went to S. Ronanus, that he suffered it. Which by

the said nephew heard, and he having returned to his uncle,

he set forth to him the aforesaid. And immediately the same sufferer

vowed himself to God and to Master Yvo, then dead, and

promised he would visit his sepulchre personally,

which also afterward he did, and there had and

received health.

ANNOTATIONS.

CHAPTER VI.

The liberality of S. Yvo toward the poor, the naked, the cold, and the hungry.

[39] For clothing the poor he buys cloths: Geoffrey Jupiter, Rector of the church of Tredudel,

Witness XXX, said he had known Master Yvo,

and had been in his service for fifteen years

or thereabouts in the church of Tresdretz, of which the same Master

Yvo was Rector for eight years and more; and at

Villa-Martini, the manor of the same Master Yvo, for

seven years or thereabouts. He said also, that he made a certain

house be made in the aforesaid manor, and there

received the poor, and refreshed them with the goods given him by God.

He said also that many times, and specially

in winter time, he bought cloths, of which the poor of Christ

he clothed: and this he knows, because he often the said cloths

to the house of the same Master Yvo carried, and with him

many times went to divide to the poor the said

garments. But Witness XLIII likewise said, that

he himself saw frequently Master Yvo buying and causing

to be bought cloth for clothing the poor; of

which the same Witness at his command made the very garments,

which the same Witness present he distributed to the poor.

Asked where these things were done, he said that

the cloth was bought at Rocha-Deriani and at

Lanniuon; but in the parish of Lohanec and in many

others, was made to the poor the distribution of the aforesaid

garments. Witness IV also said, he had seen at Rocha-

Deriani on a certain Friday, on which is the market

in the said place, that Master Yvo before his death bought there

six or seven pieces of coarse cloth, to be distributed to the poor,

as he firmly believes: because he saw afterward many

poor clothed of the aforesaid cloth, as they themselves

reported. Likewise Witness XXII said, that he saw

that Master Yvo sent his messenger to a certain

village called Lannoion to buy cloths

and linen, to give to the poor; and that he asked of

him if he had any poor near him; and the very Witness

answered, that yes: and Master Yvo said, send

them to me. Asked of the names he said,

that Hervey son of Amoir and Rivalon son of Alvenet;

and afterward he saw them clothed in garments, which they said

they had had from him.

[40] But with this solicitude so little content was the most tender mind

of the Saint toward the poor, that he himself often his own

garments stripped from himself bestowed on the same. Many examples suggest

the Witnesses, which here, nearly in the order in which they were set forth, we will enumerate.

Witness I said, that once Master Yvo to a certain

poor man, whose name and person he knows not, to one cold he gives his tunic once

meeting the same and from too great cold trembling, the tunic

which he wore by day he gave. And that the same

poor man clothed in the said tunic, after a little time came

to the house of the said Witness, and to the same his wife being present

said; Behold the tunic of Master Yvo, which he

gave me for the love of God. Asked how he knew

the said tunic to have been Master Yvo's, and again, and of what cloth and color

it was, he said, for this reason that not eight days had elapsed,

since he had seen the same Master Yvo clothed in the same:

and it was a tunic almost new, and of white cloth

called Cordet or Burel. Witness XVIII said, that

once when Master Yvo was coming from his church of

Lohannec to his place of Villa Martini, he stripped

himself of his tunic, and gave it to a certain poor man, and

remained in his over-cloak and with a shirt of tow, which

he wore under the tunic. Asked how he knows,

he said because he saw then the said poor man weeping for joy,

next to Master Yvo, clothed in the said tunic, saying

he had had it from him; and Master Yvo there

present, clothed with the said shirt and over-cloak

only. Asked whence the same Witness was coming,

he said that from a certain church called of Plebe-magna,

in which he then was Chaplain.

[41] Witness XXII said, that once it happened, the Witness

present who speaks, otherwise recently made for himself. that Master Yvo had had made

to his house, to this end that he might see whether

it was well made. And then Master Yvo sent

for a certain poor man of the parish of Lohanec, of whose

name the same Witness does not remember: and he said

to the poor man that he should put on that tunic with the hood,

because upon him he wished to see whether it was well made.

And then the said poor man, with great joy, all

bashful, put on the said tunic; and Master Yvo said to him,

It suits you well, depart with it: and so with hood and

tunic glad departed the said poor man. Witness XXXVI said,

that once he heard said, that Master Yvo, when he was infested

by the poor in his house, and had not anything

which he might then give, except the garments in which he was then clothed,

gave them all his garments and remained naked:

yet he wrapped about himself a quilted mattress,

elsewhere designated, until he could have other garments.

Witness XLVI, after he declared with what kind of garments

the Saint used, added, that if he saw a poor man

in need, he gave him some part of the aforesaid garments.

Whence it happened that, when on a certain day the same

Witness who speaks, and again before the Tailor. wished for his wife to buy a garment,

he said to Master Yvo; Lord Yvo, I wish to go to

Lannuyon, to buy a garment for my wife.

And then he said to him, Buy me a tunic and hood

of the same cloth: which also he did. And while the said tunic

and hood were made in the house of Master Yvo; said

the cutter of cloths, Lord, see if your tunic be

well made; and while he wished the said tunic to put on

he looked toward the door, and saw a poor man naked and

very greatly in need: whom at once he called to himself,

and said to him: Put on this tunic, and see if for you

it be well made. And then the said poor man fearing said,

Lord, I am not worthy to put on such a garment. And

then said Master Yvo, Nay you shall. And forthwith the said poor man

put on the aforesaid tunic. Afterward Master

Yvo said to the said poor man; Receive the hood. And when the said

poor man had put on the hood, said to him Master Yvo, Go

with the benediction of God to earn your bread, and do not

do evil. And then departed with hood and tunic

the said poor man, the very Witness present.

[42] Witness XXXII said, that in a certain year, of

which he does not remember, To the cold he permits his tamarisks at the fire. while great colds pressed,

between the feast of the nativity of the Lord and Lent,

there came to him many poor saying, that

they were greatly constrained by that cold and pinched, and had

not whence they could warm themselves unless he helped them.

Then said to them Master Yvo, I have no wood

to give you, but go to a certain field

of mine, where are tamarisks; and take of them as much

as shall please you, and the rest leave: and let none

take unless he need, but let the rest be left to others

who likewise will be in need. another that he may clothe himself in winter Asked how he knows;

he said because he heard that Master Yvo ordered the said poor

that they should take the tamarisks for their necessities,

and saw the said poor gathering and carrying away the tamarisks.

Adds moreover Witness XXII, that although Master

Yvo did not warm himself, yet he himself bought wood

for the poor, and caused them to be warmed, and next to the fire

placed them. But pursuing, Witness XXXII said also

that on a certain Friday, when Master Yvo was returning

from b Rocha-Deriani, where he had preached the word

of God, he met a certain poor man naked and pinched with cold:

which poor man asked alms of him, and

then said to him Master Yvo, Come to my house, and I will cause

to be given you of bread. And the poor man answered, Alas!

bread I seek not, because I could not eat, but

I seek some little garment, with which I might

cover myself, he strips off his tunic. lest I perish of cold. And then Master

Yvo moved by mercy looked at a certain house,

and stripped himself of his white tunic which he wore, and then

called the poor man, and to him gave his tunic, and

immediately in haste came to his house: and

sent to the city of Tréguier to Rivallo

le Flove, to seek three ells of coarse white burell,

to make a tunic for himself. Asked how

he knows, he said, because he saw the said poor man clothed

in the said tunic, and the said poor man said to the same Witness, that

Master Yvo had given him the aforesaid tunic. And the said Witness

well knew, that it was of Master Yvo's tunic,

because he had seen it many times.

[43] Witness XCVII, Margilia, wife of the son of Thaor, of the parish

of Lammeur of the diocese of Dol, aged LV years

or thereabouts, said by her oath, that on a certain

day, while she who speaks with a certain woman,

called Mahaut, wife of Rivallon Leyzone of the same

parish, on pilgrimage was going to the Basilicas of the seven

Saints of Brittany to visit, they met Master

Yvo, in the road between the city of Tréguier and the castle

called Lannuyon. And when she who speaks saw him,

she was much rejoiced, as she said; in like manner the hood stripped from himself, for

the reason that she knew him and had heard him preach excellently,

wherefore she desired much to see him. And

he being saluted both followed him, desiring from

him to hear divine words: of which he gladly spoke,

when he found those willing to hear, as

she said she who speaks had sometimes experienced.

And while they went together with Master Yvo, they found in

the road a certain poor man, lying under a certain hut,

asking alms of the passers-by. And

said the Witness who speaks, that Master Yvo turned aside to

the aforesaid poor man, asking alms of the same,

and saying that he was dying of hunger. And when

Master Yvo had long spoken with him in secret, he drew off

his hood from his head, and gave it to the poor man

above said, and said: Receive it, because I have nothing else

of which I may make you alms at present; and afterward

he departed with the above-said women, going without

for the space of the third part of one league or thereabouts.

Then looking back they saw Master Yvo, he receives it divinely, far from the place where he had left it. having

on his head the said hood, which he had given to the poor man,

as to her who speaks it most certainly seemed. And she added

that Master Yvo then with bent knees in the road, and joined

hands said: Lord Jesus Christ, I give thee thanks

for thy gift: and he struck his breast. Then

the said women began bitterly to weep, marveling

on account of the miracle which they had seen there done. And

then Master Yvo said to them, that the very women should go their

ways with the benediction of God, and that they should do good,

and God would render to them. Then Master Yvo turned aside

toward his own proper house of Villa-Martini. Asked

how she knows, that it was that hood

which he had given to the poor man, she said that so it appeared altogether

to her. Asked at what time, month, day,

she said, that about thirty years; of the month and day she does not

remember, but it was in the week of Pentecost. To this

relation assenting Witness XCVIII, Mahauta afore-named,

of the same age of LV years or thereabouts, asked of the

time said, that thirty years are elapsed, on a certain

Monday about the feast of Pentecost, as it seems to her.

44] Not less was his indulgence toward the hungry, [He bestows a whole oven-baking of loaves,

nor compensated with lesser favors: for Witness III said,

that all things which he had he distributed to the poor:

and that once he saw, that an oven-full c entire of bread

he gave to the poor: and afterward on the same day, while he was

at table with Master Yvo in his house of Villa-Martini,

there came a certain most foul poor man in vile garb,

in the presence of the very Witness speaking, and Master Yvo

made the said poor man sit before him at table, and

eat with him in the same dish. He receives an Angel in the form of a most filthy poor man. And when the same

poor man had eaten a little, he rose from the table:

and when he was at the door of the house, he turned to Master

Yvo and to the said Witness speaking, and said to them in

Breton, to God d, the Lord be with you. Which

said the said poor man appeared to Master Yvo, beautiful and clothed in a

white garment: and the same Master Yvo to the same Witness at once reported,

and said to him, that he who had come most foul,

beautiful departed, and that with the brightness of his garment the

house itself was resplendent; nor further on that day did Master Yvo at

that table eat: but after the departure of the said poor man, in

the presence of the very Witness, he began strongly to weep, and said,

Now I know well, that a messenger of the Lord came to visit

us. The manner moreover in which he received his guests

Yvo thus sets forth Witness IX, Yvo Rachel, Priest

born of the city of Tréguier, aged XL years, who saw in

his house at Villa-Martini many times, when he had

the very speaker and many other poor; whom

he made sit on the ground, and over one e low table

he put or spread a cloth, and at last all of them

reclining, coarse mixed bread

and herbs sometimes, sometimes peas, sometimes beans,

prepared with salt and flour, and water for drink with his own

hand he ministered. And after the meal to the said Witness

who speaks, bread sometimes for supper he gave.

[45] Witness XII said, he had seen on a certain day, of

which he said he does not remember, Ten shillings offered to him but it was about the feast of Blessed

John the Baptist, fully thirty years and beyond,

the master of a certain great ship of Normandy,

with certain companions of his coming to Master Yvo

at Villa-Martini, and giving him eight shillings

or thereabouts of Breton money, as he believes, commending

himself to the prayers of Master Yvo, in which on account of

his sanctity great confidence they seemed

and said they had. he expends on loaves for the use of the needy: Which money all Master

Yvo at once sent for buying bread. Which bread

afterward, the very Witness and the very sailors present, he distributed.

Likewise he said, he had seen in the house of the church of Tredretz,

of which church Master Yvo was Rector, fully

thirty years and beyond, on a certain day, of which he said

he does not remember, but it was about the feast of the Rogations,

Master Yvo of a small number of loaves great alms

to many poor distributed: which loaves to the said

poor to suffice, miraculously and not otherwise, asserted

firmly he believes the said Witness, because they could not be

at most but ten or eight f shillings'-worth of loaves: of

which bread there was great g dearth then in the land; and then

were there more than two hundred poor, which otherwise are miraculously increased: as he believes, who

of the very bread had alms. Asked

who were present, he said, the very Witness speaking and

the Vicar of the same Master Yvo, of whose name he said he

does not remember.

[46] to the same he permits the beans of his garden, Witness XXXII, that once it happened about the

feast of Blessed Mary Magdalene, while there was a

strong famine, and the same Master Yvo had not what to the poor

he might distribute, and there had come many poor to him

at Villa-Martini seeking alms

of the same, Master Yvo answered, I have not now

what I can distribute to you: but go to my garden,

and see whether the beans which are there be good

to eat; and if they please you and be good,

take as much as you will: and [you who have come

from elsewhere] their husks h for cooking

you may bring to my lodging: but you who

are of this village carry to your lodgings as much

as shall be necessary for you. And the following day the poor of

the city of Tréguier went to the said beans, and many

of the neighboring villages, so that within three or

four days all the beans were eaten, and carried away

by the poor and neighbors. Asked how

he knows, he said, because he heard that Master Yvo ordered

the poor that they should take the beans, and saw them

gathering and carrying them. He said also that many times

he saw that Master Yvo, when he met wards, widows,

and other wretched persons, said to them that

they should come to his house, and he would give them of the goods

conferred on him by God. And sometimes he saw that to widows

and other poor, keeping a lodging, he sent

one or two i bushels k of corn, to put to

the mill.

[47] He said also that on a certain day, while there was great dearth in summer

time, and he sells his horse to buy loaves: and Master Yvo had not

what to give the poor, except a certain horse which

he kept for tilling his lands, he came from Villa-Martini

to the city of Tréguier to a certain l burgess

called Rivallon Traquin, who had the sister of the same

as wife, and said, Buy my horse.

And the said burgess began to deride him and to say, You

are a fool, who wish to sell your horse

for giving to the poor. And Master Yvo for these reproaches

cared not, but so urged the said burgess,

that he bought for fifty shillings the said horse; and

at once the said price being settled or paid, in haste

departed Master Yvo and to his house went, ordering

first the said sister of his, that to the same she should send ten

shillings'-worth of bread to be distributed to the poor, for everywhere

the poor followed him almost continually. Asked

how he knows, he said, because he saw and heard

how Master Yvo sold the said horse, and heard that

he ordered his sister that the said loaves she should send, and saw

how a certain servant of the same Master Yvo the loaves

aforesaid in a certain basket received; otherwise for this he pledges his hood, and he believes most firmly

that the loaves were distributed to the poor, because

the poor followed him, as has been said. So

also Witness XXXVII said, that once he saw, that

when Master Yvo had no money, and the poor of

him alms sought, he drew one hood

from his head, and sent it for a pledge to have

bread, which at once to the poor he distributed. Witness XLI

said, that he saw once Master Yvo his tunic

putting off, and to a certain poor man giving it; when garment

other he had not then for the very poor man.

[48] These are what I have collected about the present matter, from

the witnesses whose depositions survive: nor is there doubt but that

more similar things could be drawn from those which have perished, if they survived.

A few, because joined with a miracle, appear in

the Summary of miracles, where in the second place is placed: bestowing the one which alone was present, that

when the same Yvo, in time of dearth, of the single loaf,

which was in the house, was giving to the poor; and of those whom

Master Yvo had invited there was his Vicar and he murmured,

for the reason that there was not bread which he might eat;

Master Yvo gave him the half of all the bread which remained:

which the Vicar laid aside, and when he wished

to take it he did not find it. And while he ate there came a small woman,

almost a dwarf, and brought three little cakes m

or hearth-cakes n wrapped in a towel o: and while they ate

and wished to give to her, they did not see her, nor otherwise

had seen her, nor afterward saw her. This is testified

by his presence by William, Witness CLII, one

of the invited, specifying that the said Vicar said to the said

Witness and the other invited, Unless you hinder him he will give the whole

bread, and we shall have nothing to eat.

And when he wished to take bread and had not found it,

believing that someone had taken it, he departed

indignant: and when he had departed there came the woman. Hamo,

Witness CLIII, likewise one of the invited, he divinely receives three little cakes. seems to agree

with the witness just above; and adds, that

there was so great a dearth, that many poor, on account of the lack

of bread, ate earth at times: and

that the said Vicar said, that for two days

he had not eaten of bread; and that the half of the bread,

which he had given to the said Priest, afterward could not

be found. And that the woman answered, I heard that Master

Yvo had no bread, nor found any to buy:

and I bring it to him. And the said woman there sitting,

when he wished to give of the said bread to the same woman, the same Witness

believing her to have it and to sit next to him, her

did not find, nor the cloth, nor saw nor perceived whither

she went, nay he firmly believes that she miraculously vanished.

And all the bystanders marveled, whither had gone

the said woman. Nor did she go out by the door, because closed always

it remained. But this Vicar perhaps was Witness

XXX, by name Geoffrey Jupiter, who was for thirteen years

in his service, and confesses, that because Master Yvo

distributed whatever he could have, so that nothing to him

sometimes remained, which he could eat nor to the same

Witness to eat give, he himself was forced

many times to weep, although Master Yvo comforted him and

said, You have enough of bread.

[49] It is set down also, that to twenty-four poor

and beyond, otherwise for him the bread is multiplied in his hands, one loaf of two pennies he distributed,

in such quantity to each, that it should not have sufficed for twelve. And this is testified by Conanus,

Witness CXLIX, assertively concerning the number of the poor, as

to him it seems for certain: and he believes, that, if more poor

had come, the said loaf would have sufficed for all: and he believes

firmly, that this was miraculously done. Likewise

it is set down that when the said Yvo had sent his Priest and

for his lodging and the poor; they found

the [p] lock of the chest removed, and in it very

little of corn: and at once they announced to Master

Yvo, and the corn in the chest. who said, Care not: we have enough, God

giving: and with him returned they found the chest almost

full of corn; as testifies the same Geoffrey,

Witness CXLII, by his presence; and adds that

the chest could not have been so suddenly refilled, having regard

to the small interval which there was in going and

returning, except by a divine miracle, and so he believes

firmly. And to this point perhaps makes (because the chest is said

to have been found unlocked) what Witness XXII heard said by his household,

that sometimes they stole from him from

his house corn, and he himself bore this patiently;

and when it was said to him, Lord, fulminate [q]

sentences against them; he answered; Let be:

the Lord God amend them, because I am

richer than they.

ANNOTATIONS.

p. Clavatura, I know not whether rather from Clavis here drawn, so that it signifies a bolt, than from Clavus, whence Clavare.

q. That custom of demanding back things taken away by ecclesiastical excommunications, against the one detaining things, of whatever kind and however taken away, is deservedly now abrogated.

CHAPTER VII.

Certain other virtues of S. Yvo, connected with the foregoing.

[50] Witness XXIV, Olivarius Floci, The delicate foods prepared for himself, keeper of the Relics

of the church of Tréguier and perpetual Vicar

in the same, aged L years, said, that he had

acquaintance of Master Yvo at the time when he was Official of the Archdeacon

of Rennes, called Maurice, because that

Witness who speaks was then in the schools in the city

aforesaid, with a certain other called Derianus Guidomare,

who was afterward a Preacher: and then the aforesaid

Master Yvo gave them every three days

two pennies, and afterward invited them on the annual feasts,

namely on the nativity of the Lord, on the feast

of Easter, of Pentecost and of all Saints, when

the said Archdeacon was not in the village. And then saw

the said Witness, that the viands being prepared to eat,

as is customary on such feasts, and when

the tables were set, Master Yvo caused the viands to be brought,

and to be put on the table as if there were eaters:

and afterward he broke and put in a basket, and

handed over to be kept by the Witness who speaks: and afterward

he said, Go seek my people: he sets forth to the poor admitted into the house, and he opened

the great gate, and the poor entered within the gate:

and then he caused the viands to be brought, and himself

ministered to the very poor, and gave them to drink

twice: and afterward he went to the table with the two

aforesaid: and when they ate plenty of the viands

together with the household of the same, Master Yvo only

ate coarse bread and herbs, and drank

cold water from a certain fountain called Gormoye.

He said also that at that time, although he had

nevertheless saw him many times lying all clothed upon

the ground, only his shoes removed, among his books:

and the very Witness lay in the bed, and he yields his bed to another: made for him by

his command. Likewise he said, that many times Master Yvo came

to seek the very Witness at his father's house, that

he might help him to celebrate in his chapel of Villa-Martini:

and that many times he helped him and he celebrated

most devoutly. He said also that many times he ate with

him, and before he ate he gave alms

to the neighboring poor, and invited others to eat

with him, and made them eat next to him; and

before he sat at the table, he cut bread for

the poor.

[51] Witness X said, He receives many poor in lodging, he had lain for one night

at Villa-Martini, in the house of the same Master Yvo;

and had seen, that in the aforesaid house there lay that night

nineteen poor: for whom Mass on the morrow

he celebrated in his chapel, and Mass celebrated, since

he had not bread to give, to each of them

that he had for the poor a house, in which

he received them by night, and caused for them to be made a fire

in winter, and them there he visited and preached to them

the word of God. He said also, that once it happened, the Witness

present who speaks, that Master Yvo visited the poor

pilgrims, who were in the said house of his: and there was

there a certain poor man, in a house built for that purpose, who said he was going on pilgrimage to S.

James, or to the seven Saints of Brittany, because of

the place to which he was going he does not remember fully; to whom

said Master Yvo, You have good shoes. Then

said the poor man, It is true, Lord, if they were

greased. And then Master Yvo caused ointment to be brought; and when

the poor man wished to grease them, the same Master Yvo greased them with his

own hand, the very Witness seeing it. Witness XXXI said, and ministers to them.

that Master Yvo was a man of great piety toward the poor

and the sick, and that most often he visited the same,

to them out of regard for piety the necessaries, as far as

was possible for him, ministering; the same also by his words and exhortations

he induced, preaching, that they should God

love and fear, and the world for nothing reckon,

because the glory of the world is vain and transitory.

The poor too when they came to his house at Villa-Martini

or his church of Lohanec,

he invited to dinner if it were the hour of dinner: and then

to them bread and herbs or beans, as God had given him,

he ministered: and with them coarse bread and the aforesaid foods

and water for drink commonly he used, and on

the ground with them he sat: but when it was the hour of dinner

bread to the poor in such quantity he ministered,

that they could pass the day suitably. And he knows

the aforesaid, because he saw many times, and ate with him in

the aforesaid places. Adds moreover Witness XIV, that with

the cup with which he drank, also all the poor who

ate with him, drank.

[52] The first Witness said, that Master Yvo to the poor

large alms of bread and money made, He treats the Religious more sumptuously:

and clothed them, and hospitality too exhibited,

and Mendicant Religious oftener to his house

called, and them there with good viands and wine

refreshed, dissembling that he ate and drank like

them, though coarse bread and herbs, peas and beans prepared,

as above, and water only he used. But Witness

XXII, the same of the charitable reception of the Religious

commending, asked of what kind of Religious those

were; he said that he saw Preachers and Minors, whether

others he saw he does not remember. The same Preachers

and Minors names Witness XLVI, the same things which Witness I

asserting. But Witness VIII, when he had said that Master Yvo

had a good church called Lohanec, which

was worth well to make expenses of a hundred pounds,

and had also a good patrimony, of which if

he wished he could good viands and wine have and buy;

asked if the aforesaid he refused to buy on account of

parsimony or avarice that he might gather money,

he said no, as also the sick, because wine and other good viands to the sick

in need with willing mind he ministered,

although to himself to minister such he refused. But more expressly

Witness XI said, that the poor sick, the broken,

the old, and the infirm he made in his house

eat and lie, and water for washing the hands

even to them unwilling, and the viands which for them he could have

better with his own hands he ministered, and the beds

he himself made and laid the same: and this he knows, because

he himself in the aforesaid helped. ministering to them the Sacraments, Witness V sets forth how

for more readily succoring the sick, he carried over his breast

in which he kept the body of Christ, which he ministered

to the sick whom he visited, as often as to him to be done

it seemed. And this pyx (as says the Abbot of

Begar, Witness XIX) he had had from the Lady of Rostreven

of the diocese of Quimper. Witness XXXII said, that the sick

whom he could know, both in his parish and

elsewhere, most gladly he visited: and them with holy words and

good examples he induced, that the sacraments of their salvation

they should receive, and so death not fear, since they were

with the ensigns of Christ fore-armed. He said also to them, that

if his goods too they needed, to him securely they should say, and

he to them with willing mind the necessaries would minister: and so

he saw many times and went sometimes with the same.

[53] Witness XXXVII said, that he saw him many times

visiting the sick: and chiefly when on a certain day

he was making passage through a certain street, called

Partridge-Street in the city of Tréguier, he saw

for God's sake to hear the confession of a certain

sick man, dying in a certain house. Who having left

his journey entered the house, saying; If I should refuse to go

to that sick man, I should be disobedient to God. He said

also that all who met him humbly he saluted,

and humility of mind by gesture of body showed: and suggesting consoling and salutary admonitions,

and that more it pleased him to meet the poor

than the rich, and their society oftener

he frequented, and them he informed not of their poverty

to be sad, but in patience to bear it: as

sometimes he saw and heard. Witness XXXVIII said

also, that the poor and orphans he nourished, and them

that they might learn letters he informed, and to schools

put, and the salary to the masters from his own

paid: and he remembers that he saw Yvo Auspice

and Hamo Encoquer of the diocese of Tréguier, about whom

he did the aforesaid. Witness XLII said, that he saw Master Yvo

most frequently visiting the sick, namely

Alan of Villæ-Gossy, brother of the very witness, and Constance

of Villæ-Carmerii formerly, and Hasevisia

Nuz: whom he visited at divers times in their infirmities.

The same affirming Witness XLIII, among them numbers

specially his very self, when he was sick, and

Guegenet daughter of Andrew, and Azelicia daughter of Avœntec,

and many others of whom it would be difficult to remember.

And then them, the said Witness present, he comforted to

confess, and holy words to the same preaching, that

they should put themselves in a good state, if they wished health of body and

soul: and he added, that never he saw

that he to any poor man alms refused.

[54] Likewise said Witness VIII, that in the hospital of Blessed

Mary of Lantreguier of Tréguier, he buries the dead, the poor dying

he buried with his own hands, and them in a bier

with others to be buried carried, and shrouds gave

them, which he saw many times. Witness XXIX said, that he was

in the house of Villa-Martini for three weeks continuous

at the expenses of the same Master Yvo, which Witness was

then Guardian of Guengamp, and was sick in

the shin. And then he saw Master Yvo there doing good, however foul.

and how he received the poor flocking thither,

and them he refreshed spiritually and corporally. He saw

also that a certain poor sick man departed in

his house: and on that day there came not the poor to the house

of the same as they were wont, for the reason that they were unwilling

to wash the deceased on account of the foulness of his horror,

nor to carry him to be buried. And then the very Master

Yvo and the companion of the said Witness, called Brother Olivarius of

Putguoyt, washed him humbly and devoutly: and the same

Master Yvo sewed the shroud, and with his own teeth the thread

broke, as the said companion to the same Witness reported: and

afterward both carried the said deceased to be buried,

and buried him.

55] So compassionate of the poor in corporal necessities, [The confessing he moves to penance by his weeping.

nonetheless tender he was in spiritual and an efficacious

helper: whence Amicia daughter of Dathovada often named,

Witness XLI, said, that the very Witness once

confessed to him, who most bitterly wept, while he heard her,

her to compunction, as she believes, wishing to root out

her sins. And Witness XI saw many times Master

Yvo, weeping the sins of those who to him confessed

or had confessed, so that those very sinners

to weeping oftener he provoked; and over the afflicted

and the sick, for their infirmities and afflictions,

oftener weeping. But Witness XIV said,

that when he had heard the report of him, before he

knew him; on a certain day of which he does not remember,

wishing and longing him much to see, he went to him

to the place of Lohanec, and there confessed to him

his sins. After which confession so was he compunct

and led to devotion, by the holy admonitions

of Master Yvo, that bitterly he began to weep his sins;

and began him much to love, and very greatly

to long to follow the footsteps of his life: He persuades one to religion, and then for two

years he visited frequently him in the place of Villa-Martini

and Tréguier. And when on a certain day, of which he said he

does not remember, the said Witness asked Master Yvo, that

he should give him counsel, how his soul more safely and

better he might save; he counseled and as much as he could induced,

that the Order of Friars Minor he should enter, which also did

the said Witness. Nor does it seem doubtful but that by the same spirit impelled

he persuaded it, certain he would there persevere; the apostasy of another he foretells. whereas of another's

from a similar purpose defection him to have foreknown said Witness

XXIX. For when the Archbishop of Tours a was

in the city of Tréguier visiting, a certain woman,

former attendant of the same Master Yvo in the province of the said

Witness, said to the same Master Yvo, that he should obtain an indulgence

for the work of Dionysius, an Enclosed one in the reclusory b

situated near Rocha-Deriani, from the said Lord Archbishop.

Which heard by Master Yvo he stayed in contemplation

looking into heaven for a great pause:

after which he said: That Enclosed one will be c lost for love

of money: who also after the death of Master Yvo went out of

the reclusory.

56] Witness VII to the rest of Yvo's virtues numbers, [he watches for the custody of the church's goods,

that he saw him many times lying clothed in the church

of Tréguier in the sacristy on the ground, wrapped

in a certain quilted d mattress, and that in place of a pillow

he kept a stone under his head. Asked why

he lay in the aforesaid sacristy he said that for the custody of the sacred

things and others which were of the church and in the church,

which the people of the King of France, who then were in

the city of Tréguier, wished to take, by reason of the hundredth

and fiftieth of movable goods, which from the Bishop

and Chapter of the Church of Tréguier and the other Ecclesiastical persons

they wished to have, the Bishop's horse led away by the Royal ministers he recovers. to which Master Yvo by means

and ways all that he could opposed himself. Hence

it happened that the same Witness heard once, that William

of Tornamina, then Treasurer of Tréguier and

Collector of the hundredth and fiftieth of the King of France,

called the same Master Yvo, Scullion: to whom Master

Yvo said nothing, but began to laugh, and with glad and cheerful face

did all things. He saw also on a certain day, of which

he does not remember, a certain servant of the King of France,

who a certain horse, e a sleek one, of the value of forty

pounds or thereabouts, from the Episcopal house had taken;

and when he led it, Master Yvo met the same

in the cemetery, and the very horse by the bridle took,

and from the hands of the said servant snatched, and to the

Episcopal house brought back. Testifies in the Summary Geoffrey

Hilarii, Witness CCXV, and adds, that the hand of the Royal

Squire was hurt by the judgment of God, as he heard from many:

and afterward the said Servant came to Master Yvo, and surrendered

himself, and was cured. But Witness VIII, his great

patience praising, said, that many times William

of Tornamina, then Treasurer of Tréguier, and Master John

Querin, a Clerk citizen of Tréguier, blasphemed him

in the church of Tréguier, and him, although he was

of noble lineage begotten, called by way of f mocking

of him a Rustic, a Scullion, and a ragged Truant;

which Master Yvo patiently bore, laughing and

to them answering, May the Lord spare you these things which

you say.

[57] Likewise Witness XLVII, the reproaches for this cause inflicted bearing. after he had said, that

many times, although they believed that he was in his chamber, in

the church or chapel he passed the night; and that he had affirmed he knew this,

because sometimes he saw that young domicelli,

to see what Master Yvo did, followed, and

so saw him doing, as to the same Witness many times they reported;

afterward he added, that she being present, when the people

of the King of France wished to lead out by force a certain

horse of the Bishop of Tréguier, Master Yvo ran up, and

took from them the horse saying, that in the power of Blessed Tugdoalus

the Treasurer of Tréguier, who then was, said to Master

Yvo ironically and reproachfully, Scullion, you have put

us in danger of losing all things which we have.

To whom Master Yvo kindly and cheerfully answered, You shall say

whatever shall please you, because as much as I shall be able

I will put myself for the defense of the liberty of the Church

all the time of my life. And although all greatly doubted

that thence evil would follow, yet on the morrow

it was all quieted, and the said Royal men nothing

reported back: which was reckoned for the greatest miracle, He enjoys the colloquy of S. Tugdualus.

and all on account of the merits and goodness of Master

Yvo. To this point perhaps makes what is added in the Summary,

that Olivarius Lameur, lying with Master Yvo in

the Sacristy of Tréguier, on a certain night heard a great

noise, in the manner of thunder so horrible that

it seemed to him that the church would fall, and going with Master

Yvo before the high altar there he remained: and Master Yvo

went to the place where the Relics are kept: and there

Master Yvo and a certain other to one another spoke;

the very Yvo very humbly, and the other boldly. And

when they had spoken much, the same Yvo came, and said,

Peace is made. And he believes, that he who with Master Yvo

spoke, was Blessed Tugdualus: because as it were it seemed

that he went to the place where are the Relics of Blessed Tugdualus.

Likewise at another time he saw a dove shining,

with whose brightness and clarity the whole church was illumined,

from the said sacristy, where Master Yvo had remained, proceeding

to the altar: and Master Yvo forbade the same that to any

the aforesaid he should reveal.

ANNOTATIONS.

CHAPTER VIII.

Certain miracles of the living Yvo.

[58] Witness VIII said, that if he had a hundred

tongues, On account of his exceeding sanctity he could not fully tell the good works,

which Master Yvo did in the time when he lived. Witness

XX said, that Master Yvo was a man of great perfection,

and so much that, considering his virtues

which to enumerate he is not sufficient, he believes that there was not

his like under the sun: because his life and conversation was to others

much they were of good life, in respect of his life

in a certain way culpable seemed. To this so great sanctity,

even while he yet dwelt among mortals, there were not lacking

other miracles also: which partly from the very depositions of the Witnesses

partly from the Summary we will gather, to supply

the defect of the lost depositions. Thus Witness XXV

when he had said, endowed with the grace of miracles, that he saw Master Yvo eating in

the house of Lord Geoffrey of Tornamina, Knight, at Boloy

with the wife of the said Knight sick on a certain Friday,

on which he ate only bread and water; he added

that he gave to the same Lady one little morsel a broken in

water, with a piece of his bread he heals a sick woman, which she ate, and afterward said to the Witness speaking,

that there she had found her health. Testifies in the Summary,

of the same Lady, who there is called Joanna, the son

William, Witness CLXXIV, by hearing from his mother:

and added, that afterward she lived for twenty years and more,

the said mother asserting that by the merits and prayers of Master

Yvo she had received health.

[59] Witness CXXXV, Henry of Villa Guezoneti,

Priest of the parish of Contrevan and Rector of the church

of Mantallot of the diocese of Tréguier, aged XL years, said

by his oath, that when a certain timber

material, prepared for the work of the bridge called Pont-Ars

that for the said work useless it was rendered; by the prayers of Master

Yvo then living it was made fit and apt miraculously

for the said work to be done. Asked how

he knows the aforesaid, he said, because he saw on a certain day Yvo

of Villa Guezoneti his father, who the said timber had bought

for the said work to be done at his cost and expenses,

angered marvelously and disturbed, for the reason that thrice,

four times or five times the said material measured by

experts in such works, short and curtailed he had found

almost by half a foot. For which father's consolation

Master Yvo by chance coming up, prayed God

that the material for the said work fit and useful be rendered. Which

said Master Yvo the said timber material measured, and

the said material fit and suitable for the work was found, the said Witness

in all the aforesaid present, in the year of the Lord one thousand

three hundred and one or thereabouts, present

also the mother and brother of the very Witness now dead, and Olivarius

le Teriat parishioner of the church of Tréguier, in

the house of the said father of his which is next to the said bridge. In the Summary

is added Witness CXXXVI, Olivarius afore-named,

who saw the curtailings and measurings aforesaid

before the coming of Master Yvo, and afterward saw the said material

by him measured to be longer by nearly two

feet than it was before.

[60] From the same Summary it is had, that when the water

called d Leve was great, so that it exceeded over

the bridge of the same water, and Master Yvo had begun to enter the water

toward the bridge, the overflowing river by the sign of the Cross he divides, the water was so deep at the entrance

of the bridge and at the exit, that no man could pass

without danger of being drowned. And Master Yvo took

his servant, by the hand drawing him: and when

they had come to the first depth of the water of the entrance

of the said bridge where was a pit, Master Yvo made the sign

of the Cross over the water; and at once the water was divided and

drew itself back, so that both ascended freely upon

the bridge. And at the exit of the bridge, where was a like depth,

he made likewise the sign of the Cross, and the water there also

was divided, so that as on the other part freely they passed, a fire he extinguishes,

and at once the water to its pristine state returned.

Testifies by sight and his presence the very

servant who was with him, namely Hamo Labero, Witness

LXXX; and adds, that he was marvelously stupefied,

and knew then that God was with Master

Yvo, and for him had worked this marvelously. Likewise

that when the house of Hamo, parishioner of Lohanec,

by fire was burning; Master Yvo making the sign

of the Cross over the aforesaid house saying, in the name of the Father

and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, Amen, and casting

and was extinguished. So testifies, by sight and his

presence, Hamo, Witness CXIX.

[61] a demoniac he frees, The hundredth Witness, Yvo Auspice, an Enclosed one

near the bridge of Guengamp, aged LX years or thereabouts, by

his oath said, that Master Yvo having heard of

the Witness who speaks to bring him. Who

came with the same peaceably, although before he was kept enclosed

and shut up e in a certain house lest he do harm. And

when he was before Master Yvo in his church of Lohanec,

asked him Master Yvo, if he had a demon.

Who said that yes, within his time, that

frequently it vexed him, and spoke with him. And

then Master Yvo induced him to confess: and after

the confession asked him, the very one present who

speaks, whether the demon had afterward spoken to him:

who said that yes, threatening and saying, Why did you bring

me here? Woe to you the coming night, woe to you the coming

night: and you shall know much in that night, because me

here you have brought. Then Master Yvo said to the demoniac,

He lies about the manner: because you shall not pay, but he shall pay:

and you shall eat, and shall lie in my house this night.

And evening being come he ordered a bed to be made for him, next to the place

where the very Master Yvo lay. Then, the Witness seeing,

he sprinkled the bed and the house with holy water, and said

the Gospel of Blessed John and many other prayers. And

afterward he made the said demoniac enter the bed, and the very

Master Yvo kept vigil almost through the whole night studying

and praying: and on the morrow he asked the demoniac,

how it had been with him that night. Who said, Well,

and that three years were elapsed since he had not so well rested

as he had done that night. And said Master Yvo to

him, Did the demon afterward speak with you? Who

said, No: nay he departed from me. And then Master Yvo said,

Render therefore thanks to God, and I too render: and return

to your house and do good, hear gladly

Masses and sermons, and make alms, and

be good, and keep the precepts of the Church, lest further

the demon return to you, and it be for you worse than

before. two of his servants attesting,

[62] Asked how he knows, that Master Yvo kept vigil

as above; he said because he was his servant, and lay

next to the place, and saw the light continually burning,

which he was not wont unless he studied or prayed: there are

moreover fully twenty-nine years or thereabouts, and it was on a certain

Monday that he brought the demoniac, who on

the morrow returned to his own, cured. Asked

who were present, he said, that when he went

to seek the demoniac in his house were the wife and

household, as it seems to him, and in the house of Master Yvo a certain

other servant, called Hamo Tolleflam, now

an Enclosed one. Asked of the place and how was called

the demoniac, he said that in the church was the confession,

but the others were done in the house of the said church:

the demoniac moreover was called Alan of Trezveleur

of the diocese of Tréguier, and he did not see him before he was seized,

but heard said that for three years: and afterward he saw

him sound many times. Witness CI, Hamo Tolleflam,

an Enclosed one of Lohanec, aged LX years, saw the said

demoniac on a certain evening, while he who speaks

had come from agriculture, going to bed in a certain

bed of straw, next to the place where Master Yvo lay; and

as it seems to him this was for two or three years before

the death of Master Yvo; and there were present, he who speaks,

and Juliana his mother. and the son of the freed one. In other things he said conformably

to those things which the prior Hamo had deposed.

[63] There followed Witness CII, William, son of the late

Alan the Elder, aged L years, and said that he saw his father,

laboring with diabolical fury and vexation,

men if he could wishing to strike, and

his own garments tearing, and horribly crying out,

and at no time sleeping, and sometimes on the ground

lying and saying, Why do you weary me, demon?

why do you weary me? and similar words uttering:

on account of which in a certain house he was kept enclosed

continually, and through a certain little window

of the said house was given to him his food, upon which frequently

he urinated, and afterward ate. Asked

how he knows, he said because by day and by night he heard,

and saw him most frequently through the said window thus

doing and saying: and because sometimes he said

that he had a demon in his body which spoke

with him, and he ate little he himself seeing who

speaks. And said the same Witness, that once, while

he himself was absent from his house, Master Yvo sent, as he heard,

for his father, present his mother and brothers

his, who all are dead; and him by his prayers

cured and from the demon freed, as publicly was said.

He said also that he saw his father, after

he returned, fully almost thirty years or thereabouts,

sound and totally freed, and that never

in the time of his life the said infirmity him afterward seized:

and he added, that he himself lived after the cure fifteen

years or thereabouts.

ANNOTATIONS.

CHAPTER IX.

The death and burial of S. Yvo.

64] Lady Theophania of Pestuven, Witness XVI, said, [Aspiring to death,

that, three weeks before he

died, he said to the same in Cætreda his manor

and his wife's, that he had been very sick and had believed

he would die, which he greatly longed for, while it then to God

should please. To whom the said Witness said, that it was not expedient

for her the Witness and many others, who from his life and doctrine

very greatly profited. To whom he answered, that as

she or any other would rejoice, and now sick he abates nothing of the hardness of his bed. if her foe

or enemy she had conquered; so he of death would rejoice,

since his enemy by God's grace himself he believed to have conquered.

The Abbot of Begar, Witness XIX, visited Master Yvo

in the infirmity of which he died, fifteen

days before: and found him in a tunic upon a certain

quilted mattress of small value, because without straw:

and he had two books with their boards under his head

in place of a pillow. And when he went for the sake of necessity, the Witness

who speaks put of straw upon the boards of the aforesaid

books: and when he himself returned and saw the said straw,

he removed it. Thus also lying found him Witness

XVIII, on a certain Monday, that is the sixth day, before

his death: and there was present Lord Geoffrey then Bishop

of Tréguier with many both Canons of that

church and others. And (as deposed Witness

XVII, who also himself present was there) the same Lord Bishop

said afterward to the same Witness, that he had visited Master Yvo

grievously sick, and had found him

clothed upon the bed, which most vile appeared,

nor did he believe that there were aught but only straw and a most vile

covering. And when the Bishop reproved

him, that he was badly off; he said to the Bishop, that

better was it thus for him than otherwise. There was present then also

Witness III, who said, that that quilted mattress, small

and black (or, as says Witness XXXVI) all brown with

earth and dust, only extended

to the breast: he saw also straw under the head, and believes

firmly, that under the very straw was a stone in place

of a pillow, because this said commonly the bystanders.

[65] On Tuesday or the following I believe it happened, what Witness

XL relates as done in the week in which he departed, The last Mass celebrated, when

namely Master Yvo, so sick and weak, that he

could not sustain himself, but was sustained by some assistants,

celebrated Mass in the chapel of his Villa-Martini,

the very Witness present too and seeing it. Indeed Sibylla,

widow of the late Raymond of Grossillii of Rocha Deriani,

aged XLV years, Witness LII, when she heard that

he was sick, she, who was pregnant with two

boys and too heavy with child, went to him to confess,

because her Confessor he was; on Wednesday before the Ascension

of the Lord there were twenty-seven years elapsed:

and she found him in his chapel, and he was putting off the priestly

vestments, because Mass he had celebrated,

and was so weak and sick that scarcely himself he could

sustain. Indeed the Abbot of Beauport and Lord Alan le

Bruc, Archdeacon of Tréguier, sustained him. the confession of a pregnant woman he hears.

And when he was unrobed, he said to the Witness speaking, Lady,

what do you wish? And she answering him said, Lord,

I heard that you were sick, and I wished to confess

to you. And then Master Yvo sat down and heard her confession.

Of the same day can also be understood

Witness L, John Autredy, Rector of the church of Franchet

of the diocese of Tréguier, aged L years, who, as he said, visited

Master Yvo with Master Yvo Cognati then Official

of Tréguier for three or four days before death

in his manor; and they found him clothed in tunic

and over-cloak with his shoes or boots in his bed,

namely upon the ground, and he had a stone

for a pillow at his head. And when the said Official

reproved him, that he so lay, and had not

under him at least enough of straw or bedding; Master

Yvo answered, that he was not worthy to have it, and

that for him sufficed that which he had.

[66] On the very feast of the Ascension, that is the third day before Master

Yvo's death, 16 May, his own Confession made, visited the same Geoffrey of

Loanno, Rector of the church of Rupe-Deriani, Witness V,

and heard his confession. And then he saw him

in bed, in his accustomed tunic clothed and with the quilted mattress

aforesaid covered, and a stone at his head, to himself and

the other assistants the word of God preaching incessantly.

Among the assistants moreover could have been Witness XXI,

Geoffrey Arnaudi, Cantor of the church of Tréguier, aged

LXIII years: for he too visited him in the infirmity

of which he departed, three days before his death: and

then found him in bed, where was a little of

straw. he forbids the concourse of the people, On the same day he ordered Jabretus son of Rivallo,

Witness XLI, that he should go to his church, to forbid

the people lest they come to him, and to say

to them that he himself was in a good state by God's grace.

And this he caused to be done, as says the same Witness, because the people,

hearing his grave infirmity, already began

to flock to him, and specially of his parish of

Lohanec. In like manner lying found him on Friday

Guidomomarus of Haranen, Witness XXIII, parishioner

of Lohanec aged XL years; and Derianus of Boisaliou,

Witness XLIV: and when he who speaks said

to him, Lord you are not cured, as said

your people; he answered, God knows, and

extended his joined hands toward a certain image

of the Crucified, which he had before him: and then on the very day

Friday departed the Witness who speaks.

[67] William Adegau, of the parish of Ploeguiel,

aged LXXV years, Witness XXVI, 18 May he refuses the help of a physician, visited him

one day before he died, and heard

that it was said to him, that he should seek a physician. And

he answered, that never would he have a physician

except our Lord Jesus Christ. The same

day, namely Saturday, very late in the evening, as

says Dothovada, Witness XL, who from eleven years up to

that day in his house with husband and four children

dwelt, the very Witness saw Lord Hamo Gorec,

Priest Curate of the church of Tréguier, he is anointed with the holy Oil, to Master Yvo

the sacrament of extreme Unction to have ministered:

and to have heard the very Master Yvo himself, the anointers

answering with the prayers and other things which in this kind of

office were read. Witness also IX then present,

said, that very reverently and devoutly the said Unction

he received, and that before his sight in

of the Crucified, which continually and with devotion and reverence

he beheld: and that those doing the Office he helped,

saying the Psalms and to others answering.

Asked who ministered to him this kind of Unction,

he said that Lord Hamo Gorec, then Vicar

of the church of Tréguier, of and in whose church's parish Master

Yvo was. Asked of the other bystanders he said,

that Master Yvo Cognati, then Canon of Tréguier,

Lord Geoffrey of Abbatia, Priest, and very many

others, of whose names he in no wise remembers.

[68] But Dathovada pursues, and says, that the Unction

being done Master Yvo lost his speech; and looking at the Cross,

with hands sometimes joined, and he dies on 19 May at earliest morning. and devoutly and frequently himself

with the sign of the Cross signing and arming, he expired. From whose

mouth foam any, or anything else horrid from nose, ears,

and eyes did not come out: and as if laughing and sweating to all

the assistants he seemed: and more beautiful and more ruddy,

than he was while he lived, he appeared. The Saint died

moreover at twilight or thereabouts as said Witness

IX, asked of the hour; and, as Witness I, asked

when Master Yvo departed; on the Sunday after the Ascension

of the Lord last past, as he firmly believes,

there were twenty-seven years. The year therefore was of Christ

1303 when by Cycle of the sun 12, A.D. 1303. of the moon 24, by dominical letter

F Easter was celebrated April VII, and

so the feast of the Ascension May XVI, of which the following Sunday

was numbered the XIX of the month: on which day, as S. Yvo's

Natal, his memory to be celebrated festively in the year 1366

decreed Clement VI, as below shall be said.

[69] The aforesaid Witness IX, who had been present when he was anointed

on Saturday evening, 20 May carried to the church of Tréguier, as we saw, said, that he saw on the morrow

him dead in the said house of Villa-Martini from which

on the same day the body was carried away almost at the same hour

to the church of Tréguier, the said Witness present and assisting,

and a certain wax candle bearing before the said body,

accompanying also a copious multitude of people, touching

and kissing with the greatest devotion the feet and

hands of the very body. Witness moreover XXXVI said, that

he was one of those who carried the body to the church:

and after it was carried to the church, he saw

it stripped of the robes, he is stripped of the garments in which he had died: in which it was clothed, namely

the over-cloak, tunic and shirt aforesaid. And then the said shirt

was placed among the Relics of the church, and afterward

he saw it among the said Relics. The Lady also Theophania,

Witness XVI, said, that she was at the burial of Master Yvo and

of the said shirt, which to Master Yvo was found put on when

he was dead, she had one scrap, and a part also

of his belt, which was of a small woolen band:

which aforesaid she keeps and guards honorably, as she said,

in place of Relics, on account of the sanctity of the upright

man. Likewise she said, that while the body of the same Master Yvo

was in the bier in the church of Tréguier, a copious multitude

of people, of men and women, out of the greatest devotion

touched and kissed his body; and is honored with a frequent concourse. and the ornaments

which they had, and rings, and other ornaments

to the same body they made touch, believing

undoubtedly the same Master Yvo to be a Saint.

[70] And these are the chief of those things, which in the first process

the fifty-two Witnesses heard deposed, concerning the life,

virtues, miracles and death of S. Yvo; the very Process

in this manner is closed. And I Peter of Clausellum, Clerk

of Angoulême, The Notary closes the Process, public by Imperial authority

Notary, to the production of the above-said Witnesses, the reception,

the saying of the oath, the examination, and the Processes

done from the day Saturday before the Nativity of Blessed John

the Baptist, in the year of the Lord 1330, Indiction XIII,

of the Pontificate of the most holy Father and Lord John

by divine providence Pope XXII in the year XIV, up to

the day Saturday after the feast of Blessed Peter in Chains inclusively,

in the city of Tréguier, by the reverend in Christ

Fathers and Lords, the Lords Roger of Limoges

and Aiquilinus of Angoulême by the grace of God Bishops,

and Aymericus by divine permission Abbot

of the monastery of Blessed Martin of Troarvo of the diocese of Bayeux,

Commissaries deputed by the Apostolic See, to inquire

concerning the life and conversation and miracles of good

memory Lord Yvo Hælorii, Priest, buried

in the church of Tréguier, together with the discreet men Bartholomew

of Cella, Prior of the secular church of Blessed Mary

of Gratiacum of the diocese of Bourges, in the presence of witnesses, William Soubril of Autun, James Brachifortis of Angoulême,

Canons, Radulph of Fayolia Archpriest

of Thorofalen a, and James Rector of the church of

Asso b of the diocese of Axsolanum, and the Notaries written below,

present I was, and by the mandate of the said Lords

Commissaries the depositions of the very Witnesses,

contained in twenty-six rolls of parchment, sewn above

in order, with my own hand I wrote, together with the interlineations

and erasures made in seven words

c and of them it is clear to me fully, because with my own

hand I made them, and on their rolls I affixed my accustomed

sign: present the interpreters the venerable

in Christ Father Lord Aufredus Abbot of the monastery

of Bona requie d of the Cistercian Order of the diocese of Quimper,

and the interpreters. and the Masters Harvey of Ploezmec

Canon of the churches of Vannes and Saint-Brieuc,

Olivarius of Curia of the diocese of Léon. Namely interpreters

were needed, because the Witnesses spoke Breton.

ANNOTATIONS.

CHAPTER X.

Miracles after the death of S. Yvo, and first various raised from death.

[71] Since in the preceding Process only a few miracles of Yvo

still living were proved, nor for the most part of set purpose,

it pleased to compose a special Process concerning miracles,

continuing the order of Witnesses after the last numbered

in the prior the Fifty-second. But of the year,

month, day, The Second Process extended from Witness 52 up to 249. in which this Process was begun and instituted and finished,

we can say nothing, as long as we have it from the Ms. codex

only mutilated at the beginning and end. The first who

is offered to us is Witness LXXXI. There have perished therefore the Depositions

of the twenty-eight preceding Witnesses. Then again,

after the deposition of Witness CX, is offered a new gap, through which

are lacking fifteen Depositions: but how many are lacking

after Witness CXXXV, who in the aforesaid Codex is the last,

we should not know, unless in the Acts for the Canonization the very Pontiff

had said, that in all were heard 249 Witnesses. In this defect of

depositions so many, it seems best to us to follow

the order kept in the Summary, in the Codex mutilated, it is supplied from the summary of miracles. yet the very narration

of the miracles immediately to take from the words of the Witnesses

as often as those are at hand; but where they are lacking, to report a strict

memory of each benefit with its Testifications,

as in the Summary they are expressed. The first title there

is of the miracles, which God wrought in the person

of the very Yvo while he lived, and contains particular cases

nineteen, held for miracles, and in the preceding

chapters, as occasion bore, inserted. Afterward follows

of the miracles of the same Yvo after death, and

first of the dead raised and from the danger of death

freed. Hence beginning we find

[72] That Raymond son of Alan Ruffus, of the parish

of S. Brieuc of the diocese of Tréguier, aged XIV years or thereabouts,

from under the wheel and water of the mill of Henry Duaut drawn out

dead, and most badly wounded in the head and other

places of his body; a vow by Geoffrey Morvani

to Master Yvo emitted, according to which the dead are said to be raised, that he should render him life, and the said

Geoffrey would cause to be made for him a girdle of wax according to

the length of his body; he recovered spirit

and life. Testify by sight and presence

their own Yvo Bruni, Witness LX, and Geoffrey Morvani, Witness

LXIX, Yvo indeed, saying that he himself was with

others to draw out from under the wheel and water the said Raymond;

and entered the water the very Witness up to

the throat. a boy crushed under the mill wheel. And he said most certainly, that Raymond was

drawn out dead and most badly wounded in the head,

mouth, shoulders and other places of his body, and all broken

and blackened. And he saw and heard, that Geoffrey

Morvani vowed him to Master Yvo: and the vow emitted

after some interval he saw the said Raymond recovering

spirit, and groaning very feebly.

Of the words of the vow he said, that the said Geoffrey said these

words or the like, S. Yvo, to you I render and vow

this man, that you may render him life: and I will make

for you to be rendered for him a girdle of wax, according to

the thickness of his body. Asked how much

time he was under the wheel and water; he said, that there would well have been

one small Mass celebrated: and he stayed between the drawing out

of the water and the recovery of life almost for

the same space, that no signs were in him, and all

who were present reckoned him for dead.

But Geoffrey said, that he and certain others drew out

the said Raymond from under the water and wheel of the said mill:

and the very Witness with bent knees weeping to Master

Yvo the said Raymond vowed; and then he saw that the said

Raymond began to recover life, hearing

him groaning. Asked, how much time

he was under the wheel and water; he said, that for the space of one

league, as it seems to him, and out of the water, before he recovered

life, for the space of one league and beyond.

Raymond, Witness LXVIII, the very raised one, seems to testify

of his case under the wheel and water of the said mill:

and although he felt great pain at the beginning

of the fall, yet afterward he felt nothing, because altogether the spirit

he breathed out. Then he found himself in his own house

after two days placed upon a bed: and then he felt

the greatest pain in all his members, chiefly in

the head. And he showed you the trace of the wound;

and he was of the age of XVI years or thereabouts, as he believes: and

he believes he recovered life by the merits of Master Yvo: of the vow

he testifies, by hearing it said; and of the report, he asserts.

[73] That Alan son of Adevora, widow of Guido

of the parish of Pratum of the diocese of Tréguier, died

after nones about vespers: another extinguished by a continuous fever, and the said woman

his mother about midnight invoked with bent knees

Master Yvo, saying, I ask of you my son: and

if you raise him for me, all the days of my life

I will fast on the fourth and sixth day and Saturday, and on the sixth

day on bread and water, and never will I use linen garments:

and on the morrow about dawn, by the merits of the said Yvo,

he was raised; and lived afterward for fifteen years,

having one part of the nostrils closed. Testifies

Adevora, the mother being witness who vowed him, Witness LIII, mother of the said Alan, asserting of

the death and of the resurrection of the said son of hers by the merits of Master Yvo,

and of the vow by her emitted: and that the very Witness closed

for him the mouth and nostrils: and saw him making sobs,

as the dying are wont to give: and from the bed she put

him upon the ground, and they kept vigil over him through the whole

night as dead: and he stayed dead from the hour

of vespers up to the morrow about dawn. And

while they wished to put him in the shroud, the very Witness

saw him turning to her, and he asked water: and afterward

he said to his mother, Great labor you gave me. Asked,

who closed for him the eyes and nostrils and mouth; she answered,

that Alan Hilarii and Catharine, long after the death

for the space of half a league. She added also, that

after death he emitted a great quantity of blood,

and was cold like ice. Asked, what infirmity

he had had; she answered, that a continuous one: and

on the eighth day of his infirmity he was dead, with two raised sisters. Catharine,

Witness LIV, sister of the said Alan, seems to accord with Adevora

the aforesaid mother, of the death and invocation,

the vow, the raising, and of the time by her presence;

but of the infirmity she says nothing: of the signs moreover

of death she said, that he was cold, rigid and pale, from

the said hour of death up to the hour in which he revived. Leveneza,

Witness LV, sister of the said Alan, seems to accord

with the said Adevora her mother, of the vow and raising

aforesaid, of the signs preceding before death, and

of the time in which afterward he lived: and is written in the book

to have said as Catharine her sister, the Witness immediately

preceding.

[74] That Aymericus, son of Hamo of the parish of

Lannuyon, a boy of ten years and more, was submerged

in the arm of the sea called Leguier: The Third, submerged in the sea, and dead

thence drawn out, to the paternal house carried; he remained

dead for the space of two leagues. And there coming up

his mother, with bent knees, with a great cry,

vowed him to Master Yvo: and continuously the boy opened

one eye, and called his mother. Testify, seemingly.

Joanna, Witness LXXIII, sister of the father of the said Aymericus,

of the submersion and drawing out, by hearing it said: his aunt attesting, which

done the very Witness came up, and saw the boy drawn out

of the water, cold and dead. Then she herself the

Witness present, he was to the paternal house thus dead carried:

and when he was prepared for burying, the mother of the said

boy came up: and when she saw the boy dead, with bent

knees and with a great cry, vowed him to Master

Yvo. And continuously the boy opened the said eye, and called

his mother: and the mother to him said: My son, where

were you? Who answered, with a certain White Lord,

who drew me from the pit, in which I was submerged. Asked,

how she knows the aforesaid; she said, that after

the said boy was drawn out of the water, the very Witness

was always present in all things. Asked, how much

time she saw him thus dead; she said, that for the space

of two leagues and more: and because he was pale

and cold; and because he had not spirit nor

life, as the very Witness saw, touching him with diligence

and feeling him. Asked of what age was then

the said boy, she said, that eleven years or thereabouts. Catharine,

Witness LXXIV, kinswoman and neighbor of the said Aymericus, said,

that hearing the people crying out, she ran, and found the said

son dead upon a certain bank: a kinswoman, and saw that the people

shook the boy and felt him, and nothing in him found

of spirit nor of life. Then they carried him

upon a certain ladder to the house of his father: and she saw a little

after the mother of the said boy coming up, because absent

she had been: and when she had seen her son thus dead, she began with a loud

voice to cry out, S. Yvo, I ask of you my son,

and to you I vow him. And at once the said boy opened one

eye, and lifted his hand, and said: Where is my mother?

Asked, how she knows the aforesaid; she said, because she was

present: and the said boy to have been dead she believes firmly,

because all the signs of a dead man he had, keeping his eyes

closed, and all his members were cold and rigid,

and because for dead he was reckoned without doubt by all

who had seen him. Asked, if she before

knew him; she said yes, because her kinsman and neighbor

he was. Asked, how much time she saw him

thus dead; she said, that nearly for the space of three leagues.

Asked, if he emitted from the belly water; she said,

that yes, as much as the palm of the hand would hold. Harvey, Witness LXXV,

and a neighbor, who saw him submerged and drawn out. said that while he and the said Aymericus were bathing

themselves in the arm of the sea called Leguier; the said Aymericus submerged

there remained, the very Witness present and seeing it.

After which a certain one called Rogalvey stripped himself,

and the said submerged one searched for, and could not find;

and going out, a little he rested, because he had been wearied.

And again a second, and a third time likewise he searched:

and the third time he found, and dead drew out, and

carried toward the house of the father of the said submerged one. Then

on the morrow saw the very Witness the said Aymericus, alive

and sound, as before.

[75] That Yvo, son of Savima, widow of Rivallo,

of the parish of Ploneguiel, of the diocese of Tréguier,

midnight, expired: and on the Sunday, on

the Feast of Easter at Vespers, the said mother of his invoked Master

Yvo, and to him the said son of hers vowed in this manner;

O S. Yvo, to you I render my son, and

I promise you to give a wax candle, of the length

and thickness of him. And at once, it being measured,

she felt and saw a sign of life in her son: and he rose,

and afterward lived up to after the feast of the Nativity

of the Lord. Testifies Savima, Witness LVI,

mother of the raised one, the mother being witness. by her presence: and that she and

her daughter the said Yvo dead drew out, carrying

him dead through the city of Angers, seeking

alms for a shroud, and for burying, and

seeking a Priest who would bury him: and on account of

the solemnity of the day Friday and Saturday and Easter,

bury. And on the Sunday of Easter about Vespers,

the said witness invoked Master Yvo, and the boy revived: and up

to the said hour in which he revived, he was pale, cold and

rigid, and had his eyes and mouth closed, nor did he move,

nor breathe, nor drink, nor eat, nor signs of life

appeared in him. And she believes firmly, that her son

revived at the invocation and by the miracles of Master Yvo.

And she adds of the report of the said miracle at Angers, and in the City

and diocese of Tréguier.

[76] That Alan, son of Yvo Cadiocy, of the parish

of Plebs-parva, of the age of one year and a half or

thereabouts, The Fifth submerged in a ditch of the house, submerged and dead in the water of a ditch next to

the house of John, and thence drawn out, and dead for

the space of going the fourth part of one league or thereabouts;

afterward at the invocation of Master Yvo, both the mother,

and the grandfather of the very boy, and many others asking Master

Yvo, that he should render to the very boy life; and the mother

and father and grandfather promising to give a wax candle

of one penny, and one penny to be offered

annually; the vow and invocation of this kind being made, at once

the said boy revived, and signs of life appeared in him,

and still he lives. Testify by their presence,

Basilia, the mother, grandfather and father being witnesses. mother of the said Alan, Witness LV, that him from the ditch

she drew out, and him touched: and he was cold, rigid,

and pale; and had his eyes closed, and did not

breathe: and she believes firmly that he was dead. John,

Witness LXVI, seems in all things to accord

with Basilia. Likewise Yvo Cadjocy, Witness LVII, father

of the said Alan.

[77] That John, son of Peter, of the parish of S. Melanus,

of the diocese of Tréguier, a boy of twenty-four years

or thereabouts, The Sixth under the mill wheel, from under the wheel of the mill of Mons Relaxus,

and from under the water drawn out, dead and cold and

broken; while he was carried, his mother coming up,

crying out and weeping, vowing him to Blessed Yvo, at once

the boy resumed life, and on the morrow was cured

and sound. Testify, seemingly. Reliotus, Witness LXXXV,

who (as he said) under the wheel of the said mill and under

the water the boy found, the one being witness who drew out the dead one, and him drew out of the water

dead and cold: that after the vow of the mother at once

the boy resumed life, a little moving himself:

and adds that on the morrow he saw him sound and glad:

and he believes firmly this by the merits of Blessed Yvo to have happened.

Asked how much time he was under the water the said boy;

he said, that for the space of the fourth part of one league.

Asked, how he knows him to have been dead;

he said, that on account of the signs of mortification, paleness,

coldness, immobility of the whole body, and blackening

of the lips, which were in him. Yvo, Witness LXXXVII,

said, and the one who carried him home; that he came up when the boy was drawn out

of the water, and he was dead truly and cold; and

him carried to the house of the father. And of the vow of the mother

he seems to agree with the witness just above; and on

the morrow he saw him sound and cured. Asked,

how he knows, that he was dead; he said, that so

it seemed to him, for the reason that he had not spirit

nor heat in him, nor color: and that the whole body

of him was broken and bruised under the wheel of the said mill,

whence he had been drawn out, as he heard. Margilia, and they themselves, who vowed for him, the mother Witness LXXXVI,

mother of the said John raised, asserts of the death

of the said son, and of the vow by her emitted: and adds, that him

she vowed to the sepulchre of the said Yvo with a candle of his length.

Which said, she saw that he had recovered life,

and on the morrow wholly cured was, although the very

Witness believed that never could he be cured, because

the bones of the boy totally were broken from the hinder part. And

this she knows, because she touched him with great solicitude,

nor did she see nor feel in him any sign of life,

and those who were present, him altogether dead reckoned.

Asked, how much time she saw the boy thus dead

and infirm; she said, that as long as would be said

the Lord's Prayer she saw him dead, and on the morrow

cured. Peter, Witness LXXXIV, father of the said freed one, and the father.

said, that when he saw the boy first after the said fall,

the boy was all broken and blackened, although

he had recovered life; and of the vow of his wife by hearing

it said, and when he recovered life he saw also

that again he vowed. In other things he seems to accord with

the aforesaid.

CHAPTER XI.

Certain others vivified, even dead before birth: women in childbed helped.

[78] That John, son of Joanna de Vau, parishioner

of Plebs-parva, of the age of one year with

of a depth of four feet and beyond, full

of water; and there submerged and dead, was thence

drawn out: whom the said mother of his vowed to Blessed Yvo, of

one candle each year, that he should render him life, and

work in him a miracle: and at once the vow being made the boy

revived, and still he lives. Testifies Joanna, Witness CLXVII,

mother of the said raised one, asserting of the fall of the boy in

the fountain: yet she was not present when he fell, the mother being witness but

when Derianus drew him out thence. And adds the Witness speaking,

both of the vow by her made, and of the raising of the said

boy asserts; and that he stayed dead from the hour of noon

up to the hour of nones; and that he was black in the face,

cold and rigid, except the neck, which seemed

broken. Derianus, brother of the said raised one, Witness CLXVIII,

who drew out the said boy from the fountain, seems to agree

with Joanna his aforesaid mother: and the brother: and adds that

no signs of life appeared in him.

[79] That a certain boy, killed by a certain

horse, carried dead to the sepulchre of the aforesaid Yvo,

and by the bystanders he being invoked that to the same life

he should restore, revived; nor in anything was he in pain, as he said. killed by a horse,

Testify, seemingly, brother William, Witness CCXXIX,

that while he entered the City of Tréguier he saw

which lies the body of Blessed Yvo, dead to be carried to and

next to the sepulchre of Blessed Yvo: and he saw there the said boy lying

thus dead: and after the end of Mass he saw him

having his eyes open, nor in anything was he in pain, two being witnesses who saw him dead: as

he said. And while Mass was celebrated, the people who stood by

invoked the said Yvo, that to the same boy life

he should restore. Lord Lucas, Witness CCXXX, said,

he had seen the said boy dead, before Mass began,

and during it; but Mass ended, while was said

the Gospel of S. John, while the bystanders cried out;

S. Yvo, S. Yvo; the boy opened his eyes,

and revived. Of the signs of death, he said, because he saw

him casting out foam through the mouth, as the dead are wont,

and pale.

[80] That William, son of Alan, of the parish of Gazualon

of the diocese submerged in a pond, of Tréguier, of the age of twenty years or

thereabouts, submerged in the pond called of Portus-Magnus,

of paying each year one candle

of his length, by his mother to the said Yvo emitted;

thus dead, to his own house carried, on the same

day for the space of one league recovered life; and

was sound, and still is alive and sound. Harvey,

Witness LXXVI, said, that in the month of July, as it seems to him,

before the hour of Terce, hearing a cry of those saying,

Run up; thus hearing for the space of half

sought the said submerged one, saying, S. Yvo, help,

help. the one being witness who drew him out, And saying this, the said submerged one

he found, and drew out, and put upon the bank cold

and dead. And thence coming the father and mother cried out,

and said, S. Yvo to you we vow

our son, and we promise you to pay each

year one candle of his length. And afterward

him thus dead, he himself present, to their own

house they carried. And on the same day after noon

he saw him sound and alive: and he believes that by the merits

of the said Yvo. And still he is alive and sound, as he was exhibited

before us. Asked how much time

he was under the water; he said, that for the space of one league

great: and he saw him dead out of the water for

the space of the third part of one league, and he was cold,

rigid and discolored altogether, as one dead:

and him all, who were present, dead reckoned.

Alan, Witness LXXVII, father of the said raised one,

seems to agree with Harvey aforesaid: and the father who lives, but of

the vow by him emitted he said, of rendering each year

one penny. And the mother said, by the same words;

except that she adds of the candle aforesaid: and she asserts

of the report. William, Witness LXXVI, of the age of twelve

years, and the very raised one. the very raised one, said, that he well remembers,

when he fell into the pond. Asked, if

dead he was under the water; he said, that yes. Asked,

how he knows; he said, because he felt nothing, and so he heard

afterward said by others. Asked of the time, he said

he knew not: yet then was put flax in the water.

[81] That when Rolland, son of Geoffrey of the parish

of Bothlazas of the diocese of Tréguier, a boy of the age of six years

or thereabouts, had been submerged in the water called b

Guindi, about the hour of noon; Geoffrey his father

aforesaid running up, likewise another, entered the water hastily, saying;

S. Yvo, I vow and recommend to you

my son: and he found, and drew him out dead:

and about the setting of the sun he revived. Testify Geoffrey,

Witness LXXXI, father of the said boy, who him drew out

(as he said) dead: the father being witness who drew him out, and that no signs of life were

in him, nay he was altogether cold and whitened, and the neck

he had untied, as is the manner of the dead:

and that from the time in which he heard the cry, until

he drew him out, a man would have gone plainly for one

league: yet he believes that long he was under the water, because

so he was cold and whitened, and the said water was deep

by one fathom. Prima, Witness LXXI, said,

that she saw the said boy, and a neighbor who was present. when he fell into the water;

and Geoffrey just above the Witness cried out, who

ran up: and touched the aforesaid boy cold and

dead, and carried him dead: and heard the father

of the said Rolland invoking S. Yvo: and the aforesaid

she saw and heard, and present she was. In other things she seems to agree

with the superior Witness, who ran and touched,

except that of the raising she says nothing, but the Inquisitors

Apostolic add, that they themselves saw the said Rolland,

sound and alive in their presence, present

also the very one who speaks; and testifying, that that was

the boy.

[82] That Henry Olliverii or of Monstier,

of Quimper, submerged in the great pond of the lodging

of Plelovan; and dead, as was believed, thence drawn out; likewise a third submerged.

of the said Henry to the said Yvo for him emitted, he revived.

Testify. Rolland, Witness LXIII, who

said, that he drew him out of the pond: and that then

he was as if dead, nor had he any sign of life;

and he believed and believes that he was dead altogether,

and this believed all the bystanders. Henry, Witness LXIV,

the very freed one, speaking of himself, and of the submersion

and death, and of the vow of the said Lady of his, by hearing

afterward it said.

[83] That when Theophania, daughter of Mabilia, wife

of Alan, Of a three-year-old raised, of the parish of Plelan of the diocese of Léon, of the age

of three years, had expired; at the invocation of the said Yvo,

and on account of his merits, she revived. Testifies Mabilia,

mother of the said Theophania, Witness LXVI, by her presence.

And she believes, that on account of a continuous fever

she had expired; the mother deposes. and that the very Witness and many others with bent knees

and devoutly the said daughter of hers to the said Yvo vowed, and

besought, that he should render her life. And after

the vow they knew and saw signs of life, beginning

to appear: and at once she revived, and still she lives. Of the

time, she said, that she was dead on a certain Wednesday

following, at which hour she revived the very Witness present.

Asked what sign of death she knew in her; she said,

that she saw her making the sobs of death, and

afterward she expired, nor signs of life appeared in her: and

she kept vigil over her through the whole night, and caused to be prepared

for burial. And firmly she believes, and was and is public

voice and report, that at the invocation of the said Yvo

and on account of his merits, she revived. And the Inquisitors Apostolic

assert, that they saw the said daughter alive and

sound. Theophania herself the raised one, Witness LIX, by

hearing it said many times, and by many through report: and

that so she believes.

[84] That Guemireta, daughter of Rivallo, parishioner

of S. Sulliavus c of the diocese of Léon was for a year furious

and out of her senses, so that it was necessary to bind her feet

and hands. And at length the same father of hers led her

thus furious to the sepulchre of the said Yvo, likewise are raised, a furious woman, dead before the Saint's sepulchre, for health to be had:

and there she was for seven days bound, because she bit

those she could reach, and the bonds by herself

were dissolved on a certain day, because she expired.

And she stayed from the hour of None up to the morrow after

the great Mass dead; and her they put in a shroud,

and they were up to the middle of the cloth. And

then her father vowed her to the said Yvo; and the very Witness

vowed herself and the shroud she put off, and offered the shroud and

burning candles at the sepulchre of the said Yvo. Testifies

the very freed one, Witness LXI, speaking of herself and of the

infirmity, and that thus she was led to the sepulchre of the said Yvo:

but that she was dead and put in a shroud, and

of the vow of the father; and when she vowed herself, that the shroud

she put off, by hearing from the very father of hers: and she remembers

she saw at the aforesaid hour herself naked and the shroud.

[85] That Amicia, daughter of Agnes, of Plebs peverit

of the diocese of Tréguier, of the age of years or thereabouts, and a three-year-old girl.

infirm for three months, so that she seemed at

midnight dead; a vow and promise of

paying two pennies annually to the said Yvo, that he should give

her life, by her father made, when dead she seemed,

she revived healed, and still she lives. Asserts this Agnes,

Witness LXII, mother of the said freed one, in all things

so to be.

[86] That Blancha, wife of John of the parish of

Guerrandia of the diocese of Nantes, pregnant with a living infant

whom she had many times felt, a foetus extinguished in the womb 5 days, as is the manner for pregnant women

to feel; afterward she stayed for five days

so that she felt him not living, but rather dead;

and him and her belly cold: nor did he move for

the said five days: and other signs of death she felt,

which feel pregnant women, having dead

infants in the belly. Which noting the said Blancha,

she vowed herself to the said Yvo for the remedy of her childbirth, to render

promising a wax candle, of the length

as long and thick as she was, if the infant should come to

baptism. And the invocation and vow being made, she came on pilgrimage

to the sepulchre of the said Yvo: and when she entered the church

of Tréguier, where his body rests,

at once she felt the infant living, and in the belly throbbing.

And the belly of the very Blancha so swelled, that the d

hardelon, of the belt, and the tunic which she had put on

about the belly, burst. And the infant revived; and afterward

within two months she bore a son, who is called

William: and he lives still, and is of the age of ten

years and beyond. Testifies this the very Blancha,

Witness CLXXXIX, speaking of herself and of the said son of hers.

[87] That Marita, wife of Yvo of the parish of Plebs-ploec

of the diocese of Tréguier, bore before the rising of the sun a male

birth (as it seemed, and she firmly believes) dead:

and thus he was up to after the hour of Prime of that

day. another miscarriage, Then William Ductor vowed him to the said Yvo,

that he should render him life, and measured the length

of him: and at once the said birth emitted a voice, who

still lives. Testifies this the very Marita, Witness CCXVI,

speaking of herself and of the said birth of hers, who was

cold and rigid; nor a voice did he emit after the birth as

is the manner; and other signs of death appeared in him.

[88] That when Juzeta, mother of Robert of Blæzendet

of the diocese of Léon for giving birth had labored for two

days, a third, as was believed, of a dead infant; she vowed herself to the said

Yvo, that he should free her, and make the infant whom

she carried come to baptism, and she would give him two pennies.

The vow being made, before could be completed the salutation

of Blessed Mary, she bore a son, who lived for eleven

days without milk, sustenance of food, and other nourishment;

and baptism he had: so asserts Robert,

Witness CCXXV, son of the said Juzeta: and that the said mother

of his said, that for fifteen days before the birth

she had not felt him; nay he stayed as if dead, and

she believed that he was dead.

[89] That Mencia, wife of Oliver of Fista of the diocese

of Quimper pregnant labored for childbirth almost for

fifteen days, on account of which she was made gouty; and

her members, chiefly the shins and legs, were very

greatly made black, a fourth. and she as if dead made:

at length at the invocation of the said Yvo and the vow emitted

by Adenora her mother (who vowed to Yvo

Mencia and the creature which was in her, and promised

six pennies annually as long as that creature lived,

if he should save Mencia, and that creature should come to

baptism) a daughter she bore sleeping and without pain,

without the aid of a midwife; and she was also from the gout

and infirmity of the members, shins and legs

entirely healed; and from the hall of her husband, after childbirth

awakened, without anyone's aid, she went to the chamber

to her bed; and the said daughter naked she found without

stain of blood or other filth, as if she had been

many times e bathed; and she lives, and has a husband, and

is very devout; and fasts for two days on bread

and water in every week. Testifies this Mencia,

Witness CCXXVII, the very freed one.

[90] That when the wife of Hamo, parishioner of

Plestin of the diocese of Tréguier, A woman in childbed helped, imperiled by a dead foetus, in giving birth for five days

had labored, and had emitted the arm of the birth, all the rest

within the belly remaining, and thus had stayed for those very

five days; she invoked the said Yvo, that he should intercede

for her, that from that danger she might be freed: and at once

the invocation made she emitted the birth dead, and was

freed. Testifies Geoffrey, Witness CLXXXI,

saying that the midwife showed him the arm of the birth,

saying that for five days thus it had been, and of the life

of the woman they despaired: and the same Witness counseled the wife,

that she should invoke the said Yvo.

[91] Amo of Villa Goussy, Witness CIX, parishioner

of Ploneguiel of the diocese of Tréguier, A woman in childbed deprived of milk, of the age of fifty

years or thereabouts, said by her oath,

that twenty years are elapsed or thereabouts, that a certain

woman of the parish of * Plessy of the diocese of Tréguier, of whose

name she does not remember at present, had a certain

little son, who very harshly cried. And

when the said one who speaks asked once the said woman,

why her son so much cried; she to her

answered, because the boy was hungering, and because she had not

milk except a little in one of her breasts.

Then the very one who speaks said to her, that she should vow

herself to S. Yvo, and obtain for herself grace of milk, she obtains it by vow. by which

she could nourish her son. And then the woman vowed herself

And at once, the very one present who speaks and seeing it, milk

in the breast which had been barren abounded, so that visibly

it dropped. Which done, at once the very one who speaks,

with bent knees thanks to God rendered and to S. Yvo,

by whose merits she firmly believes the said miracle to have been

done. Of the day and month, she said she did not remember;

yet it seems to her, that it was about the month of August.

Asked, if the said woman before she knew,

she said yes, for half a year before. Asked,

how much time that woman was with the said breast

without milk: she said, that from the time in which she bore

the said boy, as she said. Asked, of what age was

the boy; she said, that of one year, as to her by the look

of the boy it seemed.

ANNOTATIONS.

* otherwise Plestin.

CHAPTER XII.

Those freed from a present danger of death, S. Yvo being invoked.

[92] That a certain man of Mortum a, as he said,

at the invocation of Yvo was from the danger of death

freed, Thrice hanged he escapes death. when he had been at Mortum to hanging

condemned, and three times in one day hanged.

Testifies Laurence, Witness CXXIII, asserting he had

seen (ten years it is or thereabouts) the said man coming,

and entering the church of Tréguier in

shirt and breeches, with a cord at the neck, saying

and publicly confessing, and swearing before the Official

of Tréguier the aforesaid so to have been. And asserts the same Witness,

that the cord was broken: and that on his neck

the traces of the wounds, inflicted by the aforesaid hangings

and the cord, most manifestly appeared. Catharine,

Witness CXXIV, seems to agree, except

of the time; of which she says, that XX years are it or

thereabouts, as she firmly believes. Olivarius, Witness CXXV,

is written in the book, that he said the same in substance and

effect as Laurence. Geoffrey, Witness CXXXI,

said also he had seen and heard a certain man,

whose name he knows not, saying and publishing

himself from the danger of hanging to have been freed at the invocation

of S. Yvo. And the same Witness saw the scars,

which the aforesaid to be true truly to show seemed.

[93] A blind man fallen into a deep well, That Geoffrey Rannou of Ploegrescaut,

blind, of the age of L years or thereabouts, falling at the hour of Vespers

or thereabouts head downward in a new well,

near the great Cross of the cemetery of Tréguier,

deep by eight fathoms b and beyond, and little

was there of water; the said Yvo's help being invoked by the very falling one and other

persons for him, afterward about the aforesaid

day's setting he was drawn out alive, although wounded

in the head: and still he lives and is sound, when yet

another man into the said well had fallen, and thence

dead had been. Testify Floria, Witness CLXIX,

of the fall, he is brought out almost without harm, by hearing, on a certain Friday: and at once

she ran to the well, where was the said blind man, and vowed him

to the said Yvo, with bent knees: and at once went to the church,

and offered two pennies to the c trunk of the said Yvo: and

afterward returned to the well, and found him drawn out,

wounded in the head. And she added, that another certain one

fell into the well aforesaid, and there on account of the fall dead

was, and she saw him dead. Asked,

through what space he was in the well; she said, that as much as

crossbows. Asked, if she saw him in the well;

she said, that yes, because he was her man d liege, and passed the night

in the house of the very Witness. Geoffrey Hilarii,

Witness CCXV, from the assertion of 7 Witnesses present, said, that, when Geoffrey the blind man had fallen

into the well of the square of Tréguier, Prigentius vowed

him to the said Yvo, and recommended that he might have

Confession: and the wife of Prigentius cried out, S.

Yvo, help him. And he saw the very blind man falling

into the well, head turned downward; and thence drawn out alive:

and still he lives. And in the same year a certain strong youth

into the said well had fallen, and on account of the fall there

dead was. And the very Witness saw him alive, and

on account of the fall dead: and he stayed in the well for the draw

of four crossbows, and he does not believe that the water

was high by half a foot. Rolland, Witness CCXVIII,

seems to narrate of the fall and of the drawing out: and

when he had been drawn out, he saw that he did not suffer,

nor was he hurt, save a little in the head and

in the back, yet without danger. Margilia, Witness CXIX,

seems to agree with Geoffrey aforesaid, of the

fall into the well by sight, and of the vow and invocation,

by herself the Witness and Prigentius then her husband made. John,

Witness CCXX, said, that he saw him drawn out

alive, and still he lives, and heard many assistants,

invoking the said Yvo that he should save him. Laurence,

Witness CCXXII, said, that the said Geoffrey fell

head downward into a well, which is in the market of the Town

of Tréguier near the cemetery of that place; whose

depth is seven fathoms; namely one

fathom and a half or thereabouts with water, and the rest

without water; and he says he had measured it. Which blind man

although he was in the head hurt, was nevertheless by the invocation

of the said Yvo from the danger of death freed. Asked,

how he knows; he said, because he saw him in

the well falling, and heard him loudly crying out, S.

Yvo, help me; and afterward saw him drawn out of

the well alive, in the head only wounded, saying

that when he fell and was in the well, no pain

or harm he felt: and he was in the well from the hour

of vespers or thereabouts when he fell, and about the day's

setting he was thence drawn out. Raolinus, Witness CCCXXII,

said, that he saw him in the well after the fall,

and he lives, and thence drew him out: and he was alive, and of those approving the fall to have been fatal. wounded

however in the head with a great wound. Harvey, Witness CCXXIII,

said also that he saw Geoffrey

fall into the said well, at the hour of vespers or thereabouts. Likewise

he said, that the said Geoffrey had his head downward to

the water of the well, and his feet toward heaven raised; and thus

he was in the well after the fall. And drawn out he said

he did not feel pain, because (as he said) in all things

the said Yvo helped him: and that to S. James he had gone.

[94] That when Henry of Villa Guezenoci,

Priest, had fallen with the horse, There are freed, one fallen from a horse into water; which he was riding

upon the bridge called Pont-Ars, into the water of a pond,

and from under the water had been for half a league and more,

as it seemed to him; at the invocation of the said Yvo

from the danger of death he was preserved and freed. And

in the e little bag, which he carried bound behind him, were

many letters and writings, which in nothing were destroyed

or wetted. Testifies the very freed one,

Witness CXXVII, speaking of himself, and of the letters: and of

the vow by him emitted he adds, that he promised to the honor

of Blessed Yvo one Mass each year to celebrate, and

twelve pennies of annual income to him to give. Oliva,

Witness CXXXVIII, seems to agree with the freed one:

and while the said Henry thus fell, she heard him thus crying out,

S. Yvo, help me, and from danger me

defend. And she saw under the water the whole very Henry,

who was believed dead and submerged: whom she saw

afterward freed at the aforesaid invocation. Of the

little bag and the letters existing in it, it is said in the book

he said, as the Witness immediately just before. Yvo, Witness CXXXIX,

is written in the book, that he said the same in all

and through all in substance and effect, which the Witness

immediately preceding: and he added, that while

the very Witness wished to help the said Priest to go out

of the water; he forbade, saying, I need not,

because Blessed Yvo helped me and helps me.

[95] 15 imperiled by a tempest, the oars now broken, That when Lord John of Pestuven,

Knight of the diocese of Quimper; and Payen of Mons-Villæ,

Squire; and others to the number of fifteen or thereabouts,

from the manor of the said Knight, called Roscolor, to

the island Theven f, situated in the sea, distant from the land

by a league, were sailing, and were near the island

aforesaid by a stone's throw; there arose a disturbance

and tempest, and sailing the oars were broken, the disturbance

and tempest of the sea growing strong. Who being

without oars in a ship almost full of water, and of

life not hoping, vowed themselves to God and to the said Yvo,

that if to the port of safety they should come, his sepulchre

with bare feet and without shirts they would visit. Which vow

emitted at once the ship, against the course and impetus of the sea,

the wind and tempest, turned itself; and them rightly

led to the port, from which they had departed, free and unharmed.

Testify Lord John aforesaid,

Witness CXVII, speaking in all things of himself and of the others:

and that these things were fully twenty-five years,

about the feast of all Saints. Payen, Witness CXVIII,

is written in the book, to have said the same in substance

and effect as the Witness immediately preceding; except

that of the time he said, that in winter there will be

XXII years and beyond, as he believes.

[96] Yvo Textoris, Witness CXXVIII, son of Olivarius

the blind, parishioner of Plebs-Magna-Galtrei, of the diocese

of Tréguier, of the age of forty years or thereabouts, said

by his oath, that a certain ship, likewise 2 shipwrecked, their companions submerged. laden

with earth called g marl, suffered shipwreck a tempest

arising suddenly: he indeed, when he was in the same,

and saw himself in the sea imperiled, the said Yvo as much

as he could invoked; vowing for himself, that if

by his merits from the very shipwreck he should escape, his sepulchre

all naked he would visit; and at once a calm

was made, and he at length from the very shipwreck freed.

Asked of the time, month and day; he said,

that on a certain Saturday, in the month of June of that year

there were sixteen years, as he firmly believes. Asked

of the names of those, who were in the said ship:

he says, that John Tardi, son of the said Tardi, of

the aforesaid parish and diocese born, and saved

from the said shipwreck, like himself; and six other men, of

whose names he said he did not remember, because

then they were there dead and submerged. Asked

of the place and hour of the shipwreck; he said, that in the sea

which is between S. Mandetus h of the Island and the Town

of Lezardieu of the diocese of Tréguier, was the said shipwreck about

nones. Asked, how he knows, that the said

John thus escaped; he said for the reason, that he heard

many times the said John crying out and invoking

S. Yvo, and such or similar words uttering;

Lord S. Yvo, help me, help me; and I to you

vow myself to visit your sepulchre all naked,

if I escape and you save my life. Asked

of the place and hour of the freeing; he said, that in the sea

which is near the Town-Mouster, which is distant by

one league from the place of the shipwreck above said, about the setting

of the sun. Asked, if he knew how to swim; he said,

no. Asked, how from the sea aforesaid,

which is near the Town-Mouster, he came out at the hour aforesaid;

he said, that certain neighbors of his with a certain

ship came thither, and him received and

drew out of the water. John Lardi aforesaid, Witness

CXXIX, of the age of forty years or thereabouts,

upon the aforesaid miracle agrees with Yvo

Textoris; and said, that on the following Monday the very

Witness and the said Yvo this kind of vow fulfilled.

ANNOTATIONS.

CHAPTER XIII.

Others, from present death divinely snatched, through S. Yvo.

[97] That when Alan of Treraurays, Knight

of the diocese A horse with a servant about to be drowned emerges, of Tréguier, and his wife with others wished

to cross by the sea-port, called Lanaber a,

of the diocese of Vannes, and the same Knight his palfrey

with a b Vallet sent ahead in one ship, [his face wrapped

with a tabard c]; when they were in the sea by a great

space distant from land, the said palfrey [hurled itself

from the ship into the water. Which seen Alan] the vallet

and palfrey recommended to Blessed Yvo, that them

he should keep for him. Which invocation made, the said vallet,

out of the water appearing, with an oar laid hold of himself; and the sailors

drawing him to themselves, him received, and in the ship

placed: the palfrey indeed against the waves of the sea,

the winds and the billows contrary to him, turned itself, the tabard

still before its face remaining; and came to the port

whence it had departed by a straight way. Testify, the noble Alan

the Knight aforesaid, Witness CLVIII: and he adds,

that the miracle of this kind seen, the same Witness with others

and with the palfrey, to the sepulchre of Master Yvo, came

as pilgrims: and as soon as the palfrey the church

entered, and as long as there it stayed, to neigh as if

it rejoiced it did not cease; although the said day nor the other was it

wont to neigh. The noble Theophania, Witness CCXXVI,

seems to agree with the said Alan her husband

of the contents in the theme, and that she was with him in

the miracle.

[98] That when Judicellus Omensy, of the parish of

Guiccastel; and Guido Cubis, likewise six shipwrecked the rest of 45. of the parish of Plebs-Petri

of Plœsquellet, of the diocese of Quimper, and many

others, to the number of XLV, were in one little ship in the sea,

distant from the land; and the said little ship, on account of

too great a load and inundations and a contrary wind,

took in water; Judicellus and Guido aforesaid,

seeing the danger, to the said Yvo vowed themselves:

and nevertheless the ship and all the persons aforesaid

took in water, and were submerged, except

Judicellus and Guido aforesaid, and four others, who

the danger of submersion escaped. Testify Judicellus

aforesaid, Witness CCX, one of the freed aforesaid,

speaking of himself and of Guido his companion and

the others aforesaid: and he adds, that the very Witness the said Yvo

invoked in this manner and the like, O S.

Yvo, to you I render myself, and I vow to render ten

shillings when I can, that you may save me. And the said

vow being made, although the same Witness took in water, yet

afterward raised he stayed floating upon the waters;

until fishermen came (who then for the space

of two leagues, as he firmly believes, were distant) and

coming up, the very Witness and Guido, from the sea

drew out. And to the questions, answering, he said;

that of the water he did not drink, and that the waters he took in

twice: and that he stayed, both falling, and ascending

and floating, for the space which one could for

two leagues walk. Guido, Witness CCIX, the other

of the freed, seems to agree with Judicellus his companion

his, of the danger and freeing aforesaid; and that,

while the ship took in water, the same Witness the said Yvo

invoked. And when the water had brought him up

and over the water he floated, again the said Yvo he invoked,

that he should save him; promising him a candle

of wax, of the length as long and

thick as he was: and at the invocation of this kind he remained over

the waters floating, until fishermen of Léon,

distant by the space of two leagues as

he firmly believes, came up; and himself and the said Judicellus

drew out. And he believes firmly and it is the report,

that he and the said Judicellus and four others, as they said to him,

the said Yvo invoked, and escaped: and

this one to another recited. In other things he seems to agree

with Judicellus, except that of the water he much

drank, which afterward he vomited up.

[99] That William Tornemina, Domicellus

of la Hunauday, of the diocese of Saint-Brieuc, likewise a rider overtaken by the tide of the sea, was freed in the sea

from the danger of submersion and death, in d la Greva

of Hylion near S. Brieuc, where the sea flows and ebbs

in a day twice or thrice. And because the sea seemed to come,

and he wished to hasten his journey; he fell into a pit with

his horse. And afterward with the horse he rose: and at the bank the ground

failed the horse, and he fell again into the sea. And he rose

with the horse, as before; and again upon the horse, which

was swimming, he believed he would come to the bank. And separated then

from the horse, he went to the deep. And then in the deep

of the sea he vowed himself in his heart to God and to S. Yvo: and at once

the sea cast him upward; and afterward, he knows not

in what manner, he found himself upon the croup of his horse: and holding

himself to the saddle, the horse by swimming carried him sound

and unharmed to the bank of the sea, and he did not drink anything

of the water, and sound he came out of the water. Testify,

the very freed one, Witness CLXV, speaking of himself, so

to have been; and that he was in danger, as he believes, for the space

of half a league; and he believes firmly, that God

freed him from the said danger, by the merits and prayers of Master

Yvo. Harvey, Witness CLXVI, said, that he saw

the said William and his horse, falling into the water

of the sea in great danger; so that not unless miraculously

could they escape. Which noting the same Witness

and many others, whom he names, who were present, seeing

the sea come on and of themselves doubting, fled,

the said Yvo invoking, and saying, S. Yvo

help him; this kind of invocation many times repeating.

And afterward he saw the same William,

raised over the waters to the bank.

[100] Alan Andreæ of Tredersec, of the diocese of Tréguier,

Witness LXXXI, a boy about to be drowned the ball of weed loosed which he had mounted, of the age of thirty years or thereabouts (as

he said, and by the look of his body it appeared) said by

his oath and deposed narrating, that once

on a certain Thursday, as he believes, while he was upon

the bank of the sea-water, near the port of the Black-Stone

next to the city of Tréguier, together with three other

boys, and they had gathered together one ball of weed

of the sea called e Goumon; and the same one who speaks

had mounted upon the said ball of weed, within the waters

aforesaid, for the sake of conveying the said ball, to the paternal

house, as ships are conveyed. And when he had now

thus conveyed it through the waters, as much as is a stone's throw,

as he said; the said ball was torn and spent by

the waters aforesaid; and the said one who speaks, from the ball

then cast himself into the sea, reckoning the ground he could with his

feet attain: which he could not, because the water most deep

was there. And thus the said Alan over the water remaining

and crying out, S. Yvo, S. Yvo;

he heard a certain woman and the boys aforesaid crying out,

who him to the good Yvo likewise vowed.

And then a little after, while the billow of the sea him

carried, and he had been thus in the water for the space of half

his hands, having in these waters round about the whole body

except the face; there came up a ship, in which was Alan

Clerici: who rose from the ship reaching to him his hand, and

laid hold of him drawing him to himself within the ship. But

the very one who speaks, rose, as he said, from the waters, before

the said Alan Clerici reached to him his hands.

Likewise he added, that his father said to him, that

he wished to turn him over, that the water might go out of his belly:

but the very one who speaks would not, saying, that it was not

expedient, because one single drop of water had not entered

his body. Asked of what age he was then,

he said that of ten years or thereabouts, as he believes. Asked

if he knew how to swim, he said, that neither then,

nor even now. Asked how he stood upon

the ball, he said that standing erect, as he would stand upon

XCIII, had said; those attesting who helped him floating. that while he sailed through the arm

of the sea aforesaid, with others who were in the ship, they found

upon the waters of the sea the said boy, lying supine,

as if he wished to sleep: and the people crying out,

S. Yvo help; the ship with the very Witness approached

to the place, where was the boy thus upon the waters.

And the very Witness laid hold of the boy, drawing him to

himself: and the boy with extended hands held the very Witness

by the neck, until he was within the ship: and thus escaped the boy

from the danger of being drowned by the merits of Master Yvo, as believe

the very Witness and others who were there. Asked of the

time; he said, that about the Nativity of Blessed John

the Baptist. Asked, how much time he was thus upon

the waters; he said, that for the space of the third part of one

league or thereabouts, after he heard the cries.

Agrees also Andrew Bonamici, Witness XCVI,

father of the aforesaid boy. And John Gregorii, Witness

XCV, of the age of fifty years or thereabouts, deposed

as Alan Clerici; except that he said, that

well he saw the said boy raising himself from the water, before

the said Alan reached to him his hands; and well

he saw the father of the said boy, wishing to turn over the said boy,

and that the said boy would not.

[101] That when Alan of Laude hœz, parishioner

of Plœnez of the diocese of Saint-Brieuc, again shipwrecked, and Geoffrey Richardus

and Hamo and others were in the sea, the flux of the sea led

the little ship to a great stone, and it was broken: and at once

the said Alan to the said Yvo vowed himself, promising four

pennies annually. And at once the little ship in pieces dispersed,

the same Alan up to the deep of the sea fell:

and the water through the mouth and through the breast, up to the bowels,

and not further that he felt, entered. And afterward

the water him upward brought back, and again he vowed

himself as above. And a certain piece of wood of the little ship

receiving, himself upon it sustained, floating from

the hour of None or thereabouts up to about the setting of the sun. And

then there came up John and Alan Seven, and

him received, and to the port led. And

the said Richardus and Hamo were submerged: and the said

Alan escaped, by the merits of Master Yvo, because then he vowed himself

to the same. Testifies Alan, Witness CLXI, the very

freed one.

[102] That when Arnald, son of Sibylla, of the diocese

of Tréguier, and another imperiled: with sailors had led the ship before the port

of Rupella f; suddenly there was made in the sea a tempest with

the greatest darkness, so that the ship was tossed with

the danger of being submerged. And then the said Arnald, with

the two who had remained, invoked the said Yvo

saying, S. Yvo help us. And forthwith

there appeared a certain light visibly over the ship:

and at once the tempest ceased, and afterward they continued

happily their journey. Testifies Sibylla, mother

of the said Arnald, Witness LXXXVIII, asserting, that these

all things narrated to her the said Arnald her son: and because

the very Witness after the departure of the said ship recommended

to the said Yvo the ship, and her son, and the others.

[103] likewise another, That when John Gat of Tredarzec was

in a ship, in the sea near the Port-Blessed g, and

five others with him; a tempest there was, and the ship was broken,

covered by the billows, and submerged. Then he invoked

the said Yvo, and vowed himself, that if he should escape

he would go naked to his sepulchre. And at once he found a little

piece of the ship, which had the length

of one foot or thereabouts, and the breadth of three fingers:

and with it swimming, always invoking the said Yvo,

for the space of half a league and more; he came

to another ship: and thus escaped, and his companions perished.

Testifies the very freed one, Witness XCI, speaking of himself

in all things so to be.

[104] That at the invocation of the said Yvo, Yvo,

Guio, Lucas, and Henry, and others. of the parish of Plœbalazuant

of the diocese of Saint-Brieuc, escaped from the sea with the ship, to danger

exposed upon a certain rock h, which after the vow

at once miraculously to the port was led. And

another escaped with the ship, broken in the forepart against

of S. Vilianus, from an evident danger of being submerged

in the sea, escaped, the greatest tempest having arisen. Testifies

Alan le Cervesus, Witness CXLV, by hearing from

the said freed ones: and he himself made three ships of wax at their

instance, and them hung up he saw in the Church

of Tréguier next to the sepulchre of Master Yvo.

[105] That when Beneventa, wife of Yvo Harvæi of the diocese of Tréguier, A little infant girl is kept safe within a fire. had given over for keeping to Agnes

of Narbonne her daughter, of the age of one year or thereabouts, and had gone

to the fields, she began to fear: and doubting of her daughter

aforesaid, she vowed her to the said Yvo and the house in which

she was, lest the daughter perish. And at once to the house returning,

she saw the smoke of a fire, and running entered the house, and

saw that there had been there a fire; and the said daughter in the cradle,

and the cloths up to the navel consumed

and burnt, and the daughter sound and unhurt: and still

she lives. Testifies Beneventa, Witness CXVI, mother

of the said daughter of hers freed, by sight.

ANNOTATIONS.

CHAPTER XIV.

The contracted and paralytic, healed by the help of S. Yvo.

[106] Persevering 7 weeks at the sepulchre a contracted woman, That Catharine, wife of John of Gannetz

born of Plebs of John, now parishioner

of Plestin of the diocese of Tréguier, contracted in hands,

feet, arms, and shins, so that walk

she could not, nor rise, nor feed herself; and her arms

she had one over the other wound and joined, and hands

closed under the shoulders without armpits, and shins joined,

and feet one over the other almost in the manner

of a Cross. And thus suffering and contracted, she was carried to

the sepulchre of the said Yvo, for receiving health: where

she was for seven weeks or thereabouts, infirm herself, during

the time often to the said Yvo herself vowing, and asking

that he should give her health. And when she had not recovered

health, bound upon a horse, for returning home

led, a little after on the same day to the church of Tréguier

and the sepulchre of the said Yvo, on her own feet she returned

fully freed. Testifies Catharine, Witness CLXX,

the very freed one, and the vow frustrated returning; speaking of herself: and adds, that when

she was led, and was near the Burnt Bridge, distant

from the city of Tréguier almost by one league;

she again vowed herself with great devotion to the said

Yvo: and looking toward the said church where the body

of the said Yvo rests, she said devoutly, O S.

Yvo, how shall I go infirm? O S. Yvo, may I have

through you freeing. And these said, at once she saw the greatest

splendor, shining about her: from which

she was warmed, and her arms at once were loosed,

and hands opened, and feet disjoined and shins, and fully

she was freed and healed of the passion and infirmity

aforesaid. And at once by the servant the bindings being loosed,

with which she had been bound upon the horse, by herself

to the ground she descended: and healed and fully cured,

by herself and on her feet to the sepulchre of the said Yvo a pilgrim

she returned, and her offering she offered. the Saint again invoked, she is healed on the way. Asked

of the time, month, and day, in which health

she received; she said, that on a certain Sunday before the feast

of all Saints: and before she had been contracted

for one year and beyond. Asked, whence had come

the said infirmity; she said, that from gout and other infirmities

which had happened to her. John Audreti,

Witness CLXXI, with her seems to agree of the infirmity,

by sight: and that thus contracted she was carried

to the sepulchre of the said Yvo: and Alan, Witness CLXXII,

said, that he saw her detained in the said church by the infirmity

aforesaid and afterward sound.

[107] That Nicholas of Guerrandia, of the diocese of Nantes,

paralytic and contracted in the shins, another similarly after 5 weeks so that go he

could not; carried with a cart to the sepulchre of the said Yvo

for receiving health, and there remaining sometimes

at the sepulchre, sometimes in the lodging, for the space

of five weeks or thereabouts; many times invoking

and vowing himself to the said Yvo; at length when

sad and grieving that he had not received health, he had reckoned

with his host being about to depart on the morrow; the night

following in his chamber appeared a great brightness,

as if the house seemed to be burning: and in the morning he rose

sound and cured, saying, S. Yvo was with me,

and me wholly cured: and he went by himself on foot,

erect, sound and freed to the sepulchre of the said Yvo

with his offering. Testify, Helias, Witness CLXXXVII,

asserting he had seen the said Nicholas paralytic

and contracted, in hands, arms and shins, and

adds, that he kept his hands closed; arms and shins

he could not extend, nor walk, nor rise,

nor stand upon his feet, nor feed himself. And thus paralytic,

he was brought in a cart as a pilgrim to

the sepulchre of the said Yvo for health to be had: about to return home, and in

the house of the father and mother of the very Witness he was lodged,

and stayed for five weeks or thereabouts; and heard

many times and frequently the same Witness the said Nicholas

vowing himself to the said Yvo, and with invocation

affectionate and devout, in this manner or the like;

O S. Yvo, give me health, and to your sepulchre

as long as I live I will come each year, and

I will give twelve pennies annually, and a wax candle

of my length, and a wax image. And

at length about the end of the five weeks, sad

and grieving that he had not received health, he reckoned

and satisfied for the expenses, on the morrow (as he said)

about to depart. And about midnight coming on, the Saint appearing through the night he is cured.

the same Witness waking saw in the chamber, through

the door open and barred, so great a light and brightness,

that it seemed to him that the whole house was burning. And the very Witness lying again in the said chamber,

there appeared a light and brightness, as above. And again

rising the same Witness and Catharine his sister,

fearing that the house might burn, said the said

Nicholas; S. Yvo is with me. And about

dawn coming on, the said Nicholas invoked: and they saw

him standing on his feet, sound and cured, saying,

S. Yvo was with me, and me wholly cured.

And he went by himself on foot, sound, erect and freed

fully; and a candle lit and a wax image

offered at the sepulchre: and afterward him

he saw sound, and cheerful, and cured. Asked,

how much time before him he saw infirm; he said,

that for four years and beyond he had stayed and been

thus infirm. Catharine, Witness CLXXVII, seems

to depose of the aforesaid and agree upon the contents

in the article with Helias her brother. Hadou, Witness

CLXXXVI, seems also to agree with the aforesaid

Witnesses.

[108] That Harvey Goloviæ, parishioner of the church

of Tréguier, born of the parish of Plœnez

of the diocese of Saint-Brieuc, having for two years or nearly the shin

left contracted, likewise one contracted in the left shin, which extend he

could not, but kept it turned back to the leg joined,

and with two staves he had to go;

standing many times at the sepulchre of the said Yvo, and

him invoking, and vowing himself to the same that he should give him

health; afterward, within a short time he was sound,

and of the said infirmity cured, and walked erect

without staves by himself. Testify Harvey,

Witness CLXII, the very freed one, speaking of himself in all things;

and adds, that when he slept next to the sepulchre

of the said Yvo, he heard a voice as if coming out of

the said sepulchre, saying to him; if you would offer two wax candles at

my sepulchre, admonished from heaven of the offering to be made: you would be cured. And on the morrow he offered.

And the day following, when the great Mass was celebrated,

going out next to the sepulchre, the shin contracted he extended,

and was healed. And at once rising, erect and on foot

by himself he walked, without staves and any aid:

and he had been infirm for two years. Theophania,

Witness CCXXII, seems to agree with

the said freed one by sight: and Geoffrey, Witness CCXXI,

said, that he saw him for three years infirm,

and afterward cured: and heard from the said Harvey, that

by the merits of Blessed Yvo.

[109] That Amou, widow of William David,

parishioner of Plebs-Barbata of the diocese of Tréguier, for four

months contracted in hands, and contracted in arms and legs: arms, shins and

feet, so that rise she could not nor walk,

to the sepulchre of the said Yvo carried; at the very Yvo's

invocation, often and oftener through many intervals

of time repeated, full she received health. Testifies

Amou, Witness CLXIV, the very freed one, speaking

of herself so to be: and adds, that her hands she could not open,

nor arms and shins extend, and that by

others she was fed and carried. Asked of the place

where she was healed: she said, that in her house of the aforesaid

parish, and that she had been infirm for a year and beyond.

And afterward is written: And we saw her, sound

and directly walking.

[110] That John Guilloti, of the parish of Louargat

of the diocese of Tréguier, Likewise contracted, paralytic and contracted for

two years or thereabouts, so that walk he could not,

nor rise, nor shins extend (nay he had and

kept them bent, as if joined about the legs, keeping

one foot over the other almost in the manner of a Cross)

an invocation and vow, by the very contracted one and by

his mother, to the said Yvo emitted and made; on that very

day the shins he extended, walked, and was cured also

of the infirmity of gout, with which he was weighed down, which afterward

he did not feel. Testify, John the very freed one,

Witness CLXXXII, speaking of himself in all things so

to be; and adds of the infirmity, that it was necessary that

by another he be raised and carried, being contracted.

Asked of the time; he said, that on the day

Sunday, before the feast of Blessed John the Baptist last

past. Asked at whose invocation,

he said, that he himself vowed himself to the said Yvo, and invoking

him promised a circle of his body in wax. And at

the end of his attestation is written, And we saw

the very John sound, and by himself directly walking:

his members however he had weak and thin,

on account of the very infirmity lately past.

Nobilia, grandmother of the said freed one, Witness CLXXXV, seems to testify

also of the infirmity by sight, and that

the very Witness and the mother of the very John vowed him to the said

Yvo.

[111] Yvo son of Yvo Gatian, Witness CIII, parishioner

of Bidernec of the diocese Likewise a boy contracted his memory lost, of Tréguier, of the age of ten

and eight years or thereabouts, as he said and heard said by

his parents; by his oath said, that

bathing himself in a certain river called Taudi, next to

the mills of S. a Inflanus of the said parish, he lost his memory,

so that he knew not what he did, nor even

where he was. And this was about the hour of noon, as he said:

of the time, month, and day he does not remember. And

he added, that during this there seized him a certain infirmity

in the hands, and arms, and shins; so that

he had his arms crossed, and his shins likewise, so that

scarcely could he go: and his tongue and mouth were as burnt

within: but he knows not, as he said, how or

when these things had happened to him, except that his memory lost,

as he said, these aforesaid he felt. Then his memory

he recovered and health from the infirmities aforesaid,

on the Sunday after the octave of the nativity of S. John

the Baptist, this year: and he believes firmly that it was

by the merits of the said Lord Yvo: because he heard from his father, that

he had vowed him to him, and had led him to his sepulchre

for health to be obtained: and he does not remember the bystanders,

who were many when he recovered health,

whom he knew not. And the recovery

of health was in the house where dwells the Lord of Limoges,

in the city of Tréguier, near the door of the said house.

Moreover Yvo Gatian, father of the said Yvo, Witness CIV,

of the age of fifty years or thereabouts, whom his father attests. said by his oath,

that two years are it or thereabouts, and

in this month of July, that he himself who speaks found

his aforesaid son, who was bathing himself in the water and

place above designated, words disordered and foolish

uttering, as if furious and demented.

Then during the fury there seized the said son a certain

infirmity, by which he had his tongue and mouth within burnt,

and hands and feet cold, and shins one over the other

crossed, and arms likewise. On account of which

he himself who speaks in process of time the said son of his to the said

Lord Yvo vowed, and led to his sepulchre

in the church of Tréguier. And he added, that he was in the city

of Tréguier for ten continuous days, the said church

continually visiting: and at length the said ten days

completed his son was cured perfectly. Asked

of the time, month and day; he said, that

he found him as above, but of the day he does not remember;

he said however, that this year in the month of July, on a certain

Wednesday, he was cured in the lodging of a certain Tornemina,

where dwells the Bishop of Limoges now

in the city of Tréguier. Asked who were present,

he said none in the bathing, that he himself who speaks

saw; but in the cure very many were there,

of whom he does not remember; because, as he said, for joy

he cared not. Asked with what words he had invoked

the said Yvo, he said, By saying, S. Yvo

to you I vow my son, and I will that he be to you

obligated for one wax candle of length sufficient

to gird him, to be rendered to you annually.

The infirmity moreover lasted nearly for two years

continuous, a small interval being interposed.

[112] likewise contracted for two years, a boy, That John, son of Alan, parishioner of

Plebs-Nova of the diocese of Tréguier, of the age of fifteen years

or thereabouts, contracted well for two years, so that

scarcely go he could, bent and keeping his hands upon his legs;

nor could he sit, but lay; carried on the Saturday

to the sepulchre of the said Yvo; on the Sunday following

after noon rising, he felt suddenly himself cured. And

approaching the sepulchre of the said Yvo, he said himself healed

by the merits of the said Yvo, to whom him had vowed his mother.

And he himself frequently had said, next to the sepulchre of the said

Yvo, S. Yvo, obtain for me grace from God,

that he free me from this infirmity. Testifies the very freed one,

Witness LXXXI, speaking of himself infirm, vowing

and healed, and of the vow of his mother. And about the end

of his said is inserted; And we saw freely

him walking.

[113] That Adelicia Olivi Thomæ, born of the parish

of Plebs-parva, paralytic and contracted of

gout for two years or thereabouts, and a girl, who kept her shins to

her legs and feet to the rear almost bent, but with

her hands she dragged herself upon the ground; the said contracted one

vowing and promising six pennies annually to the said

Yvo, that he should free her, the vow being made at the invocation

of the said Yvo, she was healed, and cured next to the sepulchre of the said

Yvo, and by herself rose. Testifies the very freed one,

Witness CLXXX, speaking of herself in all things so to be: and

at the end of her said is subjoined. And we Commissaries, saw

the very Adelicia sound, and by herself directly walking,

humpbacked however, and with head somewhat

inclined walking, which (as she said) before the infirmity

she had not.

[114] That Henry Augerii, of Anglica-villa

of the diocese of Coutances, likewise one having left his crutches at the sepulchre, contracted and bent, not

able to go without crutches, but he dragged his feet; and thus

going to the said Yvo at Lantreguier on pilgrimage;

afterward, eleven days or thereabouts

elapsed, he came back thence, having left the crutches there, as

he said, by the grace of God and the merits of the said Yvo cured.

Testifies Brother Andrew, Abbot of Beauport, Witness

CCI, who met the said Henry thus contracted, going

with crutches or b eschasses, as he said, to the said Yvo

at Lantreguier: and afterward, eleven

days or thereabouts elapsed, he came to the Abbey aforesaid,

himself cured saying, as in the theme is contained.

[115] That John, son of Nanus, parishioner of

Lanmeur of the diocese of Dol, contracted in feet

and shins for eight years or thereabouts, and another, so that rise he

could not, nor shins erect, nay it was necessary that with hands

and knees he should walk; at the invocation of the said

Yvo he was healed, and erected himself, and went, and goes sound

and erect. Testifies John, Witness CLXVII,

the very freed one, speaking of himself in all things: and adds

of his vow, that he promised a candle of his length

and thickness, for his freeing. And he goes

(as also we saw) sound and erect; yet

humpbacked, which as he said was not before. Of the place,

he said, that in that church of Tréguier, next to the sepulchre

of the said Yvo.

[116] That William Balch, of Queriam of the diocese

of Quimper, contracted in one shin for

seven years and beyond, so that it raised to the leg

he kept, and it extend he could not, and with eschasses

or crutches he walked; and another after seven years. he invoked the said Yvo

and vowed himself to the same, promising to be his man,

and to give him seven pennies annually for his cure.

Which thus said, a brightness shone about him, and

he was so warmed that he sweated: and after the sweat

at once he felt himself relieved, and extended the shin of

which he was contracted, and rose on his feet: and his crutches

left, sound, erect, and fully cured, he walked.

Testifies the very freed one, Witness CLI: and at the end

of his said is written, And him sound we saw

walking.

[117] likewise contracted and dumb, That Mahauta, daughter of Leveneza, of the parish

of Lanmeur, of the age of two years and a half or

thereabouts, lost her speech, and her face was turned, namely

the mouth to the left part, and the nerves of the arms and

shins, on the left side paralytic, had been contracted,

so that she could not extend nor have the use

of the same: and she stayed thus infirm for ten weeks.

And the said mother of hers vowed her to the said Yvo of one penny

annually that he should free her. Which vow being made, while

she led her a pilgrim to the sepulchre of the said Yvo, on

the way from the city of Tréguier by seven leagues, the very daughter

full health received, and spoke: arms and

shins she extended, and after one hour by herself walked,

and her face to its pristine state returned. Testifies

Leveneza, Witness CCXLIV, mother of the said freed one,

by her presence. and finally an arthritic,

[118] That Olivarius of Sista, at the invocation

of the said Yvo, because to God and to the said Yvo he vowed himself, was cured

of gout, which he had suffered for half a year,

which by the physicians was said incurable: because

it descended through his right shin, and through a hole

made in the said shin miraculously went out, and dropped. Testifies

the very freed one, Witness CCXXVIII.

ANNOTATIONS.

CHAPTER XV.

The blind illumined, infirmities of the eyes cured.

[119] That a certain man, of the age of LX years

or thereabouts, from toward Rupes-amatoris born,

blind, A blind man led by a dog is illumined; and causing himself to be led by a dog as

and there some while drawing delay, and to the sepulchre

of the said Yvo himself sometimes recommending, recovered

sight, and went afterward without the dog, and saw and discerned

colors. Testify, seemingly, Harvey, Witness CXL;

saying, that eleven years or thereabouts are

elapsed in the month of January, present the very Witness and many

others in the church of Tréguier, next to the sepulchre of the said Yvo

and at the invocation of the very Yvo, words interposed

of this kind by the same; O S. Yvo, to

you I vow myself, and I ask of you to be rendered me my sight

mine. And he said that for XV days he had seen the very blind man;

but how much time he had been blind he knows not, because

appeared; and by a dog he caused himself to be led as

see things, and discerning colors. Olivarius, Witness CLVI,

said, that he saw the blind man, whose

leader was a dog: and he saw him first blind in the city

and church of Tréguier, and afterward seeing:

and the miracle was done fully ten years or

thereabouts, at the hour of Prime: and he saw him blind well for three

weeks or thereabouts before his cure.

[120] That Guido, son of Omensen, of the parish of

Laugoat of the diocese of Tréguier, and another for 15 days deprived of sight, was blind and seen blind

XV days and beyond; and afterward at the invocation

of the said Yvo was illumined: and saw, and went without a leader,

and discerned things and colors. Testify

John, Witness CLIX, who saw and knew the said Guido,

and he was blind: and afterward saw him illumined

and seeing. Asked, why he knows that

he was blind; he said, that by another he was led, and to those seeing

it appeared that blind he was. Harvey, Witness CLX,

seems to agree with John.

[121] Mahauta, wife of Rivallon Leyzone, Witness

XCVIII, of the parish of Lanmeur, of the age of LV years,

said, that she was nurse of a certain girl, by name

Margilia, A spotted eye is cured, daughter of Lord Peter of Lanmeur of the diocese

of Dol, Knight: and she saw the very one who speaks the said

girl having a spot in her eye. And when the mother

had vowed her to S. Yvo, the one present who speaks:

after a short time the very one who speaks saw

the said girl cured totally of the spot above said. Asked,

at what time the said girl had the said spot,

and at what time she was healed and cured; she said, that

there may be ten or twelve years or less, but

she does not well remember. Likewise she said, that the said spot

lasted in the eye of the said girl for eight days or thereabouts, as

it seems to her. Asked of the month and day; she said, she

did not remember: yet it seems to her that it was in summer

time. Asked, who were present; she said

that there were present the mother of the said girl by name Levenez, and

the father likewise, and the Witness who speaks, and many. Asked

of the place; she said, that in the house of the said Knight,

father of the said girl, called Vetus-villa in the parish of

Vimahec. Asked, at whose invocation was done

the miracle; she said, that of Blessed Yvo. Asked,

by what words; she said the mother had said: O Margilia

my daughter, I would rather love you dead than spotted;

and I vow you to S. Yvo; because I and your father

with bare feet will bear to him your offering. Asked,

if she was present when those words were

said; she said, that yes. Asked, how much time

she had known the said girl before she had the said spot;

she said for four years or thereabouts: and she added,

that the said spot was born in the eye of the said girl after the assumed

infirmity which is called Smallpox. Asked

of the size of the said spot she said, like

Peter, Witness CLVI, father of the freed one, by sight

of the infirmity and freeing: and that he and his wife

vowed her after supper, and on the morrow they found

her cured in the morning. Asked of the

time; he said, that there are XIV years or thereabouts.

[122] That Theophania, daughter of Derianus of the parish

of Platum of the diocese of Tréguier, of the age of six years, had

both eyes swollen and closed, eyes swollen: and see she could not,

the said father vowing her of two eyes of wax,

to the said Yvo to be rendered each year as long as she lived;

on the morrow she saw with both eyes, as before. Testifies

Derianus, Witness LXXXIX, father of the freed one,

by sight.

[123] That when Petronilla, wife of William of the parish

of Tregrom, for six weeks had pain

and infirmity of a pricking gout in the left eye, pain in the eye:

so that little she saw, and water thence dropped;

she vowed herself and the said eye to the said Yvo, promising

to render one eye of wax, that he should render her health.

And the invocation and vow of this kind being made, at once

ceased the pain, gout and infirmity aforesaid, nor afterward

did she feel them, and fully she was cured. Testifies the very

freed one, Witness CCI, speaking of herself in all things so

to be.

[124] That when Evenus Eudonis, of the parish of Plebs-nova,

was in the mill of the Convent of Blessed Mary

of Begar next to the small wheel, an eye crushed. the wheel drew him to itself,

and put him under itself, him so oppressing, that his forehead

over the right eye strongly hurt him, and from him

drew out the eye. And then a certain woman invoked

the said Yvo that he should free him. And at once, the invocation

made, the water stood, and the wheel likewise: and thus thence

he was drawn out, and freed, and the eye in its place

replaced, and a scar he has on the forehead over the eye,

and fully he is freed. Testifies the very freed one,

Witness CCVI, speaking of himself and of the said woman

vowing.

[125] That when a certain blind woman, wholly

not seeing, led by her daughter as a blind one, going

out of the church wished to depart to her own; the aforesaid daughter

weeping with a loud voice uttered, A blind woman receives sight, O Blessed Yvo, you

do many miracles, but they do not appear. And while thus

departed the mother and daughter aforesaid, and were in the cemetery

outside the church; at once the daughter began more strongly

to cry out with joy, My mother sees. And the said mother,

returning to the church without the leading of anyone, perfectly

saw. Testifies a Religious man, Witness LXXIX,

by sight, hearing and his presence.

[126] That when Juliana, daughter of Lavinia of Quontreven

of the diocese of Tréguier, of the age of two years with

had lost, and had stayed blind for eleven weeks;

the very Lavinia the said daughter of hers, whom a pilgrim she had brought

to the sepulchre of the said Yvo for health to be had,

to the said Yvo vowed her, invoking that he should free

her, either by death or by life: and promised to render

one penny annually. And at the invocation

of this kind the said daughter, who then was blind, sight of one

eye received; and the other, which was closed, opened:

but of it she saw nothing. Testifies Lavinia, Witness

CCIII, mother of the said freed one.

CHAPTER XVI.

The mind restored to the furious, S. Yvo being invoked.

[127] That Yvo, son of Yvo Andreæ, of the parish

of Denguenam of the diocese of Tréguier, of the age

of XX years or thereabouts, A demoniac from his mother's curse, cursed by his mother, and given

and granted to the devil, at once fell to the ground, and there seized

him a vexation in the heart and through the whole body,

so that many men scarcely could hold him.

But when day dawned, he asked his father and John Doliga

that they should lead him to S. Yvo. Who when

they led him on the way, when he felt his mother, he began to be vexed:

and then the father made the mother withdraw, and at once

ceased the vexation. And when they had come to the sepulchre of the said

Yvo, there seized him a vexation most hard as before,

and it lasted up to Vespers. And about the hour of Vespers

the father made him kiss the head of the stone, led to the Saint's sepulchre, which

is over the sepulchre of the said Yvo: and at once the said son

felt himself freed of the aforesaid vexation, and afterward

slept: and was in the town of Tréguier for nine

days or thereabouts: afterward he departed alive and unharmed to

his house. Yvo, Witness CXX, the very freed one, speaking

of his mother and of himself, and of the time, and of

others, as in the theme is said; specifying also

that on a certain evening, his mother ironically broke out against

him in these words, Are you he who defamed me? Then

with bent knees and her breasts drawn from her bosom, she said,

I give you my curse, and of the breasts

which you sucked, and of my bowels which you

bore: and whatever right I have in you and have

can, and whatever I bore of you, all I deliver and

grant to the devil. And that after there seized him

the first vexation, he narrates how he was invaded, scarcely four men could him

hold. Then being in bed, he saw over himself by

night two demons, great as towers, black and

horrible, having the form, faces, and horns of a goat,

striving to take him, saying, You are ours, because

your mother gave you to us. And then there appeared to him S. Yvo,

sitting upon his bed, and said to him: Fear not,

because you have been at my sepulchre, and you are called by my name

mine, and therefore I have come to save you. For your mother

could not give you to the devil, because no right she had

in you, and by the Saint through a vision bidden to come. more than a sack in the corn which is carried

in it. But day dawning he was led to the sepulchre

of the said Yvo, as is had in the theme. Asked of

the time; he said, that in the past year, on the Wednesday

after Pentecost. And about the end of his said is written:

And we saw him sound. John Portevitaille,

Witness CCIX, seems to agree with the freed one:

and said, that at once the said son fell to the ground,

so that he believed him dead. And while he was upon

the bed, he began to be vexed, and to cry out, like a man who

seemed to have lost his memory; saying, Thieves,

I will not go with you, because S. Yvo defends me. And on

the morrow saw the very Witness, who speaks, that the father

took up the journey with his son of coming to the sepulchre of the said Yvo,

and nothing else he saw, until he was returned within

eight or ten days, sound and unharmed.

[128] That Margilia, daughter of William Hirundinis,

parishioner of Pratum, of the age of XXI years and beyond,

demented and furious for a month and beyond, There is cured a furious woman, so that upon her mother

and others she rushed, her garments she tore, and many

other dementias did, so that it was necessary for her

to be held and bound, on account of the merits of Master Yvo healed

she was and cured, and freed in the church of Tréguier, next to

the sepulchre of Master Yvo, where she had been brought a pilgrim

for health to be had: and her mother her vowed

to Master Yvo. And the vow being made at once she was healed and cured:

and her mother an offering of one candle of wax there

offered for her. Testifies the very freed one, speaking

of herself.

[129] That Michael of Fontarabia a Spaniard,

who had spat into the hands of a poor man, and a Spaniard injurious to the Saint's name. asking alms

for the love of God and of Yvo aforesaid; demented, furious,

and to the ground falling, crying out and saying, that

Master Yvo with companions, clothed in white garments, beat

him; at the invocation of Master Yvo (to whom the master

of the said Michael vowed the same, and him led

to the church: in which he kept vigil that night next to the sepulchre

of Master Yvo, and on the morrow made an offering

of wax candles to Master Yvo for him) he recovered his pristine

health, and was cured of the aforesaid dementia and

fury. Testifies Alan, Witness CXXII, and said,

that he had seen the said Spaniard, crying out and saying,

that Master Yvo, with many others clothed in white garments,

having candles lit in their hands, beat,

and slew him; and afterward saw him

cured of the said dementia and fury: and that he was cured

at the invocation of Master Yvo, to whom the master of the said

man vowed the same, present the very Witness; when

by the said Witness, and Laurence, the said man had been brought

bound to the said master and companions.

[130] Peter le Prevost of Pleli of the diocese of Saint-Malo,

Another furious man of the age of XL years or thereabouts, Witness CVI, said,

by his oath, that William Chauveti,

parishioner of the said place, was so demented and furious,

that scarcely him could hold even bound four

men well strong. And brought by vow,

to the church of Tréguier, he was from the said dementia and fury

cured and freed, by the merits and prayers of Master Yvo.

Asked, how he knows the aforesaid; he said,

that for the reason that he saw the said William demented and

furious, as above is said; and afterward saw

him cured. And he said, that he himself was one of those,

who brought the said William to the church of Tréguier,

to the tomb of Master Yvo. Asked of the

time, in which was the said miracle; he said, that

on the Wednesday a after the feast of the Apostles Peter and

Paul, cured on the way, in the year of the Lord one thousand three hundred and thirty.

Asked who were present, he said, that

the same Witness, Stephen and Peter Chouveti brothers,

and John le Sauver kinsman of the same brothers were

present. Asked of the place; he said, that

on a certain road, which is between the parish of Pleli and

S. Brieuc of the valleys, while the very William to

the church of Tréguier they led. Asked,

what words being interposed, the mother and brothers aforesaid

invoked Master Yvo; he said, that they vowed

to God and to Master Yvo, promising that him they would lead

or cause to be led to the sepulchre of Master Yvo if

he should give him health. Asked, if the said William

before he knew; he said, that yes, from his boyhood,

because his neighbor he is. Asked, how much time

the said William was infirm; he said, that for fifteen

days or thereabouts. Asked, of what age is

the said William; he said, that of forty years

or thereabouts. Asked, whether he had had otherwise the said infirmity;

he said, his brother himself attesting; that no. With this agreeing Witness

CVII, Stephen Chauveti, brother of William

Chauveti, of the age of thirty-five years or thereabouts;

said, that he brought the said William, together

with Peter Præpositi and Peter his brother, and John

Sauver his kinsman, bound, from the house of the said William

up to one league, going toward Tréguier

to the sepulchre of the said Lord Yvo, to whom the mother and brothers

aforesaid the said William had vowed, on account of the aforesaid

infirmity. But when they were in a certain

place, who had led him thither, distant by one league from the house aforesaid

as above; the said infirm one began to convalesce and better

to be, so much that the aforesaid Stephen and Peter

him, even not bound, brought to the said

sepulchre peaceably and quietly: whom, when from the aforesaid

house he had departed, scarcely four men even bound

could bring and hold. And after they had come

and prayed at the aforesaid sepulchre, he was

perfectly restored to his pristine health. Asked,

with what words was the aforesaid vow emitted; after the vow made for him. he said,

that the mother and brothers aforesaid said, that

him they vowed to God and to S. Yvo, promising that

him they would lead or cause to be led to his sepulchre,

and there would offer one candle of the thickness

of his belly, and another of the thickness of his head,

if he should give him health. Likewise said the same Witness,

that the aforesaid mother and the very Witness present had vowed,

and him had led to S. Jagu b, and to S. Leonarius

c, and to S. d William of the diocese of Saint-Malo;

from which he had returned, infirm, as he

had gone. And we saw the same William personally

before us cured, and on his arms

appeared the traces, how most strongly on account of the said

fury he had been bound.

[131] Witness CVIII, Yvo Ridell, of the city of Tréguier,

of the age of fifty years or thereabouts, a furious woman is healed at the tomb, said

by his oath, he had seen a certain woman,

called Gloagnen, furious, in the church of Tréguier

near the tomb of Master Yvo, and bound on account of

her fury, who at the very Master Yvo's invocation

received health. Asked of the time,

month and day; he said, that at this time of summer there are

eight years or thereabouts, as he believes, on a certain day, of which

nor of the month he said he in no wise remembers. Asked

who were present when was done the said miracle,

he said he knew not, because he was not at the said miracle present,

but her he saw well for eight days thus furious,

afterward well for three or four days following

sound, and of the said infirmity cured. Asked

at whose invocation was the said infirm one cured, he said

he firmly believes that at the invocation of Master Yvo.

Asked why so he believes, he said, that for

the reason that he saw a certain man, whose name he knows not,

who the said infirm woman had brought and kept,

who her himself to have vowed said to God and to Blessed

Yvo, that to her he should give and restore health. And said

the said Yvo, that she was also his niece, and

that she had been infirm for three weeks and beyond. Asked

from what place the said woman was born, he said,

that from near Mons Relaxus, as he heard said

by the said man who led her. Asked of what

age then was the said woman, he said he believes that she was

fifteen years or thereabouts, as by the look

of her body it appeared.

[132] That Hazevisia, daughter of Hymsianus of the parish

of Plebs-Petri of the diocese of Quimper, likewise a girl, demented and furious

for a year and beyond, so much that her it was necessary

to hold and bind; her mother invoked Master Yvo,

and vowed her to him of one wax candle, of the length

and thickness of the said daughter, to be rendered him annually

while she lived, that he should give her health: at once

healed she was and cured. Testifies the very freed one, speaking

of herself of the infirmity and freeing, and the vow of the mother,

by her presence, sight and hearing. And at the end

of her said is written: And we saw her sound,

as it appeared, and of sound sense.

[133] That Gleoguena, sister of Yvo of Trevol,

of the diocese of Léon, raging for five weeks, and another woman,

who strove her hands, and arms and others

approaching her to bite, and it was necessary for her to be bound

in feet and hands, by the said Lord e William

then Bishop of Léon, and Daniel

Brien uncle of the said woman, and Yvo aforesaid;

Daniel and Yvo the same led to the sepulchre

of the said Yvo; she was there for four days thus raging.

And at length there fell the bindings from the hands

and arms of her, and with feet bound she dragged herself and entered

the sepulchre: and when she had stayed for a short time,

she went out: the bonds being loosed of their own accord at the sepulchre. and there fell the bindings of the shins; and from

that hour she was healed, and sense was to her restored.

Testifies Yvo Natalis, Witness CX aforesaid, brother

of the said freed one, speaking of his sister furious aforesaid,

and that many times she bit him in the hands

and many other places of his body, and raised a

morsel from his left side: and that the said Bishop

said to the very Witness and others, that they should vow her to the said Yvo,

and lead her to his sepulchre. And the same Witness

and the said Daniel vowed and led her, and she was

freed, as in the theme is contained.

ANNOTATIONS.

CHAPTER XVII.

Other infirmities cured, things lost recovered, by the help of S. Yvo.

[134] That when Heliendis, wife of Anvirois citizen

of Tréguier, A dropsical woman is healed of the age of XL years or thereabouts,

was dropsical, for three years or thereabouts, so that the said

woman's skin had cracked; she was at the invocation of the said

Yvo cured in this manner. Because when she had stayed for

the space of XV days or thereabouts next to the tomb of the said Yvo

keeping vigil and praying; her husband, not hoping

of a cure, to the house caused her to be brought back. And

afterward to the same woman was in dreams said, and revealed

by the said Yvo; that she should return to the church,

and make one wax candle to be placed and burnt

over the tomb of the said Yvo, and thus she would receive health.

And on the morrow the said woman to the church

of Tréguier caused herself to be brought: again brought. and there being made miraculously

about the navel, the humors in the manner of water

came out, and most copiously dropped: and thus cured

was the woman aforesaid. Testifies Laurence, Witness

CXXIII, by sight many times of the infirmity of the said neighbor

of his, and afterward saw her many times for the said XV

days in the church of Tréguier still infirm, and afterward

of the aforesaid infirmity cured: and of the apparition

and revelation of the said Yvo, and of the hole, by

hearing from her. And he said, he the hole and the dropping

and the wetting had seen in the church and place aforesaid: and he saw afterward her sound nearly for a year: and

that the said woman had one son, after the said cure

conceived.

[135] That Helena, widow of Hyraes of the city of Tréguier,

for a year and more paralytic, likewise a paralytic woman. and in her side

having a great hole, through which the bowels appeared;

healed she was and cured, by the merits and at the invocation

of the said Yvo. Testify, Witness CCII,

Theophania, by sight many times of the infirmity: and

that while she suffered she sent by the very Witness

to many others, to whom she said, that the said Yvo her had visited,

and where he had said that his sepulchre she should visit,

and there she would receive health. And she caused herself to be led by

the very Witness and others to the sepulchre of the said Yvo, and

there vowed herself to the same, and invoked for health

to be had: and healed she was and cured. And her afterward

he saw many times wholly sound, and this was next to

the sepulchre of the said Yvo. Blezuona seems to agree

with the said Theophania, of the infirmity and freeing.

[136] Witness CXXVI, Adelicia daughter of Billon of the parish

of Plœsat of the diocese of Tréguier, of the age of thirty years

or thereabouts, said by her oath, that

the throat between the jaw and the neck bit; After the bite of a venomous worm foully swollen, and so

grievously, that she was from the crown of the head up to the navel

so dangerously swollen, infected and infirm,

that from then for eight days or thereabouts she totally lost

the appetite of eating and drinking, and feared and believed

verisimilarly from this to die. On account of which she

vowed herself to Master Yvo, saying these words or the like, Lord

S. Yvo, myself to you I vow, and I ask you that

from this infirmity and danger in which I am you would

free me; and I will visit your sepulchre, and

my offering to you I will make. Which vow being made, she is healed by touching Yvo's hood: and

indicated to Yvo Alani, husband of Catharine Hælorii,

sister of the said Lord Yvo, whose house the said Adelicia

had gone to; he said, to the same Catharine his wife,

that the hood of the said Lord Yvo, which at home with himself

he had, she should bring, and put upon the head of the said Adelicia

thus infirm. Which hood indeed the said Catharine

brought, and put upon the said infirm one:

who at once felt herself relieved; and on the morrow at dawn

cured she was totally and healed. Asked of the

time, month and day; she said, that in the month of August,

as she believes: of the year and day, she does not remember.

Asked, how much time she was thus infirm; she said,

that for eight days or thereabouts. Asked, who had seen

her infirm; she said, that Yvo Alani aforesaid,

and Catharine his wife, and Robert Brierry,

and many others. Asked, how she knows that by

the bite of the said worm she was thus swollen and infirm; she said,

that before she found the said worm, pricking and

biting her throat (which with her hand she took trembling,

and from herself far cast) sound she was. Of what

kind moreover or color was the said worm, she said she knew not,

because it she could not see, because by night

happened that deed. Asked, if afterward

she was infirm; she said, that no. And we saw her

sound. Likewise Witness CXXVII, Catharine Hælorii,

sister of good memory the said Lord Yvo Hælorii, whom the Saint's own sister attests. parishioner

of Hengoat of the diocese of Tréguier, of the age of eighty

years, said by her oath,

that on a certain day there came to her house at Hengoat

Adelicia, daughter of Billon parishioner of Plœsat,

her breast, head and in her neck, so much that for

pain scarcely breathe she could or speak. Which seeing

the said Catharine, thus swollen and afflicted, by a motion of piety

and at the suggestion of many bystanders, of whose

names she in no wise remembers, she brought and put

upon her the hood of the said Lord Yvo, which with herself at home

for relics she kept, and now keeps diligently

and also reverently. And then at once the said Adelicia

began to say these words or the like, S. Yvo

to you thanks I give, because the pain of my infirmity has begun

now to pass. And she believes firmly, that at the invocation

of Master Yvo healed she was, because by the touch or application

of the hood aforesaid, many of divers infirmities

full have obtained health.

[137] That a certain man, a pilgrim, came to the sepulchre

of the said Yvo, for health to be had, as he said,

of an infirmity, Carrying a stone in the scrotum he is freed. which he suffered and had in the testicles

to the quantity of a man's head. He invoked the said Yvo,

and rendered and vowed himself to the same, that from him that vice

he should expel: and the vow and invocation of this kind being made,

also in the said skin of the testicles and the swelling

appeared a hole or opening: and thereby flowed

and fell out one stone in the manner and quantity

of a goose's egg, with some quantity of humors: and of

the passion, pain and infirmity, which he suffered, he was

healed and cured. Olivarius Lamine, Witness CCIX,

by his presence in all things, saw him thus infirm

for XV days and beyond, in the city and church of Tréguier.

Harvey, Witness CC, seems in all things

to agree with the aforesaid by sight, hearing, and

his presence.

[138] That when Olivarius le Mazcon, of the parish

of Ploevelenec of the diocese of Saint-Brieuc, was going along a b cart-road,

there entered between his foot and his right shin

next to the ankle c the point of a piece d of a spindle,

and the spindle being broken there remained a piece there to a finger's length enclosed, a hurt shin is healed:

so that it could not be got out without cutting: and thus

it was for three weeks or thereabouts that go he could not,

and the greatest pain he felt. Then he vowed

himself to the said Yvo and promised that if he were cured, he would render

him each year four pennies, and would fast on the day

Friday all the time of his life: and at once went out the piece

aforesaid of the said spindle, and ceased the pain. Testify

the very freed one, Witness CXLIII, speaking of himself:

and Alienor, Witness CXLIV, wife of the said freed one; and adds,

that it was not hoped of his cure, and that the said

piece of the spindle without hindrance went out.

[139] That Guidomarus, son of Loeder, parishioner

of Lanna of the diocese of Dol, grievously suffering for

the time of XXV years or thereabouts in the right jaw, so much

that the jaw and gum tauta much he had swollen,

and sometimes eat he could not nor drink; likewise a swollen jaw,

he vowed himself to the said Yvo, and him invoked; that, if he had

the power with God of binding or loosing, he should free him:

because well he believed that he could obtain it: and

he promised one penny annually. And then at once

of the said Guidomarus: which the same feeling drew out, and

altogether the pain ceased, and fully he was healed and cured:

and was that stone of the quantity of the first joint f

of the thumb, and of the likeness of a plum-stone. Testifies

the very freed one, Witness CLXXXVIII, speaking of himself.

[140] That when Brother Andrew, Abbot of Blessed Mary

of Beauport g of the diocese of Saint-Brieuc, was in a continuous fever

for XIV weeks, and a continuous fever. and had relapsed, and more

was hoped of death than of life; he vowed himself to the said Yvo,

that he should pray God for him, that he should give him health: and

afterward he heard a voice saying to him, You my boy,

hold this: and when I shall come back, I will remove it

from you. And at once he made a sob for two days: and

afterward at once was cured. Testifies the very freed one,

Witness CCIV.

[141] That when Simon, Clerk of James Rector

of the Church of Mosques of the diocese of Nantes, Likewise grievously infirm, was

for eight days or thereabouts with a grave infirmity infirm, he had

devotion to the said Yvo, and vowed himself to the same,

and him invoked for health to be had; and thus infirm

caused himself to be carried before the image of the very Yvo,

which the same James had made in the church of Alnetum of the same

diocese of which he was then Rector. And when for

the space in which could be said the Miserere mei, he had stayed there;

he came back fully sound and cured, saying that S.

Yvo had cured him: another dumb, and he ate and drank with the same

Rector cured and sound. And when William,

Clerk of the same James, on account of a grave infirmity,

which for a long time he had had, his speech had lost; himself

he vowed and invoked the said Yvo for health

to be had; and caused himself to be carried before the image above

said, and there stayed for the space of going the sixth

part of a league, and afterward came back sound and cured. Testifies

James, Witness CCVII, the Rector aforesaid,

asserting the aforesaid of Simon his Clerk aforesaid:

and asked of the infirmity, he believes of a continuous fever:

and the said William of the infirmity.

[142] That when Juzeta, mother of Robert, was so

infirm for XV days and beyond, that it was not hoped of

life, and a sick woman. the mother of the said Juzeta her to the said Yvo vowed of XII pennies

annually, as long as she lived. And after a short

time at once in the evening she sweated, and fully was healed. Testifies

Robert, Witness CCXXV, son of the said Juzeta,

asserting of the said infirmity, as he believes, a continuous fever.

[143] Elezvenna Goasqueder, of the city of Tréguier,

Witness CXXX, of the age of XL years and beyond, said by

her oath, A matron finding her house plundered, that while on a certain night she was

absent from her house, which she inhabited at Tréguier; thieves

entered her house, and all the goods which in the house

were with them carried away; at length on the morrow returning,

and finding her goods thus lost, grieving and

groaning and very greatly weeping, she came to the tomb

of the said Lord Yvo in the church of Tréguier, and prayed the same

for the recovery of her goods lost;

vowing and promising to the same ten shillings once,

and each year for life twelve pennies,

if it should happen for her the aforesaid goods to recover. Which

vow being made, it was to her in mind or spirit (as she believes)

divinely inspired, that in the city of Tréguier in

the house of the widow Galocoysin, and in the house of Brientius Judicelli

Bozec near the fountain of S. Tugdoalus, the vow made she is meanwhile admonished where the better part lies hidden, and in the house

of Yvo Pontene of Langazou next to the said chapel of saint

Queizou of the diocese of Tréguier, goods of this kind

she would find. Which woman at once going to the servants of the Bishop

of Tréguier, and of Lord Henry of Tuonguindi,

and of Maurice of Plebs-Crucis, in whose

dominion or territory the aforesaid goods consisted;

by the said servants the said houses she caused to be searched diligently:

and in the houses of the widow Galo and Brientius Judicelli

three parts of the goods aforesaid of the said woman

were found, and at length by judgment of the said

goods restored to the same: but with the fourth part

of the goods aforesaid, a certain one of those thieves, namely

Yvo Ponteur, secretly fled and withdrew toward

Rocha-Deriani, distant from the city of Tréguier

by one league. And when he was in a certain place called

the park of Herverius, son of Herverius Bozec, he was totally

blinded. and it being found he receives also the rest; And then the wife of the said thief sent Yvo

Lalœper of Tréguier her brother, now

to the same brother of hers, that he should go to the said husband of hers,

whom he would find in the place above named wishing

to go out of the country. And then the said monk went to the said

place, and found that man as the woman to him

had foretold. Which said man said to the aforesaid monk, that

(as he believed) blind he was, on account of certain things which

he had taken away from the house of Blezuenna; asking that he should go to

the said Blezuenna, and say to her, that she should come to the said place,

her things there to receive. And afterward the said

monk came to the said Blezuenna, and said to her that

she should go to the said place on the day aforesaid: and that in the place, in

which she would find tamarisks knotted, her aforesaid things

she would find. Which also the said Blezuenna did: and as to her had said

the aforesaid monk, it came to pass. Asked, of the time

in which the aforesaid things were; she said, that ten and

eight h years are it or thereabouts, as she believes, in the month of March,

on the first Monday of the month aforesaid; present in

the said vow and in the recovery of the aforesaid Prigentius

Cozic, servant of Lord Geoffrey of Tornemina

then Bishop of Tréguier, Bertou Urnosi,

Provost of the same Bishop now dead; and Huro

son of Guido, then servant of the said Lord Bishop;

and many others, of whose names she does not remember.

Asked, how many days the aforesaid goods thus

were lost; she said, that the three parts of the aforesaid

goods she recovered on the same Monday, on which the vow

she emitted: but the aforesaid part remaining within the day

Sunday following. Asked, if she had

any suspicion against the said thieves before the vow

emitted; she said, that no.

[144] Yvo Ponteur of the city of Tréguier, Witness

CXXXI, of the age of sixty years, diligently examined

upon the said miracle, by the said Blezuenna above

set forth and narrated, said by his oath,

that the goods lost, the thief who carried it off being struck with blindness, from the house of the very Blezuenna, with

certain others on a certain night, of which he does not remember

on account of drunkenness, induced furtively he took away; and

that in the said place of the Park, to which he had fled, with

part of the said goods to him by his companions assigned,

he was blinded; and the vow emitted by him to the said Lord Yvo

he said, that the goods aforesaid he would restore, and two shillings

annually to the said Lord Yvo would give, if to him he should render his sight

his: and his sight he recovered: and the goods aforesaid, which

he had he restored by the said monk, in the manner above

set forth. until he caused them to be restored. Of the restitution of the other goods, which

his companions had, that he knew nothing he asserted; except that

he heard said, that they were to the said Blezuenna fully restored,

and firmly so he believes, on account of those things which happened

to his person above expressed. Asked

of the year; he said, that ten and eight years

are it or thereabouts, as he believes. Asked of the month; he said,

that in March: but of the day he does not remember, as

he said. Asked who were present when he emitted the vow;

he said, that in the emission of the vow of this kind alone he was.

Asked, who saw him blinded; he said

that Morvanus Vice-comitis of i S. Cazou of the parish

of Tréguier, and many others of whose names

he does not remember, as he said. Asked, how much time

thus he remained blind; he said, that from the hour of none

up to Vespers of the day immediately following. Asked,

in what place he received his sight; he said, that in

the village of Conam of the parish of Tréguier, distant from the aforesaid

Park, where he was blinded, by two draws of a crossbow:

to which village he was led by a certain

boy, of whose name he does not remember. Morvanus

Vice-comitis, of the parish of Tréguier, Witness

CXXXII, of the age of sixty years or thereabouts, asked,

if he heard made the vow emitted by Blezuenna;

he said, that no; but he heard the aforesaid Blezuenna,

in the said Park existing, saying these words or

the like; Lord S. Yvo, to you I render thanks, because

through you my goods I have aided. Asked, if and how much

time he saw him illumined; he said, that he

saw him blind for one night and day, and afterward

and now seeing. Asked who were present

he saw him blind; he said, present Conanus

Davidis of Langazou neighbor of the said Yvo of the parish

of Tréguier, and many others of whose names

he does not remember. Asked of the place where he saw him

illumined after the day and night aforesaid, he said

that in the house of the said Yvo. Asked if him before

he knew, he said that yes for many years.

[147] Yvo Agordone of the parish of Tréguier, Witness

CXXXIII, of the age of fifty years, said, From the same woman a cup taken away,

that when Blezuenna Guasquider of the city of Tréguier

Yvo she vowed, and promised and paid a certain cup

of wax, to the end that the aforesaid cup

she might recover. Which done it happened, after six years

or thereabouts, the house of Geoffrey Guasqueider, near

the city of Tréguier situated; with all the goods

which there were, to burn except the aforesaid silver

cup: which though in the flame of fire long it had stayed,

unburnt yet and unhurt remained: and afterward

the same cup was to the same Blezuenna restored. Asked,

how he knows the aforesaid; he said, that he saw

the house burn, and the said cup in the flame of fire existing,

for so great a space that it ought to have been melted or dissolved

altogether, unless miraculously from such

dissolution it had been preserved. Asked, of the time;

he said, that six years are it or thereabouts. Asked

of the month and day; he said, that at the beginning of the month

of May, on a certain Friday, at the hour of prime or thereabouts. Asked,

who were present, he said, that Scolan

the baker of the city of Tréguier, Theobald son of

Presbyter Novus, Yvo of the village of Onsy, William

of the village of Guilli, Yvo Abranthahe, and many others.

Asked, in what place or in what part of the house the said

cup was in the flame, he said, that in the middle

of the house. Asked, at whose invocation the said

cup was from such a fire freed; he said,

that at the invocation of Master Yvo, as he firmly believes,

to whom the aforesaid woman the said cup had vowed, as above

he said. Asked, how he knows the said woman the said vow

and with what words to have emitted; he said, that because he heard

the very woman, many times saying these words or

the like; S. Yvo, to you I vow my cup, and

I hope firmly that you will render it to me. Asked,

how he knows the said woman the said cup of wax

to the said Lord Yvo to have vowed and paid; he said, that for

the reason that he heard, as above; and because he saw in the church

of Tréguier a certain cup of wax hanging,

over and next to the sepulchre of the said Lord Yvo: and commonly

it was said, that that cup was, that which

the said woman had placed or caused there to be placed. Asked,

how he knows the said woman the said silver cup

to have lost; he said, that for the reason that he heard a Priest

in the church of Tréguier many times saying, and

admonishing openly and publicly under pain of excommunication, the house where it was burning after six years, it is found,

that whoever a cup of this kind by

the said woman lost had found or knew, it

should render or reveal to the same; and for the reason that he heard

the said cup sought through the houses of the city of Tréguier

by the servants of the Bishop of Tréguier, at the instance

of the woman aforesaid. Asked, how he knows

the said cup to be the same, which the said woman had lost;

he said, that for the reason that it many times he had seen

in the house of the aforesaid woman, and had drunk with the same

before it she had lost. Asked, how

he knows that the said woman the said cup had recovered; he said,

for the reason that, after the said fire and other aforesaid, he saw

many times the said cup in the house of the woman aforesaid;

and the very woman many times this afterward to him said. on account of her vow made for its cause. Blezuenna,

Witness CXXXIV, just named, diligently examined

upon the aforesaid miracle of the cup, from the fire

freed or preserved, said, that twelve years there were

at the feast of Blessed Nicholas of May k last past,

that the very one who speaks lost a certain cup

of silver, plain, of the weight of one mark and a half

of Tréguier, in the middle of which was a knot l of Gildasius

in various manner drawn through, which on the morrow she vowed

to the said Yvo by these words or the like; Lord S.

Yvo Hælorii, to you I vow my cup which

I lost, asking you that thus for me you would keep the same,

that by anyone it cannot be sold or alienated; and

I promise you one cup of wax, and twelve

pennies to be paid once, if the said cup

for me to recover should happen. And a certain cup

of wax on the morrow of the said vow she caused to be placed in the church

of Tréguier, over and next to the sepulchre of Master Yvo.

At length it happened six years revolved, on the same day on

which the cup she had lost, the house of Geoffrey Guasqueider

by fire to burn, with all things contained in it,

except the said cup of silver, which after the burning

of the aforesaid to the same woman restored was, altogether

unhurt and in no wise changed by Yvo of

Villa Onsy, a Noble: who said to the same woman,

as she asserted, that the aforesaid cup he had had from

the said Scolan. And Yvo son of Presbyter Novus, who

it had found in the house aforesaid burnt.

[148] That Stephen called Lyrois, a sailor of the city

of Tréguier, a wooden boat-hook m, which he lost

in the Seine near Rouen, a punt-pole lost in the river is recovered. almost for one

league, afterward on the third day found at the invocation of the said

Yvo in the port of Maligneaux of the diocese of Rouen,

before the ship, where it had come against the common

course of the water. Testifies Stephen aforesaid, Witness CXL,

asserting that if he should find it, he promised one

wax candle of the length of the said boat-hook.

[149] Houses are kept safe from fire, That when a certain house, which was not distant

from the house of Olivarius Derianus except by two paces,

by a very great fire was burning, and then there blew a great

wind, so that the house of the said Olivarius was covered with the flame

of the fire above said for the space of half a league.

And then the said Derianus, his father, the said house, by the flame

of the fire covered, vowed to the said Yvo, him invoking;

and promised to render eight pennies each

year all the time of his life. And at once the wind

from the contrary side began to blow, so that the said house

was free. And the flame was turned to the other part.

Testifies Olivarius, Witness LXXXIV, by sight and

his presence in all things.

[150] a ship from submersion, That a certain merchant of Spain, XV pounds

of Tours to the trunk of the said Yvo in the church of Tréguier

offered; which to him he had promised, as he said,

for the value of one cask of wine in danger of being submerged,

together with his wines in the sea established: from which danger

at the invocation of the very Yvo he had been, as he said,

freed. Testifies Alan, Witness CXLV,

who saw the said merchant, the said XV pounds offering.

[151] That when the nag n of Yvo Lœgier, of

Plebs plœsunet of the diocese of Tréguier, had fallen into

the river called Lya, likewise a horse with feet bound fallen into a river. its two fore feet bound;

and had stayed from the hour of none up to the setting of the sun

under the water, and so that nothing of it appeared; Adelicia

wife of the said Yvo, doubting of her husband, who to her

was hard and cruel; vowed the said Nag to the said

Yvo, and promised to pay a candle of the length

of it. And the invocation and vow of this kind being made,

the ears of the horse appeared over the water, and it came out to

land by itself. Testifies Adelicia aforesaid,

Witness CCXVII, who the said Nag had led to

the mill with corn.

[152] That when there was a great mortality of animals,

and the animals of Agatha mother of Adelicia of the parish

of Plebs Nova were dying indiscriminately; and animals from a plague. the very Agatha

her animals vowed to the said Yvo; a calf of one

month, which should have no mother, and from then lived

without milk, promising to give him. And then ceased

the aforesaid mortality: and afterward the very Agatha the said calf,

of the age of four years or thereabouts, handed over

and left at the sepulchre of the said Yvo. Testifies Adelicia

aforesaid. Finally are brought forth the testimonies of the Commissaries

Apostolic, and of the Vicars of Tréguier

of the multitude and quality of the anathemas, the frequency

of pilgrims at the sepulchre, and the report of miracles widely

spread; for which also thus the Summary of miracles is ended,

uncertain when written or to whom offered.

ANNOTATIONS.

APPENDIX

Of the Canonization of S. Yvo, the elevation of the body, translations, cult.

[153] Laurence Surius, among the Lives of the Saints, also

setting forth the Life of S. Yvo, To the Canonization celebrated 1347 in a more elegant phrase

by him adorned, of his own adds and concludes: Clement

of that name VI Roman Pontiff, at the time

in which Clement V and Benedict XII over the Roman Church

presided, often diligent effort gave,

that Blessed Yvo into the number of the Saints be reckoned. And

to him making a journey there appeared a holy man, a staff in his hand

holding; and bade that the undertaken business he should attend to,

and to effect bring. So very

solemn rite afterward he came to enroll that one's

name in the Catalogue of the Saints; and him to be held for a Saint

pronouncing, solemnly, as they say, he canonized,

in the year of the Savior Christ 1347 on the

XIX day of the month of May. Grievously affected by sickness was

the nephew of that Pontiff, the same also Archbishop

of Narbonne, and the hope of his life the physicians and skilled men

had cast away: but when his friends, of God and of Blessed Yvo

the help had implored, and a certain vow to Blessed Yvo

had pronounced, at once to him restored was health.

All which Andrew Saussay, in the Gallican Martyrology,

after a long elogium of the life on May XIX, transcribed. We have

for the use of the XV century written, and with abbreviated notes far

more numerous than those to which the earlier centuries were accustomed, intricate;

containing the Acts for the Canonization, a more ornate

and more prolix Life in the same XV century from the Processes collected, the Conferences XI made are had in Mss.

and the whole proper Office for the use of the church of Tréguier

composed: which book came to us in the year 1644

by the gift of the R. P. James Dinet, then Provincial of France. The first

part is divided into eleven Conferences or Sermons,

both by the very Pontiff, and by other Prelates upon that business

consulted pronounced before the solemn sentence: which

all to here transcribe worth the labor we do not think, since

they are with common topics prolixly extended. Of each however

the Themes it pleases to exhibit.

[154] Conference I made by the Lord Pope Clement

VI, The first of the Pope himself about to propose the matter on the XVIII day of May, of his Pontificate in the year V, in the recitation

of the Process of the Lord Yvo Hælori, formerly

Priest of the diocese of Tréguier, thus begins. Heloy,

Heloy. Mark XV. Because Heloy is interpreted My God,

because also our Yvo of whose Canonization

we wished to seek counsel and have it. He is surnamed

from his lineage Heloy. And in truth well he was

Heloy, not only as to kinship and surname;

but as to grace and participation.

For those you call Gods, to whom the word of God was made,

John X, and in the Psalm, I said You are Gods and sons

of the Most High all. Deservedly, whether we take Heloy by

essence, or Heloy by kinship, or Heloy

by grace, I can today cry out and say the words

of the Theme afore-assumed, it is divided three ways. Heloy. And it seems to me that

according to that triple acceptation of Heloy, I can

triply introduce my theme. First

indeed, taking Heloy by essence, I cry

Heloy, Heloy, to the suppliant imploring of divine help.

Secondly, taking Heloy by kinship

and lineage, and for wisdom I cry, Heloy,

Heloy, by the people Breton's, nay of the whole Kingdom

of France's, concordant and frequent supplication.

Thirdly, taking Heloy by participation and

grace, I cry Heloy, by the very admirable and

most exalted merit's consideration and faithful recitation.

[155] In this style the first part deducing the Pontiff; and thence

passing to the second, he pursues the endeavors of Brittany for

obtaining the canonization aforesaid, with his Predecessors

Pontiffs, Clement V and John XXII; alleging those things

which in the letters of the Commissaries Apostolic above

related are contained, of more than five hundred persons, upon

the report of sanctity together attesting. He adds afterward,

that not only those testimonies they received of the report,

nor only also the testimonies of two hundred and forty

nine Witnesses, whom singly and apart they examined;

but also they themselves with their eyes beheld,

as there they narrate. The inquisition moreover being made, he says,

both upon the report and upon the truth, The cause reported to John XXII, of which presently

it shall be seen in the third member, the Bishop of Limoges

to the Lord John the predecessor reported. Who the reception

of it committed to the Lord Benedict the predecessor

of ours, then of the Title of S. Prisca Priest, and to John

Bishop of Porto, and to Lucas of S. Mary in Via-lata

Deacon, Cardinals, who heard the said Bishop's

relation, and of the seals proved the verification,

and afterward reported. In the wonted manner the rubrics were made,

and the books according to the number of the Cardinals multiplied,

and handed over each to each. Afterward many supervening

businesses, up to our times

it rested the cause: but then strongly excited they began

to cry out with common vows both of the Prelates and of the Princes,

both in the Consistory and in the Chamber, Heloy,

Heloy, and to make it known they added the words referring

to me, Lammasabactani, which is interpreted, To

what end have you forsaken me? And so much they cried out,

that the Duke of Brittany, who a now is, to us on account of

this in his own person came, and in his presence the business

also caused to be proposed in the Consistory, and he

himself there two miracles reported.

[156] it is brought to Clement 6 by the Duke of Brittany One of himself, how when he had been most grievously

infirm, and of his convalescence the physicians despaired,

to the Lord Yvo he vowed himself: and not only health

he received, but so to his pristine strength was

reduced, that on the second or third day on his feet to

the sepulchre of the Lord Yvo he came. The second was,

that when there was there a certain ship, in which were b wares

many of various kinds, it was imperiled, two miracles by himself attesting, and under water

nearly for three days it stayed; the merchants moreover it vowed

to the Lord Yvo; which was raised, and (which a miracle

great seems) those wares in nothing

wetted nor deteriorated were. And these the Barons,

who with the very Duke were, testified. Said

also the same Duke, that he and the whole province

Heloy, Heloy, which according to their tongue is interpreted

Alacrious-help, that peace to that country

would be rendered; and because to me they cried out. And certainly to me

in dreams in that year he seemed to say, and me to rebuke,

because to his Canonization I did not proceed; as if he said Lamma sabactani. Whether moreover

it was a vision or a dream, he knows, I know not: but

well I know, that at once I sent for the Procurator of the business, the Pope even in dreams admonished:

and told him the dream: and from then I bore in mind to proceed

in the business mentioned, and to say to that Lord Yvo,

I will not let you go, nor will I forsake you. Joshua I.

[157] And perhaps not by chance but by divine dispensation

it was done, that to me that business was reserved. 1 Kings

IX, Of set purpose it has been reserved for you. And the reason seems,

the first that, because the Duke of Brittany John on

the part of his father is a Breton, a Breton too Yvo Hælori,

by a Pope of Limoges c to the Catalogue of the Saints

be enrolled. The second, as from his Process is gathered, who suspecting the matter divinely reserved for himself,

that Lord Yvo in the year of his age the fiftieth, and on the XIX

day of May is crowned in heaven; I moreover in the year of my age

the fiftieth to that state, though unwilling,

assumed, on the XIX day of the month of May crowned I was, but

diversely: for he was crowned in heaven, I on

earth; he in paradise, I in exile; he to honor,

I to labor; he to glory, I to pressure and

penalty; he to joy, I to mourning; he to consolation,

I to tribulation… I say thirdly,

that I can today cry out, Heloy, Heloy, by the very

admirable and most exalted merit's manifold consideration. For he wholly into God transformed,

which is plain from his life and miracles, shone with singular excellence

of merits, and resplended with radical refulgence

of miracles: and these two I will prove in the process, him

in brief reciting. the merits of sanctity and of miracles he sets forth. Hence into the matter proposed

entering the Pontiff, the same lucidly divides: and elegantly

having pursued it through whole columns sixty-four, of which

four we have transcribed, thus at last concludes: These therefore

in the Consistory diligently thus discussed and examined,

and a relation made by our Brothers Peter d

Bishop of Sabina and of the Title of S. Anastasia Priest,

and Galhardus e of S. Lucia in Silice Deacon

Cardinals; and there all particularly

read, it seemed, that also from the Prelates here existing

in the Curia we have, whether we ought to his

Canonization to proceed, counsel to seek:

For safety is where many counsels, Proverbs XI. Wherefore

what upon this shall seem, you may set forth, that in so great a

business that only we may do, which will be in the eyes of the divine

Majesty acceptable. Which to us may grant that

true Heloy, the same God. Amen.

[158] The II Conference made by Maurice f Heluy

Procurator of Blessed Yvo, upon the supplication of the Canonization

of the same, for its Theme had, Let the holy one be sanctified

still, Apocalypse XXII: and proceeds through columns

twenty: and follows Conference III or the Sermon of the Lord

Patriarch of Antioch g, drawn from the Theme, I perceive

that a holy man is this. The Prelates assent, nine consulted about this. 4 Kings IV, through

columns eighteen. The IV Conference is of the Archbishop h

of Narbonne, by which supplication is made upon the canonization

of Blessed Yvo, which on account of the infirmity, by which the same Archbishop

at that time was vexed, he could not

publicly preach, the Theme assumed, Exalt him

as much as you can: for he is greater than all praise. Ecclesiasticus

XLIII, and is extended through columns twenty-one. The V is set

the Conference of the Lord Armanovus i, Archbishop

of Bordeaux, in the matter of the Canonization of the Lord Yvo.

Upon these words, Truly this man was just; and fills

Columns nineteen. The VI Conference made by Oliver

fifteen, proceeds from these words; Praising I will invoke

the Lord; from Blessed Augustine, in the Sermon on the Lord's

Prayer, assuming, that two things he who invokes ought to

beware, lest he ask what he ought not, nor from him ask of

whom he ought not. Afterward the Sermon, which formed the Lord

XVI assumes; Whomever the Lord shall choose,

he shall be Holy; and are filled Columns ten. The Sermon

of the Bishop m of Sigüenza, which is Conference VIII, thus prefaces,

He is worthy that this you should grant him. Luke VIII, and through columns

twelve is extended. Conference IX, made by the Bishop

occupies columns seventeen, at the head bearing

from 1 Peter IV these words, In all things let Heloy be honored.

Finally the Sermon of Brother Galfridus, of the Order of Friars

Hermits of S. Augustine, Bishop of Ferns o, is numbered

Conference X, beginning from the text of John ch. XVII

Father the hour is come, glorify your son, through Columns

eleven. All these Sermons moreover to this point look, that the Pontiff understand

that altogether he must proceed in the business. After all therefore follows the Sermon made by the Lord Clement

Pope VI, in the canonization of Blessed Yvo, the Theme

assumed, Which heard the Pontiff proceeding, Exult and praise habitation of Sion, because great

in the midst of you is the Holy One of Israel. Isaiah XII, and begins

from the Bull of John XXII above in ch. I brought forth, and ninety

eight Columns filling, fully treats of the merits of the cause and

the authority of the Church to acts of this kind, and at last concludes,

saying: But because the Holy Spirit specially illumines

and rules the Church, therefore him let us invoke

saying, Come Creator Spirit. Which finished and

the prayer completed, to his canonization we proceed

in this manner.

[159] To the honor of God omnipotent, Father and

Son, and Holy Spirit, and the exaltation of the faith, and the increase of

the Christian religion, He declares Yvo a Saint, by the authority of the same God

omnipotent Father and Son and Holy Spirit, and

of the blessed Apostles Peter and Paul, and our own, of

our Brothers by concordant counsel we decree and

define, of good memory the Lord Yvo Hælori,

formerly Priest of the diocese of Tréguier, to the Catalogue of the Saints

to be enrolled, and as a Saint

to be by all venerated, and him to the said

Saints' Catalogue we enroll; decreeing that

by the universal Church on the day of his death, namely the XIX

day of the month of May, his feast every year, and

the Office as for one Confessor not Pontiff devoutly

and solemnly be celebrated. Moreover by the same authority,

to all truly penitent and confessed, who on

the day of the revelation of his body, and on the day on which there first

of him it shall be celebrated in the church of Tréguier, and for its cause he defines Indulgences. shall be present,

seven years and seven quarantines; and on the Octaves

and through the Octaves of the said festivity otherwise of the revelation

and of the first solemnization, on each day one year

and one quarantine; and who in each year to

the sepulchre of the same on the day of his Nativity or also

of the revelation shall devoutly come, one year and

forty days; but to those coming in each year on

the Octaves and within the Octaves of the said feasts to the sepulchre

of him, a hundred days of the enjoined penances

mercifully we relax. Afterward let be said Te Deum

laudamus, and the Prayer which shall be made for him. Then

let be said the Confiteor, and let be made Absolution in the wonted manner, and

an Indulgence of seven years and seven quarantines

be given, and afterward we will vest ourselves and celebrate

Mass of him. This whole sermon rendered in French to

be found is in Albert le Grand, after the Life by him deduced,

who another copy of the Acts must have had in

which those things alone were: for if ours sometime he had seen,

he would have remembered the Life contained in it which below we give.

[160] There followed moreover in the Codex the election and the deeds

of Clement Pope VI, in the year 1342 ordained, Follows the elevation of the body October 29, which in

the Chronological series of the Roman Pontiffs in its place we will report,

and then in rubricated letters these things were written. In the year

of the Lord 1366 (which number correct and read

1347) there was at Avignon canonized Blessed Yvo

Hælori, born of [p] Munehi and of the parish Munehi

of the diocese of Tréguier, by the same most holy Lord

Pope Clement the sixth: and there was raised

from the earth the body of the said Saint, on the twenty-ninth of the month of October,

on which day is celebrated the very Saint's Translation.

On this day I find also enrolled his memory in the Kalendar

of the Church of Vannes in Brittany, before the proper Saints

of that diocese, printed about the year 1652; nor

do I doubt, but that this is the true usage of the Church of Tréguier and of others

in Brittany following the example. Nonetheless Andrew

Saussay the Translation aforesaid's memory in his

Gallican Martyrology on October XXVII consigns. These

moreover words he uses. not 27 as Saussay. In the Armorican city of Tréguier

the Elevation and Translation of S. Yvo Priest, the Advocate of the poor called; when Clement VI, on account of

the increasing at his tomb miracles, his sacred

limbs from the dust of the sepulchre to be raised, and (because the soul

of one enjoying God and to Him so pleasing the most sacred pledge,

with so many rays of glory glittering, unbecomingly to lie not

would he bear) to the due cult of so great a Heaven-dweller into an honorable

shrine to be translated, and in the sacristy to be replaced by Apostolic precept

commanded. In which solemn carrying

vast wrought miracles, for the grace of those

who to the blessed Confessor vows had pronounced, how much this

his honorification to him was acceptable, clearly showed.

[160] He makes mention of the same Elevation at the beginning of Part

IV the author of the following Legend but has nothing whereby to indicate that of

it anything specially written or to memory handed down to

his hands had come, the miracles then done are lacking. nor even in general does he make mention of the miracles

then wrought, which yet to have been lacking is not credible.

Indeed the Continuator of William of Nangis, at this very time

living and writing, and ending in the year 1368,

the Canonization, and the Elevation one year later places, and so

speaks: In the same year 1348 Helori of Brittany

the lesser Priest and Confessor, of marvelous virtue

and grace, was by the Church and the Lord Pope Clement

the sixth canonized. And in the following year by the Prelates and

Clergy of Brittany from the earth elevated, with many signs and

miracles, through him or by the Lord then done on account of

him and shown. And a church in his name in the street

of S. James begun first and founded. With how great

virtues and sanctity he flourished in the church of Tréguier

in the said Brittany, where his body rests,

is clearly declared. This he by one, as I said, year

erring, as not only from the aforesaid is plain, but

from the very instrument of the foundation aforesaid, which in the Theatre

of Parisian Antiquities of James du Breul page 586 of this kind

is read. To all the faithful of Christ, At Paris in the year 1348, a church founded, the present

letters about to inspect and hear, Fulco by the divine mercy

Bishop of Paris, greeting in the Son of the glorious

Virgin. Although omnipotent God, who needs no patronages

and rewards, in the honors

and pious works, which to His honor and praise

daily are done, rejoices in heaven: we and other orthodox,

who of the Saints themselves the prayers and intercessions

so much the more with Him need, deservedly to rejoice together

ought on earth, Since therefore beloved to us

in Christ certain faithful of Christ, at Paris dwelling,

and chiefly of the province of Tours and of the nation

Breton, desiring, as they assert, to the honor

and praise of S. Yvo, the glorious Confessor, newly

by our Lord the present Pope his clear

merits and miracles requiring canonized, one

society or confraternity at Paris to create and also

to ordain, and of the goods to them by God conferred and to the same

confraternity by the same faithful of Christ the Lord favoring

henceforth to be bestowed, and in it a confraternity. one chapel or church,

even Collegiate, to the honor of the said Saint

to construct, found and endow, and one or more benefices

in the same chapel or church to found and endow;

to Us humbly they supplicated, that to them

the aforesaid of doing and ordaining license and authority,

by our ordinary authority, we would deign to impart.

We therefore of the aforesaid, and chiefly of the merits

and miracles of the very glorious Confessor

by regard induced, and the said supplicants in their laudable

purpose to foster desiring, to the same supplicants

all and singular the aforesaid and any of them

of doing, creating and ordaining, by our authority

ordinary, by the tenor of the presents we give and grant

license and also power. Given under our seal,

in the year of the Lord 1348, on the Monday

after the Assumption of Blessed Mary the Virgin. That church in

the said S. James street constituted the corner of the square called

of the Nuts, as writes the same de Breul: and to it the now named

Fulco in the year 1357 added the right of a proper cemetery,

and briefly touches the points of the statutes of that confraternity,

of which one is, that if any of the confraternity not by his own fault

but by adverse fortune to want be reduced, to him by the common

expenses of the others of suitable sustenance let be provided.

[162] Moreover besides the place from the Gallican Martyrology related,

again in the Supplement to the same on October XIX

is set in Brittany the lesser, the Translation of S. Yvo

Priest and Confessor, of the diocese of Tréguier, special

Tutelary, Another Translation. and of the whole Province of Armorica common

Advocate with God. The Index moreover of Names

this place notes, as if by it were indicated another Translation:

of which a more distinct and more certain notice I require,

equally as of the miracles from the time of the Canonization until now

wrought. Meanwhile we can say, the second of the body

Translation to have been made it seems in the time of Duke John V, in the century

XV; and either then, or rather in the first Translation, separated

was the head, and placed in the Treasury of the church of Tréguier.

The last to feel seems Albert le Grand, from

whom thereafter take of John V's devotion toward the Saint as

follows: Asserted this Duke, son of John IV surnamed

the Conqueror, Devoted to the Saint Duke John V, founds his chapel, from many and grave dangers

snatched himself to have been by the merits of S. Yvo: and therefore

in the church of Tréguier, at the left side of the middle nave,

to be constructed with most beautiful work he caused that which there today

is seen chapel, commonly called the Chapel

of the Duke: within which a tomb of white stone elegantly

carved the holy body encloses, and above rises

of the same material a beautiful tabernacle up

to the vault: up to which also rise gratings

of iron over the whole work stretched, and within covered with curtains

of white linen sewn. The same Duke at the instance

of his Confessor the R. P. Brother John le Denteur, and under his name a church of the Preachers, of

the Order of Friars Preachers, of the same Order

the town of Guérande of the diocese of Nantes, and its

first stone he placed in the year 1408, March XVI;

and the church he willed under the name of S. Yvo

to be dedicated, as also was done in the year of the same Duke penultimate,

of Christ 1441, September XVI, by the Lord William

Maletroit, Bishop of Nantes.

[163] Had been this Prince treacherously taken by

Margaret Clisson, Countess of Penthièvre, nay by a vow made to him he had been freed from captivity,

on February XIII of the year 1419 and in the castle of Champtoceaux

shut up: where considering the extreme to which he

lay subject danger, a vow he made to God and to the holy

Yvo, that if by this one's intercession he were freed

from that prison, his sepulchre, a chapel being founded at it

above said, he would adorn, with a dowry to the daily sacrifices

sufficient. Nor in vain the vows fell; for

by the indignity of the matter moved the Princes, Barons, and Magnates

of Brittany, even those who the Countess closely

touched, having collected more than fifty

five thousand of an armed army, the besieged

castle of Champtoceaux so strongly assaulted,

that within five weeks they compelled the defenders

to the surrender of the place and the restitution of the Duke,

made in the month of May of the year 1420. Wherefore

in the next October residing in his Parliament at

Vannes Duke John, the foundation aforesaid's instrument

ordered to be ratified, on the seventh day of the month, under

this beginning:

[164] John by the grace of God Duke of Brittany,

Count of Montfort and Richmond, and a burial chosen for himself before the chapel, to all about to see or

hear these greeting. Since by our own motion and singular

devotion, by which we are borne toward the glorious Saint

and Lord S. Yvo, whose body rests in

the church of Tréguier, we have chosen for ourselves and designated

and designate, in the aforesaid church; therefore also we have ordained

and by the presents in our general Parliament

we ordain, to be made a foundation of the divine

Office, under a dowry of certain incomes here below to be expressed,

for celebrating in the aforesaid church

explained: and first he founds a daily Mass before

the tomb of S. Yvo, to be sung by one of the Canons

Vicars or Chaplains of that church after the celebration

of Matins, with Deacon, Subdeacon, he designates a daily Mass there,

Cross-bearer, Acolytes and other ministers: who with

the whole College of Canons processionally let come

to the tomb of the said Saint, singing the Antiphon,

Versicle and Collect of him; then the Collect

for the Duke while he shall live, but after his death, Inclina.

Which done shall be begun the Mass, on Sunday indeed

the day of the S. Trinity with the Collect of S. Yvo; on the Feria

II of Requiem, for the souls of the deceased and successors;

on the feria III of S. Yvo, IV of S. Tugdualus,

V of the Holy Spirit, VI of the Cross, VII of the Divine one, so

that daily, except on the feria II, be added the Collect

for the Duke: and let there be going to his tomb and there be sung,

Ne recorderis, Our Father, De profundis,

and the other accustomed prayers. Daily moreover he bids at the end

of Matins by the tolling of the great bell a signal be given,

to convoke the people for the said Mass; which finished

let the Officiant be held in the vulgar tongue for the Duke himself

prayers to conceive, of whom also the anniversary Vigils,

on the first day of each month not impeded, as solemnly as possible

to be repeated are prescribed: and for all those

is constituted the sum of five hundred pounds

of Breton money, each year to be received

from the rights of the port of Rupes-Deriani, newly acquired

from the Penthièvre people.

[165] And he indeed, these things thus settled, died

in the year 1442 in the month of August, near the city of Nantes:

and, contrary to what he had ordained, and there he is entombed in the year 1451, in the choir of the church

there Cathedral buried; but its right pursuing

the Chapter of Tréguier, to be surrendered were the ninth

after year of the dead Duke the bones, and to Tréguier to be sent:

which the Bishop of the place the Lord John of Ployec

with all the Clergy and people going to meet,

them brought into the prepared there tomb, at the foot of the chapel

in a place a little lower than where stands the sepulchre

of the Saint. To whom also through all Brittany many

are churches dedicated, a church of the same Saint in Ker-Martin. as to the Province's Patron,

and namely the church of S. Mary of Ker-martin,

now S. Yvo called, one from the city of Tréguier

quarter, at the wall of his paternal house:

whither a great continually flows number of pilgrims,

not only from Brittany, but from all everywhere

regions, attracted by the multitude of miracles,

which there to the honor of its Saint God works.

Thus far Albert, this also adding that the university of Nantes,

at the instance of Duke Francis II by Pius Pope likewise

II erected in the year 1460, S. Yvo for itself Patron chose.

ANNOTATIONS.

p. Muriehi, by Albert le Grand Menehi is written.

LIFE MORE PROLIX,

By the Author Maurice Gaufridi of the Order of Preachers.

From the Ms. Parchment of Tréguier, now ours.

Yvo, Priest of Tréguier, in Armorican Brittany (S.)

BHL Number: 4637

A. MAUR. GAUFRID.

PROEM.

[1] To the reverend in Christ Father and Lord, the Lord

Christopher, By the Bishop and Chapter by the divine mercy and of the holy

Apostolic See by the grace Bishop of Tréguier, and the most excellent

Priests and Lords of the same church

of the Chapter, and the whole venerable College, Brother

Maurice Gaufridi, in the sacred Page a humble Professor,

and in the Order of Preachers in merits the last

since I am, recommendation of every kind, reverence,

and obeisance, not so much due as devoted.

Long ago to me, through certain Lents the word

of God among you to the people preaching, the Author asked to compose Lessons for the double feast, by certain of your

church's Vicars, of the divine Office and of S. Yvo of that

church the other Patron zealous, it was urged, and from me

nonetheless instantly required, that of the feasts of the very

Blessed Yvo, and their Octaves and within, Lessons from

the life and miracles of the same Saint I should draw, and according to

the two Festivities of his requiring with suitable

phrasing arrange. Upon which hesitating,

and your and the other Lords' of your Chapter

and College mind by no means convincing,

on account of which and doubting, I deferred what they urged.

But lately again by the same instantly pressed,

and of the hoped grateful acceptance of yours favor by

the same informed and assured, nay also of the delay and

postponement reproached, although for this insufficient, and in

the familiar businesses of our mendicity occupied;

in God's help, however, the suffrage of the Saint, and of obedient

charity confiding the merit, my mind I applied,

my study I excited.

[2] Indeed while for the very work the Acts of the same Saint,

if any worthy with themselves they had, the old Legend rejected as insufficient, to me to be shown

I demanded, a certain Legend of the Choir and a book

of the Inquisition of the Apostolic See of the same Acts

they presented. In which Legend indeed, also some things

which of great estimation seemed, I discussed more diligently;

and inspected I judged, as there they are set

and less worthily are found, on account of the defect

of the fullness of truth, not much to the title of Blessed Yvo

to pertain; some indeed a note rather and diminution

to import. Wherefore that being rejected, of the kindly

very Confessor the renowned life, and the prodigious

death, and also the prodigies of virtues, by which

the divine power bestowing, whether while he lived or after

death, he glittered, as to the universal Church,

the truth of all, a new one from the Process to be made he decrees, the book of Inquisition being witness, the Apostolic

See's authority transmitted, with a humble indeed,

but truthful style I have touched: in which can also the very

Lessons, as they are sought, more easily be ordered. So

moreover in all things to keep the mean I have studied, that neither

too great rusticity of words diminish the nobility of the history,

nor superfluous ornament beget suspicion

to secure truth: protesting that nothing in this edition

is noted, which not first has been with the book by due

collation discussed, and from conjectures though more verisimilar,

according to the Rule of Ticonius, in the several things not

expressed to the nail polished.

[3] For the profit moreover of the readers sometimes

certain moral documents I have interspersed, some moral matters being added. and

exhortations to the Saint's imitation and devotion

I have added. Let receive therefore your reverend Paternity and the illustrious

Dignities of your Church, the Chapter's, and College's

sacred Society, what your ratified and grateful acceptance

to me made urged and extorted: and the happy Patron

the glorious Yvo, with wonderful nor less true splendors,

so to say, renewed, let the whole company rejoice

of the sons. Boldly indeed I profess, that in comparison

of those things which anew here are added, few

at once and small, but also unworthy to be reckoned are, which

the prior edition contained. In all moreover and singular things,

how much from this compilation to his praise has accrued,

its diligent examination and to the preceding

comparison will be able to indicate, if however a pious and faithful

inspector it shall have. The promised order therefore

pursuing, first of his renowned life it comes

to be treated: which from the beginning up to his death

touching, through ordered Chapters let us distinguish.

This distinction we note in the margin, another to our work

more commodious partition about to assume: meanwhile

the old Titles, as they are had in the codex marked with rubric, here together

take.

The First Chapter. That the divine providence, which

always from the beginning of the world, in the several times and the several

nations, some for the common salvation of others inspired,

the illustrious Yvo, after many others,

in the now evening of the world, to the nation of the Bretons,

for their salvation delegated.

II How the divine providence, in the manner of the sacred

Scriptures and the history of the Saints, fittingly and

congruously the virtues and graces of S. Yvo, both by his birth

and from the names imposed on him and his parents,

presignified.

III How the divine providence Yvo's sanctity

future both by oracles foretold, and by the indications of signs

and by the presages of His Saints, from his infancy

and boyhood, foreshowed.

IV How by the divine providence disposing he was sent

to Paris, where in the liberal arts first he might be imbued,

and so to the other human and divine sciences

might be disposed: and how in things Philosophic and

Theologic effectively he studied and profited for nine years.

V How by the same divine disposition afterward he was sent

to Orléans, where of Canon Law and Civil flourished

study, that of both the science having gained, the future

himself Advocate and Judge, to spiritual causes and at the same time

temporal more salubriously might consult.

VI How in the aforesaid Universities, for the study

of letters, the religion of virtues he did not neglect: but

to both intently serving, holy morals always

to science he preferred.

VII How after the course of study, his skill and

probity of morals being known, he was made first Official

of the Archdeacon of Rennes, and that strenuously and

lawfully himself in the office he bore.

VIII How on account of the report of his governance and justice,

the place of his own nativity requiring, thence by the Bishop

of Tréguier he was called: and his Official

constituted, how worthily and fruitfully he exercised the Office.

IX How the aforesaid President being dead, his successor

with a like wish the holy man as his Official

retained: and how the just causes, chiefly of the poor,

so he protected, that the Poor's Advocate commonly

he was called, and for their causes injuries and

contumelies he suffered.

X How in the time of so great cares, businesses, and

solicitudes, to God fixed to attend desiring,

an unwearied struggle of sensuality against reason for eight

years he suffered: which however in the ninth year, the divine in

him clemency wholly lulled.

XI How, because the flesh and at the same time the spirit in active

and contemplative life duly he ruled, and perfectly offered,

of the Royal Priesthood of Christ deservedly its

worthy minister he was made.

XII How the diadem of the Priesthood received and

the governance of souls imposed, that by word equally and

example more effectively the luxury of the world to be fled he might show,

into another man made, his pristine life he renewed;

and first of his clothing, furniture, and

bed.

XIII Of the quality of his table, abstinences and fasts.

XIV Of his humility: how in all

words, signs, and gestures humility shone forth.

XV Of his patience in pains, innate, inflicted, and assumed.

XVI …

XVII Of his devotion in the Mass and Canonical

Hours, and extraordinary prayers, and their efficacy.

XVIII How for healing the wounds of souls diligently

the seven Sacraments of the Church he ministered, the Sacramentals

cleanly he handled, the Bible as an apothecary's shop,

and the Fourth of the Sentences as a table

of Sacramental medicines, with himself continually

he carried.

XIX How the seven works of mercy corporal

about the needy and orphans he exercised.

XX Of his hospitality.

XXI How he clothed the naked.

XXII How he visited the sick.

XXIII How he buried the dead.

The Epilogue of the virtues, and an exhortation to imitate his life

his. And so ends the first Part. The second Part, which

was promised, of the holy Confessor's death, through six

Chapters shall be distinguished.

I How he foresaw in spirit and foretold to certain

dear ones the end of life imminent to him, which glad

he expected.

II That, although of strength destitute and very weak,

in the last week to divine works he was intent, up to

the fourth day, in which the last Mass he celebrated

and Confessions he heard.

III Of the disposition of his health on the feria V.

IV How visited by many and his parishioners,

he made to them the last farewell on the feria VI.

V How having taken of the holy Communion and extreme

Unction the Sacraments, on the Saturday, at the dawn

of the following Sunday, in the Lord happily

he died.

VI How his body now extinct more

with purity shone.

VII Of his celebrated burial.

The Third Part, which was promised, of miracles and

prodigies will be twofold. For first will be touched of those

which God's virtue wrought in his person while he lived,

and will have as many Chapters as will be the very miracles.

I. How he merited with God by miracles to shine,

and sometimes in various ways in life he shone.

II. How, where the Saint timber for the church

Cathedral had taken, within five years taller

and thicker trees by God's virtue grew up.

III. How through the negligence of the carpenter

timbers by two feet too short, by four feet

invisibly lengthened are seen.

IV. Of the double miracle for the liberty of the Church.

V. How a chest, of corn furtively emptied,

full to the brim he found, to be distributed to the poor.

VI. Of bread for supplying his defect and

the guests' divinely transmitted, and it is a double miracle.

VII. Of loaves at a single time multiplied.

VIII. How Christ, in the form of a poor man, the hood

received from him, to him miraculously transmitted.

IX. Of a most foul poor man at the entrance, and at the exit

into a most beautiful one transfigured.

X. Of the colloquy of Yvo still a wayfarer with Tugdualus

now a comprehensor, upon keeping the tranquillity

of his Church.

XI. Of an unseen beautiful bird, to the Saint at table sitting

for solace from heaven sent.

XII. Of a dove appearing, and the church with its brightness

filling.

XIII. Of a brightness appearing when the Saint elevated

the Body of the Lord at Mass.

XIV. Of a demoniac and furious one cured.

XV. Of a sick woman freed from a grave fever, taken from

the table of the Saint a morsel, with which also he himself was refreshed.

XVI. How the man of God with the gift of prophecy shone.

The Fourth Part, of the miracles and prodigies of the kindly

Confessor after his death, shall be distinguished according to

the divers genera, species and individuals of the very

miracles, which will be plain through the following order.

Of the solemn translation of his most holy body,

and the reasonable causes of the same.

Of dead conceptions and miscarriages raised.

And are set consequently five miracles without other

title than of number only.

Of those freed from the danger of death. And first of one condemned

to hanging.

Of a blind man falling into a well.

Of a Rector falling into a pond, with horse and letters

unhurt.

Of the Lord of Pestuven with his company from the danger

of death freed.

That of eight persons suffering shipwreck,

two invoking S. Yvo, the other six submerged, escaped.

A like miracle of the Lord Alan of Karanreis:

and it is double.

Of ten in the passage of Treisquinec freed, S.

Yvo invoking, the others not invoking perishing.

Of the Lord William Tournemin, falling into the sea

of Hilion.

Of a boy freed near the port of the Black-Stone.

Of one freed from shipwreck.

Of one freed from a tempest.

Of a shipwrecked one freed.

Of three ships freed from the danger of shipwreck.

Of a daughter from a fire freed.

Of the contracted and paralytic from the impotence of their members

freed. And are set consequently, under the sole distinction

of number marked with rubric, twelve miracles.

Of a blind man illumined.

Of another blind man.

Of a spot of the eye purged.

Of an eye torn out healed.

Of a blind woman to the light restored.

Two miracles about one blind woman.

There follow six miracles, of demoniacs and furious ones, through

S. Yvo from the demons freed, and to sense and

memory recalled, without other designation of Titles.

And likewise five Articles, Of those freed from dropsy,

swellings, ruptures, cracks, and wounds.

Of those freed from a continuous fever, three Articles, nor by number

even marked distinct. And of temporal

substances miraculously found, five rubricated Articles.

Of animals from a plague preserved.

Of the elevation of the stone, in which is sculptured the image of the head

of Blessed Yvo.

CHAPTER I.

The country, lineage, name of Yvo and of his parents, and the holy studies of his first boyhood.

[4] Since in manifold and many ways, to human lapses

the providence of the divine goodness meets, The divine providence,

for the opportunities of the times, which by His wonderful wisdom

are disposed; not small to them His piety's benefits

it conferred, when to those blinded from the path of rectitude

and astray rulers and leaders of salvation it showed. Whence after the lamentable in the delirious head of the Protoplast

fall of the human race, the world everywhere with all of vices

filth shaken and not yet made manifest the way of the Saints,

certain men of His will to call always and

to send it did not cease; who the world itself of its errors

might admonish, of honesty and justice by words and

examples documents might furnish, and the promised of justice

rewards might propose; and so their own and others' salvation

seeking, to it in the sole Maker established

they might aspire. But neither from such a salvation's help

the pious very author and lover of man any ever from

the beginning of the world times despised or any nations

cast off. Acts 10, 34 Indeed by the witness of Scripture, not a respecter

of persons is God; but in every nation, he who fears God

and works justice, is accepted by him. Hence the world

by a cataclysm of the impious perishing, which always some for the world's salvation destined, the eighth Noah of justice

the preacher it destined: hence Job descending from Esau,

in faith and morals most renowned, to the gentiles in

the land of Hus designated: hence Moses for Leader of the elect

people delegated; until after these too the holy

Patriarchs, Prophets, Judges, and Kings, He himself who

had founded it, the collapsed world in its own to repair

might come, and to its ruin at the time received with congruous

remedies of His incarnation might meet.

[5] After the fullness moreover of this time, not

less with men or more sparingly He acted: nay rather

willing all, as of nature in Him consorts, in the evening of the world to the Bretons' nation, most ancient, so of grace

and glory to be partakers, from the first morning of the day of grace,

at the several hours up to the eleventh, that is the world's

consummation, from all nations, peoples, and

tongues into the vineyard, which His right hand planted, cultivators

always to send the father of the family Himself will not cease.

Therefore since this common benefit of divine goodness

to the other nations through the world diffused granted

is; that the Bretons' that most ancient nation,

nor this of His grace gift unsaluted, the divine

condescension passed over, but with a more favorable it with honor

endowed, is plain. The divine indeed munificence,

although with magnificent titles it above the other nations

extolled, in this most that the scepter of Israel in antiquity

it preceded a, and for one thousand eight hundred years unshaken

holding, the strongest kingdoms and Monarchies in duration

it surpassed; this at length also from the coming of the Savior

most celebrated of praise the proclamation by His gift

obtained, that among the very peoples of the world from

the year of the incarnation thirty-fifth b of the irradiating

Christ the light it received, and most Christian, and from it afterward its face

by apostasy did not turn, and neither schismatics or

heresiarchs or by the worst crimes infamous (of whom

in ancient deeds and sacred canons their invaders

are noted) nay rather of faith and morals

propagators and champions, in every state, sex

and order, nor in number rare, but also armies and legions,

Martyrs, Confessors and Virgins always

it brought forth, and steadily into these our times to produce

it does not cease.

CHAPTER II.

[6] From this indeed illustrious Bretons' nation, in the canton

of Tréguier, it gave S. Yvo: of noble stock, the kindly very of Saints

founder and illustrator, the world's aging age

to evening already declining, a star by no means setting

lately brought forth the morning one, as a sun a sun

now of its own brightness a partaker, of the harmful night of sins

free, of every eclipse ignorant, of no cloud's

veil subject, Blessed Yvo, the illustrious of his

name Confessor, the renowned lamp of the Church,

father of Brittany, of Tréguier the singular protection.

Teaches moreover of both Testament the Old at the same time and

New the series, from a noble and virtuous stock, and from the Saints' histories is plain,

the Saints, to God's glory and the world's salvation by God's providence

ordained, not only from morals to be described,

but from birth and imposed names in their virtues

and graces to be presignified. It was fitting therefore that of so great

both by lineage and religion and also by appellation of his future

as it were hereditary the testimony should bring forth

of sanctity. With a great therefore presage of the future from a distinguished

and Catholic stock he was born, that illustrious himself in lineage

and religion, the future he should be in life and morals more illustrious;

and the native nobility of the flesh, into the spiritual

generosity of the mind more aptly he should change; and

the dignity of mundane nobility, of a more excellent nobility

by his conversation he should transcend, and so to be done it ought

to the vain noble ones of the world by his own change he should show.

[7] That indeed Yvo named, from the mother indeed

Hadou and Hælorius the father, in lawful matrimony

begotten he is, the bestowed on him divinely of goodness abundance,

and of his abundant goodness on others the redundance,

and in these shining of pleasant congratulation

the vehemence, the very names' signification

presignified. himself by his name presignified the Good-man, For Yvo, as the modern

Gauls and Latins for euphony's sake, though corruptly,

pronounce; the foreigners moreover and ancient Latins c Eudo,

the Bretons themselves Euden, from the Greek Eu and the Breton Den

composed word, and into Latin translated

the Good-man or the man of Goodness most plainly

signifies, and d of abundant goodness by the divine

bounty to him to be conferred the presage was. Wisdom 1, 4 Moreover since

by the very Wisdom's witness into a malevolent soul wisdom does not enter,

nor dwell in a body subject to sins;

it became His order, that whom for Himself into a temple

of habitation He prepared, He being good alone existing

and in the only good dwelling; with the charisms of His goodness,

of body at the same time and soul with goodness should endow,

and according to His goodness so also the name should impose;

that according to the name, so also his praise to the ends of the earth

might remain; that also thus with Solomon he might glory and

say, A boy I was ingenious and obtained a good soul;

and since I was more good, I came to a body undefiled. Wisdom 8, 20

Nor at me as at a madman laugh,

the Bretons' appellations putting: for the very

Bretons from the most renowned of the Greeks their origin drew,

and their idiom, though corruptly, they retained,

the Breton namely, is augmented Greek.

[8] Hadou indeed, the maternal of the very Good-man

Yvo name, from the mother Hadou called, which signifies Seeds, in the Breton idiom of the plural number

is and Seeds signifies, by which what more aptly

than the abundant goodness of him on others the redundance

can we take? For indeed the very freeborn mother, although

many seeds in a certain plural presage

was named. Blessed indeed that mother, in her good son

one, with manifold goodness fruitful, and of doctrine

and morals abounding, the mother Church's

offspring not so much in number as in merit multiplied,

and with the fruit of salvation and good works the progeny

before barren, the poured of God's word and of tears seeds,

for propagating a very great of the saved

harvest she made fruitful.

For when the sacred crop of Tréguier fills the world,

All from this one seed the harvest was.

For of their number wholly he was, of whom

the Psalmist, Going they went and wept casting their seeds

their, but coming they shall come with exultation bearing

their sheaves. Ps. 125, 6

[9] But since of the very highest Good and of all goods

the Giver the edict is, With a good mind glory

render to God, and in every gift cheerful make your countenance

your; but also His Trumpet to all sounds, Each one

as he has determined in his heart, not from sadness

or from necessity, for a cheerful giver loves

God; it is plain that in himself meritoriously good to be,

and with good works' seeds on others to abound,

cheerfulness excluded, no one can. Cor. 9, 7, Eccli. 35, 11 For by the witness of Augustine,

No one unwilling does anything, and from the father Hælorius, denoting Cheerfulness, even if good is

what he does: nor can be to God pleasing, forced services.

Rightly our Good-man Hælorius was surnamed,

from Hælorius the carnal father propagated,

which name Cheerfulness to the Bretons sounds. By the divine

goodness endowed for tilling the Lord's fields,

and with salvation's seeds to be sown, with all always

joy and cheerfulness of spirit he was formed: and

for driving away the world's sadness, which death works

in mundane events, an even always of mind

cheerfulness he was instituted. Prov. 16, 15 Again what in a Royal countenance

Scripture commends, As the latter rain and the dew

morning upon the grass, so the cheerfulness of his countenance;

in our Good-man, the Royal Yvo, to be verified

we behold. In the latter indeed, of the present life into

the setting declining, a wayfarer existing, with copious to the Christians

raining benefits; and in the morning of the future

life, an evening not knowing, now a comprehensor, with frequent

of suffrages besprinkling sprinklings; them on this side and that,

as from either part of that river in the Apocalypse,

beholding, with the wonderful of his countenance cheerfulness he flooded

and floods.

[10] So of this kindly Confessor the abundance of goodness

and of abundant goodness the redundance, in his receiving the presages of a cheerful and fruitful goodness: and in

both of cheerfulness the spirit's vehemence, of these three

names is the clear signification, of which one deservedly

not incongruously that proclamation, which in Bethulia

the faithful people to the Saviouress brought forth e Judith,

we in Brittany to Yvo the glorious, to us from us for

our salvation destined, rightly to bring forth can;

A new light has seemed to rise, joy, honor and dancing.

For the light of his sanctity and goodness to the world

diffused; and joy indeed common to all

it brings to the Christians, and a general was the honor to the Bretons,

but to the Tréguier-folk a perpetual it bestows dancing

special.

Chapter III

[11] So moreover His Saint the gracious Giver

of charisms with the manifold blessing of His gratuitous sweetness

to anticipate deigned, so that also his sanctity

future both by an oracle He foretold, and by the indications of signs

from his infancy demonstrated. Nor indeed

of this privilege also, to his mother too is presignified the future Saint, to certain friends specially

granted, His dear Yvo to be deprived the divine providence

decreed. His indeed pious mother, by the divine

foreknowing of things future visited spirit, this one to be a future

Saint in dreams received, and to the people openly prophetically

foretold. Which manifestation indeed of the spirit,

which according to the Apostle is given for utility,

both of God revealing, and of mother and offspring, and of all the people

the grace and glory embraces. 1 Cor. 12, 7 In this indeed

shines the very God's toward His dear one condescension more wonderful,

and the very dear one of God's dignity is shown more illustrious,

the mother happier is made, and with so great a son a care more cautious

is bestowed, the people all made more joyful, and to

bear by observing the boy due reverence

rendered more ready. From this indeed in the mouth of all

hearing not discordant resounded, that which in the Forerunner

of the Savior the Evangelist confesses, They placed all

in their heart saying, What think you this boy will be?

[12] Of this moreover foretold sanctity the indications,

the very first studies of his age were: for the boyish

his beginnings, the future more manly prognosticated, and foretold

figured, what afterward perfected came to pass. Luke 1, 66, Prov. 20, 11

Indeed by the witness of Scripture, From his studies is known

indeed from studies Astyages knew Cyrus; so

the boy Ambrose to his mother and sister, the priests' hands

kissing, his also offering to be kissed, and

So it ought to be done saying, the future himself a Bishop prognosticated.

So also the boy Athanasius, in a single one game,

namely the boyish Mass with boys chanting,

as in church to be done he had beheld, delighted, of Christ

himself a Priest to be future prefigured. The divine therefore

grace in him already wonderfully working, from the first years

the divine servitude the sacred illustrious boy's infancy breathed,

of that Boy of boys the Maker the boyhood imitating,

who by his parents for three days sought in the temple was found,

in those things which of his Father were occupied. And he began,

before any of youthful vice's stain into his

mind glided, of all virtues to be imbued with the study,

that the odor of sanctity as a fresh pot he might imbibe,

which afterward grown old with perpetual tenor he might conserve.

[13] And lest into the of his heart still fresh lodging

the world its step might fix, and the first rudiments of disciplines: him for itself salutary discipline

anticipating claimed. For after the manner of the boy Samuel

and of noble boys the custom, a boy still elementary

he was handed to a preceptor, Master John

of Villa-senex, in morals and primitive letters to be instructed;

in which, as being a boy of very good disposition, under the very

Master's diligence assiduous he persisted. Supplying moreover

in him grace what age and nature denied; the vices,

with which that age is wont to be entangled, repudiating; to the of all

maturity and sanctity study himself wholly he conferred,

wholly proceeding into God. Day and night, in the evening

and the morning, the churches' thresholds he wore; the divine Office

and the solemnities of Masses most avidly frequenting,

the Priests and altars most diligently he served;

the Epistles hearkening and the Gospels, among which the Lives of the Saints to read and imitate he studied, the Church's precepts

and the doctrines of sermons by his life's institution he kept;

to reading and prayer without intermission he gave; and with himself

with Jacob in the tabernacles dwelling, the of Esau into

the fields excursions he declined. In the Saints' histories

most frequently and most studiously reading, a great from

them of perfection heap he apprehended, while the proper

of each one perfections he drew. Of this one

the continence, of that one the pleasantness he followed; of that one

the gentleness, of that one the vigils, of another the of reading

industry he emulated; this one fasting, that one on the ground lying

he admired; of another the patience, of another the meekness

he proclaimed. Of all thus toward himself retaining

the love, and with all the parts of virtues

watered, to himself he returned: there with himself all things treating,

of all in himself the goods he strove to express:

and upon these examples, as upon firm foundations, not

less in mind than in age profiting, to the of virtues

citadel with a happier daily step he ascended.

[14] These moreover and similar studies of boyhood, what other

than of his future sanctity preludes were? to other boys for an example He had given

indeed to him the Lord a docile heart, and very useful

that of the Wise man f counsel in his mind it had impressed,

That it is good for a man when he has borne the yoke of the Lord from

his adolescence. Lam. 3, 27, Prov. 22, 6 For, as elsewhere, the same Wise man says; A

proverb it is, An adolescent according to his way, even

when he has grown old, will not depart from it. For boys, the studies

of letters and virtues being neglected, to the unruly left,

to vices initiated, with lost morals ensnared, who

will amend? Jeremiah asks, Can the Ethiopian

change his skin, and the leopard his spots. Jer. 13, 23 And you,

when you have learned evil, can you do good things?

Asks also the Wise man, What you have not gathered in your youth,

how in your old age will you find it? Eccli. 25, 5 Do therefore

now boys, letters being joined with virtue. and turning away from vices and idleness avoiding and

vanities, the first feet of your affections to letters and good morals

give, lest a small error in the beginning, from the right

path of salvation turned away, in the end also frustrated you constitute.

Remember, of sciences and virtues naked

you were born, without which yet to the end, to which

you tend, to attain you are not able. Approach therefore the of letters

studies, cultivate the virtues; and of which you have only

the seeds, by the labor of study and the exercise of good works,

the habits acquire, and the fruits to use strive.

Behold and do according to the exemplar which

to you in the mount, that is, in the eminent of the boy Yvo

conversation was shown; knowing that to these

will be to you his intercession a suffrage, if of his conversation

you do not desert the example.

ANNOTATIONS.

CHAPTER II.

The studies of S. Yvo at Paris and Orléans.

Chapter IV

[15] His boyish years moreover innocently run out,

an adolescent now of fourteen years made, Sent to Paris,

he was sent to Paris, that for himself of the liberal arts

he might acquire by the exercise of study skill. For demanded

the order of the divine disposition, that whom the Lord

to the house of wisdom, of sacred namely Scripture and

of the doctrine of faith, and to the art of arts the governance of souls

invited; first the arts the arts' ways, and

the sciences the sciences' doors he should salute; and from them the keys,

by which he might enter, obtain. For since the Apostle

says: see that no one seduce you through Philosophy

and vain fallacy, who from fallacies himself will defend, who

fallacies does not know? or from those philosophizing, after the studies of the Arts, who of

Philosophy nothing has learned? Col. 2, 8 For with the spoils of the Egyptians

are enriched the Hebrews, when those things which among the Artists find

the faithful, to carry away they study for the faith's defense,

the destruction of errors, the exposition of the Scriptures,

the erudition of morals. Since through pagans

and heretics and feigned Christians the devil studies to prohibit,

lest there be Doctors in the Church, in the liberal Arts

imbued, who spiritual arms may make

for the Christians for the aforesaid. Which under a figure the book of Kings

records, where it is said; Moreover a smith

was not found in all the land of Israel; for the Philistines had prohibited,

lest perhaps the Hebrews should make a sword

or a lance up to the goad of the ox. 1 Kings 13, 19

[16] He began therefore the holy adolescent not slothfully

to act, To Theology he applies himself, to the erudition for the sake of which he had been sent, diligently

attending: whence it was done that in the of Arts liberal

erudition above many of his coevals in a space shorter

he profited, and at length in the same from a disciple and hearer

indeed in the liberal Arts diligently sweating sufficiently

he was taught; lest the time for the more salubrious disciplines

congruous in those sciences not so much, as

of true and highest Philosophy preludes might be lost, to

the Theology study himself wholly he conferred: of whose studies

through many years ardently keeping watch, from the treasures

of it there he drew avidly, what afterward to the peoples

he poured out abundantly.

Chapter V

[17] Considering moreover the faithful of Christ, whom the King

himself peaceful had disposed, then to Jurisprudence, in mouth chaste, peaceful,

and modest, with unbridled and of itself prodigal cupidity for themselves

to emulate, to litigate, to wrangle, in questions to be entangled;

right among them by the windings of suits to perish, justice

by the abuses of litigations to be extinguished, and the bill of repudiation given

as everywhere concord to be exiled; of the law also

canonical the study, by whose rules every harmful appetite

is limited and every effort of injustice repressed, the faithful

that honestly they live, the other not harm, his own right

to each render are informed, the greatest also there

effort he gave: so that the contests of suits known,

the future himself Judge and Advocate, both ecclesiastical more clearly in causes

might discern, more surely justice might aid, and to iniquity

more cautiously meet. Again attending the very mediator

of God and men, the man Jesus Christ,

King and Priest, and one and the same of all

Empire and Priesthood the author and beginning, so

for the proper acts and distinct dignities the Offices

of both powers to have decreed proper, that Christian

Kings and Emperors for eternal life of Pontiffs

would need, than civil at Orléans; and the Pontiffs themselves for the course of temporal

things only the Imperial laws would use;

lest by the whirlings of secular causes he should fluctuate,

but for the Church's matters both spiritual and

temporal to be decided and consulted ready always

and sufficient he might be, in the year of his age about the twentieth

fourth Orléans he sought, the study of both Laws:

where under master William of Blavia, afterward

Bishop of Angoulême, he heard the Decretals;

under the Lord indeed Peter of Capella, afterward

Cardinal, the Institutes: and there for many years instructed,

at length of both Laws the skill he obtained.

[18] Moreover since with the Poet it is shameful to descend

into the battle-line, for gods and men undertaken, with an awl

armed; it became the divine providence, that whom

for the faith of divine things and the good morals of men

to be protected, that, with excellent doctrine on all sides instructed, to the militant Church she destined, not with an awl,

that is with a scanty and slight science, to be armed she disposed.

For indeed if for the quality of the times and places,

either with heresy reigning, or where perfidious ones to the Church neighboring

are, for the matter of faith a Theologian is to be sought;

for jurisdiction indeed to be governed, the ventilation of causes

and the termination of occurring cases a Jurist;

everywhere however and always one from both mixed for the governance

of Churches is to be preferred. The glorious therefore

scholar that holy man, and with all utterly honor in

the Church of the people and in the chair of the elders to be exalted,

who as a Scribe learned in the kingdom of the militant Church,

new and old, divine equally and human, from

his treasure to bring forth worthy and copious was held.

For he is another that Bezeleel, should serve the Church, as Bezeleel the Tabernacle. whom the Lord filled

with the spirit of wisdom and all doctrine, for making

work in gold, silver, and bronze, in all things

which are required for the Sanctuary of the Tabernacle. In

gold the preciousness of divine wisdom, in silver of the canonical

sanctions the clarity, in bronze of the civil laws

the sonority are imported. For if according to Aristotle

the sciences are divided, as also the things of which

they are, and subjects to subjects are compared; as

gold is preferred to silver, and silver to bronze; so

Theology excels the Canons, and the Canons the Laws,

where divine to human and spiritual to temporal

are preferred. In gold therefore, silver, and bronze a learned

workman, for the adornment of His tabernacle the Lord

gave Yvo; because in Theology, the Law Canonical

at the same time and Civil, for the beauty of the militant Church, in

his vocation skilled and industrious He completed.

Chapter VI

[19] It pleases moreover diligently to note, the vessel of election

the future man of God Yvo, from wine and meats abstaining, after to attaining

science he began to attend, with how great zeal of learning he was borne.

For the aforesaid salutary studies, for many

years keeping watch, with so great diligence and so great avidity

he adhered to them, that almost the nights he led sleepless.

Of Solomon also imitating the purpose, that

his mind he might transfer to wisdom, he thought from wine

to withdraw his flesh; he thought, I say, and what

he thought he effected; and not only from wine and from all

the vices of gluttony his flesh he withdrew, and it

to the laws of continence subjugated. Eccl. 2, 3 For of him relate

the Acts, and on the ground lying; that while he was an adolescent in the Studium of Paris,

the flesh's now delights abhorring, not in a bed reposed,

which yet in his chamber good and honest

he had; but on the ground with small straw to the body

rigorous he lay. At Orléans too, the rest of his companions

meats and wine using, he himself from them abstained;

and frequently, but on Fridays always, he fasted.

Of the sacred Scriptures and Canons moreover

and Laws, in which he sweated, the science with the attentive of the heart

ear receiving, as land with celestial rain steeped,

not only of sacred meditations and affections

the crops, but also of good works the fruits most abundant

he produced. For seeing, in riches piety,

in delights chastity, chaste and humble, and in honors humility

to perish; and nonetheless his fellow scholars, as

many through the precipices of vices walking, to those to aspire,

to humility and mercy his mind he gave: from

the snares of the world, the flesh, and the devil solicitously guarding

himself. Nor indeed ever against the very

companions and coevals was he moved; but only that flame

in the eminent scholar grew in his breast, lest second

to anyone in virtuous works he be found.

[20] not so much in letters as in virtues he studies to excel. Gladly he went to Masses, Sermons he frequented,

the Hours of the Blessed Virgin never he failed, never

of God or His Saints he swore, nor a word

unseemly any he uttered: the portion of his

allowance of meats or fishes, at table before placed,

whole to the poor he distributed: no of youthful

lasciviousness or incontinence sign (as in such

I do not say scholars, but the unruly as in many,

is wont to be) contrary to chastity he bore. Nay

rather of all modesty and inner cleanness outside the title

he displayed: in which things certain of

the scholars and masters into the of admiration he provoked

an excess, certain indeed to the imitation of works

and of sanctity the divine favoring grace he led.

For he was wise that virtue in this surpasses science,

since virtue, even without science, is a way leading

to life; science indeed without virtue, a way leading

to perdition. Otherwise indeed Augustine, still

companions lettered addressing, would not have said; The unlearned

arise and seize the heavens, and we with our letters

ours into hell are plunged. Otherwise also the infidel

Philosophers, so in sciences excelling, from

the lower regions would not have been absorbed; which yet even of the very

most wise Solomon assert many of the faithful, of

whose all science the Prophet makes mention saying,

The waters of Dibon are filled with blood. Is. 15, 9 Dibon, Abundantly

understanding, is interpreted.

[21] lest as for most science to him should be a ruin, And certainly the science of modern scholars, in

whom abundantly understanding either they are or that they may be

they thirst, with blood that is with sin full are said; because

today as mostly with sin they are acquired, and

of many sins the occasion they are. In this moreover

these are like to Uriah, carrying against themselves the letters

of their death: for by how much greater with the gift of science

they are endowed, by so much greater they lie subject to fault, and consequently

also to penalty. To those moreover, the cult of virtues not so much

neglected as despised, so much today they pant with avidity,

with so great studies they are worn; that what to all is

natural, and to them meritorious could be, an end undue

prefixing, into a vice for themselves and damnation

they turn. Certain ones indeed according to Bernard

study to them devote, only that they may know, and curiosity

it is; certain that they may be known, and vanity it is; certain that they may be enriched,

and cupidity it is; these moreover all in this of the delirious

Protoparents themselves sons and imitators show,

who by diabolical suggestion, the law of God neglected, and

the religion of virtues, the good removed and the evil acquired the science,

which they had not, held; and the virtues, which

they had held, but should profit unto salvation. lost. Not so the holy youth and flourishing

scholar of ours, but with the Apostle wise to surpass

science by charity, not so with inordinate love

embraced the serving science, that divine

charity he abnegated; nor so to the commanding adhered

charity, that to the science the leader of charity he attended not:

so moreover one to the other he preferred, that to neither a repudiation

he gave; but both, to his vocation most necessary and

to himself mutually subservient, not so much as mothers as

as spouses he assumed. For while from infancy of science

and religion studious the breasts he sucked, of them a nursling

he was: but while in them into a perfect man he grew,

first, and afterward scattered the seed, very many

before barren he made fruitful; and ample in them and from them,

with the fruit of salvation and of good works the progeny multiplied,

the mother Church's joy he heaped up.

CHAPTER III.

The office of Official at Rennes and Tréguier illustriously borne. The flesh to the spirit after an eight-year struggle perfectly subdued.

Chapter VII

[22] With such therefore and so great of wisdom and religion

in the Blessed one, Made Official of the Archdeacon of Rennes, now a man made, with most pleasing comeliness

flourishing, began the fragrant odor of his sanctity

and wisdom on all sides to be diffused: which when

to the notice of worthy memory Maurice, of that time

Archdeacon of Rennes, by report celebrated bearing,

it came; him forthwith he summoned, and the summoned

with most instant prayers induced, and to charity

acquiescing, his Official he instituted; blessed

indeed himself reckoning in this very thing, while both for himself of so renowned

an Official, and for his jurisdiction of so industrious

and sufficient a Minister he had provided. In which both the very

Archdeacon's comes to be praised the provision, and of Yvo accedes

of the office the acceptation to be commended, and of the Rennes-folk

the reception rejoicing succeeds. Happy the Archdeacon,

and the very dignity not undeservedly worthy,

who such and so great for an Official seeks, and among

the unequal Paris-folk and the golden Orléans-folk a chief

one to himself propitious to find merited. Praiseworthy

also himself the holy man, sought and found, who as

the office he did not ambition, so neither offered out of charity

refused or pertinaciously declined. Conscious for he to himself

was, of the talent to him entrusted to God and to the neighbor he would be

to the supreme Judge to render account. Resounds

also the region of the Rennes-folk, such and so great a Judge

by the divine condescension's gift receiving: who what

just was justly might judge, and of those things which the supreme

Arch a under delegated Judges imposes all

might fulfill; nor by any seduced ignorance or passion,

anything which of right and justice was might omit.

[23] At once indeed as the Officialate's office he discharged,

he began to all to persuade, that abnegating impiety

and secular desires, soberly as to themselves, he was in that office to all equal and peaceful. justly

as to the neighbor, piously as to God they should live in this

world, awaiting the blessed hope and of the supreme Judge

the just retribution. The rebellious moreover and insolent,

to due censures and medicinal penalties subjecting,

he coerced from evils, and to the rest for an example

their correction he exhibited. Indeed because both

of truth he was in causes the investigator, and the truth found

he was of justice the faithful champion, to each without

selection and difference of persons swift justice

he made. Those at variance to peace and concord

with all his efforts he brought back: in transactions and concords,

the parties' rights, as much as he could, he conserved;

and when to pacify he could not, swift to them

justice he ministered. The pleaders wonder at so sudden

of justice and truth a summit, as a lamp upon

set; and seeing that the wisdom of God was in him

for making judgment, they blessed in him the Lord,

and with Joel's voice to the region of the Rennes-folk said,

Sons of Sion, exult and rejoice in the Lord your God,

who has given you a teacher of justice. Joel 2, 23

Chapter VIII

[24] Of this therefore so praiseworthy justice and so

fruitfully reigning the report flying about, began toward him

the desire of his native country to aspire. Thence called by Alan Bishop of Tréguier. Moreover this also the very

country's necessity demanded: for its inhabitants

at that time so were to good slothful and

slow, but to evils whatever inclined and prone, that

they had need of a man four-square with virtues, who them both

from evils might restrain, and to honest things whatever and praiseworthy

might stimulate. The Prelate also of that time of good

memory the Lord Alan le Bruc, deeming

happy to be with such a one his Court a Judge, this same expected,

and by all means sought; and the very

holy man, mindful of the Tullian saying, that no cause

ought to intervene, whence one's own country be denied, that

very thing he was busy about. By this therefore triple of ordered charity

cord, which difficultly is broken, drawn, Rennes

leaving, his native soil he sought. The Archdeacon weeps

for him bidding farewell, the Bishop exulting receives him approaching:

the Rennes-folk deplore, the Tréguier-folk applaud:

the foreigners mourn, the natives rejoice.

[25] Received therefore the Prelate exulting, him

his own Official instituted, and in the word of the Prophet,

nay more truly of God through the Prophet bursting forth, he fulfills all the parts of a good Official, the burden

of the Officialate expressed: Behold, he says, I have constituted you today,

over nations and kingdoms, the small namely and the great,

the poor and the powerful, that you may pluck up, and destroy, and build,

and plant. Jer. 1, 10 All which the holy man, the Officialate's

office discharging, diligently fulfilled. Soon

indeed the autumnal trees, twice dead, in vain the garden

of the Lord occupying, he uprooted; the unfruitful

branches, which also the vineyard of the Lord of Sabaoth to demolish

seemed, with Peter's sword he pruned; while the country

of depraved and perverse, corrupt and pestilent men

he purged, and of the Parochial gardens of churches,

through the diocese in circuit, with new of the justified

plantations he filled. From the numerous indeed of lewd ones,

usurers, robbers, of women and

virgins oppressors, and of various other vicious

crowds, some into Monks: to monasteries

transferring, others changed into Priests promoting,

others in hermitages into Solitaries enclosing,

others into Pilgrims to the thresholds of the Apostles and

other far places transmitting, and by various other

ways, which the subtle and manifold spirit gave, those from

God estranged and from salvation astray, through the Church's Sacraments

to the Society of Saints he engrafted. So therefore

the rebellious, obstinate and pertinacious, with penalties and due

censures destroying and plucking up, the obedient indeed and

penitent with charitable exhortations and words paternal

and examples planting and building: the whole country

for the better he reformed, and of the reformation the traces

into these very days are plain, and the fruit abundant perseveres.

[26] with the greatest good of that diocese, O happy behold, Tréguier, and a little your eyes

raise: stand on high, and see of your Saints the benefits

upon you heaped. Rejoice, and over your Patrons

continually delight. Cry out, and into thanksgivings

burst. Did not once of your Pontiff most sacred

Tugdualus by your demerits the absence to you, from man

up to beast, nay even the earth's productions, sterility

procreate? rain and of celestial things the influence

for three years interdict? b Did not his to you penitent

and corrected return, of animals fecundity,

of fruits abundance, and of all goods

opulence minister? in him another Patron having obtained. But in the course of time more unhappily

and more perniciously afflicted, did not famine and thirst,

not of bread and wine, but of God's word and justice, you

to the death of very many souls oppress?

Did not of good works of holy and honest conversation

sterility, as it were with all; the fruit of

salvation with none, or certainly rare was? when

another that holy Patron to you coming, with overflowing

of doctrine and justice rain, the dry and sterile in

you hearts watered, the influence of supernal graces

obtained, and to the abundance of salutary fruits by the word

and example of science made fruitful. What therefore worthy

praises and equal thanksgivings for the benefits,

to these your Patrons will you pay? Do therefore slender, and

for your measure unequal thanks and honors; and since

for your wish worthy gifts you cannot offer, your

fault as a suppliant to be excused, and your want to be supplied beg.

Chapter IX

[27] The aforesaid Prelate being dead, who as long as

he lived him in the Office retained, his successor of worthy

memory the Lord Geoffrey of Tornamina, dear to Geoffrey successor of Alan, is called the Poor's Advocate, having found

the holy Official's virtues and perfection, by no means

him to desert wished; but with a like toward him fervent

devotion, with all love at the same time and honor

he pursued him. Since moreover sometimes from many

other Courts, over which he himself had not presided, and to which

him his own mind, premonished by God by whose

spirit he was acted, led, and from others called it happened to be present;

for the poor, wards and widows, and the other

wretched persons, gratis he petitioned, the causes fostered,

and to their defense himself offered:

whence the Poor's Advocate commonly he was called;

for them without salary c he patronized and counseled; their

memorials, letters and acts in writing for nothing

he drew up: but while and where he himself presided, the Advocates

and Notaries of the Court to the same to be done, by requests

he induced. It was moreover to others a pious spectacle,

to see the holy Yvo of the Lord, though noble,

learned, and in all things distinguished, even to reproaches to be borne for the poor, for the just

of Christ's poor causes to be fostered and protected, by the Advocates

of the adverse parties with wranglings assailed, with mockeries,

derisions and blasphemies attacked,

however in mind or troubled, not finally

in anything impatient to become, but with a placid and cheerful

countenance with gratuitous and reasonable answers the opposers

meeting: in which also of the Apostles he was not

defrauded the glory, by whose example he rejoiced in the sight

of the council, since he was held worthy for

Christ's poor contumely to suffer.

[28] These moreover more manifestly in very many of suits'

contests were plain, especially in the cause of a

certain poor widow, with a certain usurer; provided he knew the causes to be just. and

in the cause of the contract of a certain young girl with a youth

whom she sought, not having whence to the Notary she might pay:

in the cause also of the poor Squire Richard le Brouze,

against the Abbot of Relics, the land from him to take away

striving: who of substance stripped, unless the very Poor's

Advocate, by the cries of the Squire knocked,

his cause out of regard for piety to be conducted had undertaken;

it altogether would have abandoned, and justice by no means to obtain

would have been able. The said causes moreover and very many

similar, oaths given that just their causes

they believed they had, he undertook, and up to definitive

sentences conducted, and for them obtained. Let him say therefore

with the asserted King and pious Judge Job, and truly let him say;

A father I was of the poor and a defender d of widows: an eye

I was to the blind, a foot to the lame; the cause which I knew not

diligently I investigated; I broke the molars of the wicked,

and from the teeth of the impious I took away the prey: and with

the Prophet, Snatching the needy from the hand of the stronger, the needy

and poor from those plundering him. Job 29, 15, Ps. 34, 10

[29] Would that so they hear with their ears these things that they may understand

with their heart of our time the Officials, Judges, and pleaders.

The Advocate and Official Yvo to imitate studiously

let them strive. by all Judges to be imitated, For this is what through the organ of Wisdom

the Spirit to them holy proclaims, and that they attend

admonishes by threatening; Hear, he says, Kings and understand;

learn Judges of the ends of the earth; lend moreover

your ears you who hold the multitude, and please yourselves

in the crowds of nations: since given is to you power by

the Lord and virtue by the Most High, who will interrogate your works

your, and the thoughts will scrutinize: since when

you were ministers of His kingdom, you did not rightly judge, nor

kept the law of justice, nor according to the will

of God walked. Wis. 6, 3 Horribly and quickly will appear to you,

since a most hard judgment, on those who preside, will be made.

For to the small will be granted mercy, the powerful indeed

powerfully torments will suffer. According to which sentence

relates in his Tragedies Seneca e, that Nero,

who an unjust Judge and cruel had been, with unjust

and impious to himself similar Advocates surrounded in the lower regions

bathing, his ministers everywhere gold boiling pouring in,

was seen: who when near he saw a certain

cohort of Advocates, cried out, O venal kind

of men! O Advocates my friends, hither approach,

and in this vessel with me bathe: for still

in it remains a place, which for you I have reserved.

Chapter X

[30] With so great moreover of businesses cares and various of causes

solicitudes, the holy man this way and that constraining, Amid these joining Mary very well to Martha, and Leah to Rachel,

as in the course of study for reading religion

he did not neglect, so neither in so great a variety of things

from the cult of virtue the eye of intention he turned aside, nor

his mind toward God tending from devotion and contemplation

he distracted. Of Martha namely either by helping,

or by judging, or about frequent other ministry

being busy, bearing the part and thence troubled,

not however perturbed; the part of Mary nor for a moment

losing, but to God fixed attending, from her

feet to depart he could not: and of Leah, because fruitful,

not abhorring the bleariness, the struggle of flesh and spirit he sustains, by Rachel's beauty

he was absorbed. But because the common with the other

mortals humanity he bore, a common

to the other mortals, between the flesh's sensuality and the rational spirit, struggle unwearied he suffered.

Which struggle indeed internal, and war from the womb

to all innate, the wrestling of Jacob with Esau his brother,

while still they were in the womb, figured. For it became

through every mode, that the King himself of glory Christ,

who for His soldiers, that the more in the agony and crown

they might be confirmed, and in tribulation and the kingdom might participate,

divers of wars contests provided; to His kindly

Confessor, a strenuous recruit, this also hard

kind of contest, not for a penalty of fault, but for

so that a true soldier of Christ he might be proved, and to God acceptable and a crown worthy be found; since more glorious

it is not to consent, than temptation not to feel.

So indeed through the Angel of God to holy Tobias it was said,

Because acceptable you were to God it was necessary that

temptation should prove you: and elsewhere Scripture says: As

gold in the furnace He proved the elect God, and

found them worthy of Himself. Tob. 12, 13, Wis. 3, 6

[31] The flesh's therefore in him querulous sensuality extorted,

that Mary all contemplation and every study, all that he tasted, read and meditated,

into the help of Martha rising up, the temporal goods contending on the flesh's part, into the very

flesh's service should commit: on the contrary indeed

the rational spirit the contrary more justly demanded, that all

the active Martha's ministry, to the contemplation

of Mary for the use and service of reason should be subservient.

And while each the other for itself to claim, and from

the other's service to withdraw was striving and contending,

with themselves struggling, an unwearied between flesh

and reason struggle resulted, and in the house of the Just one a tempestuous

was raised assault. There offered themselves moreover

to the assault of their own accord with the flesh, of flourishing youth the elegance,

of lineage the pompous nobility, the cunning intellect,

the puffing science, the haughtiness of authority, the favor of the world, of men

the access, of multitudes the concourse, the coming

of riches, the renowned report, and various more other of more

carnalities the occasions, the satellites of vices, of Satan

the cohorts, the devil's legions, which the carnal besiege

men, the voluptuous overcome, and lead

captive. These indeed and the like, as an army, for

sensuality against reason gathered, the laws of reason

to subject, rebellion to foster, and to it war to declare

persuaded; and reason to sensuality into a slave

to reduce, and the mistress reason for itself tributary to render

and the due obedience to withdraw they strove.

[32] To reason moreover on the other part, against sensuality, ran together into suffrage, of the conferred

gifts of nature, on reason's part the acknowledgment of his obligation for the same, of grace, and of fortune the prudent consideration:

by which, unless those to the Giver's service he exposed and

for gain entrusted he dispensed, not so much vanity in

them, as from them harm to himself prepared he observed.

There acceded as a help of a loftier lineage the acknowledgment,

by which of divine being lineage, to the human condition's

dignity deferring; a vile of the body chattel

to become, and by a degenerate conversation into of carnal pleasures

servitude to be reduced, he disdained. But also the propagation

carnal, the earth filling, for the spiritual

heavenly things restoring he rejected. There followed also the committed

of judiciary power authority, premonishing

that not of man, but of God he should exercise judgment, and

whatever he judged upon him would redound, and in the extreme

judgment to be judged he would pay. and by all virtues: The of the surrounding

promiscuous people concourse and access admonished

that to God, Angels, and men a spectacle made, in

the midst of a depraved and perverse nation, to converse he should study

harmless. The coming riches, in pious works distributed,

to him fighting sent fellow-soldiers in aid,

the Saints whom he honored, and the poor companions

whom he fed. The Cardinal virtues, prudence namely,

temperance, fortitude and justice well four-square,

to every of occurring passion impulse stable

rendered and unmoved. The whole of all virtues

body the cuirass of faith encircled, the head fortified

the helmet the hope of salvation, javelins ministered and missiles

fiery charity.

[32] By these therefore arms defensive and offensive, by which

the Saints conquered kingdoms, wrought justice, and obtained

the promises, reason fortified, and as of a camp

the battle-line ordered, sensuality hearing the trumpet, with which equipped, from afar

scenting the war, at the exhortations of the leaders and the howling

of the army proceeding into encounter, vociferated Aha!

For the first motions of the flesh, by which sensuality invites

to the battle, feeling, and any temptation in

its very beginning perceiving, how also and by what

acts themselves against him the capital vices prepare,

and the manifold of them species, as the leaders' satellites

the howling of the strong imminent war raise, detecting; the voice of contempt, Aha! he emitted, for

the hope of victory and of the crown, by the King to the fighter promised.

For although sensuality's and its army's suggestions,

to the very gate of the heart assailing, advanced;

entrance by no means he indulged, nor of consent

the door opened: but with the accustomed of the aforesaid virtues exercises all of its temptations the assaults

forthwith he repelled.

[34] When therefore eight continuous years, both of fighting

by the exercise, and of divine help by the gift, in that very

dire and hard fight, without a fall he had passed; in the ninth

at length year, by the singular gift of God, to few hitherto

granted, so lulled and quieted the war was, that

neither sensuality of the flesh into the rational spirit rose up

by assailing, nor to it obedience withdrew

or to obey refused by serving, nor rebellion

offered in the operation of virtue, nor distraction

or depression from the elevation of the mind. And thus

by the divine deity, in the of the kindly Confessor's mind domicile,

this peace was commanded, that by sensuality's assent the action

of Martha to the contemplation of Mary should be subservient, and all

its ministry should expend to the wish and good pleasure

of reason, and from the law and command of reason

should proceed whatever in the ministry of Martha to sensuality

should serve. There is given therefore to his flesh divinely an inviolable

decree, the flesh to the spirit perfectly subjugated. that henceforth of reason a handmaid itself

it should acknowledge, and to it in all things acquiesce; and to reason,

that as a mistress sensuality as a handmaid it should hold

subjugated, and into its always assume prepared for service. O grateful habitation of Christ, so

by the kindly Confessor's exercise and the wonderful of the Holy Spirit's

artifice prepared, in which deserves not Martha

to be reproved, nor Mary; but each for her laudable and

ordered occupation to be praised! O pleasant house, in

which to Rachel the fair Leah the fruitful does not envy, but

with mutual concord to themselves their joys they mix; and with mutual

services meeting themselves smiling-back they re-salute, and

mutually sweet kisses they give! So certainly the Confessor

kindly, in the concordant psaltery of the mind and harmonic of the flesh

cithara, the royal Psalmist imitated saying,

My heart and my flesh have exulted in God

my. Ps. 83, 3

ANNOTATIONS.

CHAPTER IV.

Yvo's, to the care of souls translated, exemplary and austere life.

CHAPTER XI.

[35] Because indeed no lesser is the virtue to keep what is acquired than to seek it; In action at the same time and contemplation perfect, knowing himself of so great grace, of so

dear and so precious peace and concord the treasure

in a fragile vessel to bear, with the highest care it in himself to conserve

and foster he studied, and lest sometime furtively a like

struggle should sprout again with the highest vigilance he was wary. From then

indeed the very flesh, which as an enemy thus to reason he had subjugated,

lest a future to it fellow-citizen he should kill;

afterward a fellow-citizen made thus he held and fostered, lest again into

an enemy it should rise. It therefore with frequent vigils, assiduous

labors and fasts thus he educated, with nakedness and

austerity thus he clothed, that a victim living made, to God

pleasing in sacrifice he might offer. The spirit indeed thus

with the fat and delicious bread of Christ, that is of the Scriptures

meditations, devout prayers, desires

celestial, of divine charisms sighs he fed, that

into a most sweet holocaust to God wholly he might kindle.

From the sacrifice a part to the Priest remains, another part

to God is offered: and the holy man to the flesh necessity not

denied, the flesh's however mortified pleasure he immolated.

The holocaust whole to God is kindled, and

the Seraphic man every sense, every affection, and the whole

to God gathered spirit, with his charity's fire

melted and refined, he burned. Because therefore thus

the active life and the contemplative under the divine law's

order he ruled, and the flesh and spirit with unanimous exultation

to God in an odor of sweetness offered; not only

of the Kingdom and Priesthood of Christ a partaker he was made, but

also of His Royal Priesthood a minister deservedly worthy

was held.

[36] This moreover diligently attending, of holy memory

the above-named Prelate, Alan le Bruc namely,

to him contradicting and very greatly resisting the parochial

church of Trezdretz to be governed conferred: Of the Parish of Trezdretz a Pastor he is constituted, and

though unwilling, to its title a Priest he ordained.

And this indeed for eight years and a little more,

to God's praise and souls' salvation, worthily and

laudably he ruled. Thence moreover in the course of time, by

the said deceased Prelate's successor the Lord Geoffrey of

Tournemin, above also named, to the parochial

church of Lohanec he was translated: in which

for a decade and up to the end of life Rector he persisted.

In which wholly of the very Prelates, nay more truly

of the Prince of Pastors Christ to be praised comes the providence:

which to the flocks, with His precious blood redeemed,

in faith and morals to be directed, so industrious

and to God by prayers and merits to be commended, so suitable

and worthy a Priest entrusted. Resounds also

of the very peoples the rejoicing confidence, which of so great

and of future glory more happily proceed; and of so great a Priest

by the commendations leaning, all far

driven repulse, in the gates of both a grateful to them and cheerful

access is opened. To be venerated wholly is to a father for sons

the conferred faculty that a King sent to them them under God should rule,

and a Priest instituted himself the upright should offer: but also an ample too of the sons from the father obtained convenience,

by whose ruling they are sanctified, by whose offering they are gratified.

CHAPTER XII.

[37] Soon moreover to the governance of souls and Sacerdotal

ministry assumed, that of a Rector and Priest

more fully he might fulfill the office, That his subjects by example before than by word he might teach, as if he were a new

Honoratus, his pristine life he changed, and his whole

state in apparatus, food, clothing, gesture, into a man

other made, he renewed. For knowing of seculars

the hearts by examples rather to be moved than by words, that

Christ the poor and His faith, not by words only

and lips he might sound, but by things and hands demonstrate;

nor in the Pharisees' manner who say and

do not, but by his own example of the Master, who began

to do and to teach; he began also himself first to do, what

afterward to others he would persuade: for too much from the sense of doctrine astray

errs, who what he has cared to know, flees to do. The arms of Saul

cast off therefore, with David in a sling and staff

against Goliath to be prostrated proceeding; his precious garments distributed among the poor, all things which

for the mortal body for adornment seemed to be, and all

the world's haughtinesses he drove away and to Christ the poor by preaching

himself wholly he gave; that what the tongue's voice uttered, the life's

merit might confirm. The apparatus therefore laid aside of robes,

and of Persian and lined garments, which from

the aforesaid Archdeacon and Bishops received, in their

Officialates honest and middling, for jurisdiction's

veneration he was wont to wear, and in which

to the common crowd and people to preach he had begun; a vile

and common, and more evangelizing the poor

Christ habit he took. Whence at once the hospital

of the city entered, to one poor man a hood he gave, to another

holding, naked of feet, to go out he was seen.

[38] From then moreover a poor habit, humble

and abject he wore. An over-cloak namely of coarse

burell white long, a habit altogether humble and vile he assumes: and a tunic with great and ample

sleeves without buttons, and a hood for hiding

the face and the countenance somewhat inclined;

all of white color, in of his innocence a sign, of a humble

spirit the ensigns, and of modesty and the flesh's chastity indications;

that so the virtues of the mind, the habit of the body might speak.

Shoes high and laced, in the manner of the Preachers

and Cistercians, accustomed to lie hard, for the way of peace to evangelizing prepared, without hose he wore:

nor on horseback through places, however much distant, but

on foot laborious he went. Next to the flesh a most rough hair-shirt

he wore, and a coarse of tow shirt,

the hair-shirt itself, lest it be seen, above covering.

A bed where for himself outside should be prepared for resting

suitable, not in the very softness, but upon planks

or on the bare ground, or small straw he lay:

at home indeed upon a hurdle of woods and coarse sticks,

with rods woven, he rested: with a quilted mattress,

vile and black, sometimes in time of cold he covered himself;

the rest of the time with his garments content, never

or rarely unshod resting.

[39] On a certain night, while a certain squire Maurice

of Monte, and the very Saint, in the same chamber

were by their host lodged, and the said Squire the bed

entered believing Yvo in the chamber to have remained,

Arise, sometimes sleeping on a stone he is found. the Blessed one lies on a stone, and you reposed

lie in a bed. Who waking, from the bed quickly

rising, nor the Saint in the chamber a light lit finding,

to the cemetery proceeding, him by chance in

book, not of sleepiness but of diligence an instrument;

that one by day also with himself bearing,

that in the law of the Lord day and night he might be occupied. Sometimes

moreover in the manner of Jacob, a stone under his head he put:

for also on the true rock, which Christ is, his rest

he had placed and his thought cast. With these beds,

these mattresses, this furniture for the several

times he used; and his flesh for the salvation of his subjects

he crucified daily, hard sleeping on a bed, by the example

of Him, who the sleep of death for His flock took

on the hard gibbet of death.

Chapter XIII

[39] Of his table moreover, and of food and drink the quality,

or even quantity, accustomed to frequent fasts on bread and water, what shall I say? So great was

in food the sobriety, in abstinence so great the austerity, that

neither of carnal ones the mind can conceive, nor the tongue endure

to bring forth. For eleven years the whole Lent on

bread and water; the Advent also of the Lord and from His

Ascension up to Pentecost, on the fasts of the four

Seasons, and on the Vigils of the Blessed Virgin and

of the Apostles, with all the Vigils by the Church ordained,

on all the fourth and sixth Days and Saturdays,

also on bread and water he fasted: on other days

of the week only once in the day on bread and pottage

he fed: otherwise he eats nothing but the coarser things: on the days of Sunday, on the Nativity of the Lord,

the feast of Easter, of Pentecost and of all Saints,

twice in the day he was refreshed. It was moreover the bread

of him coarse, of rye namely, of oats, of barley,

of bran, or of a mixture: the pottage indeed of peas,

of beans, of herbs or turnips, for the most part with salt

without other condiment; sometimes, though rarely,

sometimes moreover on the day of Easter for a pittance one

or two he ate eggs, almost continually water drinking.

[40] When he was at table with Bishops or friends,

by their instance overcome, a little of wine, though

rarely, nor unless rarely anything does he relax, he put in water: of meats indeed or fishes,

cheeses or nuts, or other foods, which among the fragments,

for alms he laid by, himself to season he

feigned. In the last however Lent before his death,

of a certain hermit poor and infirm, of Yvo

by name, by piety and compassion led, sometimes

pottage he ate; that the said infirm one, whom

he nourished, he might induce to eat. Sometimes

also he was detected for five days, the sole virtue to this impelling. sometimes

indeed for seven, not eating anything nor drinking,

with celestial only and Angelic food sustained;

after which act so in good state and pleasant

countenance he appeared, as if daily with food and drink royal

he were fed. Since moreover a sufficient Benefice

and a good patrimony he had, and in temporal things

to be acquired provident and industrious he was, and the whole

of all affection toward him kindled, themselves and theirs to him

to bestow vowed; not constrained by want or

by poverty compelled, soft garments and delicate

foods or drinks he lacked; but for love of Him at the same time and

example, who that His subjects with the stole of glory He might clothe,

and with blessed fruition satiate, with the food of gall fed, and with vinegar

was given drink; and naked for them on the cross hanging,

to Himself all things drew; he himself too, that his subjects to

His imitation he might draw, all these austere things sustained.

Chapter XIV

[41] In gesture too very humble he was and meek,

patient and benign, peaceful and quiet.

His words, signs, and works, and of his whole life the honest

conversation sanctity, cleanness, and purity

and nothing to them contrary breathed. With head inclined

his modest casting down eyes, the hood drawn forward,

humbly he went. In conversation humble, Of the poor rather than of the rich

he rejoiced in the companies, with consolatory them words

and deeds most humbly treating. Mundane honors,

by all himself to be honored, he fled: and much to himself

it displeased; if any him commended. Whatever

grades, states, sexes, and orders to of humility

ordered the merit he provoked; and himself to all and in

all the example in himself of humility exhibited. Whence

also once at Locuzer of the diocese of Tréguier, where annually

before all others his sermon demanding, against

every of all will, to the Brothers of the Order

of Preachers, who present were, he deferred; asserting

himself in their presence unworthy to preach: and for

it favoring, to whom this displeased, to them to be heard he led.

Chapter XV

[42] Of great moreover patience he was in adverse things,

whether of names namely the reproaches, patient and meek he appears. or assumed

of penitence the austerities, or of the present dwelling

miseries inflicted and innate. For often those blaspheming,

and though distinguished and to be venerated, a Scullion yet

calling, patiently and with cheerful countenance he bore.

Lice also, about the neck and over his garment

coming forth, he did not permit to be taken away; but in his bosom replacing

he said, Worms in a corpse are left, and rabbits

in a warren. He was also peaceful and quiet,

according to the doctrine of the Apostle swift to hear whatever

salutary; slow moreover to speak, unless

what God's honor and the neighbor's salvation might edify. James 1, 19

If at any time he was angry with the wicked, he did not sin: but if anything

against them contrary he spoke or did, benignly

and patiently he made it up. So therefore in clothing,

food, at the same time and the gesture of works delightful to all

and a clear of sanctity of life mirror and of conversation

example he exhibited, although not equally to all,

yet somehow for one's measure to be imitated.

Who having seen of so great austerity and so great sanctity of life

the exhibition, to the holiness of life and of penance

justice not be recalled, not be animated?

CHAPTER V.

Of Yvo's preachings and prayers the efficacy: works of corporal and spiritual mercy.

Chapter XVI

[43] Not only moreover by the holy and celestial conversation's

examples his above flying about

he provoked the chicks to fly, In the preaching of the word assiduous, nor by familiar

only and private colloquies, but by public also sermons,

frequently and fervently he exhorted. So moreover

he was to the divine word's preaching assiduous, that

most frequently and almost continually to the same he was intent; and

not only in his own parish, city, or parishes

of his diocese, but in very many other dioceses,

cities and parishes, of the Bishops

and Ordinaries of the places, not so much by license, as

by most instant request. In places too public, the crossways

and crossroads, and the common squares, announcing the word,

on the same day and the same place twice sometimes he preached.

But also sometimes in three or four divers

places and distant parishes, on one and the same

day, often in Lent he preached. But also of his deeds

the attestation relates, in which wonderfully gracious, on a certain Good Friday

him seven times in seven places to have preached.

What more? To many thus oftentimes preaching, though by

many affectionately invited, sometimes however fasting

he returned, so wonderfully wearied, that himself to sustain

not being able by others he was supported. So great moreover

by them of him was diffused the grace, that a copious of people

multitude from divers parts flowed together; nor being able

with the sweetness of his words to be satiated, from sermon

to sermon, from parish to parish, that again

him they might hear, they followed. The custom moreover for him was before

devoutly to pray, sometimes also weeping.

In the very also preachings with so great he wept sometimes

devotion, that the very also his hearers

to tears he provoked.

[44] a great fruit of souls he makes, With such therefore and so great preachings, and

holy doctrines, and salutary of good works

examples exciting, the country's people, to good slothful

and vicious very many, and to evils whatever prone

from their errors were turned back, and from perversities

recalled; and the whole country, experience being witness, for the better

was reformed. The good and honest in virtues profited,

the depraved and perverse to the salutary way were led back

were, the discordant and divided and with iniquitous hatreds inveterate

were united and pacified; to lewdnesses, lasciviousnesses, and pandering given with perpetual on bread and water fasts,

of soft and linen things abstinence and pilgrimages,

as in a certain Geoffrey, a most wicked before

ribald it was plain, were bound. Public usurers,

oppressors of women, violators of virgins and homicides

(of whom was a certain Derianus, rich and

noble) after pilgrimages to the thresholds of the Apostles

were amended. A certain indeed other, a lewd

Clerk and very greatly dishonest, and many sinners he converted: after a Roman

also pilgrimage amended and a Priest

made, the whole Lent on strict bread

and water short, afterward by his own vow he fasted. A certain

also Squire, while he preached passing by

and of the sermon not caring, the Saint before

the people first indeed reproved saying, that

if there were present wenches with the devil's tabor he would gladly

have remained, who to hear the word of God to remain

despised; then publicly he besought the Lord,

that before death in the flesh penance he might do.

Wonderful God's justice and mercy! Not much after

to God and the Saint himself vowed, health he received,

and for many an example his life he corrected.

Chapter XVII

[45] Those moreover neither by good works' examples,

nor by private admonitions,

to convert and amend he was able; the obstinate in evil by prayers he softens; by public sermons, to the accustomed

of prayer refuge himself turning, by prayers he recalled,

and by the divine instinct to return he compelled.

Related to us a certain Geoffrey of Insula, that

there had arisen sometime a very great dissension and of a suit controversy

between him and his wife on one part, and the stepsons

of his wife from another husband the sons, Master Radulf

Portarii and his brother James Portarii,

on the other part, upon certain goods movable and

immovable, in which the said Radulf and James

stepsons their stepfather Geoffrey and the very mother

impleaded. The holy man moreover of the disputants

the suits to settle, and between them justice and peace to make

was busy, to an amicable between them composition

to be ordered he labored, and himself unbidden offered.

But the stepfather and mother to no other

composition of peace or concord, the discordant the Mass said he bends to peace. than what the law's

rigor with the clamor and figure of judgment should define, acquiesced,

nay rather with hardened mind utterly

resisted. Perceiving therefore the holy man them by malice

blinded, the obstinate considering will, and

in the case to Him alone to be recourse, who alone to Himself

even rebel compels propitious wills; this

at least them more earnestly asking, that those whom by admonitions to agree

he could not, by prayer he might convert, and by prayers

he obtains from the same, that for a while they should wait and

the hour prolong, until a Mass of the Holy Spirit

he should celebrate, and the gift to himself of charity to be infused beseech,

by which easily to peace and justice they might condescend and to of peace

the bonds be bent. What more? Wonderful God's grace!

wonderful with God of the holy man the merits! Approaches the Saint

to the sacred Mysteries, of prayers brings forth the incense, returns,

and reunited meet the before rebel and obstinate,

saying; More to the spirit to resist or to contradict

we cannot, Lord: of the whole suit's controversy

and discord, which is turned between us henceforth

do the full will. O changing of the right hand

of the Most High! Who would not see how efficacious with God

is the prayer of the Saint, by whose Sacrifice's oblation and prayer's

virtue, a free will from an evil affection into a good

resisting suddenly is changed, and in an evil purpose

fixed, remaining free, to the opposite is compelled.

[46] He in the Canonical Hours to be said and the Office

of the dead, In sacrifice and other prayers most devout, the ordinances of the Church and the times appointed

unfailingly observed. Of Masses frequent and

daily he celebrated the solemnities, unless by infirmity's

cause or by another great impediment he were held.

Frequently when the Body of the Lord was elevated, in so great

of mind he was rapt a transport, as if there present

Christ he saw incarnate. Before he approached,

the custom for him was, before the altar with bent knees, clasped

hands, inclined head, and face hidden,

himself in prayer to prostrate; and with groanings, sighings

and tears more at length to pray. In the very Mass

oftentimes he groaned and wept at the altar, mindful that

the very Savior, on the altar of the cross with a strong cry

and tears Himself offering, in all things for His reverence

was heard. Outside indeed Masses, in private

prayers, assiduous for sinners, the wretched

and afflicted, a new in himself bearing Jeremiah,

most abundantly he wept, and with a wonderful of compassion melted

affection. Above measure indeed of souls perishing

with zeal kindled, nor less with desire of the celestial habitation

affected, frequent in prayers he passed the night.

Often moreover even amid prayers he roared from the groaning

of his heart, nor could he contain himself, but that the voice of one wailing

from afar was heard.

Chapter XVIII

[47] This therefore holy Priest and pious Pastor,

by holy of conversation example, The Sacraments diligently he ministers: by continual of preaching office, and assiduous of prayer suffrage the peoples

to whatever salutary by recalling, their also

souls and bodies to be cured opportune subsidies,

spiritual at the same time and corporal, most diligently

he dispensed. For curing indeed of languishing souls'

wounds, with the seven Sacraments' salutary medicines,

more diligently he met; and of sick morals and

of the needy's bodies to the seven works of mercy,

spiritual and corporal, dispensation more fervently

he was intent. To this the very Bible, of salutary

all medicines the apothecary's shop, with the Breviary

in his bosom or in his hand continually he bore; and the Fourth

of the Sentences, of the vessels of grace the table, he scrutinized;

that ready always he might have, what to each

occurring one, for the quality of his health

he might counsel, and what would be expedient minister. For catechizing

the rude a great study he expended:

of his subjects the Confessions himself gladly he heard,

at them he wept, and to weep their sins those confessing,

as another Ambrose, he provoked. To the penitent

and confessed the Body of the Lord and the other Church's Sacraments

most devoutly he ministered, and these and whatever

other Sacramentals most cleanly and most honorably

he handled.

Chapter XIX

[48] In corporal moreover of piety works, about

the needy to be exercised, the mind's from infancy with him grew

compassion, as from the mother's womb gone out it was, to the works of mercy he is intent: as in the foregoing

was shown: an ampler however in him, when

he nourished, and to schools put, and from his own to the masters

the salary paid. To marriageable poor girls

to be married he was helpful: where indeed he had learned any one,

by temporal things' tempest compelled, perhaps

by the danger of falling could lie open; or fallen from a depraved society

to depart could not, because food and clothing

elsewhere to have easily she could not; where elsewhere she had not

whence so great misery to relieve the want, the help

of the Lord, who is rich in all things, for their want

to be relieved more importunately he urged.

Chapter XX.

[49] Hospitality to all, poor and rich,

he kept: for which, a large hospitality he exercises: besides his church's Presbytery,

in his own manor of Kar-Martin a special

house he had made, where all flowing together, the infirm,

the broken, the blind and lame, the old and infirm,

with joined to heaven hands God blessing,

with joy he received; water for washing

the hands himself gave, for eating the necessaries with his own

hands he ministered, with them on the ground he sat;

the more broken, foul and deformed next to himself he placed,

and them in his own dish to eat and with his own

cup to drink he made. Of bread white of wheat, and

pottage, and what better he could have to them he gave, and

he himself next to them bread coarse only and water

most often took. Although also himself by no means he warmed,

wood however for them he bought, and from the fire farther

he himself standing them to the fire to approach he compelled:

them himself he unshod, the feet washed, and the shoes with his own

hands he greased, beds for them he prepared, and in

them them he laid and covered, he himself indeed on the ground lay.

Above measure indeed the religious mendicants,

Preachers and Minors, with a wonderful he venerated affection,

them to his house frequently inviting, and them

with good viands and wine from which he abstained with glad countenance

refreshing, and the same with them lest they should fear to use feigning.

This not rarely or lightly and in passing he did:

but many times and sometimes for continued weeks,

in his very house by retaining, spiritually them and corporally

he refreshed.

Chapter XXI.

[50] Frequently moreover and specially in time of winter

cloths and linens he bought, the naked he clothes: and made from them garments

to the poor he divided. To a trembling sometimes certain

poor man, since other garment which to him he might give he had not,

the tunic put on he stripped off and to the poor man gave, and himself

in shirt and over-cloak only remained. When

once by many he was infested with poor, nor other

what he might give, besides the garments with which he was clothed, for then

he had; all to them he gave, and only that quilted mattress,

of which we have spoken, wrapped and covered, until

other garments to have he could, he remained. Another time, when

for himself a certain tunic he had made, and to him said

the cutter, Put it on, that we may know if well made it be; turning

himself to the door, he saw a certain his parishioner

very greatly in need; and calling him he said to him, Put

on yourself the tunic with the hood; upon you for to see I wish

if well made it be. The poor man moreover, though bashfully,

gladly however it put on. And said to him the Saint:

Very well on you it suits, depart with it.

Chapter XXII

[51] The sick whoever, both rich and poor,

though more gladly the poor, the sick he visits, and both his own

parishioners and others, and both in the common house

of God, the hospital namely, and elsewhere in their own houses

indifferently, most gladly and most frequently he visited.

Of their indeed languors of souls more

than of bodies solicitous, with divine them colloquies and

good examples he comforted, and induced to of present

penalties patience, of temporal goods

and of the present world the contempt, and the desire

of eternal things. He exhorted also to confession

of sins, of misdeeds the amendment, and of salutary

Sacraments the reception; that if

the Maker's will were, in a good state going out,

of the soul at the same time of the body sooner they might receive health;

and if the term of their assumption pressed, with Viaticum and

Christ's ensigns fore-armed, more securely they might pass to of the good

the society. The Body to them of the Lord from a silver

pyx, before his breast at his neck hanging, he bore,

and them most devoutly communicated. Wholly also

with tears suffused them in the last placed with mind

glad to the world to bid farewell, and to their Judge justified

secure to meet, with pious faith testifying, prayers he poured,

and in the Christian manner the extreme Unction

with his own hands he bestowed.

Chapter XXIII

[52] Of the deceased moreover in the hospital of the poor

or elsewhere the corpses he washed, shrouds gave, the dead he buries. in biers

he placed, to burial to bear he helped, and with his own

he himself hands buried. It happened moreover on a certain

time, of them a certain deformed poor man in his house

died, on account of whose horror on that day the poor,

who daily to flow together had been wont came not,

lest so great foulness they should wash, or to bury

bearing or otherwise ministering by stench and

horror be weighed down. The holy moreover Priest and

pious Father the very dead one humbly and devoutly washed,

the washed with a shroud the corpse wrapped, the shroud sewed,

and the thread with which he sewed with his teeth cut, and at length

to burial graciously committed.

[53] Epilogue of the I part. So great therefore the man this holy with of morals honesty

was strong, with so great of divine fervor impetus he was borne, that

him to be a vessel of honor and of grace, Thus in all virtues abounding, a vessel adorned with every

precious stone, without doubt would be proved. For full

of discretion, science and virtues, to God grateful and

to men, so the present dwelling without complaint

he led, that his memory in the benediction of the Just

may remain, and in the glory of the Saints made like

he is. O truly blessed, in whom guile was not! no one

judging, no one condemning, to none evil

for evil rendering. What in his mouth but Christ?

what in his heart but piety, but peace, but mercy

was? What ever tongue will explain

altogether his in prayer perseverance, abstinence

in fasts, and in vigils power,

and no empty from the work of God time, in which

either to leisure he had indulged or to business, but neither to food or

sleep indeed, except in as much as nature's necessity

required. Never any hour and moment passed,

in which he did not either to prayer apply himself or be intent

on reading or work; although also amid reading

or if anything else perhaps he did, never his mind

from prayer he relaxed. Indeed as to smiths it is

the custom, who amid working for a certain relief of labor

their anvil strike; so the Saint this, exulting with tears, even

while another thing to do he seemed, always prayed. He wept moreover

most abundantly, and were to him tears bread day and

night; by day indeed then more, when of Masses the frequent

and daily he celebrated the mysteries; by night indeed,

when above all with untiring he kept watch with vigils;

and when thus as much as from the fragility of the body to extort

he could he kept watch, and at length weariness succeeding and

the spirit growing weak the necessity of sleep interposed, whether

before the altar and on the bare ground, or upon the aforementioned

bed a little resting, again he awoke to of the spirit

and prayer the fervor.

[54] A true lover he was of the poor: vile to use garments;

to weep with those weeping, and with wonderful charity embracing them and himself wholly into the neighbors'

care and of the wretched compassion to pour out,

to himself proper he claimed. All men

with a large of charity bosom he received, and since all he loved,

by all he was loved. Of those beholding his sanctity

and grace so were the senses changed, that

as neither he himself from God, so neither they themselves from him, or from God in

him could be separated. Wherever he was, at home

or abroad, among prelates or peers, magnates or plebeians,

always of edification he abounded in sermons,

abounded in examples, by which to the love of Christ,

of the world contempt, and of souls salvation, of the hearers

the mind might be bent. By which all causes, although

human praises and mundane honors he rejected,

all however to the same rose up, after him as

whence commonly and publicly, his own neglected name,

the Holy Priest by all he was called. Who

of this man on all sides the virtue to imitate would suffice? he was loved by all.

Let us imitate however, Brothers, as we can, of our

Patron the footsteps, at the same time and let us give thanks to the Redeemer,

who such in this way by which we walk a leader to His servants

exhibited; and let us beseech His mercy, that

him suffraging to the goal of perpetual beatitude, to

which he happy entered, we too through his footsteps

to attain may merit. Amen.

CHAPTER VI.

The death foreseen by Yvo: his last actions and burial.

PART II.

[55] Approaching moreover the end of the contest, the course's

goal, and of the good-labors with the glorious

fruit, by which the blessed Yvo the laid up for himself of justice crown

was about to receive in heaven; Yvo foreknowing his death, it pleased the divine benignity

this grace; to few and privileged dear ones his

hitherto granted, also to His dear Yvo to concede,

that his death long before in spirit he should foresee,

and to certain worthy secret and familiar ones the imminent

of his tabernacle of the body dissolution he should foretell.

For related Theophania of Pestinen,

that three weeks before the death of the holy man,

mutual between them salutary having held colloquies, to this

world with its delights amid the words growing vile,

and they panting with the mouth of the heart together for the supernal

streams of the living fountain; among the rest the Saint added,

I, Lady, from the preceding of my body infirmity

the highest joy and the spirit's exultation is. But also

for I desire to be dissolved, and to be with Christ. To whom

the pious Lady, sad and from the hearing of his death embittered

in spirit, and by a vehement of heart grief within

touched, groaning and wailing cried out, Father most loving,

ask of the Lord for living for you a leave. Thus then will separate us bitter and untimely death?

Me wretched? what shall I do? why me, Father, do you desert, or

to whom desolate do you leave? For neither to me, but nor

to the peoples of the world, who daily from your life profit,

Safe for you your rewards are, nor delayed will they be diminished;

of us rather have pity, whom you desert. To whom the man

holy, as another Martin, of his death rejoicing, and

to live if God's will it were not refusing, as an enemy conquered, for relieving

the Lady's sadness and consolation to be bestowed,

answered: Lady, as you or any other one,

when a foe and enemy you had conquered, would rejoice;

so also I of my very death inestimably rejoice,

since through the help of God my enemy myself to have conquered

I trust, and nothing deadly in myself to have I behold. O

happy triumpher over hell, an inhabitant of the world and a citizen of heaven;

who of his departure the term did not ignore, whose secure

conscience the Judge's meeting did not dread, nor the accusing

in passage enemy feared; but at the end

of the present warfare the laid up for himself of victory crown,

glad and rejoicing until the change come, he awaited.

Chapter II.

[56] In the very indeed week in which he departed, although of the last

sickness, On the fourth day before it the last Mass he makes: of which he died, by force already of the body

he began of strength to be destitute; not however from God's work,

of Masses celebration, of Confessions hearing, and

the not-omitted of God's word preaching he ceased. Whence

on the fourth of the same week Day, in his chapel

of the manor of Kar-martin, the final and last his

Mass most devoutly he celebrated: in which with copious suffused

tears, pious groans and deep sighs more at length

he emitted. He was moreover so then infirm, that for

the weakness of the body neither to put on, nor to put off by himself

he sufficed the sacred garments; but nor the other for Mass necessary

to prepare, at the altar himself to sustain, or for elevating

the Body of the Lord himself to help, unless by the assisting

Abbots of Beauport and of Begar, and the Archdeacon

of Tréguier the Lord of Karrimet with the others present

he were supported. So great however not obstanting the weakness,

force to himself inflicting, licensed first that distinguished

company, and for a time from himself removed, at once after

Mass, to hear of those waiting the Confessions

himself turning he sat down.

Chapter III.

[57] On the following indeed Day fifth, now not being able

more to celebrate, but nor to stand nor to sit; the fifth lying down, by various he is visited: on that noble

bed, already above described reclining, the fainting

limbs still the spirit to serve he compelled, and of the mind to God

untiringly adhering by the strength he profited: nay,

as if already free he were from corporeal bonds, with spiritual

wings to God by mind he ascended; and a way to them

opening, the assisting to the same he provoked; and the wings to

the ascent with edifying words, pious exhortations,

and consolatory examples, from the very reclining, he prepared.

When moreover by the Official and certain Canons

him visiting, that some mattress or at least

straw and bedding, and for the stone, which to his head

placed he had, a pillow to be put he would permit,

they exhorted; them himself by no means worthy he answered, and

enough to be what he had. Into the image of the Crucified,

which before his sight painted he had, with eyes

and hands always intent, the unconquered from prayer

spirit he did not relax.

Chapter IV.

[58] On the Day moreover sixth before his death, where now upon

his death and of so great a treasure the loss his compatriots

and parishioners, inconsolably grieving, the sixth, the concourse to him of the people he prohibits: to him

to visit he perceived to flow together; with shaken upon them

of paternal piety the bowels, a quickened messenger he destined,

who to them might interdict, lest so great of body

labor and of mind disquiet they should take; but rather

in each man they should be consoled, because by God's

grace in a good state and every of heart wish he was. O heart pure, with pious to the sons compassion moved!

amid the very of death straits, because of himself forgetful,

of his own rather he pities the straits; and of his own secure,

of his own however was of the state solicitous: but also the pitiable

of the deserted flock loss, of so great a Father the solace destitute.

I ask you, Brothers, whose heart with a more ample

grief is shaken; whether the Father's of his own sons

the desertion, or the sons' of their so great a Father

the loss? Weigh if you can, I not easily would judge.

Chapter V.

[59] On the Saturday indeed growing toward evening, the body now

failing of virtue, On the Saturday the Viaticum he takes, in the last himself feeling placed,

of the Eucharist the viaticum, the Communion of the body

of Christ, with the greatest of heart ardor for himself he supplicated

to be exhibited: which reverently and devoutly received, the very

also extreme Unction humbly he requested, and

present the Official, Canons, Priests of the church,

and very many other devout of divers conditions

of both sex persons, he received. In the Psalms

moreover to be said and the Litanies, and in the prayers

to be made, to the several of words forms he responded:

and the rest, and the holy Unction received, which in this kind are required, in the ministries

he assisted; and to the Cross with the image of the Crucified,

which before himself placed he had, his face unbent

he kept. The Unction moreover now perfected, at once indeed

his speech he lost; but still the very cross with his hands

to hold, with pious eyes to gaze, with his lips more frequently

to kiss, and with its sign more frequently himself to fortify, through the very whole night he did not cease. Dawning moreover

the day of his happy passage, On the Sunday morning he expires. for the last joined to God

his hands, the spirit to the Creator recommending, as if

himself to sleep he gave, at dawn within the Octave of the Ascension

of the Lord, of his life in the year fiftieth, in the Lord

happily he fell asleep, and of mortality the term to of immortal

life he continued with the beginning. It was fitting indeed,

that the spirit of the son of light, whom the darkness comprehended not,

not the night, but the light of the dawn rising

and into the very day growing should receive; and the sevenfold

of his present dwelling, the Octave of glory should terminate; and

he who in this valley of tears ascensions in his heart had disposed,

the time of the ascension, in which an ascender of heaven

he might become, should observe; and the granted present time's

space ended, into the fiftieth of eternal gladness jubilee should pass.

Chapter VI

[60] This of his spirit, to Him who gave it returning,

glory the very also of the lifeless body's appearance, The dead one's body with a wonderful appearance shines:

which in the expiration shone, most manifestly declared.

For testified those who were present, the body

itself the nature and property as of a body

glorified in a certain way to have put on, and a certain beauty

of future incorruption to have shown forth. His countenance

as if laughing and sweating even to the bystanders seemed,

and more beautiful and more ruddy than it was while he lived

appeared; and neither his mouth or nostrils or members

other foam indeed or a slight blemish disfigured,

or the countenance's brightness obscured. Weigh, Brothers

most dear, with how great of purity whiteness his spirit

shines forth, who in a body now extinct such relics had left.

Chapter VII

[61] Now indeed in the obsequy of the funeral to be believed not

can how great of men a multitude assembled, a great concourse to the obsequies is made:

and how great was of those assembling the devotion, their breasts beating,

emitting wonderful wailings. Some of the hands

and feet insatiably the kisses repeated, others

the body itself or at least the bier with their hands or certainly

with their things, rings, jewels, hoods, or other ornaments,

as best they could, to touch hastened.

Others moreover the fringes or pieces of the garments, and of the other

things which his holy flesh had touched, everywhere for themselves

for Relics snatched. There ran up also the very his

parishioners, with tearful lowings themselves orphans deserted

crying out; their life and defender from them

to have fled lamenting; the whole multitude them hearing

and thus to be tortured seeing, to compassion

moving. There follows also of others, the poor,

the contracted, the blind, the lame, the lepers,

and of other languid and weak nurslings

of his the greatest multitude, with uncertain voices, but

certain clamors the air filling, and of their pastor and physician

the death deploring. So therefore all the Clergy and people

accompanying, the holy body of him to the Cathedral church

of S. Tudgualus with the highest of mind devotion was carried

was: and there the solemnities of the obsequies honorably

celebrated, venerably entombed, and to the clod of earth

delivered, what of all cleanness had been the alabaster.

[62] It was fitting moreover that the kindly Confessor, as by

life's merit he had shone on earth, he is buried in the church of Tréguier of S. Tugdualus, and by glory's participation

the spirit was assumed by the Angels, to be honored

in heaven; so also the body by glorious burial by

all should be venerated by the peoples. It was congruous also that

another Patron, with the principal Father of the diocese,

the mother of the parochial churches to be buried should receive,

by which of the daughters an ampler to the mother devotion and a greater

affection might grow, and in necessities a recourse to the daughters

be shown, and a confidence to her more secure rise. This

also demanded of the Patron to the Patron the charity and devotion

singular, with whose zeal for a long time and of his church

the restoration with much labor he had sweated, and in it

while still he lived he had chosen a burial. Of which

also when to him it was said by many, that so great a work

in life to perfect he could not; in the spirit prophetic

he answered, that unless it in life he should perfect, it

after death he would consummate. O grand in death

confidence, for whose restoration he had labored. which itself more powerful as their helper to be future

did not doubt, by which into the powers of the Lord more secure

he had entered! O of charity vehemence, by which of himself

now secure, of his own however to be left

he was of help solicitous! O happy sons, whose now

it is not of their father's death to be saddened, since him more useful

they are after his death to have.

CHAPTER VII.

Certain miracles of the living Yvo.

Part III, Chapter I

[63] As moreover while he lived his own to the divine commands

he subjected the will, and himself to God a grateful and

acceptable victim immolated; Deservedly endowed with the grace of miracles, so God obeying

the voice of man and in him for Himself well being pleased, with many

and evident miracles he shone forth. For went before

justice his countenance, by which to him cooperating with grace,

as he was distinguished by life's admiration conspicuous,

so also with innumerable signs and miracles he glittered.

To all things indeed which he willed to be obtained of his vows

he who adheres to God one spirit is with Him, and according to

whose will to be able is, of one is made will.

So therefore powerful made in Him, that of many a few

we may relate, of many dead he recalled the souls

to the cloisters of the bodies vitally to be quickened, demoniacs

by fury vexed to quiet he restored, he cured

moreover from divers languors the languid, and the frail

his suffrages imploring. The members of the contracted

and weak to natural offices he reformed:

the fire's burning from the houses of neighbors, the men

and their things safe, with the sign of the Cross he extinguished;

the deep of a river water, to himself and his pedestrian companion

so with the sign of the Cross he himself divided; which after the free

of himself and his pedestrian passage through the dry, to its pristine

of its channel course returned.

Chapter II

[64] Considering sometime the provident Saint,

the Cathedral church's structure to a fall and ruin

to threaten, in the wood, whence had been cut the timber for the church, and great and most necessary of its members

repairs to need, the most powerful and magnificent

Lord of Rostrenen he approached, and to him of the mother

church the necessity he set forth. He himself moreover the Lord,

among the rest of his liberality's gifts, this also

with a willing mind and prompt liberality granted, that

whatever the work might require, and wherever, in the groves and

better forests, in which he abounded, as it pleased,

he should take. There are sent by the Saint carpenters,

who according to the granted license from the chosen of the forests

parts what more beautiful and more desirable occurred with

axe and adze at the pleasure of will cut and carry away.

What more? Where the of so pious and holy a work

timber a cut and taken were, the omnipotent

of God munificence within five years, quickly to grow up others he makes; above nature's

powers, denser groves planted, taller and

thicker trees produced; which to God's glory,

of so great and so pious a work the commendation, nor

less of the said magnificent Lord a worthy and just temporal

also compensation, into our still

times persevere, as to those beholding the place's

evidence and the grove's excellence makes plain.

Chapter III

[65] But also a still greater and unwonted miracle

followed. For when a certain Architect industrious, and the same shorter than just,

whom over the fabrication of the timbers' work the Saint

had set, the measure of the church's dimensions taken,

its timbers according to the geometric rules by his judgment

proportioned had cut; when to the raising and in

the edifice to be joined timbers it was come, to them again

to be measured his before measures applying, a disproportion

notable he detected. What more?

With repeated times the timbers he revisits, the timber too

short cut he finds. He breaks into a clamor, his hairs

he plucks, with the body's joints loosened he trembles,

astonished in mind wholly he is terrified. Of his

art therefore by the error confused, of so great of the church a loss

guilty, of his blush and guilt a refuge not having, in

so great of heart anguish a rope he seeks, which with his hands

bearing the Saint he approached; and at his feet falling,

with querulous voices and tearful groans

he addressed: pitying the architect's fault acknowledging it, Venerable Master and my Lord,

me wretched! what shall I do? how shall I appear in

your sight? how shall I be able so great a disgrace

and reproach to bear? All day my shame

against me is, the confusion of my face has covered me.

But how shall I be able so great of the church of Tréguier

with the rope I commit to be punished, because through my

unskillfulness and negligence the timber, by your solicitudes

and sweats acquired, now useless made

are, and by two feet for the edifice too short.

[66] Which heard the pious Saint with a double compassion,

of the carpenter namely the desolation and of the timber's

loss, prayers poured he bids it again to be measured, moved, to see the timber

quickly with him hastens; under his sight to be re-measured

he bids; and, as to him he had reported, so with his eyes true to be he beholds.

Soon the Saint dismayed his head bows,

his breast beats; at length with pious eyes to heaven raised,

pious turning his face, says to him; You did not well measure:

take the reed, and re-measure. The carpenter moreover

as by a certain of hope ray reviving, his commands

obeys, and again the timber re-measures.

Great is the Lord and great His virtue! In the word and

command of the Saint of God, and longer they are found. His mercy with pious desire awaiting,

the timber by two feet short, again measured,

by four feet invisibly and divinely lengthened

forthwith, on the spot are beheld; so that by two

feet longer they were than the church's structure

required, and so much of length it was necessary of them

afterward to have cut. There is turned therefore mourning into joy,

the wonderful Lord in His Saints is proclaimed, and

glorious in His works is published. Of a like form

prepared, by the unskillfulness or negligence of the carpenter

by half a foot short found, and useless

rendered, by the very holy man's prayers afterward sufficient

and apt found.

Chapter IV

[67] When the royal retinue of the people of the King of France,

for the hundredth and twentieth to be raised and exacted, The Royal ministers he prohibits to take away the church's things, of Tréguier

had come to the city, and the Bishop's palfrey

from the Episcopal house taken violently they led out; the Saint

Official, of the house of God and of his liberty by zeal kindled,

ran up; nothing to them in the liberty of Blessed Tudgualus

to be able to claim he proposes, the violence to ecclesiastical

liberty inflicted he objects, and them hardly he refutes.

What more? The Spirit of the Lord rushing into him, boldly

to the satellite, the horse leading away he approaches, his hand

into the horse he puts, and it by the bridle he held. The satellite

moreover by the reins, the holy indeed Official by the iron

of the bridle the horse this way and that holding and to themselves drawing,

the raging satellite the reins breaking on the ground

fell; the gentle and constant Saint by the iron

the horse obtained. There runs up to the violence, in aid

of the Saint, of his nurslings, the poor namely

and of divers kind the sick and of the common

people of the city, a multitude: but from the opposite cries b

the horse-dealer, by the just vengeance of God struck, at the dire force

himself of the sacrilegious hand the hurt to feel: the fierce French

of threats the darts cast, and of Royal vengeances the thunders

fulminate: and the Episcopal horse he claims, the Ecclesiastical Dignities are struck,

the whole city by fear is shaken, the more powerful

each fearful tremble, and all the future to themselves

dread to befall dangers. What more? They come together

all into one, assailing against the Saint

of the Lord, with terrors him and objurgations

and blasphemies that he desist attacking.

[68] though others said this rashly done: But also the Church's Treasurer and a great Dignity

of it, who therefore to its liberty for a wall of defense

himself to the holy Official ought to have joined, on the contrary

more against him rises: with foul for the French adulation

marked, with degenerate inconstancy of the Royal retinue

the Ecclesiastical dignity subjecting, profane

himself, of that exacted Royal a collector he had made himself: assails

he very many, excites all: and because not

penetrated the Church's privilege, as to a just

he admonishes excess, and as of rash justice

sacrilegious he vociferates injuries. Scullion, he says, you

alone were, who more freely of all us all Ecclesiastics

and seculars, with the very city, and of goods

to the loss and scandals and dangers ought to expose?

who empty of them, nothing can or are able to lose? O

how great he endures injuries, hears threats, derisions

beholds! But in all he overcame with the Apostle;

blessed himself reckoning, because he was worthy, for

the Church's rights, through Blessed Tudgualus acquired, contumelies

to suffer. O of things the material! by a little indeed

I am anguished on all sides, by whose reproaches in no way moved, but with a great mind nothing great. Behold

the stirred wind's rage, the swollen waves and immense

billows, not so much from external as internal rising up,

to the Saint a shipwreck threaten: but behold, since

he himself in the Church's cause, undaunted of mind constancy

supported, and on the rock of the Church Christ, solid

and unmoved stood, to be submerged he fears not. He bore

for in mind and conferring in himself he said;

Are not the waves, which against a rock are dashed, no more

profit, than that into themselves they are dissolved, and

into foams exterminated perish? Are not the adversaries

of the Church, its defenders more renowned have rendered; their

own indeed strength only have they worn? For the Church

nothing is stronger, the Lord asserting; that the gates

of hell shall not prevail against them: if anyone to impugn

proposes, his strength to wear out it is necessary.

[69] These while in mind he revolves, as if suddenly made

the Spirit of the Lord upon him, [the crowds he calms and shows himself instructed with the gift of fear, of piety,] with the sevenfold of that Spirit

gift, with which full he was, learned and acted, all things

suddenly tempestuous he tranquilized, the clouds he serened, and

to each according to the same Spirit's instruction, what

he ought and was expedient, he paid out. By the gift of holy Fear

of the Lord, the earthly King's terror; the Royal countenance's,

to the celestial indignation he postponed; and in his Church's

prejudice the exacted he denied. By the gift of piety,

of the horse-dealer penitent and God's mercy, through his

deprecation imploring, the hand monstrously tortured

forthwith on the spot he healed. A splendid indeed victory,

but also an excellent mercy: to the enemy he yielded not, of knowledge,

the wretched penitent he succored. By the gift of Knowledge, by which

we are taught in the midst of a depraved and perverse nation blamelessly

to converse, of Ecclesiastics at the same time and seculars

the furies, of fellow-citizens and foreigners the objurgations,

with placid addresses and soft answers

mitigated, he pressed the wrath, and the impetus of the impious

fury he extinguished. Prov. 26, 4 For of the Wise man having used the counsel,

not to them according to their folly he answered, lest like

to them a fool he be made: but lest to themselves wise who fools

were they should seem, with cheerful and placid countenance he answered;

You shall say, Lords, what shall please: because for

defending the right and liberty of the Church to my power

I am ready to expose my life, for which Christ

exposed His. of fortitude, By the gift of Fortitude, just himself

as a lion confident, the fierce of the fierce King's ministers

intrepid and alone to resist he did not fear; the champion

of divine justice, the head and spouse of the Church

Christ, before his eyes setting, who for it to be saved

the winepress of the cross trod alone, and of the nations there was not

with him a man. of counsel, By the gift indeed of Counsel, the great-counsel's Angel

the way of peace to him ministering, so maturely with the Royal

messengers on the morrow of peace he treated, that

of all their fury the monsters he placated; to the scandals and

evils, which were dreaded, an end he gave; and lest they should come forth

he made up.

[70] By the gift of Understanding, according to the judgment of the Savior,

what of the King were, of understanding, to the King to be kept dismissing; what indeed

of God and his Church were, to God and the Church unhurt

conserving; the Church's rights and its ancient privileges shown,

the King's messengers nothing against claiming,

with lawful answers placated in peace he dismissed. and of wisdom. By the gift

of Wisdom, whose it is in things measure and order to put,

in so great of weight a business so he proceeded, attaining

from end to end strongly and disposing all things

sweetly, that all seeing wondered, and

hearing praised together his wisdom, which also the very

Wise man under the sun had proved the greatest, where he says; A city

small and few in it men; there came against it a King

great, and surrounded it, and perfected was the siege; there was found

in it a man poor and wise, and he freed

it by his wisdom. Eccl. 9, 14 But also of so wonderful a man and so

wonderful a benefit, in future always ages to be recalled,

the ungrateful and forgetful each to be reproved

he showed; when by reproaching he subjoins: And no one

thenceforth remembered that man poor. Of Wisdom

also the contempt and of doctrine the spurning

wondering he adjoins: How then is the wisdom

of the poor contemned, and his words are not by

posterity heard?

Chapter V.

[71] When the holy man in the house of a certain parishioner

of his, The chest emptied full of corn he exhibits. near his church, a chest with corn

filled, closed and with a key fastened had, his

Priest with a servant he sends, that of the corn,

what for the lodging and the poor should be needed, they should take

and carry away. They approach, the key removed and the chest

as if empty they find, they bewail the loss and to the Saint

announce. Hearing the Saint by consoling answered,

Care not, the Lord bestowing enough we shall have;

with them he goes to the chest that he may visit it, and it with corn full

even to the brimming over he finds. The messengers therefore

of their going and returning not having an interval, a work

divine to be perceiving, both God's virtue and the Saint's

merits wondered.

Chapter VI

[72] A famine most violent on the parts of Brittany pressing

so, that the poor for the lack of bread the earth ate, The single loaf that was at hand distributed,

the holy man Yvo, when on a certain day after

his Mass certain ones, who to him to visit had come,

he invited to dinner: very many poor,

Priests indeed and Levites, but a Samaritan

most rare finding, in the wonted manner followed; whom

when the pious Saint a single only loaf, which

he had cut, and now a third its part or thereabouts

had distributed, seeing the Priest and Vicar of his, to the invited

said that they should hinder it, else the whole he would give, and that

to eat afterward they would not have. But also of these

solicitous and of himself not forgetful, crying out to the Saint

he said: not without complaint of his Vicar, Whence shall we buy loaves that may eat these:

behold master now for two days fasting I have endured, nor bread

have I eaten. The Saint indeed exulting in spirit, with countenance cheerful

blessed God, and as from above infused to him confidence

comforting him, said: Fear not; you the half

of the whole loaf have, the rest for me will be and

for my companions. Takes he his part, and, while

the table he sets, lays it (as he reckons) in safety:

which yet neither there nor elsewhere afterward could be found.

A wonderful utterly and divine thing! They sitting at the table,

and set the of bread which had remained little portion,

there is at the door of the house knocking as a little woman,

who in stature a dwarf seemed, three cakes with a cloth

covered upon her head bearing: and asked what

she sought or brought, she answered: divinely three cakes he receives. I heard that the Lord Yvo

had no bread, nor found any to buy, behold

I bring to him. Which given, and the loaves upon the table

set, suddenly thus she departed, so that no one ever

afterward, either whence she had come, or whither afterward she had turned aside,

could know. She departing, the man of God to

his comrades and table-companions this way and that the stretched-out hand,

Now, he says, brothers, eat. Wherefore of that

woman none of those reclining dared the man of God

anything to ask, knowing that the divine providence,

which through an Angel to Daniel in Babylon

the dinner of Habakkuk transported, and to Elijah through a raven

in the desert food ministered, to the man of God and his guests

through an Angel, into the form of a serving woman transformed,

bread daily in extreme necessity

transmitted.

Chapter VII.

[73] In the time when of the Church of Trezdretz Rector

he was, of no lesser virtue a work, Of 7 loaves 200 poor he satiates. but of equal power

alms to more than two hundred poor

by distributing. Rector also of Lohanec being, of one

only loaf, which then he had, to more than twenty

four poor he distributed, to each in such quantity,

that for few very to suffice it ought not: otherwise 24 of one: and if

more had come, that single loaf to suffice could seem;

it indeed in the hands of the man of God working,

who through the hands of the disciples from few barley

loaves so many of men thousands satiated.

Chapter VIII.

[74] When on a certain time with certain ones accompanying

and with him of salvation conferring, the holy man

made a journey; a hood to a poor man given, there met a poor man, who from the passers-by

alms sought, and himself of hunger to die complained.

To whom turning aside the Saint, first words consolatory

gave, at last taking from his head the hood

to the poor man he reached saying; Receive, because other what to you

I may give for the present I have not. Edified therefore

the poor man and consoled, the Saint the begun returns to

the journey, and through half a league the Hours saying naked

of head he goes. O worthy of a worthy gift recognition!

Looking the of Christ condescension into the Saint worthy, and

into the worthy gift of his, by which him in his poor he had honored,

his very to him hood he restored and to his

head replaced. The Saint moreover of himself and of his merits'

with Christ acceptance by the very sign certified,

forthwith with knees bent to the ground, with joined hands, with an invisible hand he receives it:

and beaten breast adoring, said: Lord Jesus Christ,

to you thanks I give for your gift. To the men moreover

this seeing and hearing, and from this exceedingly

wondering, and at such hearings and spectacles for

joy weeping, dismissing them their ways to go and

bidding farewell he says; Go with God's benediction, and as much as

you can do good. To the eye you see, how

grateful is Christ, and recompenses to those doing good.

Chapter IX.

[75] On a certain day, after an oven-baking of bread entire

the holy man to the poor had distributed, he receives Christ under the form of a foul man, while he was

with his comrade at table, a certain in appearance

most foul poor man, in habit vile, of abominable

form came up; whom the Saint before him at table to sit,

and with him in the same dish to eat made. When

moreover a little he had eaten, from the table he rose; and

while going out at the door of the house he was, to the Saint and

his comrade himself turning, in Breton bade farewell saying,

To God. The Lord be with you. A wonderful of divine condescension

and acceptation showing! then of a beautiful poor man. Who most foul had come,

most beautiful departed, a most splendid namely

garment clothed: with the immense of his garment brightness the whole

house so resplended, that with its beauty delighted

the man of God, with further refreshment to be refreshed refused,

but were to him tears of joy bread on that day and night,

while he said to the assisting companion, Now I know well and certain

I am, since in his messenger has visited us Christ,

rising from on high.

Chapter X.

[76] When in the days of the man of God the people of the King of the Franks

to Tréguier came to the city, the hundredth

and twentieth of movable goods from the Bishop and

Chapter and the other persons Ecclesiastical of the city

and diocese of Tréguier, For the custody of the church in the sacristy passing the night, against the rights and liberties of that

Church, about to exact; the holy man, by zeal of God and of S.

Tugdualus his Patron, who the very rights and liberties from

all earthly dominion, God favoring him, from the ancient

Kings of the Franks had obtained, by means and powers

all by which he could to resist disposed. On a certain

therefore night, while in the wonted manner with his companion,

for of the sacred things and of the other goods which in

the church were the custody, lest for pledges they be snatched,

in the sacristy he lay; it happened, they alone in the church shut,

to hear a great noise, in the manner of thunder,

terrible so that to them it seemed that the whole church's

structure would fall. They rise therefore, a light they kindle,

and that they may see what this was the sacristy they go out, and to

the great altar proceed. Bids the Saint his companion

at the sepulchre before the altar to stay. The man moreover this

holy to the sanctuary, where the Relics of the very most blessed

Tugdualus were kept, he enjoys the colloquy of S. Tugdualus, approaches. Nor delay: and

behold two there with one another a discourse held very long

conferred, not indeed with equal tone or like sound

vociferating, but of a poor and a powerful one the manner keeping,

of which Scripture; With entreaty speaks

the poor, the rich moreover will speak rigidly. One indeed

spoke humbly, the other boldly. Prov. 18, 23 Heard moreover

the companion, from the place in which he stood, of each indeed

the voice; but with whom the Saint spoke no one

he saw, nor what mutually they conversed understood.

And when many to one another reasoning they had conferred,

returning to the companion the holy man said to him: Let us go

to rest, since peace is made: and this

to you in God's virtue I command, lest what you have seen and heard

to anyone me surviving you reveal.

[77] In which matter since others, besides the Saint and his companion

in the church shut, and the church's cause with him suppliantly he pleads: who thus would converse,

none at all there were; it is clear Blessed Tugdualus that

other to be, at whose Relics, for imprecating

aid and protection of his church and its rights, the devout

his and holy zealot a vigil kept: who

also himself, in the manner of a poor man still a wayfarer, humbly spoke,

the rich Tugdualus now a comprehensor

beseeching, that the church which he had founded he would protect,

and its rights as he had acquired so also conserve.

The rich moreover Tugdualus the comprehensor to the same wayfarer

boldly spoke and rigidly: since his he was

in heaven a hearer, animator, and helper, to whose honor

on earth still placed, was the very eloquent

zealot. In the noise moreover of terror he came since

the terror of the persecuting French against the Church

imminent he premonished. By the colloquy moreover

singular, for defending the Church's cause, he instructed,

and to liberty to be protected animated. And so of both

at once by the help and protection, perpetual peace to enjoy and with secure

tranquillity to flourish for them, intently and worthily serving

the Church of Tréguier he foretold.

Chapter XI.

[78] It is not also in silence to be passed over, that

on a certain day, he is refreshed by the sight of an unwonted bird: on which on bread and water he fasted, while at the hour

of refection, with the poor in the wonted manner around poured,

at table he sat, and bread more delicate,

by a servant offered, to the very servant and the poor

he granted, the coarse moreover and bran for himself to be set

he bid; a bird certain small, about the neck indeed

of snowy color, above moreover green and resplendent,

to which in the house or those parts never before, but

nor after, a like was seen, through the window enters,

and to the holy man before his breast as on a branch sat. Persuading

moreover the assistants it the man of God receiving, and

for some while with open hand beholding, at length in the name

of the Lord bid to go away saying, Go in the name

of the Lord. Truly this wonderful bird, both on account of

its unseen appearance, and on account of the unwonted of approaching

and departing manner (for not unlicensed

it departed, though by the hand always open it was held) what

other than a sign certain divine, in testimony

of sanctity and austerity of life a solace, from heaven to the Saint

transmitted, shall we judge.

Chapter XII.

[79] There was not lacking also a testimony of the sanctity

of the man of God, in which God the devotion of His Confessor, over the one sacrificing a shining dove appears,

in the ascent of the holy altar, to His Majesty well to have pleased, most clearly showed. For when on a certain time,

while the Bell-ringer for Matins rang, and at

the signal of the ringing the Saint from the sacristy, where on account of

the causes above mentioned he had lain, to the choir proceeding,

before the altar bowing adored; the said Bell-ringer

church round about with immense clarity filling,

saw from the said sacristy to the altar proceeding.

Which seen ceasing from further ringing, and to see

what this could be hastening, at once the dove

disappeared, and the clarity itself vanished. The said moreover

Matins said, when the holy man the Bell-ringer reproved,

for the reason that thus little against the custom of the church he had rung;

he answered, the above-said narrating vision. To whom

bid the Saint, lest to anyone him surviving he should reveal.

Chapter XIII.

[80] Of the same also sanctity and immense devotion

the Saint once Mass celebrating, while the Body of the Lord

he elevated and the Blood, there appeared about the very

Body and Blood a brightness of light, which at once

after the performed Elevation disappeared and departed.

Chapter XIV.

[81] An energumen furious, There was not lacking also to the man of God, to him summoned, for the assertion

of his sanctity, the virtue of the Most High, even in demons

to be put to flight. There was about three years before the death

of the man of God an energumen certain, who for a term

continuous with fury and diabolical tossing labored,

men as he could struck, his own garments tore,

little ate, at no time slept,

to the ground himself dashed, horribly cried out, with

him a demon spoke, and he himself to the same cried back.

Why do you weary me, demon? why do you weary me? and the like

uttered: wherefore also continually he was kept

shut, and through a narrow certain window to him

was ministered that thin which he used refection, upon

which yet frequently he urinated and it afterward ate.

Which when found the man of God, pitying

him, and to confession induced, his servant who him should loose and to himself bring

he sends. Whom loosing the servant himself, on the spot wholly

gentle, freely, obediently, and peacefully to

the man of God he leads. The Saint moreover him to Confession

first inducing, the Confession made asked,

if the demon to him more anything would speak: who

answered that yes, to himself threatening and repeating,

Why hither did you bring me? woe to you the night to come: woe

to you the night to come. You shall pay, and much shall pay this night

that. Why hither me did you bring? But the man of God the demoniac

comforting, Safe, he says, and secure be; he lies

the demon: not you shall pay, but he. You shall eat, and in

peace shall lie in my house, and he shall hunger of you, and shall lie down

in his hell. What more? The Saint refection

for the hungry one prepared, a bed for him next to his bed

he spread, and the very bed and the whole house

with holy water he sprinkled: and thus the demoniac refreshed

in the bed he laid, and over him the Gospel

of John he read, and other prayers very many he uttered.

On the morrow moreover asked by the Saint, how from the demon he frees:

with him it was, if the demon more to him would speak or

with him would be; he answered, Now three years revolved are

since not so well I have rested, and the demon to me no

more speaks, but has departed wholly from me. Then

the Saint to God thanks giving, said to him: Return into

your house, and in thanksgiving persevering

be: henceforth do good, Masses gladly hear,

sermons frequent, on alms be intent, on good works

persevere, observe of God and the Church the precepts,

lest return the demon more to you, and worse to you

happen than before. Who to the Saint's admonitions according to his power

obeying, after these for fifteen years to God

and His Saint grateful and devout survived.

Chapter XV

[82] When the Lady Joanna of Beaumanoir, wife of the Lord

Geoffrey of Tornemin Knight, with a piece of his bread a dying woman he heals: in the of death was danger

placed, so much that the physicians her had left,

and for burial the funeral things were prepared; the man

holy, who her Confession frequently had heard,

came that her he might visit. When moreover the hour of dinner had come,

and with his accustomed foods, coarse namely bread

he fed, and morsels in water before the very Lady took;

she of one of the morsels, which the Saint had set apart,

to be given to her instantly requested. Soon as the very

morsel she received, and (wonderful the Lady's confidence! wonderful the Saint's

grace!) a little she tasted; herself relieved and of

her infirmity freed she exclaimed, and afterward for

twenty years in thanksgiving, to God and the Saint

devout, persevered.

Chapter XVI

[83] The Archbishop of Tours the Church of Tréguier

visiting, The ruin of an avaricious Recluse he foretells: a certain pious woman and aged to the man

holy familiar and devout, him asked, that in

of Derianus an Indulgence from the aforesaid he should obtain Archprelate.

The holy man for some while contemplating and

into heaven looking up, as if some of divine predestination

ray he had beheld, answered: That, he says,

Enclosed one, for love of money will be sometime lost.

This moreover the following proved the event. After

the death indeed of the man of God the reclusory he went out, and back

looking, unfit for the kingdom of God, as the Saint had foretold,

of perdition the way took up.

ANNOTATIONS.

CHAPTER VIII.

The dead raised, many from the danger of death freed, S. Yvo being invoked.

Part IV

[84] After the passage of the kindly Confessor, from multiplying

through his merits miracles, The body is elevated from the earth the divine power

incessantly did not cease. For God omnipotent,

who in His Saints glorious is shown, did not

suffer the sun to be obscured by a cloud, nor a treasure in

the dust to lie hidden. He decreed indeed that a lamp so

renowned, upon the candlestick of the Church set, to the profit

of all should glitter with signs, shine forth with miracles.

Wherefore the miracles increasing unceasingly,

since the blessed man's sanctity could not further be hidden,

the faithful's worthy deemed devotion, his body,

in a humble before place laid, to a higher with due

honor to transfer. Unworthy indeed it seemed

and was, that his bones a vile earth should cover, whose

merits God's power, with signs so evident, proclaimed.

Prudently truly and wisely the wisdom disposed

of the Redeemer, on account of the frequency of the miracles. that his body dead

of bodies should turn to the medicine, whose living members

happy of living souls had been the medicine;

and his flesh most holy worthy in the opinion of mortals

venerably should be held, on account of the glittering

benefits of healings, which through of all purity and virginal

cleanness the glory a sister had been of the Angels.

What indeed wonder, if those sacred members languors

heal and deaths repair of bodies, by which

as by organs had healed God the languors and pests of souls?

What unworthy, if virtues spiritual

have retained the Relics of that body, which so long

the bestower of all virtues inhabited the Spirit of God?

Now therefore to some miracles stupendous, which after

his death through his merits, to the exaltation of His glorious

Confessor, to show God deigned,

and worthy are of the Witnesses' assertion before the highest

Pontiffs, Clement VI and John XXII proved,

with faithful narration let us pursue: and first, about

the dead raised and from the danger of death freed.

[85] A certain Raymond an adolescent of S. Brieuc,

while at the channel or water's passage of a certain mill

to the closing less cautious he was intent, there are raised from the dead a youth under the mill wheel extinguished, into the water

slipped and by the wheel of the mill snatched, in the head wounded,

in the whole mouth, shoulders, and the other of his body members

broken and bruised, in the water was suffocated. By the mass

moreover of his body, the water's course somewhat obstructing,

and the wheel of the mill from its motion retarding,

an old a miller the cause exploring and finding

the fall, began to his power for help to cry out. The farmers

indeed from the neighboring fields, the voice of the old man for his

weakness at first indeed scarcely hearing, but at the cry

at length continued attending, a great interposed of time space,

to see what this

was at length approached: and the fall comprehending,

up to the neck the water having entered, from the deep

dead they led out. What more? Upon so pitiable

they commend, and for his life to be repaired vows

and suppliant prayers they emit. Not them deceived hope

in the Lord, and confidence in His Saint. For made

of time an interval, for proving his true death

granted, soon in their eyes, the youth who

dead had been revived, and together with the bystanders, exceedingly

in God exulting, to God and the Saint thanksgivings

a long while paid.

[86] The son also only of his mother, who also a widow

indeed distinguished and freeborn was, another by a continuous fever dead, with a continuous fever

laboring, on the eighth of his infirmity day died. And when

of spirit and of life a sign none in him at all

appeared; the pious mother by relatives admonished, a great

after interposed of time space, the mouth, nostrils and eyes

closed; and with a noble and numerous company,

and the whole wailing household, the whole night about the body of her extinct

son the vigils observed. These moreover about the to be prepared

funeral things occupied, others indeed with tedium affected

to rest withdrawing, the sorrowful mother

alone remained; and next to the head of her dead son herself placing,

the reins to tears she loosed; the most pious Yvo,

that to the mother, now by her husband left, the very her only one

he should render, with vows equally and voices incessantly interpellating.

It was done therefore the dawn shining,

that he who dead had been should revive, and his eyes opened

and to his mother turned should say; My mother, a great

to me labor you have given: but also Blessed Yvo, to your desolation compassionate, that to you alive I be rendered

by his merits obtained. The report moreover then flying about

that dead he was, more than two hundred persons

to bury assembling, him not only

alive but also sound wholly finding, together

with the mother to God and the Saint vows paid, and due

thanks rendered.

III

[87] Of another man noble Hammo Kargeze

Aymericus the twelve-year-old son, a third in the sea drowned, in the arm

of the sea called Leguer himself bathing, submerged and thence

dead drawn out, to the first house was carried.

While moreover the funeral things for the same were prepared, interposed

with too great upon the son absorbed sadness, with a strong

cry, knees bent, tears poured, the suffocated

son to the kindly Confessor commended and vowed.

Who continuously his eyes opened, and his mother called.

To whom the mother, My son, where were you? Who answered,

With a certain Lord white, who me from the river

submerged snatched.

[88] When the whole Brittany the calamity of famine invaded,

five years old, likewise a begging woman's son, to the Angers city a beggar

coming, in the hospital of the poor was received. It happened

moreover that when her son at midnight of the Lord's-Supper

had expired, and she for the funeral things and burial

necessaries with her dead son through the city

had begged; at length to the house of a certain citizen a Breton

she came. He indeed compassionate of them, and them

Bretons to be perceiving, admonished the mother, that faithfully

and devoutly S. Yvo, who a neighbor and compatriot

to her had been, upon her son she should invoke, and to herself

him devote. Soon indeed, she who before was absorbed

with sadness, from the word of the man by a certain of hope ray reviving,

cried out to the Saint, that her son to her alive

he should render, and a wax candle the magnitude of his body

encircling she vowed. Rising therefore, and a thread,

with which of the corpse of her son the measure she might take, seeking; while

about of Vespers of the Easter day the hour the little body

she measures, she who wept the dead, received her son

to life forthwith restored.

[89] A certain woman of Plebs-parva, Basilia by name,

her son of one year and a half in the water

of a certain ditch submerged and dead found, and a boy in a ditch drowned, raised,

and drew out. At the mother's moreover cry

the father and grandfather of the dead one with others very many running up,

with bent knees, and tearful voices,

for the boy the most holy Confessor interpellated.

Each parent also and the grandfather himself, vows of a candle

of wax of one penny, and one penny annually

life accompanying to be offered, emitted. Which done at once

the boy himself revived, and God's glory and the holy Confessor's

report increased.

[90] Another also of the same Plebs a mother, Joanna

by name, another in a fountain, a son of the age of one year in a fountain deep,

to the house neighboring, submerged and suffocated, a vow

of a candle to be rendered with imprecations emitted,

whom mournful she wept neglected, soon glad recovers

raised.

VII

[91] William also a boy of six years of the parish

of Goaz-valon, a third in a pond; in the pond of Portus magnus

submerged and dead drawn out, by the mother's prayers to the kindly

Confessor commended, and emitted by her

to be offered, on the same day to her alive and sound was restored.

VIII

[92] Geoffrey of the parish of Bothlazan his son

Rolland, likewise a fourth, of the age of about six years, in

the water of Guindi submerged drew out dead. He cried out

to the Saint and invoked him, and emitted

[93] Henry the Baker of the Lord William of Plœeric,

heated from the oven, and a fifth, in the pond of the house great himself

bathing, to the bottom even by a fall sunk, dead

was. Whom the Lady Joanna, of the aforesaid Knight wife,

of the chattel's unforeseen death grieving, very oftener

with most ardent cry to the glorious of God Confessor commended,

and for him vowed: and continuously by his merits

the servant revived, and to the devout Lady sound restored

was. Who forthwith by the aforesaid Lady, with to him handed over

money, to the holy Saint's sepulchre sent

with thirty pennies and with praises

and thanksgivings, to God and His Saint offered.

[94] A certain boy by a horse was killed: whom

wailing the mother and lamenting to S. Yvo's sepulchre in

her lap carried. and a boy by a horse killed, While moreover the solemnities of Mass celebrated,

the Gospel of John was read; the assistants,

by the mother's cry and the extinct son's compassion moved,

cried out repeating, O S. Yvo!

O S. Yvo! The boy moreover, as if by the very cry from

sleep awakened he were, soon his eyes opened and

revived: and so the mother's terminated sadness and the Saint's

glory amplified.

[95] In the parish of Plœlare of the diocese of Léon,

had expired: and a three-year-old girl, whom the mother and her acquaintances to the holy

Confessor devoted, and him for her besought

were. The night moreover whole in funeral things and her vigils

spent, the following day's light she revived, and after wailing

applause she introduced.

XII

[96] A certain daughter, by name Guenureta so

furious, likewise a furious woman expiring at the sepulchre: that her to a post firm by hands

and feet to be bound it was necessary, for the reason that whomever

she could touch she bit; the father after

for a whole year to many of Saints places for to have

health he had led, nor had obtained, at length

to the sepulchre of the most holy Confessor Yvo

led. There moreover when for seven days she had stayed,

on the Saturday about the hour of none, the very of the body bindings

by themselves were dissolved, and she at the same time expiring,

the soul from the body's bonds was loosed. The Sunday

indeed following the Mass finished, while of the dead one the shroud

they sewed, and the funeral things prepared; the father himself with querulous

groans and knees bent cried out, S.

Yvo, am I of the labor and patience, which for a year

now for seeking the salvation of my daughter I have sustained,

even by you of a reward frustrated to depart? Am I of my hope,

spiritually in you placed, to be frustrated? Alas grief!

How to the sorrowful mother of her death a messenger shall I go?

These therefore and of this kind sighs and wailings while

were made, soon the dead one the shroud put off, naked rose,

and the very put-off shroud and candles by

two Priests offered, and at her funeral lit,

to the Saint's sepulchre, in of restored life testimony,

presented.

XIII

[97] Related Agnes, widow of John Brientius Viscount

of Peverith, that Amicia, her daughter, likewise another three-year-old. of the age

of three years, with a grave infirmity for three months

held, the languor growing strong and nature failing,

at length died. The father moreover of the daughter, namely

the very Viscount once of the said widow husband, S. Yvo

for his daughter more devoutly imprecating, and for her

vowing, soon not so much from the dead recalled, as

from the languors unharmed he recovered.

[98] Let these too be written in another generation, and

the people who shall be created praise the Lord in His glorious

Confessor, and nonetheless Yvo with praises

extol, who marvels by His virtue wrought

even in conceptions dead and miscarriages raised.

A certain damsel, Mentia by name,

of the diocese of Quimper, pregnant, A dying woman in childbed helped, and the foetus saved, with so great pains

and anguishes for fifteen days bringing forth labored,

that in all her members, chiefly the shins and legs,

gouty wholly made, livid and blackened, and as

altogether dead made. Her mother therefore, seeing

her of strength destitute, by no means to bring forth able,

and so death in the doors to exclude the hope of salvation,

to S. Yvo's help to be invoked herself turned,

and for her vowed, imploring that her daughter from those pains

he would free, and the foetus by baptism save. What more?

Continuously wonderful and hitherto unwonted miracles followed

were. At once namely the very one bringing forth, the midwives,

and all those serving and assisting sleep oppresses;

the damsel sweetly sleeping, without the hand's of the midwife

aid and without pain, a daughter bears; from

every also gout of the members, shins, and legs

pain wholly is healed; and from the place of childbirth,

the hall namely of her house, without anyone's support,

to the chamber and her bed awakened she proceeded.

The daughter too born, without pain into the light comes: thus clean and without stain

of blood or other filth was found, as if she had been

many times bathed. Afterward indeed to the marriageable age

coming, a certain Magnate above the measure

of her state a husband obtained: with whom as long as

she lived, besides other works of piety, in which she abounded,

on two days on bread and water in each week

she fasted. Which indeed all God's gifts, through S.

Yvo her Patron's merits and suffrages, to have obtained

herself at no ever afterward time was silent; but with words

always and deeds related.

II.

[99] A certain woman of Guerandia pregnant, who

an infant in the womb alive very many times had perceived,

and by occasion of improper labor by certain signs for

five days dead afterward had noted; likewise another extinguished in the womb, herself and the infant

to S. Yvo recommended and vowed, imploring

that neither she herself should perish, nor the infant baptism lose.

A wonderful thing! At once to visit the Saint's sepulchre a journey

taking up, where the very sepulchre she touched, on the spot the infant

in the womb throbbed, and the belly so swelled, that

both the girdle was burst and the little tunic unsewed,

and the miscarriage revived, and it after two months, by baptism

reserved, safe she bore.

III.

[100] Marita a woman of the parish of Ploeyunet, a male

bore dead: and a dead one born, whom she alone, with her husband

and a certain familiar coming up Clerk and very many

coming, by the one bringing forth's and the miscarriage's piety

led, prayers poured to the holy Confessor devoted. Who

at once reviving, a living voice emitted gladdened all.

IV.

[101] Juzeta of Plebs-danielis of the diocese of Léon,

when for two days of an infant, likewise another. for fifteen days in

the womb dead, with great of childbirth pain she had labored; with heart

and mouth equally as much as she could she cried out: S.

Yvo free me, and the infant whom I carry make to baptism

to come. Which done at once a son she bore:

who baptized indeed, without milk however or of any

other nourishment sustentation nine days

lived.

[102] To this let accede that done miracle of

the woman, a barren breast having. While a woman

certain of Plestin an infant had little, milk for a woman in childbed obtained for

whose nourishing in one only of her breasts milk she had, and

this also little; and on this account upon him the infant, as if

in her bosom the soul it would breathe out, continually wept; at

having recourse, him she beseeches, and to him herself and the infant

devotes. Which done, milk in the barren breast

abounded, and continuously visibly dropped, whence

the perishing son she refreshed and fed.

[103] There was at Niort b a certain by death of hanging

condemned, There are kept safe, one thrice hanged, who three times in one day

hanged, at the invocation of Blessed Yvo, from the very of death

danger was freed. On account of which also at once to

his sepulchre, in shirt and breeches with the cord in

his neck, with which he had been hanged, a journey he took up: and at length

coming, both his deed and the perpetrated

by the Saint's merits in him miracle publicly he confessed.

The cord also itself in the middle broken, and of the inflicted

wounds the traces in his neck from the very hanging left,

to all to behold desiring he showed.

[104] A certain blind man of fifty years, into

of Tréguier, a blind man fallen into a well, in which in the emerging year a strong

certain youth falling, dead had been, downward fell with his head.

But the Saint interpellating by name said: Holy of God Yvo, to you help I cry. Of those running up also by vows and prayers to God

and S. Yvo commended, thence, though in the head wounded,

alive however was drawn out. He asserted also,

that as the aforesaid youth, so also he himself by the same

precipice would have perished, unless S. Yvo him in all things

had conserved.

[105] On a certain time it happened, Henry, Priest

and Rector of the Church of Mentaloet, a Priest into the water from a bridge falling, while there was

whose water beneath a passage had, together with a little bag

letters containing to fall headlong. When moreover forthwith

he cried out, S. Yvo, help me; and to his honor

on the very day annually a Mass to celebrate, and

twelve pennies of perpetual income to ordain he vowed;

the Saint him on the spot from of submersion the danger

freed, and the little bag with the Writings and letters uncorrupted

wholly preserved. While also certain ones approached,

and to go out of the water themselves as helpers

offered, the Priest of the sole Saint the suffrage to suffice

testified.

[106] About the feast of all Saints, Magnates

certain and Domicelli, in number about fifteen, to

and now to a stone's throw from the island were distant; behold

that the sailor diffident and fearing, as quickly to return

he counsels. But a certain of them more spirited the Lord of

Pestuven, not acquiescing, but oar after oar

taking, all by the vehemence of the rowing breaks. At length the tempest and the whirlwind of the sea growing strong,

and they without oars existing, and the ship with the waves swelling

and the waters flooding filled; the human

not having, to the divine they have recourse for help. The holy

therefore Yvo a patron and with God for

them an intercessor they constituted, to the same vowing,

if a port of safety for them he would deign to obtain, themselves without shirts

and with naked feet his sepulchre to visit. Nor

delay: and behold against the course and impetus of the sea, the wind

and the tempest, the ship turned itself; and them by a straight track

to the port whence they had departed, safe and unharmed brought back.

[107] It happened also that eight persons in the sea, which

is between the island of Maudetus and the village of Lesardroe, likewise two shipwrecked, in

them, since to swim by no means they knew, and themselves wholly

imperiled they beheld; with heart and mouth crying out, S.

Yvo into aid they invoked, vowing that

if they escaped, altogether naked his sepulchre they would visit.

At once moreover the tempest itself ceased, and a great made

tranquillity, their six companions submerged, they by the coming up

neighbors safe were received.

[108] A noble man Alan of Freranrais a Knight, with

the Lady Theophania his wife and certain other

their familiars, through a sea-port, called c

Lober, of the diocese of Vannes to cross disposing, A horse with a servant into the sea falling headlong,

being wary of danger for the company, the palfrey with a horse-dealer

in the passage sent ahead, the face of the palfrey with a tabard's

veil covering, lest the sea's roar it should dread.

When moreover farther from land they had proceeded, in a certain

passage perilous, in which it was necessary for the little ship two

or three circuits to make, before further it should proceed;

the said palfrey infested and terrified, into the sea

itself with the horse-dealer cast headlong. Which seen the very Lord

at once cried out: S. Yvo, both my vallet

and the palfrey to you I recommend. And behold continuously

the horse-dealer submerged swam up; and an oar laid hold of

cast to him, into the ship received and freed was: the palfrey

indeed, whom the reflux of the sea into its was leading

and drawing channel, turned aside; and against the sea's waves,

through the wind and billows to it contrary, with the veil also

to it placed hindering, to the port whence it had departed

and where it the Lord awaited, by a straight track

returned. So great therefore seen a miracle, ingratitude

to God and His Saint not enduring, his freeing by neighing he attests. at once

together with his horse-dealer and palfrey, for publishing

the miracle and thanks to be paid, to the Saint's sepulchre

he hastened. Where also a new other miracle

and a certain portent was shown. The palfrey

indeed itself, that brute animal, by a divine certain instinct,

as if the Saint's grace it acknowledged and its

freeing to him attributed, the church entered, while it approached the sepulchre, with a wonderful and unwonted manner began to neigh,

when yet the whole day it had not neighed, nor

otherwise to neigh had been wont: but nor from this kind of neighing

as long as it stayed ceased, but continuously neighing

until it departed persevered.

[109] The passage of Treysquinet, which is in the confines

of the Quimper and Léon dioceses, Of 40 shipwrecked 10 saved, on a certain

time for too great a load of persons, on account of

also the floodings of waters, the wind, and the billows

contrary, into the deep of the sea with all crossing,

in number about forty-five

persons, was submerged; of whom only ten,

to God and S. Yvo themselves devoting, escaped, who also themselves

oftener to the bottom even to the sand of the sea descending

and thence ascending, and so for two hours and beyond

floating, and S. Yvo continually invoking,

at length by certain fishermen of Léon, from two

leagues thence coming up, drawn out and received,

by the holy Confessor's merits were freed. d

[109] William Tournemin, Lord formerly

of Hunaudoye, when in a notable company the shore of the sea

of Hilion, a rider with his horse by the sea's tide absorbed, where twice, sometimes thrice in a day flows and ebbs the sea,

to cross he proposed, believing the flux to anticipate

the others to precede he strove. They indeed by fear

of the coming sea to follow refusing, alone himself

through the middle shores drives his horse: in which falling, again

he rises: but at length the solid for the horse's feet failing

ground, to the bottom of the sea with the horse he is sunk.

In the very moreover deep existing, while himself in heart

to the Saint he devoted Yvo, the sea him cast out: but believing

the horse swimming up to hold, again with the horse

he descended into the deep. Which seeing his comrades,

nor otherwise to help being able, S. Yvo also for him

oftener invoked, and unharmed, nor a little also

water swallowing, to the dry it led.

[110] It happened also that a certain boy of ten years,

upon one ball of heaped-up seaweeds, a boy drowned in water,

which through the sea then flowing to the house of his father he was conveying,

the ball loosed scatteringly into the water most deep,

near the port of the Black-Stone next to the city of Tréguier

fell. The boy moreover at once to cry out began,

S. Yvo! S. Yvo! Thus also over the water

remaining, from one bank of the sea he heard a certain woman,

from the other indeed boys crying out. Run up,

we beseech, run up; to the submerged succor. S.

Yvo help, S. Yvo a helper be present. Nor delay

and behold a ship swiftly approaching came up to

the boy, in his garments clothed, very long over the sea

supine, as if to sleep he would unfrightened, nor by swimming

nor otherwise by escaping himself helping, without also

of water swallowing kept safe, it saves and receives unhurt.

[111] A certain little ship, in which Alan of Landehoez

of the diocese of Saint-Brieuc, with other companions was, by the flux

of the sea impelling against a rock was broken. likewise a shipwrecked one, He moreover

Alan soon cried out, S. Yvo, to a true Confession

and of this danger the escape save me; and

in all years of life four pennies I will render to you. At once

indeed the little ship in pieces was dispersed, and he into

the deep sunk, the water entering up to his interior

parts. But the sea him to the top again bringing back,

and he again as before the Saint invoking,

which floating himself he sustained, until by the nod of God

and the Saint's merits, there came a ship, which him received

and saved.

[112] When Arnald, son of Raymond of Rupes-Deriani,

for the sake of trading by ship Gascony was seeking;

before the port of Rupella, and a merchant in a tempest imperiled, the sailors to land descending

and he himself with two companions in the ship remaining,

suddenly a tempest greatest with so great darkness

arose, that the ship with the merchandise

most badly tossed in danger of submersion was constituted,

and scarcely one another to see could. Then the said Arnald

with the others to himself left crying out, and the Saint

with hearts at the same time and voices imploring, forthwith

over the ship itself a light certain visibly

appeared, and at once the tempest wholly ceased.

[113] John also Gad of the diocese of Tréguier,

while once he was with five other companions in the sea, again shipwrecked,

near the Port-Blessed of the same diocese, so great

in the very sea a tempest arose, that the ship in which

he was broken and with the billows covered, was submerged. Then

moreover he himself, to swim or another escape to find

not knowing, amid the very straitened straits, the most Blessed

Yvo invoked; and if he escaped, his sepulchre

naked himself to approach he devoted. At once therefore the Saint's

merits working, a small of wood piece, of the length

of one foot and of the breadth of three fingers, from

the bottom of the sea emerging, he laid hold of: upon which to another

ship coming, the danger of death he escaped. The others to swim

knowing, who also to the Saint themselves to recommend neglected,

perishing.

[114] Alan a citizen of Tréguier the emitted vows to the Saint

paying, and three ships imperiled. three wax ships at the sepulchre of S. Yvo

hung up, one for the escape of a prepared shipwreck, upon

the ship to the port by the Saint's merits was led. Another

by reason of another, in the forepart also broken,

which also the vow emitted at Tréguier to its port

came. The third indeed by reason of another ship, from the danger

also of shipwreck and of the sailors' submersion, by

the arisen greatest tempest, from which his devout ones

the pious Saint freed and unhurt conserved.

[114] The wife of the Viscount of Peverith, Deudmat

by name, confessed that her daughter of one year to Agnes

thence she had returned, she began with a certain of heart anguish

to fear. Not knowing moreover whence this could to her befall,

it came to her in mind of her very daughter to doubt,

and her and the house in which she was to the most blessed Yvo more devoutly

to commend. A stupendous thing! To the house, in

which her daughter she had left, S. Yvo always invoking

at once she returns, the smoke of a fire from it coming forth

she sees, and her course she accelerates: the house she enters, of a fire

the traces she detects, the very also her daughter in

the cradle placed and her cloths up to the navel

consumed and burnt she beholds. O Saint,

with all of faith and hope cult to be pursued! by whose merits

both the fire's burning ceased, and the daughter the burnt

cloths sound wholly and unhurt remained.

ANNOTATIONS.

CHAPTER IX.

The contracted and paralytic healed; the blind and infirm in the eyes cured; demoniacs and the raging freed.

[115] To be brought forth also into the midst are miracles

of the contracted, paralytic, gouty,

and from the impotence of members freed. A girl in all members contracted, Catharine,

of Plebs of John of the diocese of Tréguier born, of the age

of fifteen years or thereabouts, from gout and other infirmities,

in hands, arms, feet and shins for

nor to rise, nor herself to feed in any way she could:

for she had her arms one over the other wound

and joined, closed hands under the shoulders, shins

joined, and feet one over the other in the manner

of a cross placed over. And thus on a horse placed and bound,

for obtaining health, to the sepulchre of S. Yvo led

was. And when moreover there for seven weeks

about with devout prayers she persisted, nor health

had obtained; at length on a horse as before placed and bound,

to return home she is bidden. nor for 7 weeks heard, O of delayed piety dissimulation!

Behold departing and now by one league from the city

placed, still before altogether of the church and house,

in which the Saint rests, the sight she lose, by faithful

to the Saint affection bound toward the city she looks back;

and beholding the bell-tower, from the bottom of her heart deep drawing

sighs, to the sighs pious tears adding, of this kind

voices she redoubles: O S. Yvo, the greatest in me

was and is in your piety confidence, and your

house unconsoled do I depart? Holy and sweet and pious

Yvo, how still infirm, in no way cured,

to my mother returning her eyes shall I sadden? O

most pious Confessor Yvo, who both living and dead

to no wretched one you beseeching were wanting, me wretched!

how of your piety frustrated and of your mercy

despised, to you and your sacred house from

now and in the future do I bid farewell? she is healed on the return from the sepulchre. While therefore with delayed

in tribulation consolations thus she groans, behold

Not yet words of this kind had she finished, and behold

the arms looses, the hands opens, disjoins the feet and shins,

and from the pristine infirmity frees and to health

restores. Having experienced therefore in herself the grace of God, bids those

bindings, with which to the horse bound she had been, forthwith

to be loosed, by herself from the horse to the ground she descends,

and with her companions and all to her the seen miracle

meeting, to the Saint's sepulchre on foot by herself hastens.

Which heard, all the Clergy and people to her processionally

meeting, and to the sepulchre even

conducting, with the common of all clamor to God and

His Saint are paid praises and thanksgivings.

[116] A certain other, Nicholas by name, of Guerranda

born, in like manner thus in hands, arms

and feet paralytic and contracted had been, so that

neither his hands to open, nor arms or shins to extend,

but nor to walk, to rise, or his feet to stand, A man similarly contracted, or himself

to feed for four years could. He when to S.

Yvo's sepulchre for health to be had in a cart

had been carried; in the house of a certain citizen lodged,

frequently to the very sepulchre, is healed after 5 weeks, sometimes also in the lodging,

for a of five weeks space dwelling, in continual

deprecations and vows for his health persevering,

nor from the very infirmity yet relieved or

in anything amended was. Diffident therefore and of recovering

salvation despairing, his host he called, with

him he reckoned, and of his expenses satisfying on

the morrow to depart he proposed. O prone of divine slowness

compensation! For the night coming, and all the

household in their beds placed, the door moreover

of the infirm one open remaining, behold the citizen about of the night

middle waking, through the door into the chamber of the very

infirm Nicholas so great a light, and brightness beholds,

that the whole house to burn would be thought. He therefore

terrified and suddenly rising, the Saint himself appearing to him: the light itself

and the brightness disappeared. Again therefore reclining

and lying in bed, when again the very light and brightness

more radiated, he himself the host with awakened

sister swiftly rising, cried out that

the whole house was burning. Nicholas moreover himself to the same

answered: Be not moved, since well

I am, and S. Yvo with me is. The dawn moreover of day shining,

and that light and brightness disappearing,

on his feet standing they saw him, sound wholly and cured

found; and so to the Saint's sepulchre proceeding,

God and the Saint they glorified, and the emitted

vows and thanks they rendered.

III

[117] Henry of Volonia the left shin, from

gout and of other infirmities by occasion, Likewise contracted in the shin; had for

two years so contracted and turned about as to

the leg joined, that it to extend he could not,

but with two staves or crutches to go it was necessary.

When moreover once at the sepulchre of S. Yvo he stood, and

next to it slept, a voice as from the sepulchre coming

he heard, If two wax candles you would find and to the sepulchre

this offer, you would be cured. Waking therefore, and

door to door through the city for the very wax candles begging,

the sought he found, and the found at once with prayers

offered. The following moreover day, when the great Mass

was celebrated, the promised cure awaiting, and praying,

all beholding the shin he extended, and from it and

every infirmity cured he rose: and his staves left there,

on his feet he walked.

[118] Amou of Plebs barbata in hands and arms,

feet and shins so contracted for a year was, others in the whole body;

that neither to rise, nor to walk, nor her hands to open,

arms or shins to extend, or to drink or feed

she could. At the frequent moreover through intervals of time

of S. Yvo invocation, a vow being added that

to the honor of God and His Saint on Fridays life accompanying

she would fast, and to prayers and alms to her power

she would attend; the said members she extended, her hand

opened, and full health received.

[119] John of Loargat so paralytic and

contracted made was, and another in the legs. that his shins as to his legs

joined he kept, and one foot to the other in the manner

of a cross placed over he had, so that neither to walk, nor

with his members himself to help could; but it was necessary that

by others oftener or by his mother he be carried, or from

place to place be moved. When moreover for two

years continuous so great a calamity he had borne,

once with so long a time's tedium affected, and his

mother's pains and labors compassionating, groaning and

wailing he cried out: Most pious of Saints Yvo, look

clement to my calamity, and my mother's misery:

to you my body, blood, and soul I render,

and a circle of my body in wax I promise. To these

moreover following his mother added, And I to you, most blessed

Confessor, my tribulation show: have pity

on me and my son to me deliver to a speedy of life health

or death. Nor delay: the invocations and

vows emitted, the contracted his shins extended, rose,

walked, and from the infirmities with which he was weighed down

on the spot was cured.

[120] A certain Yvo of Pedermac his memory lost,

so that he knew not either where he was or what he did, Health and his mind are restored to one furious and contracted. but

as if furious and demented words foolish and disordered

uttered: so much moreover prolonged was the fury,

that such him seized an infirmity, that his tongue

and the whole mouth he had within burnt, his hands

indeed and feet cold, his shins one over the other crossed

and arms likewise. When moreover for two

years, a small interposed interval with this kind of infirmity

he labored; his father him to S. Yvo's sepulchre

led, and for him of an annual circle of his body

in wax to be offered a vow emitted. By prayers therefore

and vows of this kind persevering, and the church and

sepulchre for ten days continually visiting, at length

his memory he recovered, and of the aforesaid infirmities

by the Saint's merits convalesced.

VII

[121] A certain John of Plebs-nova, of the age of fifteen

years, There are cured, one contracted from too great a weight, under a very great of tamarisks load succumbing,

over-weighed and pressed, so contracted made was,

that to walk or to sit not being able, only

he lay and with bent hands to his legs keeping he proceeded.

He moreover for to have health to the church of Tréguier

on a horse carried, when to S. Yvo's sepulchre with

anxious labor he had approached, cried out; S.

Yvo, from this infirmity whether by life or by death

free me, and your servant perpetually of one

annual penny life accompanying I devote myself. Which done,

suddenly he rose, and himself erected, and wholly sound himself

felt.

VIII

[122] At Guengamp formerly Azelicia by name,

for eleven about years paralytic and with gout

contracted was so, from the girdle downward paralytic, that her shins to her legs and feet to

the rear bent and joined to extend she could not,

but with her hands and breasts as a reptile herself she dragged.

She so by the said gout was weighed down, that nor

she herself scarcely slept, nor the assistants for her groanings and

cries even snatchingly to sleep she would permit.

With many therefore vows and prayers oftentimes for salvation S.

Yvo interpellating, on a certain time more ardently than wont

and more unusually she knocked at the ears of God, and S. Yvo's merits

requested either from the prison of the flesh to be loosed, or to the flesh's

health to be restored. Who forthwith with extended members and

the whole body straightened rose, and from every gout and

infirmity cured to full health was restored.

[123] Henry, of the diocese of Coutances in Normandy,

in hands and feet contracted, contracted in hands and feet, not being able

without crutches to walk, but bent going, after

himself his feet dragged. To the sepulchre of the Saint at length coming,

prayers and vows emitted, his crutches there left,

sound and cured to his own returned.

[124] John Core of Lammuer of the diocese of Dol,

for eight years or thereabouts so in shins and feet

contracted was made, another in the legs, that neither himself to erect, nor to walk,

nor to ride could; but in the manner of a quadruped

with hands and knees through the earth himself dragged, and his shins

his own in vain, as if another's, carried. At length

moreover by the Lady Theophania of Silva-Eudonis, of the Lord

Peter of Lammuer of Laws Professor the wife, who

him as a nursling had, on a horse with a pack-saddle a placed,

to the sepulchre of S. Yvo for health was sent. By vows

therefore and prayers by him and by others for him made,

sound and cured thence he returned, and the Saint's glory dilated,

and the very Lady's and his family's gladness and

holy devotion amplified.

[125] In the diocese of Quimper of the parish of Queriam,

William Balch, for seven years and beyond, a third in the shin:

of one shin contracted was, which to the leg raised

having to extend he could not, whence also with crutches

he walked. Him, the Saint invoking and himself into

greatest shone about, and him so warmed that

he sweated: after the sweat indeed relieved himself he felt,

the contracted shin extended, on his feet rose, his crutches

namely left, cheerful and sound walking to

his own, God glorified and his Saint blessed.

XII

[126] A certain daughter of Lammuer, of the age of two

years and a half, with a certain infirmity struck, her mouth distorted dumb and in one side paralytic.

both her speech lost, and her mouth to the left part

of the face was turned: with the arm also and shin and

the nerves of the whole left side so paralytic and contracted

made was, that for ten weeks nor any

of them use to have could. The mother therefore, by the deformity

and pain of the daughter with maternal piety moved, taken

to the most pious Saint confidence, him she beseeches,

that to her sadness and the daughter's misery with eyes of piety

he should look, and her either to life raise or to health restore.

When moreover to the honor of the Saint, for the sake of devotion and

of consequence sooner of health, to the holy sepulchre

of Blessed Yvo a journey with her daughter she had taken up, and now by a league

she had proceeded, and so still from the very sepulchre seven

leagues they were distant; continuously the daughter health receives,

speaks, arms and shins extends, the face to

its pristine state returned: and with her mother glad

several of the way parts, without a staff or other support or

vehicle, to the very sepulchre hastened, of Christ Jesus

thanks giving to the name, and of Blessed Yvo a testimony

bearing to his sanctity.

[127] Nor indeed to be passed over of sanctity an abundant

certain and evident argument, since

by Blessed Yvo's merits not only life to the dead,

health to the sick, walking to the lame, speech to the dumb, but also

light to the blind is rendered and to the deaf hearing. For a blind man

certain of Rupes Amatoris to Tréguier came

the city, and in it delay for much time

drew, with a dog door-to-door begging. He at the Saint's

sepulchre more frequently sitting, A beggar is illumined, assiduously him

for the eyes' light prayed. Nor at length

was he of his desire frustrated, but a most clear receiving

sight, this to all the citizens by of single ones discernment

proved: and to them his leader the dog,

whom they had fed, dismissing and to his own returning home, the Saint's

with them glory announced.

[128] In the year in which the holy man died, and the day

in which of him the b Sevenths were made, a certain youth of

Lancout Guido by name, for long times blind, likewise a blind youth,

to his sepulchre led, there the Saint for

his sight more at length and more instantly besought. At length

therefore, the Saint what he sought obtaining, while of Masses

the solemnities were celebrated, openly he was illumined,

and forthwith bringing the offered to him by the assistants pious gifts

to the altar a votary offered.

[129] The Lord Peter's of Lammeur of Laws Professor

daughter, Margilia by name, a spotted eye is cleansed: a spot of the quantity

of one pea, by occasion of a certain infirmity contracted,

in her eye had, which for eight continuous

days remaining and daily growing, incurable seemed.

The mother moreover of the girl, preferring her dead

than in the eyes spotted, together with the father and

her nurse, her to the Saint of God Yvo recommending,

and to his holy sepulchre with offerings

to bear vowing, on the morrow her from the eye's

spot purified and fully cleansed found.

[130] Evenus Eudonis of Plebs-nova of the diocese

of Tréguier, in the mill of the monks of Begar, by the wheel

of the mill by chance drawn and oppressed was, an eye torn out is restored. to whom also

the forehead struck the right eye was knocked out. This moreover

his loss present a certain woman beholding,

to him indeed compassionate, in nothing however to him help

otherwise to give being able, to S. Yvo for help

with bent knees cried out. At this moreover cry

at once the water stood, and the wheel: and he drawn out and

freed was. The very also woman the eye torn out

into its place replacing, the very indeed eye whole and

sound was repaired; a small however scar, no

at all deformity affording, but of so great only

[131] Related a religious man Geoffrey Abbot of

Bona-requies, that he being present a certain daughter her mother

light, to the Saint's sepulchre had led: who

for much time of her blindness the remedy, by prayers and

vows imploring, nor however obtaining, despairing of

obtaining, from the church and sepulchre to depart proposed,

and her daughter to lead bid. The daughter

moreover the mother's admonitions and orders, lest her she should offend,

obeying, while the mother to her own to lead back

compelled outside the church she leads, in the very behold the thresholds

to the Saint's sepulchre looking back, the very Abbot

and of the bystanders the multitude hearing, cried out:

O most holy and most pious Yvo, a certain Abbot being present; who many and in many things

miracles do, why in my mother blind, you imploring,

and herself and hers to you offering, your miracles

you show not? Nor delay: and behold the daughter into her mother

looking, and her eyes divinely by the Saint's merits

opened beholding, the mournful sound suddenly into jubilation

changed, with another voice proclaimed, My mother sees,

My mother sees. The very therefore Abbot beholding and the whole

multitude, the mother indeed conversely going before, and

the daughter from the track following, to the sepulchre they return;

and to God and His Saint praises are extolled, and

thanksgivings are reported.

[132] Juliana of Coutrevan, of the age of two years

with a half, her blind daughter to the sepulchre of S. Yvo

for sight to be restored bore; and her to the Saint devoting,

imprecated that her either by life or by

death from blindness he would free. likewise of a two-year-old blind girl. Which done at once of

one eye sight she received: the other moreover eye, which

also closed was, she opened, of which then nothing she saw.

Two indeed wonders by the Saint's merits wrought,

in a blind eye sight clear, and in a closed a decent opening.

[133] This also of his sanctity and in him of divine

virtue a testimony shone forth in demoniacs furious,

through him from the demons freed, and to sense and to

memory restored. In the parish of Penguennam

of the diocese of Tréguier a mother certain to her son, Yvo by name,

of the age of twenty years angered and troubled, The mother cursing he is invaded by a demon, with bent

knees and shown breasts, defamation to her made

objecting, cursed: You have defamed, she said, me,

who the report ought to have defended: I give you my curse,

of these breasts which you sucked, and

of the bowels which you bore; and whatever in you of right

I have, whatever of you I bore, all I give to the devil.

Who at once into the earth as dead falling, with so great

suddenly is in heart and the whole body a vexation seized,

that scarcely by four strong he could be held.

Carried moreover to a neighboring house, and to a certain bed

bound and placed, he saw that night manifestly

against himself rush two demons black and horrible,

great as towers, with face and horns a goat-like form

displaying, striving him to take and saying,

Ours you are, Ours you are: because you your mother gave to us.

[134] at the father's vow the Saint appearing. The father moreover coming up, and seeing his son

furious in the manner of a dog wailing, and now against himself rising

and to bite seeking, terribly also

crying out; Defend me from those thieves and goats,

who wish me to carry; over him leaning cried out,

S. Yvo, my son to your custody I recommend:

protector and defender be. Which prayer

poured there appeared at once to the very son S. Yvo, sitting upon

his breast, who the importunate from him of demons drove away

molestations, and their impetus with virtuous power

coercing, and saying: For you were on Monday at the sepulchre

mine and you are called by my name, therefore I have come to

save you; nor you could your mother to the devil give, who

no right has in you more, than a sack in the corn

which is carried in it. The cock moreover at once crowing,

turned to his father he said to him, Let me, father,

with S. Yvo to converse, who me will defend. Which

words many times repeated, to sleep he began and rested until

morning. The day moreover shining awakened from sleep,

he asked his father that him forthwith to S. Yvo

he should lead. When therefore led him the father and proceeded

on the way; the mother penitent and grieving also followed

was. Her approaching feeling, he began again

Take her away. To whom compassionating the mother, from the bottom of her heart

into heaven vociferating, said: My son, I you to S. Yvo,

to whom you hasten, recommend. By the command therefore of the father home

returned, at once ceased the very second vexation.

When moreover to the church they had come, and to the sepulchre

they had approached, a most hard him again a third time seized

vexation; which up to Vespers persevered.

And while Vespers were said, by the leading and admonition of the father,

after prayers and vows, finally the stone head

which is at the sepulchre kissing, by the Saint's merits

to God reconciled and from the demons freed himself

felt, his garments and belt sought again, and to God and the Saint

thanks giving, home with his father, his mother to pacify

and to gladden, sound and of sound sense returned, and his sins

his humbly confessing the amendment of life proposed and perfected.

II.

[135] There was in the parish of Pratum of the diocese of Tréguier a daughter

certain of twelve years Margilia by name, likewise a girl,

for a month and beyond demented and furious, so much that upon

her mother and others she rushed, her garments and the house's utensils

broke and tore, and many other dementias

exercised, on account of which her to be bound and in strict custody

to be held it was necessary. She by her mother to the sepulchre

of the glorious Confessor brought, invoked upon her

the Saint and the vow emitted, at once healed was wholly and

cured.

[136] A certain Spaniard, by name Michael of Fonterabie,

to a certain poor man to him for God's honor and S.

Yvo's love alms asking, and a Spanish sailor. postponed

the reverence of God and the Saint's honor suppressed, for piety

derision, for alms indignation paying,

foully by hawking into the palm of the poor man he spat.

Nor unpunished. The poor man indeed answering, May recompense

you the Lord and His Saint; at once the aforesaid Spaniard

to the ground dashed, demented and furious made,

strongly cried out, that one with his companions,

in garments white clothed, him without compact beat,

and without mercy slew. He nonetheless

himself with two fists struck vehemently

at the breast. At length by certain companions of his,

and the bystanders from the ground raised to the ship, of which he was,

led and carried was. Coming up moreover the master

of the ship, a colloquy with the sailors upon his case had,

him to the church in which he had sinned, and the Saint's

sepulchre which he had despised, they led. Many

therefore for him Masses celebrated and candles many offered,

large alms to the poor and especially

to the injured but pacified afterward poor man distributed, their sailor

Michael himself, cured and freed,

to God and the Saint pardon asking, and of the just

correction to him made thanksgivings repaying,

sound and of sound sense to be rendered them they rejoiced.

IV.

[137] In the diocese of Saint-Malo there was a certain William

by name, of the age of forty years, for fifteen

days so demented and furious, that scarcely him to hold

could four men, another 15 days furious; well strong, even bound.

Him the mother and brothers for his freeing first

led to S. Jaqutus, thence to S. Leonard,

afterward to S. William of the said diocese. To

which places, as he had gone, so also returned he was infirm.

At length the very mother with the same brothers and other coevals,

him to S. Yvo recommending and vowing

to the sepulchre to lead; when a journey they had taken up, and

and better to be, so much that him loosing

peacefully and quietly to the sepulchre even they led.

Whither when they had come, and there for him they prayed, and vows

offered, perfectly he was to pristine health and memory

restored.

[138] A certain Harevisia of the diocese of Quimper,

that her it was necessary strictly to hold and bind.

When moreover her daughter to S. Yvo she recommended,

and for her a circle of her body in wax to his sepulchre

annually to be offered vowed; while with her belt

the body of the daughter she measures, continuously fully cured was

and healed.

VI.

[139] In the diocese of Léon Gluguenna, a certain young girl

for five and another for 5 weeks demented. weeks so was raging,

that she strove her own hands and arms, and others

her own and strangers' indifferently to her approaching, to bite

as if wishing to eat; and it was necessary by hands

her and feet to bind. Whom the Bishop of that

time William actually visiting, when he beheld, to the bystanders

said: I counsel that her you vow to S. Yvo and

render, and I trust that she will be cured: And I, he says, from

now her vow and render to Jesus Christ and Yvo

the holy, and I will that her to his sepulchre you lead.

And when according to the counsel of the Prelate and the vow led

she was, for four indeed days raging she remained;

after which from her hands at length and arms the bindings

fell, and from that hour healed she was, and her sense to her restored.

With great moreover thanksgivings,

to God and His Saint's sepulchre devoutly bidding farewell, to

her country she returned; and after these married many children,

to the Saint devoted, she procreated.

ANNOTATIONS.

By the ancient custom of the Church more solemnly are observed the third, seventh and thirtieth of the burial days: and this is what here it says the Sevenths to be made: as of festivities the octave days plurally often are named the Octaves.

In the other proper names of men and of places, in which the writing of the Process from this life's writing varies, some Breton of the same skilled, not rarely will find what correction may seem to need: we the copies' fidelity simply having followed, whatever in them incorrect shall have been, to be noted we wish for the instruction of posterity, this work for another edition about to revise: nor indeed do we doubt that many have need of some correction, which now from us escaped of the Breton words ignorant.

CHAPTER X.

Divers other benefits through the invocation of S. Yvo miraculously obtained.

[140] To be added also this is to his praise, in testimony

of sanctity of those freed from dropsy,

swellings, ruptures, cracks and wounds.

In the year in which the glorious Confessor Yvo died, a woman

certain of the city of Tréguier, who for three years dropsical

had been, in so great grossness and swelling swelled, A dropsical woman is healed;

that in many places of her body by too great extension

the skin cracked, and when on account of it to the sepulchre

of the Saint for the space of fifteen days and beyond in vigils

and prayers she had stayed, and nothing had profited,

her husband of her cure despairing, her home

led back. On a certain night moreover there appeared to her in dreams

S. Yvo, revealing to the same that to the church again she should return,

and a wax candle lit to his sepulchre offer and so

health receive: who soon confiding in the Lord to

the church herself caused to be carried, and the to her revealed fulfilled.

Continuously moreover a hole about her navel in

the manner of the point of a needle, miraculously and she not perceiving

made, the humors in the manner of water flowing down

copiously dropped and the earth lying around damp

rendered. And so the very woman fully, cured

to God and the Saint thanks rendered and in the course of time

virtuous and sound births, to God and His Saint devoted,

brought forth.

II.

[141] a paralytic woman whose side lay open with a great wound: A certain woman Helienna by name, of the city

of Tréguier born, for a year and beyond paralytic and

contracted and with other infirmities so broken stood,

that through her side the viscera and intestines appeared;

and while S. Yvo incessantly for her health she invoked,

she should visit and there health obtain. Who at once

having called together certain familiars and to her faithful ones

said; S. Yvo me visited, and was with me, and placed

his hands to my sides, and said to me that I should go to his church:

lead me to his sepulchre. Led

indeed to the Saint she vowed herself, and him invoking publicly said:

Lord S. Yvo, whom corporeally I saw, who me by your

grace visited, who miracles from afar and from near

many do, who me that to your tomb

I should come bid, behold now I have come. Now therefore your

I beseech piety, intercede for me to the Lord

Jesus Christ, that from the anguish which I suffer He may free

me. And at once before the bystanders, upon her with piety

moved, and in the very anguishes indeed, freed she was,

and within eight days from every wound wholly healed and

cured: she survived moreover afterward for eight years, in

good work and thanksgiving persevering.

III.

[142] from the bite of a venomous worm swollen; Azelicia of Ploesal of the diocese of Tréguier, from the bite

of a certain venomous worm, which between her jaw and neck

her had bitten, a horrible and dangerous swelling

in her head, neck, and breast whole, and even

to the navel incurred: from which also bite so infected

she was and infirm, that for eight days nor to eat

she could nor to drink, nay scarcely to speak she could or breathe,

but verisimilarly believed from this to die. Seeing therefore

no other to her to remain remedy, she vowed to the glorious

Confessor, that if her he freed, his sepulchre

she would visit and an offering make. Meanwhile moreover came

to her in mind to go to the house of Catharine Hælori, the sister

own of the very S. Yvo, who with herself at home

the hood of the very her brother had, and it for Relics

decently and venerably conserved. She

therefore the pious sister, of her most pious brother mindful, upon so great

an affliction led by piety, at the suggestion also of her

husband, Yvo also named and of many bystanders

agreeing, the hood itself brought, and

upon the infirm one placed; and at once by its touch herself relieved

she felt, and at the dawn of the following day totally

cured and healed God and the Saint glorified.

IV.

[143] There came on pilgrimage a certain infirm one to the sepulchre

of S. Yvo, a stone in the scrotum suffering, who of an infirmity of the testicles and of the member

or their skin, thick and swollen to the quantity

of a man's head labored, and for fifteen days there

for too great pain strongly and assiduously cried

to the Saint. At length with affectionate prayers and vows

emitted, there appeared in the said member or skin swollen a hole

and a certain opening, through which a stone saffron-colored

very much and of the quantity of a goose's egg with some

humor fell: and so from the very passion and pain

freed, by the Saint's merits wholly cured and sound

he was made.

[144] When Oliver Latomi of the diocese of Saint-Brieuc in

his right foot near the ankle was sick, hurt in the foot, from a puncture

or inclusion of a certain piece or fragment of one

spindle to the length of one finger, nor for three

weeks could proceed, nor an improvement perceive,

but of his cure despaired; the emitted to God and

to Blessed Yvo a vow, that if of the foot's infirmity he should convalesce,

to his honor once in each week

he would fast, and four pennies annually pay;

on the spot at once that piece went out, to the ground

fell, and the same Oliver cured was, nor any

of pain more felt.

[145] When Guidomarus Lœdec of the diocese of Dol

grievously was sick in the right jaw, the jaw with a stone born in it swelling. so beyond

measure swollen, that sometimes nor to eat he could

nor to drink, and neither the face so swollen, without a notable

scar or a deformed blemish, curable seemed;

tried in vain various of medicine remedies, at the invocation

of the most blessed Yvo, a benefit he obtained of health.

For him with vows and voices invoked, at once

into his mouth: which feeling he took out, and soon all

pain ceased, and his jaw cured and fully healed

was, and not a trace even of the disease remained in his face.

It was moreover that stone of the quantity of the first joint

of the thumb and of the likeness of a plum-stone.

VII

[146] When Brother Andrew, Abbot of the monastery of Beauport

of the Order Premonstratensian, There are healed, an Abbot with a continuous fever laboring, into a continuous fever

weeks infirm, had been by the Physician judged to

death, now of his very death rather than of life

he hoped. By human therefore help despaired, while

to God and S. Yvo himself he turned, a certain

voice these to him saying he heard. You my boy,

now meanwhile this hold, and I when I shall come back will cure

you. At once moreover the Abbot a sob, which before

he had not had, suffered; and after that sob

on the third day to perfect health was restored.

VIII

[147] Brought James, Rector of the church of Mesquer

of the diocese of Nantes, that there were to him twelve

disciples, a boy with a dumb companion, of whom one Simon, with a continuous fever

grievously labored; another moreover William, with another

infirmity for a long time held, his speech had lost:

who with an unequal indeed languor laboring, an equal

however medicine sought. For of the sole S.

Yvo's merits confiding, and with like devotion him

invoking, themselves to the same devoted, and themselves before his

image, in the church of the very Rector existing, to be carried

made. Who there a little for their health

the Saint invoking, at once to their master Rector

aforesaid sound return and cured.

[148] A certain Juzeta of Plebs-Danielis of Léon

of the diocese so with a continuous one laboring that

it was not hoped of life, a sick woman to death. her mother Theophania, to herself

and her little ones compassionating, to S. Yvo commended,

him invoking that the daughter he would heal; and at least for fostering

and strengthening her little ones the of the calling

of death term he would prolong; a vow also adding

of twelve pennies, to the honor of the Saint annually

to be offered; to her in the evening coming for every

physician procured a sweat, and so to full health

was restored.

[149] Nor is it by oblivion to be blotted out, that not

only the corporal incommodities of the sick to be relieved

he met, but also temporal substances miraculously

found to be recovered. When a certain woman

through her absence all goods by thieves

carried away perceived; groaning and wailing to the sepulchre

of S. Yvo she came, him more affectionately for the goods'

recovery besought, Her house plundered bewailing and a vow of ten

shillings made, and each year of twelve pennies

to be paid emitted. At once moreover as by a divine

revelation it came to her in mind, that through the servants

of the Court three expressed houses she should search, in which

three parts of the carried-off goods she found and recovered:

the fourth indeed part the thief fleeing and with himself

bearing, was blinded. the carried-off she recovers the vow being made: His sin therefore the fault from

the inflicted penalty knowing and penitent, to the Saint himself recommended,

and two shillings annually to offer vowed,

and on the spot his sight recovered, and the theft through a certain

monk restored. So therefore by the Saint's merits

that matron the lost goods recovered entirely. On a certain

also other time it happened the same Bleuzuena

to lose, for which to be recovered again God

and S. Yvo she invoked, and of a wax cup together

with twelve pennies once to be offered a vow she made

and paid. Meanwhile moreover at her instance censures

run of the Church, preceding sound the canonical

admonitions, and upon those detaining of excommunication

sentences are fulminated. as also the lost cup, It happened moreover six years

thence afterward revolved, on the same day in which the cup

she had lost, the house of her kinsman detaining it, with

all in it contained by fire to burn, except the said

silver cup: which though in the middle of the house in

the flame of fire for so great a space to be melted altogether

it ought, unless miraculously and divinely from melting

it had been preserved, and then by the Saint's merits unburnt

altogether remaining and unhurt, to the aforesaid Bleuzuena

restored was; and he who had detained it, after a due

penance, mercy and absolution

obtained.

[150] Stephen a sailor, of the diocese of Tréguier, who

near Rouen at one league in the Seine

to God and His Saint Confessor emitted, the same on the third

day before his ship found in the port of Meulinieux, where

against the course of the water, by the wonderful of God virtue and His Saint's

merits, it had ascended and come.

III

[151] When the house of Oliver of Plugiel, of the diocese

of Tréguier, with a very great kindled fire was burning,

and the wind blowing very strong the next neighboring house

of his father, by two about paces distant, By a like vow a fire is averted, with the flame

of the fire, the wind impelling, for half an hour or

thereabouts was covered; the father himself, Derianus by name, his house,

with the flame of the fire so covered, to Blessed Yvo

recommended; and of an offering of eight pennies,

life accompanying annually to be offered, a vow

he made; and at once the wind from the contrary side, to blow

strongly began, and the house from the fire defended and

protected.

[152] A certain merchant of Spain once fifteen

pounds of Tours to the trunk of S. Yvo in the church

of Tréguier as a votary and glad offered, merchandise is kept safe from the danger of the sea, asserting himself in

danger of submersion constituted, for his and his

wines' freeing, the very sum as

the price of one cask devoted to have promised; if with other

goods and the ship to a port of safety it were led: which

to be done, to the sole Saint's merits he ascribed.

[153] It happened that the horse of Aselitia of Pluzonet, in

which corn to the mill she had led, with its two fore

feet bound, into the river Leu fell, a horse with feet bound fallen into water, and in it

from none up to the setting of the sun so under the water

stayed, that nothing of it appeared. Doubting therefore

of the horse, and fearing her husband, who to her cruel

and hard was, S. Yvo she imprecated, and her to him

devoted horse: which done the horse its ears showed,

and by itself the river went out, and to the dry came.

[154] In a certain year when a great slaughter was of animals

and mortality, and of Agatha a Damsel of

Plebs-nova the animals indiscriminately were dying; animals are preserved from a plague. she

(which also from then lived without milk) that the rest to her left

animals she might preserve from the plague, to S. Yvo if she survived,

to offer vowed: which done the aforesaid ceased the mortality:

which indeed as a miracle of the glorious

Confessor to the merits ascribing, when for four years

the calf to feed she had vowed, to the sepulchre of him

she offered and it there left.

[155] Certain familiars of the Lords for the inquisition

of S. Yvo to be made by the Lord Apostolic

deputed, The sepulchre's stone is miraculously raised. in their first coming his sepulchre

visiting, and the stone in which is sculptured the image

of his head and for kissing on account of the devotion and

memory of him to the faithful exposed, expressed; and all

its circumstances diligently inspecting and

noting, asserted that from the very coming until then, the said

stone aforesaid was and is miraculously, not

by the ministry of man, by two fingers and beyond

raised: because then it was more depressed, and with

somewhat greater heaviness and inclination it was kissed:

which also they themselves measured, and this very many even

of that time asserted.

[156] Very many other signs are passed over in silence. Related also the very Lords, to whom after

the death of the man of God was committed the inquisition upon the miracles

through him perpetrated, themselves to have been informed, that very

many other to have happened miracles, which both on account of

the antiquity of time and of men's slippery memory,

and on account of their multitude, and also

of the persons the ignorance, to be declared could not,

nor singly singularly to be expressed. Who the most pious Yvo

besought, and did not obtain? How many

and infinite, by his merits, temporal benefits God

bestowed, which yet he despised? not that of those sinning

the infirmity should remain, but that to seek

better things from the earthly granted a love might be made. These moreover

are annotated, for the construction of his sanctity,

for the edification of the faithful, for the praise also

and glory of Him, who does marvels great alone, who

Three and One lives and reigns through infinite ages of ages. Amen.

APPENDIX

Of the Relics of S. Yvo in Belgium.

Yvo, Priest of Tréguier, in Armorican Brittany (S.)

BY THE AUTHOR D. P.

§1. Of those things which at Antwerp and Ghent are had.

[1] Three notable parts by the King of France On occasion of the Relics of S. Mary the Egyptian,

translated to Antwerp to the monastery of S. Saviour,

on the day II of April, we expanded the whole

treasure of that sacred place, and said by what occasion it thither

came from Lusitania, in the year 1594 by Antonio of the Prince

of Lusitania the bastard, a King himself calling after the death of Sebastian,

given to the son Emmanuel: in the Appendix too to

the aforesaid day we gave of John Alvarez de Luzana Bishop

of Oporto the diploma, teaching of the XXXIII Saints,

of what kind and whence received their relics were. There in n. 2

you will read, of S. Yvo the Jurisconsults' Patron three parts

notable, sent to the King of Lusitania first by Philip of Luxembourg,

of the Holy Roman Church Cardinal Priest, Apostolic through Gaul

Legate a latere, and LXIII Bishop of Le Mans,

conferred to the Most Christian King Francis

I, on the day IV of May 1516: which the same King Most Christian

in the same year, on the VI day of November, after a triumphal

into the city of Milan entry, and

thence to Vigevano or Viglebanum withdrawing, among

of the other Princes, nay also of the Pontiff the Legates saluting,

to the Marquis of Montferrat personally the aforesaid

Relics consigned, that they to Emanuel I

of Portugal King and his wife Mary of Aragon

be delivered, as also was done, because the same

from that time in the kingdom of Lusitania have remained.

[2] The said therefore three parts notable, together with others

exhibited to the Bishop of Antwerp Miræus, at Antwerp with others in the year 1672 carried about. and by the same approved

in the year 1610, at length in the year 1681 into public light,

for the common solace of the city, were brought; and being instituted

for their cult a Confraternity, the following

year with a most solemn pomp translated, all the Clergy and Magistrate

accompanying on August VII. In this pomp (which indeed most ornate

was, since under nine banners as many triumphal

cars proceeded, each furnished with of Saints four

images, of whom presently followed the Relics, by as many

Religious of divers Orders borne) under the sixth

banner, which of the Holy Confessors was, first was beheld

YVO THE PRAISE OF ADVOCATES, by the Saints Alexius,

Roch, and Hyacinth accompanied, supporting from the Order

of Minors Recollect Priests four. Thence the feast

of the Translation with the aforesaid nearly equal solemnity, but by the sole

Religious of the said Abbey and Confraters is renewed

each year, together with some illustrious silver dishes,

by their piety and liberality successively elaborated, for the

more decent of the very Relics carriage and exposition

on the of each Saint feast day, in the church of the same

Abbey singly wont to be celebrated.

[3] Hence what had lain hidden for LX years a treasure, by a celebrated now

report everywhere known, from those one part in the year 1675, some nobler of those Religious

friends moved, that with the highest prayers with the Abbot they should treat

and instance, into a part of so singular a good

to be received desiring. But a most noble certain of this city Senator

D. Francis Paulinus de Broukhoven Lord of

Vechel the first easily bore it off, not to himself only but also to others

fortunate; as will be plain from the consequent of the Bishop

of Antwerp letters, in the year 1675 in May under this tenor

dispatched: Brother Ambrose Capello, by God's and the Apostolic

See's grace Bishop, to all about to see these greeting

in the Lord. Since to our office Episcopal

it is incumbent, the Bishop of Antwerp approving, that according to the Catholic and Apostolic

Church's usage, from the earliest of Christian religion

times received, the holy Fathers' consent,

and of the sacred Councils most recently indeed

of Trent the decrees, the faithful diligently we should instruct and

teach, the Saints, together with Christ reigning,

their prayers for men to God to offer; and also

of the Saint Martyrs and of others with Christ living

the holy bodies, which living members of Christ

were and a temple of the Holy Spirit, by Him to eternal

life to be raised and glorified, by the faithful

to be venerated; we cannot not them with peculiar benevolence

and charity embrace, who what by our voice

hearing they perceive, that by work they complete and with fruit

perfect, while the sacred Relics of the Saints piously

they keep, to public veneration lawfully expose,

of the same toward others a liberality laudable exercise,

and whatever to the Saints' cult to be promoted conduce

with zeal of piety to pursue are busy: and we ourselves

of this kind of holy thing to be promoted our offices

gladly expend.

[4] Since therefore in the monastery of S. Saviour, of the Order

Cistercian in this city, is kept that immense

and most noble of various Saint

Martyrs, Confessors, Virgins, and Widows,

Relics treasure, in preceding ages

by Kings, Princes, and other men, whether with ecclesiastical

or secular dignity resplendent and conspicuous,

to various Kings of Portugal given, by some

of the Holy Roman Church Cardinals visited, approved, and

publicly in the Royal Chapel of Lisbon to veneration

exposed; presently by Antonio, called the I of Portugal

King, by a genuine of charity order and a liberal gift

granted to D. Emanuel of Lusitania Prince, on the day

III of April 1594, at Paris existing; and at length by

this Most Serene Prince, to the Monastery of S. Saviour

aforesaid, on account of a most benign in it liberality from him

once received, in perpetual of gratitude and munificence a monument,

offered and given (as of all these the letters authentic to us exhibited

clearly testify) and by the most Reverend D. Francis Paulinus de Broukhoven obtains the Lord

John Miræus, of the Antwerpers Bishop, predecessor

of ours, and by us ourselves for true and legal

recognized and approved. And when the most Reverend the Lord

Francis Diericx, of the aforesaid monastery the modern

Prelate, from this sacred treasure with his own hand by

commission of ours separated four particles,

from four Saints' bones, namely from the chin

of S. Roch Confessor, who is venerated August XVI; from

the bones of S. Yvo Confessor, who is venerated May XIX;

of S. Cecilia Virgin and Martyr, who is venerated November XXII;

and of S. Barbara Virgin and Martyr,

who December IV: and them thus separated and with the seal

ours Episcopal fortified, as a gift gave to the Noble

and most renowned man D. Francis Paulinus de Brouckhoven,

Licentiate in both Laws, to this City for years many by the Senate,

of the Noble D. Christian the son, with a pious kiss and grateful mind

these sacred gifts accepting and venerating; not

could we not grateful and ratified hold the aforesaid

donation.

[5] So the Bishop under the date XXIX of May, when before in the same

month's beginning, the day namely II, similar nearly letters he had dispatched,

attesting of the sole Relics of S. Yvo to the aforesaid

Lord de Brouckhoven given, for the reason that, as there

he says, this Lord Donatary, with no lesser of the said Saint

cult to be promoted zeal kindled, humbly had supplicated,

that from the aforesaid of the holy Relics

part to him given, who on 2 May a particle thence cut off another smaller particle

to separate, with the Episcopal seal to confirm, and its

which he intended donation to approve he would and

deign. We moreover, says the Bishop, to so pious

devotion's affection and liberality most propensely inclined,

from the aforesaid of the sacred bone part, a smaller (as is aforesaid)

particle we separated, and it to a silver pyx,

with glass crystalline placed enclosed, and

with our seal Episcopal in Spanish wax impressed

we sealed: and the donation by which the Lord Donatary declares

himself the said sacred particle as a gift to give to the most Ample

men, the Lords of the jurisdiction of the works of wool-making in

this city Prefects, and its Elders or Scabines,

namely the most Consulting D. Cornelius de Bisthoven

Licentiate in both Laws; donates to the Magistrate presiding over the Wool-works. the Noble man D. Philip Helman Lord

of Leefdael; and their place-holders

the Noble man John Paul Cano and John Henry

Gomez Scabines or Elders; the most Consulting Lords

Nicholas Nuyts and James Antony de Witte Licentiates

in both Laws; the Noble men Peter Mary Charles

and Edward de Brouckhoven, Lord of Novion

the Lord Donor's brother; and also Francis Vermeulen

and the Noble men, Alexander Philip della

Faille and Alexander della Faille Lord of

Reeth etc., finally the most Consulting Lords Arnold Bruynincx

and Godfrey Vrancken Actuary, Licentiates in both Laws,

ratified and grateful holding, we testify this for

to be able to be exposed, and to that license we impart.

[6] Was that of the Works of wool-making Jurisdiction, of the subaltern

to the Antwerp Senate Courts one, this to it each week to be kissed is offered. of the Cloth-hall commonly

called, into which for the most part wont to be assumed the more honored

certain of this city men, and either the next to the highest of this city

Magistracy to bear, or the same (annual for this

only it is) now deceased Scabines; and nearly in that honorific office

they remained until to a higher grade them either

to be assumed first or to be recalled by the King happened, as in this very

year 1684 the Consulate from them one again bears

the most Consulting D. James Antony de Witte, the supreme indeed

of the city Praetorship now from years some by a perpetual benefit

obtained for the King bears the Noble man D. Alexander della

Faille. There came together those for treating and adjudicating of their

forum the causes every day II. Now indeed since for the treasury to be raised

cause suppressed that Magistracy special is, and to it bidden to discharge

the very scabines; the same from here is continued on the same day, on which otherwise

the supreme Magistracy is vacant; and then in the Court chapel

to those who shall have been present Lords a Mass is said, under it the aforesaid

S. Yvo's relic, in a silver Pax-bearer (Peace

the Ecclesiastics call it) inserted, at the Agnus Dei to be kissed is offered,

that it all by its sight may admonish of justice with mercy,

the holy Patron's example, in the administration of their

office to be joined.

[7] Another on 25 May is given to D. Aug. Jo. de Lannoy. In the same year 1675, on the XXIX of May, the aforesaid

Bishop of Antwerp ratified, from the first mentioned

donation flowing another liberality,

by which the same that Lord Donor, to his friend most upright

the most renowned man D. Augustine John de Lannoy Licentiate in both Laws

of this city also a Senator, graciously to confer

decreed four other smaller particles, from the aforesaid

four Saints' Relics to him given drawn out:

and them at the humble of each supplication,

and of their pious devotion's zeal favorably inclined,

took, separated: and all and singular into four

silver pyxes, with glass crystalline placed

enclosed and sealed, making faith and attesting, these

sacred pledges, with their each inscription, to be true

and genuine respectively of SS. Roch, Yvo, Cecilia and Barbara the aforesaid Relics, and for

such again confirms and approves, and to the Lords

Donor and Donatary aforesaid them publicly in his

diocese to expose license grants. With this however

faculty not yet has used the Lord Donatary, but them in a domestic

oratory reverently keeps, a protection of the family and

an excitement of devotion: as also D. Edward de

Broukhoven, of his brother not many afterward years dead

heir, among the left by him of Relics most excellent

an erected for them privately altar, where all in most beautiful order

arranged and adorned are beheld, a part still keeps,

which left over made the fraternal to such largesses liberality,

equal or greater to the rest at the same time all the particles thence taken.

[8] Meanwhile at Ghent, the most ample of Flanders metropolis,

men from both orders chief some, of forming for

the poor patronage gratuitous a Sodality, under the invocation

of S. Yvo, deliberated counsels; and in the year 1677 another to a Sodality of Jurisconsults at Ghent, and at length both the Roman

Pontiff, and of the Church of Ghent the see being vacant

the Vicars general approving for it happily to be inaugurated

1677. These, having known the afore-praised D. Francis Paulinus'

liberal for the Saint's honor to be propagated will, through

the named to him by the Catholic King Bishop, D. Francis

van Horenbeek the very D. Francis Paulinus' kinsman

next, the more easily obtained another particle,

from the same treasure to be cut off; because he a passage

from the political magistracy to the ecclesiastical undertaking, had decreed

thenceforth to God and to himself at Ghent to live, in an addicted

to himself church Metropolitan Canonicate. On the very day, on which

published there was the Sodality's new erection, on 19 May there erected XIX of May,

in a silver as another shrine enclosed, of its truth a faith

new, as above, making the most Illustrious and most Reverend of the Antwerpers

Bishop afore-named. That moreover the afore-praised

institution's example more widely might be propagated (especially to

the supreme of the Provinces Councils, where for the of causes from everywhere

heaped-up multitude, the poor more often are deferred

longer than their fortune may endure) it helps the very

institution's form here to set forth, as it in the said

year on the day IV of May the Lords Vicars Episcopal, the (as

was said) Seat being vacant, approved, under this preface.

[9] Since in this most ample City of Ghent, of Flanders

the Metropolis, there is an immense of Judges, Jurisconsults,

and other Practitioners number, both by reason of the illustrious

of the whole Province Court in it residing, and

of the two notable Magistracies, which for the immense

of the city magnitude, sealed justice to the inhabitants administer,

beyond of many other Judges the benches;

on that account by a previous decree of our Holy Lord Innocent XI

Pontiff Greatest and Best altogether congruous and almost

necessary it has seemed, for the greater of justice zeal and

splendor, that a Confraternity, to S. Yvo (the common

of all of the Law-professing Patron) sacred and dedicated,

be erected; whose object not only will be, that by an assiduous

of so great a Patron cult, by his with God Omnipotent

intercession, all of justice Ministers with a greater

daily zeal be kindled; but also, that the Confraters

for the time existing, with a singular of the assumed office

care, of widows, wards, the poor, captives,

and other wretched persons the causes with their patronage

watch over. and approved by the King. And as for this end

the Parochial church of S. Michael Archangel, in the middle

of the city among the greatest of Practitioners number

situated, before the rest more commodious has seemed, in which

by two Bulls Pontifical at Rome granted on the VIII of January

1677, a Privileged Altar to S. Yvo

shall be dedicated; so it is not unhelpful the divine of this Confraternity

offices, and other of the poor obeisances, by a discreet

and forever to last method to prescribe

and regulate.

In the first place therefore shall be elected from the Confraters two

Provosts (of whom one ecclesiastical, as to the Body's constitution, the other secular

from the Lords Counsellors always shall be required) who

by dignity, prudence and counsel, the utility of the Confraternity

and the Poor's good shall provide for.

II. Then shall be assumed a Dean and nine other

Jurisconsults, and also eight Proctors, of whom

four shall be petitioners in the Court, and as many who

before of each College of this City the Scabines the causes

of the Poor to promote shall be able, and from all these

one to the Office of Scribe, for of occurring resolutions

in writing the drawing up; another to the reception of offerings,

which shall be offered by the faithful of Christ for paying

the inexcusable of the causes expenses, shall be constituted.

III. As often indeed by the death of any Confrater,

or by a voluntary deposition at pleasure to be made,

with the adjunction of the Lords Pastors, by a secret

scrutiny, of several to be presented shall be to be made,

that to whom the plurality of votes shall happen, into the place

vacant may succeed.

IV. All the aforesaid Confraters once in a month

shall come together on the Sunday first, and also on the feast of S. Yvo,

and at the solemn Mass and Prayer Latin on the aforesaid

feast to be made shall be present, moreover by private colloquy

of wretched persons the causes (which just

they shall find) shall promote, under penalty of a fine of one

shilling, for each absence, to the work of the Confraternity.

V. As this institution no less pious, than to the whole

Republic useful future deservedly is hoped, if long-lived

and perennial to be it shall happen; so from all indiscreet

zeal to abstain, the reception of causes especially about of causes the reception,

the Confraters are admonished, since nothing violent

is wont to be perpetual.

VI. And therefore, before the Confraternity a cause

embrace, these indispensably to concur necessary

it shall be; first that a wretched be the person, or such

who patronage by the title of alms to ask wills. Secondly,

that the cause, at least by two or three of the Confraternity

Advocates, just shall have been found. Thirdly,

that the proof required to be made shall be able, nor so difficult

or expensive be, that to the sum principal

nearly it attain or this absorb: indeed in such a case

the danger of a suit to undertake it is not expedient, even for those

who solvent are, much less for the poor: and

these concurring, always of this city the inhabitants, before

other foreigners, shall come to be preferred.

VII. Hence it is clear to gather, this Confraternity

cannot embrace the causes of Hospitals,

of the Tables of the poor, or of other Foundations,

which for their conservation by rents and incomes rejoice;

lest the multitude of causes the Confraternity overwhelm

and destroy. Saving nonetheless, that each one

of the Confraters in particular as to similar causes

shall be able to do, what to him according to the exigency just

and equitable shall have seemed.

VIII. Moreover, after the Confraternity the patronage

of any one shall have undertaken, the Advocate and Proctor for

this cause's instruction committed, before the suit's institution,

the party adverse to an amicable concord

shall invite, by offering themselves as mediators, if in

this City they dwell; if not, by letters this

they shall indicate: Christian indeed charity without necessity

so lightly to litigate does not allow.

IX. And if in the progress of the suit a new and unforeseen difficulty

offer itself, which the cause of the poor man less probable

renders or ill founded, the Advocate instructor

again upon this shall consult with the prior or

prior Advocates, unless lawfully they shall have been hindered;

in which case others of the Confraters he shall approach, that together they resolve,

whether to yield or to contend they will; for in whatever

part of the suit the Advocate of his Client the cause

shall have known to be unjust, this in conscience to desert

he is bound.

X. Although therefore the mind and intention is, that the Confraters

gratis and without honorarium patronage to the poor

afford, a hundredfold from God expecting; nonetheless

when the party adverse into the expenses of the suit by sentence

shall have been condemned, both the Advocate and the Proctor

the cause's instructors their rights shall receive, since

to equity it resists, that rashly litigating who solvent

are the Confraters' labors retain, and henceforth

so much the more freely the poor with frivolous suits vex.

XI. Wherefore the persons, of this Confraternity

the help imploring, from the beginning to be admonished shall be, lest

with the suit pending a concord they enter, without the Advocate's and

Proctor's deputed consent: and according to

the exigency of the cause, this in the Register of resolutions

they shall promise and by subscription confirm.

XII. Attending moreover, that true among the Confraters

peace and union is the basis of all community, since

by concord small things grow; so in every resolution,

both as to of causes the reception, and

of other whatever businesses for the time

occurring, according to the plurality of votes it shall be concluded;

saving that, if of a question of Law it be treated, of the sole

Advocates the suffrages shall be numbered.

XIII. As it is highly meritorious

the parties to a reasonable to lead concord,

and by the said Decree Pontifical those doing this with an Indulgence

are endowed; so the Confraters always at heart shall have

themselves as mediators to exhibit, as often as

they shall have been required.

XIV. If after these it shall happen (as to hope is right) that

the faithful of Christ, And of moneys the payment. who in this Confraternity themselves to be enrolled

took care, either with several suits involved, by a peculiar of S.

Yvo cult, a happy of their causes outcome

to commend will; or by another commiseration moved,

pious donations and legacies to this Confraternity to bestow

deign, for sustaining the inexcusable of suits

of the poor expenses; these the Confraternity's Receiver

faithfully in his book to inscribe, and by the ordinance of the Confraternity

only and not otherwise to expend shall be able, for

paying the proof and other inevitable costs, which

from the Confraters do not depend.

XV. The aforesaid Receiver likewise shall receive and note

the offerings, which by the faithful of Christ in the trunk

of the chapel of S. Yvo made shall be, and also which

at the several Congregations shall be offered; that these first

in the chapel's and altar's ornaments, and other necessary

expenses be expended.

XXI. Finally the aforesaid Receiver each year a faithful

account to render shall be bound, on a day for this by

the Confraters to be designated.

[10] With such institutes established the Sodality, when with the course

of years fruits not at all to be repented made, and more copious

moreover promised; it pleased the Royal Catholic Majesty the same

to confirm, The Confraternity and Rules also the King confirms in the year 1684, in the year 1684 through his supreme at Brussels

Senate, under the XXIV of March signed a diploma, which, from the style

of the Burgundian Court in the Frankish tongue written, thus in Latin sounds:

Since it had been proposed to the King on the part of the Confraternity

of S. Yvo, Patron of justice, in the city of Ghent,

that the same Confraternity there erected in the year 1677,

XIX of May, according to a Pontifical Bull, and the approbation

of the Vicars General of the Bishopric of Ghent the Seat

being vacant (as was plain from the libel thereupon

exhibited) for its primary end has the assiduous cult

of its Patron, that all ministers of justice, him interceding,

more holily and more efficaciously discharge their office;

for the end moreover secondary the subsidy to be borne to the poor,

widows, orphans, captives, and other persons

wretched, through ten Advocates and Proctors

eight, their effort repeatedly gratis to expend about to promote

their just causes, a hundredfold from God expecting

in this life and afterward life eternal: and that

by this means religiously shall be succored of the same poor

and wretched the necessities, for the more abundant

of divine Clemency influxes to be merited, and for averting

the rigor of His justice upon these provinces more

than upon others ever aggravated; for which Confraternity's

subsistence and more commodious direction were conceived

the Rules, of which such is the tenor (here all things

as above in Latin are inserted) Although moreover the aforesaid

Confraternity that up to the present has had the effect,

which from so pious a work could be expected; so

that already now very many poor are succored

in their rights to be obtained, from which they had been for a long

time estranged: and to it grants the right of forming a seal. yet, since according to the aforesaid

Rules it shall be needful, that congresses frequently

be held, which it concerns of authority Royal without its nod

not to be celebrated; therefore the Proponents aforesaid,

for the same Royal authority to be maintained with all

which can be conceived veneration zealous, humbly

supplicated his Majesty, that he would deign the aforesaid

Confraternity of S. Yvo and its Rules grateful

and ratified to hold, and to permit that henceforth it could to its letters

and other acts to be made in the manner of a seal to affix

the effigy of its Patron. His Majesty moreover, all these

considered, and consulted thereupon the President and

the Council Provincial of Flanders, of the said Supplicants

the petitions and prayers favorably himself inclining,

grateful and ratified held, as by these grateful

and ratified holds, the Confraternity of S. Yvo and its

Rules, as to the several points and articles: permits

also that to its letters and other acts to be made it affix

the effigy of its Patron in the manner of a seal: and commands his

Majesty all whom it touches or concerns, to touch

or concern can, that conformably to these they act

and proceed.

§ II. Of the Relics of S. Yvo at Mechlin and Louvain.

[11] Of the Ghent-folk, of which we treated, the Jurisconsults'

zeal toward S. Yvo to the whole soon Belgium became known,

by a libel published by the most Consulting D. Valentine Rosa, of the Episcopal

Court the Recorder, setting forth Motives IX, truly

salutary, for promoting S. Yvo's cult, with

the easy of the same method, The Mechlin Council, by emulation of the Ghent-folk, and the Rules and Privileges

to the Confraternity granted. This libel since elsewhere of others

very many the minds, but especially at Mechlin, of the Law Belgian

and Burgundian the supreme seat, of all the minds kindled, to

the imitation of so excellent an example, or even a holy

certain (if so to speak is right) envy; their disgrace

to be deeming, if those who all others in justice to be administered

by glory excelled, did not also surpass with a pious toward

the common of Jurisconsults Patron affection. By custom that

there had obtained established formerly and for more now years continued

of the Lords Senators toward their President Saint a religion, in the year 1697, through their Vice-president,

that on the feast of the same day a solemn Mass, with as much as it could splendor

and apparatus, to be chanted be cared for; to which then both they

and all of their Court ministers should come together; and on the Sunday

the feast following in their Sodality, which with the Fathers

of the College of the Society of Jesus is held, by the same Sodality's

Director in Latin should be pronounced an oration of the Saint's praises

panegyrical. But now something more to demand it seemed

of a laudable example the emulation. Therefore to the most Ample D. William

de Blitterswijk, of the Great then time Council Vice-President,

it is committed, that with letters as he could most efficacious with

the most Reverend Lord of S. Saviour the Abbot he should treat,

for obtaining a part some of the holy, which with him to be already

most well-known was, of the Lord Yvo relics; who this with the following

epistle did on the Nones of November of the year 1679.

[12] Most Reverend Prelate, most Ample and most Excellent

Lord. More unknown I may be to the most Reverend Amplitude

of yours, from the Abbot of S. Saviour of Antwerp, than formerly I was to Caspar Jongelinus

and Christopher Butkens, by how great of renowned Antwerp

and of your great Order luminaries! I dare nevertheless to the same

to write, nay liberty to sell, that is a benefit

to ask, whence of immodesty one may be accused. Which meanwhile

I attempt, by not one and not once asked I was that

I should do; and so one indeed, but not alone, these I write:

which the more gladly upon myself I undertook, because a business of piety

it is: in which from a Prelate, with this (as I know) and other virtues

excellently endowed, a repulse me to bear no one

I believe. The cause is. The most Ample Lords of the Great Council

Senators and of libels suppliant of the Royal House

Masters, my dear Colleagues, both ecclesiastical

and lay, with a jealousy (so to say) to labor, a particle he asks, but

lately honored of the Divine Yvo Relics, of our Patron

common, whom the supreme this of Belgium Senate,

before the rest of the Councils Provincial, even the Brabantian,

each year most exceedingly solemnly venerates, both in

the Parish of the chief of this tribunal, which is of the Prince

of the Apostles; and in the Sodality of the Optimates, which ours

is with the Reverend Fathers of the Society of Jesus, who

this their sparta Parthenian here and elsewhere excellently

adorn. Therefore uniquely we desire, of that treasure of yours,

truly precious and from Kings sprung, partakers also

to be made, and the generous of the most Ample of your

Lordship munificence, with that which is fitting observance, we implore,

that with the same relics also us he deign to adorn: by which

grace us in the first place very greatly to himself he will bind, and the rest

here of the sacred Themis Initiates and Ministers, both Royal

and Civil, with metropolitan likewise Dignities and

Priesthoods noble and venerable, and others by toga and

military cloak illustrious, of the Marian cult with the most Reverend Lordship

of yours professors excellent, our Confraters;

and that very Society of Jesus, of all favor and love

most worthy, in which two I to have sons both I rejoice

and glory. Of the holy moreover Official that of Tréguier,

of Jurisconsults in heaven the tutelary, of Advocates

and Judges on earth indeed the exemplar, excellently

he will deserve. And why should he not deserve? while into a great

of fruits hence about to come part he will come, for

generous a prelate hand, which I kiss, panting

altogether we await.

[13] So to be asked, for an honor to himself, as was fitting, deemed the Abbot;

and himself happy he reckoned, who one from a new Bishop separated and approved, if to the wish of so illustrious suppliants

to do he could forthwith enough; but to be done it more difficult could,

the Seat of the Antwerp Church being vacant by the death of the most Illustrious

D. Aubert vanden Eeden: and it appeared not long to be future

already then successor, and by the Apostolic See confirmed, the most Illustrious

D. John Ferdinand van Beughem, to such

offices, by which the Saints' honor is promoted, most propense.

This therefore when it was done, with of the city whole

of Antwerp applause, and of the congratulating the first heat

had subsided; nothing nearly first to be done he deemed for himself, than

that, accompanying the chief of his Chapter, he should approach to S.

Saviour's church; and the sacred pledges, which there

are kept, having venerated, the shrine, of S. Yvo parts notable

containing, to unseal; and their division made,

with his on each side seal to seal, according to the form by the Council

of Trent prescribed; an instrument of the whole matter being composed,

under the note of XIX of January of the year 1680. in the year 1680 to Mechlin he himself bears it: The business

thus begun not long to put an end the most Ample

Prelate desisted: but since of the dear pledge no other than himself a bearer

to be he wished, the month of January passed, and at the beginning of February

to Mechlin he himself came, and to the most Illustrious of the Council

President invited he turned aside. Then on the spot are called

witnesses, are summoned from the Society's College the Rector and Director

of the Sodality, is unwrapped the happy package, and to the very most Illustrious

President, gratefully accepting and with tender affection kissing,

into his hands is handed the relic-case, and is written an instrument,

for the eternal of posterity memory in this

manner.

[14] and it under public attestation, We Brother Francis Diericx, of the monastery of S.

Saviour of the sacred Cistercian Order in the city and

diocese of Antwerp the humble Abbot etc. Since from

our book, whose title is, Faith and tradition of the sacred

Relics of XXXVI eminent Saints (which

six years ago with privilege Royal, into public light we put)

to the dominion Belgian, and to others well became known,

three parts notable, from the true and genuine of S. Yvo

of Jurisconsults Patron bones, in the year 1516

by the most Eminent D. Philip of Luxembourg of the Holy Roman Church

Cardinal Priest, of the Holy See through Gaul a

latere Legate, and LXIII of Le Mans Prelate, to

Francis I, Most Christian of Gaul King, for

approved recognized to have come; which then by the most Eminent

D. Julius de Medici, then of the Holy Roman Church Cardinal,

of the Roman Church Chancellor, and Archbishop

of Florence (who afterward Clement VII

Pontiff Greatest was) re-approved; briefly comprising the history of the translation, from the gift

of the said Most Christian King, through the hands of the most Excellent

D. Marquis of Montferrat, to the most Powerful

Emanuel, the First of the same Name of Portugal

King, delivered, and by a tradition in the Church accustomed

delivered are: and when moreover from a demonstration

manifest, and instruments public in the same book

often related, and in the archives with us conserved,

lawfully it is clear, the whole that of the sacred Relics

treasure of XXXVI eminent Saints, from

the Chapel of the Kingdom of Lusitania to us and our monastery

through the Most Serene D. Emanuel, of the same

Kingdom Prince, of Antonio the Ex-king first-born,

to have come; so by the presents known we make and

certify, on the day XIX of January of the present year one thousand

six hundred and eightieth, by the most Illustrious

D. John Ferdinand Bishop of Antwerp,

in the presence of the most Ample Lord de Ibarra

and Ortiz Dean of the Cathedral church, and of a new separation, and D. Comperis

Canon of the said church and Seal-bearer of the Bishopric

of the same, We to have opened our shrine, with the seal

of the most Illustrious D. Ambrose Capello of pious memory

Bishop of Antwerp well closed and fortified

(in which conspicuous were the afore-named three

parts notable from the bones of S. Yvo, Priest and

of Jurisconsults Patron) and from which of the three parts one

to be halved and separated we ordered, to the effect of to another

to be given, or elsewhere to be transferred. Which part thus

separated (which indeed even now conspicuous and

notable is) into a new shrine silver, with crystal from the front

translucent to be enclosed, and with ribbons silken of red color in

the form of a Cross to be bound around we asked; and the said

new shrine (that the sacred and ancient of the same Relic

faith in the Church inviolate may remain) at the back in

the juncture of the binding with the Episcopal Seal of the aforesaid most Illustrious

D. John Ferdinand of Antwerp Prelate

in Spanish wax to be closed and fortified we caused, he hands to the Lord President of the great Council as more widely

is plain in his letters given, on the day and year aforesaid.

We therefore at the instance, and devout of the most Illustrious

and most Ample Man, and Lord John

Antony Locquet, Knight, Lord of Hombeecq,

of Impel etc., of the Catholic Majesty of the Councils

of state, and of the Supreme Council Royal the President, and

of the whole said Great Council or Parliament Royal

of the Senators prayers, the aforetouched notable of S. Yvo

of Relics part, to the Sodality Parthenian

of the Optimates, Counsellors, and other Jurisconsults

(which with the Fathers of the Society of Jesus at Mechlin

is maintained) graciously to give intend, as

at present we give, under condition expressed,

lest the said Relics for whatever cause, elsewhere than

in the said Sodality, or Chapel, or at most in

the church of the said Society there publicly of Christ's faithful

to the cult or veneration be exposed. We, to be kept with the Fathers of the Society of Jesus. in

sign of the strength of this donation and of perpetual firmness,

confirm, the aforetouched of S. Yvo part

notable, sealed and closed, as above, in the presence

of the aforesaid most Illustrious Lord John Locquet,

and of the most Noble and most beloved of the same son

John Michael Locquet, Knight, Lord

vanden Broecke etc., into the hands of the Reverend most Father

Francis Du Bois, of the College of the Society with the Mechlin-folk

Rector, assisting the Reverend Father John Du Trieu,

of the said Sodality Prefect, to have handed and as a gift to have given.

In faith of all which and perpetual strength,

this our of donation and declaration instrument

public, on the day 2 of February. with our own hand's subscription

and of the smaller seal's impression to fortify we have willed;

on this II day of February, of the year six hundred and eightieth

above one thousand.

[15] It was cared for then, lest anything of the accustomed ceremonies

should be lacking, that the most Ample D. Amatus de Coriache,

of the most Illustrious Archbishop of Mechlin Vicar general, The same approves the Vicar of Mechlin.

the instruments aforesaid seen, and a mature of Theologians for this

convoked deliberation premised, should define, duly to be clear

of all the aforesaid, and the very Relics to the faithful's veneration,

as true and on all sides certain, even in the Mechlin

Archdiocese could be exposed to be venerated; which he did

by letters, on the day XX of April signed. The very moreover most Illustrious

Archbishop D. Alphonsus de Berges, at the prayers of the Fathers

of the Society of Jesus, and the Archbishop adds Indulgences: with whom in the Oratory of the Sodality to be kept the Relics were, and in their temple each year

to be exposed, to the veneration of the city whole the recurring

festive of S. Yvo day, to all and singular of Christ's faithful

who that temple, and on the Sunday immediately

the feast following the oratory above-said, devoutly

each year should visit; and there before the same Saint's

Relics thus exposed, in a spirit of humility and

with a contrite mind, five times the Pater and Ave, or other

prayers according to the Holy Mother Church's intention

should recite; a forty days' Indulgence mercifully

in the Lord granted and bestowed,

by letters for a decade to last on the day XXVI of April.

[16] And now was approaching the feast day of the Saint, conveniently

in that year, which bissextile was, and the letters Dominical

reckoned G F, into the Sunday falling. Therefore of the Society

the new temple, On this 19 May exposed in the temple of the Fathers, to S. Francis Xavier from years not

so many in appearance most beautiful erected, that it might be of itself

everywhere more adorned cared for by the Fathers most diligently was; in

the middle indeed of its nave was erected a stage, which sculptured elegantly

statues, Religion and Justice expressing,

with their shoulders sustained, hanging from above of victorious Astraea

and of compassionating Piety the symbols: under which a for beauty

distinguished shrine (then indeed wooden and only with a laid

over it silver shining, a little after silver wholly to be future)

so contained of the sacred pledge the keeper pyx, that for kissing

commodiously to be taken out and replaced it could be, and with shining round

about everywhere lights copious on that Sunday morning silent

had adorers, while at the Mass sacrifices were made in

the church; after noon indeed, the report spread through the city, in

the evening hour, for which had been announced a preparatory sermon,

for devotion toward the saint to be excited as could be most

congruous, and the next day placed on the altar, with solemn music chanted the Praises

closed the vigil. On the following indeed Day II, on which it had been agreed

the translation to celebrate (for nor to be interrupted the festivity

was, which on the very feast in the parochial S. Peter's church,

ours opposite placed, by custom kept the Lords Advocates)

first from that stage to the chief altar was conveyed

the venerable Relic-case; and at it with continued

in order Sacrifices continuously was offered, by of nearly every order

and profession Priests; until the of solemn Mass hour after noon

was at hand: to which when the whole of the most Ample Council

body, with its subordinate ministers of the Court had come together;

the most Illustrious indeed President ascended to a prayer-desk,

on a more eminent step with tapestries and a cushion strewn;

the rest indeed most ample Lords within of the communicating

the enclosure orderly themselves placed; a most numerous of each

sex crowd the capacious of the temple nave thus filling, a solemn Mass is sung before the whole Senate:

that the nobler through the benches for their grade and condition distributed,

in most congruous order were beheld. Before

whom the most Ample D. Francis vande Venne, of the Royal

Counsellors for the order Ecclesiastical the first, and

of the Metropolitan edifice Provost, with solemn rite officiated,

at the same chief altar, under the festive of music most exquisite

concord.

[17] After noon at the hour fifth of the evening after the dismissed

Council, in the evening indeed with a processional pomp the same who in the morning assembly of Senators, of others

indeed a more frequent even concourse made was: and chanted

festively the Praises, when the most Ample D. Provost the people to

the venerable Sacrament's adoration prostrate, the raised Holy-vessel

had blessed, and it in its place had replaced; he approached

to the stage afore-mentioned, and thence the taken-up of relics

shrine with venerating hands raised, to be carried into the oratory

of the Sodality, to the prepared for him marble niche,

which before (when this place still a part of the old temple

was) for receiving of S. Francis Xavier the thaumaturgic Relics

Going before of the Society of Jesus a Novice with a Cross, and

Acolytes with candlesticks silver two, followed

bidden to be present all the ministers of the Court. To these succeeded the Jurisconsults

Sodales, a torch each bearing, intermixed

with of the first there note Nobles and of the Metropolitan Church Canons

some. Thence of the Society of Jesus Priests, all

surpliced and with stoles sacred clothed, with their torch each also furnished.

The most Ample D. Provost, a pluvial which they call

cope most beautiful clothed, and with Priests on each side

ministering surrounded, after those followed, the sacred relics

before his breast bearing; and behind, going before the Royal of the great

Council ensigns the Apparitors, in a most august nor otherwise nearly

seen order proceeded the most Illustrious D. President and the most Ample

Lords Senators, all of their dignity by the habit conspicuous

and with a serving crowd surrounded: the train indeed closed a numerous

of promiscuous condition and sex crowd, although more

even crowded another girt the squares, through which the processional

this pomp was led, and the cattle-market.

[18] In this order it came to the vestibule of the Sodality,

to which an adorned triumphally arch fore-built was beheld,

with the effigy of the holy poor men's Advocate: the same Relic is brought into the oratory of the Sodality, and the entered inside

with the relic-case D. Provost following the President and Senators, the strewn for them with cushions place of the oratory occupy,

which with no less apparatus than the church had been had adorned

our men: and the placed over the altar Relics, they hear

the Hymn Ambrosian, the D. Provost intoning, most sweetly

chanted by a choir of musicians and of every kind

of instruments which had the procession accompanied. A triple

then in the near market of cannons brazen smaller

discharge followed, and was concluded the solemnity by a venerating

kissing of the Relics: which then at last

into the marble, which I said, niche were replaced, an eternal

to the Mechlin city incitement of piety, and to the most Ample

in the first place Senate, there having promised each year of this kind

on the following Sunday, where on the following Sunday the solemnity is closed. and the same octave of the feast day and

XXVI of May, in the same as before in the church manner renewed

was the feast in the oratory often-said: and after a panegyric

of the Saint's virtues and praises oration, a most sweet

again of musicians of instruments and of voices excellent

harmony began a Mass, which there chanted the most Ample

D. de Frerin, of the Great Council Senator even himself and

of the Cathedral of Ypres Canon. The same to the Confraters and

his Consodales the sacred Relics again to be kissed afforded,

with the more with confidence an Advocate for themselves congratulating

in heaven, by how much more present now to themselves him they seemed to have

on earth.

[19] The Faculty of the Jurisconsults at Louvain, Mechlin neighboring Louvain is, nor less

than it of the Council Royal, glories in a most celebrated of disciplines

all University. In this from many now years

had obtained a custom, that of Law both Doctors and Skilled men

the feast of their Patron S. Yvo with a solemn Mass would celebrate,

in the chief Collegiate of D. Peter church, before exposed

which then cult on the Sunday next the same, in the Sodality

Marian, with the Fathers of the Society of Jesus, resume. These

hoping themselves also with the aforesaid of S. Saviour Abbot,

their once nursling and with of Theological License the laurel with

them adorned, to find grace, if they petitioned also they

more present of the ancient, but never more remiss devotion;

in the same nearly as the Mechlin Senators manner and

under instruments similar obtained, and to the perpetual

of the matter memory in the Academic annals thus to be written caused.

In this year 1682 the most renowned and Magnificent

D. Thomas Stapleton, of Law both

Doctor and of the sacred Canons Professor ordinary, in the year 1682 a like particle he obtains and exposes.

and also of the kindly University for the time Rector

Magnificent, obtained from the Reverend most and

most Ample Lord D. Francis Diericx Abbot of S. Saviour

of Antwerp, for the Faculties of Law of Louvain

the Relics of S. Yvo, the Patron of Jurisconsults,

which on the Vigil of the aforesaid S. Yvo with solemn rite

and immense pomp, accompanying the Chapter of D. Peter

with the whole Clergy, assisting all of Law

Doctors in habit, Licentiates, and of Law students

with torches white, from his College carried the aforesaid

Magnificent Lord to D. Peter: and there

at the great altar to all with the highest

veneration to be kissed reached: to which also as a gift

he gave and hung a coin gold, adorned,

with Indulgences plenary, with the effigy of our Holy Lord Innocent

Pope XI Pontiff greatest, which at Rome

two years before from the hands of the same Most Holy he received.

And on the day following the feast of S. Yvo was chanted

the most Reverend and most Ample D. Cobligins Dean of D.

Peter.

OF BLESSED AUGUSTINE NOVELLUS PRIOR GENERAL OF THE FRIARS HERMITS OF S. AUGUSTINE,

AT SIENA IN ETRURIA.

IN THE YEAR 1309.

PRELIMINARY COMMENTARY.

Of the Life written by a contemporary, the age, country, family, relics.

Augustine Novellus, Prior general of the Order of Hermits of S. Augustine, at Siena in Etruria (S.)

BY THE AUTHOR D. P.

[1] An eminent of the Order of Hermits of S. Augustine

star shone forth, in the century of Christ thirteenth,

on account of doctrine's and sanctity's excellence,

Blessed Augustine; for distinction from that first

and great Doctor, of Hippo in Africa

Bishop, The death on the 2nd day of Pentecost. Novellus surnamed: who when of the Supreme

Pontiffs the Penitentiary, and of his whole Order Prior

General had been; he chose in the century of Christ fourteenth in

by the glory celebrated, merited from this mortal life to the eternal and

immortal to migrate on this day XIX of May, on the second day

of Pentecost. The year that was 1309, in which by the cycle of the Moon XVIII

of the Sun II, and by the letter Dominical E, Easter was celebrated

on the day XXX of March, and the feast of Pentecost on the day XVIII of May,

so that wonderful it is in a matter so clear various authors, who of him made mention,

to have been able to err. His sacred body is kept

in the city of Etruria of Siena in the Church of the Fathers Augustinian, The body at Siena.

very ample, and with many ancient altars adorned:

which we approaching in the year 1661 on the day X of October, venerated

were the body of Blessed Augustine Novellus, enclosed in a marble

chest, into the wall inserted above some lateral altar. There

also we saw a most ancient of the same Blessed picture, and

of four notable miracles the history: then having addressed

the Reverend Father Marcellinus of Siena, we received offered to us a Life,

to be transcribed from a double Ms. codex, The Life from Mss. hitherto unedited, one parchment,

the other paper, in one or other of which at least it was noted,

that to have been drawn from an ancient Ms. of the convent

of Pisa, of the same Order of Hermits of S. Augustine. When

then on the XI of October in the morning we were occupied in transcribing the Life

of the said Blessed Augustine and other monuments, which the day before we had found;

unbidden brought the said Reverend Father Marcellinus an instrument

authentic, of the cult of the same Blessed Augustine, as

below to the very Life we subjoin. The author of the Life plainly contemporary was,

and of the same Order of Hermits of S. Augustine, who of his

conversation, life, death, and miracles himself to treat

prefaces, according to what from worthy of faith he heard: and

so in n. 4, the author contemporary, while he treats those things which were by Blessed Augustine performed

when of the Court of Manfred the King he was Prefect, asserts himself what

he narrates to have learned from Brother Augustine of Forteguerris,

who then was present among those assisting the said Blessed Augustine:

and in n. 14 he hints himself to write, when over the kingdom of Naples presided

Robert King, who to his father Charles II in the year 1309

dead (in which already we showed Blessed Augustine also from life

to have departed) substituted, lived up to the year 1343.

[2] This Life hitherto unedited various men saw, and thence

of their own transcribed: from which transcribed their own Jordan of Saxony among whom first deservedly to be reckoned

is Jordan of Saxony, who often the office of Vicar General

discharged, and in the book, which the Lives of the Brothers he titled,

very much alleges keeping the words of him; the book moreover that

he composed about the year 1360. Octavius Cajetanus in tome

2 of the Saints Sicilian published a Life, by himself in order of time arranged,

from those things which Jordan of him scatteredly handed down in the books

which the Lives of the Brothers he titled, that so the said Life, into one

body compacted, and thence the Bergamese, to each before the eyes and in the hands

with no labor might be: which labor he could have spared, if the which

we give Life he had obtained. A Breviary of the same's life wrote

various men, among whom James Philip of Bergamo in

the Supplement of chronicles, but wrongly his death he referred

to the year 1303: Thomas de Herrera in the Alphabet

Augustinian, who asserts from life to have gone in the year 1310, Herrera, and followed

him Philip Elssius in the Encomiastic Augustinian.

James Pamphilus Bishop of Segni, in the Chronicle

of the Order of Friars Hermits of S. Augustine, Pamphilus, rightly established

him to have died in the year 1309, and describes what he had found in

the Bergamese and Jordan of Saxony. Dielman, Cornelius

Dielman, of the same Order Religious of Ghent, published

Hermits of S. Augustine, by science and of life sanctity

illustrious, delineated; where first is brought forth Blessed Augustine

Novellus, and his Life most widely is deduced. But that

part to us most certain appears, which with the Life here to be given agrees.

There survive moreover in our of the Society of Jesus Palermo

College two volumes manuscript on the origin

of heresies, and Riera. by the author D. Bernard Riera Doctor of both Laws Sicilian

of Trapani: in whose second, where it is treated of the Kingdom

of Sicily, how it always the Catholic faith kept,

and more specially of the Religion under Charles of Anjou

the Gaul, is read the Life of Blessed Augustine Novellus; extracted

(as the author prefaces) partly from the book which is titled

the Lives of the Brothers Hermits of S. Augustine, which

wrote Jordan the Saxon a neighbor to those times; and

most recently from Joseph Pamphilus, Bishop of Segni

of the same institute; and others. Among these others also James

of Bergamo was, who in the year 1435 his work finished

at Brescia and published: Pamphilus, one century after and in the year

of Christ 1581, his book to the Roman press subjected:

wrote therefore Bernard before the end of the century XVI; and in this

sense Vincent Auria, the very Life, with his Annotations

printed at Palermo in the year 1664, dedicating to the Senate

of Palermo, from an old codex received said in

the preface to the Reader. We the omitted rivulets those all,

purer from the fount water reach forth; nor heavily

we bear to our hands not to have come the life, which (the same

Vincent being witness) James Cascio of Termini at Palermo

published in the year 1611.

[3] In the time of Frederick 2 King of Sicily in the year 1309 dead In the Annotations aforesaid two especially assumes

Vincent Auria, to be discussed and explained. First,

at what time he lived or flourished; second, in what

city was born Augustine. About the first inveighs the author

against Philip Ferrarius, that he in the Martyrology general

notes him to have flourished under Frederick II Emperor,

about the year 1290. We acknowledge here some

slip σφάλμα, of Ferrarius: for Frederick II Emperor, in the year

1250 on the day XVIII of October in Apulia from life departed: but

that slip σφάλμα would be corrected, if it be said Augustine

to have flourished under Frederick II, King of Sicily: this for from

the Aragonese born, in the year 1296 at Palermo on the VII Kalends

of April the Crown received, and up to the year 1336

reigned. He flourished therefore truly in the time of Frederick Augustine,

now older, and to death in the year 1309 to be undergone near;

while moreover still in the world Matthew he was called,

he himself presided, with the title of Counsellor and Judge perpetual:

as appears from this of the aforesaid King instrument,

which exhibits Vincent aforesaid, in the year 1663

authentically transcribed from the original Register, which

is conserved in the archive of the great Royal Court Sicilian

at Naples, and is of a tenor of this kind. Manfred by God's

grace of Sicily and Jerusalem King and of Taranto Prince,

to all and singular the series of the present privilege

about to see and in whatever way to inspect. Wherefore be it

known that the brightness of blood, inveterate

magnificence, and services at their own costs, of blood

an effusion in deeds done against the Barbarians, and other

most important occasions of the Christian faith,

both in the service of the most Serene Kings of Aragon

and of Castile, and ours and our most Serene Father's,

afforded by the strenuous and renowned family of

Thermes, of the Province of Catalonia of the Spains, which

from the ancient Kings of the Goths stock its origin

to have drawn its ancient privileges say; and to the Counts

of Narbonne, and by the same is given a noble fief. and the Viscounts of Thermes,

whose governance to the whole family the name gave.

Considering we the merits of many other

services, by you the noble Matthew de Termes,

our Counsellor and of our Royal Court Judge

perpetual, and of the nobles Oliver and John

de Termes, your grandfather and father, to our most Serene Father

Frederick the Emperor of Counsellors, in whatever way

afforded, by which also to you a debt to be of remunerating,

lest our royal largesse of its debt be lacking,

it has seemed. By the measure, into the account of the said services,

gladly we give and grant to you, the noble

our Counsellor Matthew de Termes, as by

the present series of this present our royal privilege

of grant is granted, the fief and castle

of Campus-Martini in Bitonto, with the rights and pertinences

its all: as amply held and possessed

James de Montecavioso, our traitor, and

in the same manner and form, nothing adding nor diminishing,

with a confirmation rather of those royal

privileges, to those by our predecessors

in whatever way granted. Therefore we command all

of our royal dominion, and especially of our

City of Bitonto, that at once and forthwith the present received

of the present fief and castle of Campus-Martini,

with the rights and pertinences its all, into the hands

own of the present noble Matthew de Termes

our Counsellor, or his lawful proctor, to deliver

they ought, and in it continually to maintain, by obeying

him, as a true Lord and Baron of the present

fief and castle, as if he were our royal person, with

the very authorities, powers, jurisdictions,

dominions, pre-eminences, gains, and incomes,

in whatever way to the said Barony of the fief and

castle of Campus-Martini belonging and pertaining.

So execute, under penalty of our royal indignation.

Given at Gaeta on the VIII of July 1259.

By the mandate of the most Serene King Manfred.

Saw Gualterius de Ocrea, the great Chancellor.

[4] Thus far that privilege, whose exordium, not

sufficiently happily and faithfully transcribed, it somewhat pleased to smooth,

by interposition and transposition of a few words;

we suspect however even thus not to be had entire, but in

the beginning a whole one line, from which depends a sound sense,

to have been omitted. The year of the date 1259 in Arabic ciphers notes

Vincent on page 39: for which then on page 55 crept in by a typographic

error the note of the year 1254, by an easy of two ciphers 9

and 4 commutation: for which to be corrected a certain reason suggests

the year 1258, in which first King crowned

Manfred was; joined with the year 1266, in which he perished,

in battle vanquished by Charles of Anjou, brother of S. Louis King

of France. Then indeed Blessed Augustine, the world renouncing,

the habit monastic of the Friars Hermits of S. Augustine

assumed in Sicily: The habit had taken the Blessed in the year 1266, and when in this island not for much

time with his Brothers he had been associated, as

in n. 11 is said, he came into the province of Siena: and there

for an idiot held, the vilest each offices in various

Convents he performed; until at length who he was and had been

by others was known. Then namely a Priest created, and by

of the Order universal the General Blessed Clement of Aquino into a Companion

assumed, with him the Constitutions of the Order he composed.

We gave the Life of Blessed Clement on the day VIII of April, and said

the first time the Order to have presided over from the year of the said century

70, up to the year 74; and afterward again assumed

in the year 84, and in the year 87 to have been established. It seems

moreover by Blessed Clement elected Augustine when the first time

General he was; and him he could afterward in the Constitutions to be composed

have helped, when he was of Nicholas IV Supreme Pontiff

Penitentiary created, in the year 1277 or the following. This

moreover office he sustained up to the year 1298, in which

was created of the Order universal the General: the dignity moreover

of his own accord he laid down in the year 1300, and thenceforth in the hermitage of S. Leonard

in which there on the second day of Pentecost (as we said)

to the celestial country he migrated.

[5] The other, which Vincent Auria to be discussed had assumed,

is, in what city was born Blessed Augustine; The country whether Palermo,

and he resolves, himself a Palermitan, in his city of Palermo

him to have been born. The proof first and nearly all

he assumes from the Life by Bernard Riera composed, where these are read:

Born was this holy Father in the city of Palermo,

from a noble family de Thermes called, up to today

most renowned. But who before Bernard Riera made mention

of Palermo, as of a country? To the author of the ancient Life in n. 3 is said

Blessed Augustine from a certain castle, or rather the Castle Teranum? Teranum called,

which from the Palermo city nearly XXX miles

is distant, to have taken his origin: and in n. 11 by an ancient name

he is called D. Matthew de Therano. And by Jordan in the Lives

of the Brothers (whom Bernard Riera especially praises)

he is called Augustine de Terano, or by a prior name

Matthew de Terano. So is read in book 2 chs. 4, 5, 7,

13, 14, 18, book 3 ch. 11, book 4 chs. 10, 11, 14. Hence

by posterity also he is called Augustine de Iterano, and Interamnum.

James of Bergamo in the Supplement at the year

1303 thus the elogium begins. Augustine de Interamnum,

General of our Order Prior, by nation a Sicilian,

once of both Laws most consulted and a Theologian

distinguished, in this very year not far from the of Siena

of Etruria city, in a little place to the Divine Leonard dedicated, by many

renowned miracles, with a good end rested etc. Which his elogium

in the edition of Paris of the year 1585 plainly is omitted.

But in the Chronicle of Joseph Pamphilus it seems the Bergamese, and

others him having followed, by a near plainly of the name ambiguity deceived,

Interamnum or Interamna, of Umbria a city to have regarded,

which commonly Terani, and more contractedly Terni is called: from

their very however error manifest it is made, that they no other

name, than what in the ancient Life is read, expressed

to have found.

[6] But a difficulty other hence arises, how so constantly

is written by the more ancient men a castle Teranum,

which nowhere now is found; and this same as Thermes? when in the same XXX miles'

distance from the city of Palermo is situated a town,

Thermae called; and by this surname, both Augustine

himself or Matthew in the world, and others from the same family, before

and after him born, are found called: of whom in the Dedicatory

his Vincent: That family repeats its origin

from Oliver de Thermes, among the Catalan Magnates

de Thermes, Archbishop of Palermo, Jerome,

Bishop of Mazara and elected at

Palermo Prelate; Matthew, who Blessed Augustine

as uncle had, of the Kingdom of Sicily Master Justiciar;

Francis, a Knight of Jerusalem;

and other men, who the Palermo city, with of Captain

and of Praetor, and also of Senators dignity

ruled, or of the citadel the Prefecture bore. He adds also

Vincent on page 45, of this family the men commonly all

to be called de Termini and da Termini, which also by examples

he proves; and it is wonderful enough, since Thermes and Termini

neighboring indeed of the same tract, but yet divers

places are. There accedes to the difficulty to be increased, that the Termini-folk

pretend, that as ancient at Palermo is the family from

Termini named, so to be old with them a family de

Terano, although it now extinct be. For in the scrutiny of the Magistracy

of Termini, made under King Martin in the year 1398,

is read among others Peter de Terano, in this order:

Thomas de Palma, Simeon de li Pulielli, Simeon

de la Sentina, Antony de Basto, Thomas

de S. Marco, N. de Salvo, Peter de Terano, Agathinus

de lu Cavano, Peter Solito, Philip de

lo Masello.

[7] What moreover to the Castle Teranum pertains, thinks

Octavius Cajetanus our man in the Annotations, whence the name of the family? corrupted to be

the word, and Thermes to be read. Joseph Pamphilus,

with words from Riera transcribed, thus begins: Augustine de

Therma, of our Order General Prior, by nation

of Termini aforesaid; and proves, truly some Teranum

to have been, from Thermae equally as from Termini divers.

To be reconciled however the difference could, if to presume it be permitted of the very

of Termini city's castle, which Augustine's father

for the King as governor held, by a proper name Teranum

to have been called. For the rest as it does not follow, Augustine,

because de Thermes surnamed he was, at Thermae

also to have been born; since this of his family the name was,

handed down to posterity from Oliver, of that town once

Lord or Toparch: so neither from the fact that the same family

at Palermo now its Seat has, by occasion of the offices

afore-noted, which both Augustine himself and others after

him there bore, by no means it follows, there, and not

in the of Termini of his family house to the light to have come the Saint.

Wherefore, if the Teranum castle and Thermae town

divers be not, but to this that pertain; a juster presumption

and on a more ancient authority leaning, against a simple

of Riera and Auria conjecture, will stand for the Termini-folk, an old

with them tradition pretending. On account of this

moreover of their office to be they believed, after received at Siena Relics

some of Blessed Augustine, some Relics to Siena brought. in the year 1620, from the most Serene

Great of Etruria Duke Cosmo II, into the cult and veneration

of him more solicitously to inquire, as will be clear from a double

Appendix to be added after the Life. Sufficiently moreover informed

and certified of all things, from Ferdinand Archbishop

of Palermo they obtained in the year 1645 the faculty, the very

Relics in the greater church publicly to expose, and processionally

each year to lead around, on the day of his Translation:

which to have been the Sunday first of August, taught us

the Reverend Father Vincent Galeanti, of our College of Noto in Sicily

Rector in the year 1669.

LIFE

By a contemporary author of the Hermit Order.

From the Mss. of Siena and Pisa.

Augustine Novellus, Prior general of the Order of Hermits of S. Augustine, at Siena in Etruria (S.)

BHL Number: 0804

BY A CONTEMPORARY FROM THE MSS.

PROLOGUE.

[1] Although the omnipotent and good God gifts and graces

to each according to His good pleasure

bestows: to some however greater, to some lesser He apportions:

(For this is what through the Apostle is said:

To one is given the word of wisdom, to another moreover the word of knowledge;

to another faith, to another the grace of healings, to another the working

of virtues, to another prophecy, to another discretion of spirits,

to another kinds of tongues, to another interpretation of speeches:

these all works one and the same Spirit, dividing

to each as He wills) the sacred however and venerable

religion of the Friars Hermits of the Doctor eminent

Augustine with gifts especial and graces most abundant

He heaped. 1 Cor. 12, 8 The Hermits of S. Augustine For to the holy Apostles, the rest of death

received, raised God sons, namely Holy Hermits,

by the word of God's seed in the womb of mother Church begotten:

who as legitimate sons, of the prior Fathers,

namely the Holy Apostles, imitators of the Apostles, the life would imitate

and morals: and into whom and upon whom of the very

Apostles, as Elijah's upon Elisha, the spirit

should rest, and with the mantle of holy conversation the streams

of carnality they should divide: who by of the supernal country the love

kindled, all the world's prosperities, as certain

dung, would reckon: who not only death by no means

would fear, but for the sweetness of God it eagerly

would desire: who as another Abraham, at the precept

of the Lord, kindred and country would leave: to be compared to the Patriarchs

who as another Moses, themselves sons of the daughter of Pharaoh, that

is of the very flesh and of the world, to be called would abhor, and

the reproaches of the Cross great riches would esteem: who

as another Joseph, corn to the Egyptians and the pastures of the word

of God to carnal men, with the Egyptians' darkness

involved, solicitously would minister: who as other Maccabees,

for the very holy of God laws all their things would leave,

and to die by no means would dread; and of all

enemies, namely the world, the flesh and the demon,

manfully fighting would triumph. to the Angels These are Seraphim,

with zeal of God fervent: these Cherubim, full of knowledge,

the Lord contemplating, and to Him to be known

others leading: these Thrones, in God alone

resting, and no but in God rest to be

showing: these Dominations, others by life and morals

presiding, and others to all of God obeisances directing:

these Virtues, with miracles glittering, and of God

conscious nothing impossible thinking: these Powers,

demons coercing, and by their virtue God's people

protecting: these Principalities, Archangels, and

Angels, the care of others having, and now greater, and to the Planets.

now lesser, namely what to men's salvation suits,

announcing, and God's people by prayers, life and

example solicitously guarding and defending: these the Sun,

the world illuminating, and of ignorance and of sins

the darkness driving away: these the Stars of heaven, in the night of adversity

the sad directing, and by their example them strengthening:

these the precious stones in the vestment of Aaron, and

of the very true Priest Christ with a wonderful brightness shining:

these built upon the foundation of the Apostles

and Prophets with a most firm stability lasting.

Let rejoice therefore the holy Mother Church, with so many and

such sons made fruitful: let rejoice the Hermits' Religion,

whose head is Augustine, the Doctor eminent, by its

Spouse with so many and so great gifts decorated: let rejoice

the people of the faithful, with so many soldiers defended; let rejoice also

the city of Siena, with of so great a Father, namely S. Augustine,

Blessed Augustine the New, who in our times in

the holy Church and our Religion, as a certain

celestial star shone forth, and into whom all the above said

came together, let me return: whose conversation, life,

death, but also with what he shone miracles, according to

what from worthy of faith I heard, to treat I intend, by the very

Saint's devotion moved, for the holy conversation's

example and souls' salvation.

CHAPTER I.

Augustine's Life before and after the taken habit

in Sicily.

[2] He was moreover Blessed Augustine by a double name called;

namely Matthew and Augustine:

MATTHEW in the world, AUGUSTINE in the order: which

by divine providence, not casually was done, that namely

from a double of the name appellation a manifold

perfection might become known. For is interpreted MATTHEW,

A gift of hastening: Matthew in the world which well suits

him on account of his hasty conversion. At once

indeed after the death of his Lord, namely King Manfred, of whose

Court he himself presided; Augustine in religion called, when the voice of one within knocking

he heard, from the little bed of the body and of negligence rising, to the one knocking opened; and him inward leading,

AUGUSTINE from AUGUST, which is the month hottest,

that in it be denoted the fervor of charity: or he was called

AUGUSTINE from AUGUSTUS the Emperor, who held the principate

in the world, that from this be denoted to be understood,

that he was about to hold the principate in the Order: or he was called

Augustine from Augeo (to increase), because in his time the Order

of Hermits manifoldly was exalted, and with many

privileges and graces by the holy Mother Church fore-fortified.

[3] Therefore Blessed Augustine from a certain castle Teranum

called, which from the Palermo city nearly XXX

miles is distant, took his origin: and although the name

of his father or mother is unknown, it is clear however him

from noble born birth, born in Sicily, as his progeny up

to the present day declares, which there and in many

other castles holds dominion. From his very moreover boyhood

both to letters delivered, and as much as that age allows sufficiently

instructed he was. Him wishing moreover to proceed

to Bologna to study, prohibited him his mother,

who him most tenderly loving drew back: seeing moreover

the firm mind of him, him up to Rome she followed. at Bologna Doctor of both Laws created,

Began moreover from his adolescence the of predestination

gift in him to shine, and of what kind

he would be future by indications most manifest to appear. For

many vices, with which the very adolescence and the manner of living

of scholars by their as it were is implicated nature, he began

to abhor; of women and of lascivious youths

the companies to spurn, vain words and dissolute laughters

to avoid, the church to go to, to preaching intent

to be, and (as much as that age allows) what he heard

by work to fulfill. Coming moreover to Bologna, so

in not many years he profited, that he could deservedly among

of Doctors the number be reckoned. Of both therefore

Laws made a Professor, Prefect of the Court of King Manfred: to his own he returned: and began

his report to increase, and everywhere to be diffused; so much,

that King Manfred, who then in the Kingdom presided,

over his whole Court him summoned set,

and at his command all things were done.

[4] And because in a certain way it is impossible, that one

in the midst of carnal men placed, should remain from vices unsullied;

protected him God by His grace and mercy,

that at least he should not be implicated in those vices, which into ruin the soul

plunge, and to God by no means to return

permit, and which his future vocation chiefly

to hinder could. estranged from the vices of the flesh, For although, as we said, in

the midst of carnal men placed, he had made however for himself of perpetual virginity a purpose, which up to death

he held and kept; as became known from his words,

not from boastfulness, but from charity said, as the Apostle,

by the charity of his disciples overcome, himself sometimes

commended. There assisted moreover the man of God a certain

Brother Uguitio, a man good, noble and of sound sense: who

when from a certain chance was absent, said the holy man to certain

of those assisting him then Brothers, among whom

was then Brother Augustine de Forteguerris, from whom

what I narrate I learned; he said moreover: I so love that

Uguitio, as a son, although never have I done that

whence a son I could have; he himself moreover always

from me withdraws. And at once he was silent, as if penitent

of what he had said. From which word it is given to understand,

that not only in the Order, but even secular existing,

word willed God from his mouth to slip, that from this

be given to understand, of what kind and how great he was, whose life

to be set should be to others for an example. from a judgment of blood, In the same also

Court remaining he withdrew himself, as I said, by divine protected

grace, lest he be a man of blood, who to build was

the very Religion of the Hermits. For never was he present

at a judgment of blood, nor in councils where of shedding

blood it was treated. From illicit also gains

and little gifts, from gifts and duplicity. in which of such men the kind

is wont to be implicated, he was totally estranged; so that not

and words double and vain, and extortions

which often in Courts are made, altogether he abhorred so

much, that already shone forth in him, what future him

the grace of God had foreseen.

[5] When moreover that Venerable Father was in

the Court above-said, it happened the above-said King

Manfred by King Charles to be vanquished: in which conflict

while was Augustine, God disposing, To him sick, by fear

of death led, he fled into the island of Sicily: in which

island he incurred a sickness violent, now by his own judgment

about to descend to hell, carrying with himself sins.

And fearing before the sight of the eternal Judge with

many sins, which he himself in himself from humility to be acknowledged,

and without any merits to appear, he asked from

God a space of penance, promising himself about to enter

an Order religious, at once when he should be freed.

Regarded moreover him God, and restored to pristine health:

who not unmindful of the word of Solomon saying, if

anything you have vowed to God do not delay to render, because displeases

Him a foolish and indiscreet promise; disposed to enter

the Order of S. Dominic. Eccl. 5, And two of his household sent,

when for the called three times Dominicans there met them two of the Brothers Hermits of S. Augustine:

whom to their Lord at home remaining they led:

whom he seeing venerated as Fathers;

his purpose however by no means to them opening, he sent them back.

Indignant moreover against the servants sent,

whom he had taught, how were the Brothers, whom he sought

clothed, and of their name, and where they dwelt,

he said: Why did you not fulfill what I said? Go, bring

those whom I said. Who going, two others of the same

Hermit Brothers brought: whom likewise

he sent back, and more against the servants indignant, a third time

them to the place of the Preachers sent back. Who an Angel

leading, not knowing the place or the Brothers, there should come always Augustinians. went

by a straight way to the place of the Brothers Hermits, and the received

Prior together with another Brother led to

their Lord. From which deed it is plain manifestly, him

by God singularly fore-elected, that he might be a Leader

and Father of the Brothers Hermits. their habit he assumes: Knew moreover the man

holy, himself by divine grace to the place of the Brothers Hermits called: and the divine mercy and goodness

in himself considering, he burned with the fire of divine

love: and already of the reward of eternal beatitude made

certain, and himself for the sweetness of God not containing, to those

Brothers his purpose opened: and utterly

the world and its pomps renouncing, into a man other

wholly was changed, and the habit of the holy Religion,

namely of the Brothers Hermits of S. Augustine, assumed.

[6] And because for ruin alone grows what is built, unless

willed the man of God, in the very of his conversion beginning,

of humility to lay the foundations, that the house of his soul

founded on Him who says, Learn from me because

meek I am and humble of heart, by no ruins could be destroyed;

namely because in the Gospel is written, There came

the rivers, blew the winds, descended the rain, and rushed

into that house, and it did not fall: founded for

it was upon a firm rock. Matt. 11, 29, Matt. 7, 25 and his person hiding, Therefore the man of God divinely

inspired, not only in affection, but in the exterior

effect, studied the virtue of humility to have. Wherefore

to the Order coming, and the habit of the holy Religion

assuming, he hid of his science the brightness,

of his lineage the nobility, and of his prior state the loftiness:

lest anyone from any of the aforesaid him considering

might venerate, and lest from this could some pride creep

into his heart. Made was therefore among the Brothers

with riches celestial he might be enriched; made unknown to men,

that by God he might be known; made vile to the world,

that with God he might be exalted. He associated therefore

among the Brothers more vile and more despised than all, he lowers himself to the lowest things, knowing

himself by so much to be of greater merit with God, by how much for love

of Him more he was despised in the world. Humble

he was in effect, but more in affect: boastfulness or word

any of a prior state never was heard from

him: the begging-quest and humble services of the house whatever

more vile, unknown remaining, with devotion and humility

exceeding he fulfilled. In the very moreover his humility rejoicing,

he wept because so long had deferred God the joy

of his soul. Melted his soul with love of the supernal

country, for whose love whatever here he did

for nothing he reckoned. If any word sometime

for the cause of fraternal correction to be made slipped from

his mouth, which sometimes by detestation of evil and fraternal

charity he was wont to do, at once himself condemning,

at the feet of the Brother prostrate pardon he asked.

[7] He had also the perfection of highest poverty,

as can be plain to all, his life and death

considering: tenacious of poverty, for since first in the world with many

riches he abounded, in the Order shortly nothing for himself of

those, besides humble clothes and few, he wished to retain,

whether in Sicily remaining, or to the Siena province

coming. And when he had stood in the Court Confessor of the Supreme

Pontiff for twenty-two years, in which he could,

as other Confessors of the supreme Pontiff, abundantly

abound; never however did he wish anything to amass:

so much that to death coming, nothing he had

shortly which it behooved him to leave; having imitated

his Father Blessed Augustine the Doctor, whose name

and habit with so fervent devotion he had received,

who to death coming a testament did not make, because

whence to make it the poor man of Christ he had not.

[8] in food sparing and austere. He was also very austere to himself in food and drink,

although in the world he had been with foods noble and delicate

nourished. For in his youth, when he came

to the Order, never anything he sought, except those

foods vile, which then the Brothers commonly used,

with this superadded, that always wont for him

it was to eat once in the day. After moreover he stood

in the Court, Prior General of the Order made, and after

to the desired solitude he had returned; although

sometimes by reason of infirmity other foods him to use it behooved,

always however he ate once in the day,

weighing the bread which he ate, namely fifteen

ounces every day; in this not to pleasure, but

to necessity condescending.

[9] He was a follower of hospitality: The hospital of Siena to be founded he cares for, for although with occupations

very many, which to dismiss from the very conscience

by no means he could, he was implicated; he was however

of hospitality a counsellor, and a fosterer of those who

hospitality loved. Which chiefly was plain in

the Lord Restaurus, whom he himself by his counsel induced,

that he might be the Father of the Hospital of S. Mary of Siena. For

since the same Lord Restaurus with many riches abounded,

he placed himself totally in his hands, about to do through all things

as he should counsel him. And when he could to the succoring

of the Order him induce, and to be ordained. which also he would have done;

he judged better to be, that the very Lord Restaurus all

his goods to the Hospital should commit: which also done

was. And from then, both from the goodness of Lord Restaurus, who

very laudably the above-said presided over Hospital,

and from the riches which there he left, began the Hospital

to be augmented and to grow, since before small it was.

Moreover also all the good privileges, which has

the said Hospital, and that they could be called Brothers,

and of their exemption from the holy Mother Church,

he himself when he was of great reputation in the Court, acquired.

To the very also Brothers of the Hospital a manner of living

and an order he handed down: but also to the very Lord of the Hospital,

how he ought to be clothed, he ordained: which, up

to the time of venerable memory the Lord John,

was kept.

[10] With so great also devotion was affected his heart

to the Lord, that all things to him grew bitter, With love of God and devotion fervent, and only

God grew sweet to his soul. A tedium it was to him to think

except of God or to speak: which manifestly can

be plain, to one thinking of what kind he was in his life: for up

to a decrepit age, when a man failing by old age

is forced from labor to cease, he seemed in God's service

every day in strength to grow strong. For always

in the night he was first to Matins, long always in prayer

he remained, always, other occupations wholly

dismissed, more solicitous at all the Hours. Mass

every day infallibly, unless by infirmity detained, with devotion

fervid he celebrated: nor, after he had said it,

to the common words he returned; but in his cell shutting himself,

up to Terce in prayer he remained. the novices accurately he instructs. The youths,

whom to the Order to come he perceived, because their innocence

and purity he considered, and because God

in them he venerated, with most tender love and paternal

affection he loved: and when to S. Leonard of Silva-lacus

to see him they came, with his own hands

he served, and with the food of God's word them he fed. And if

sometime anyone either to go out of the Order, or not fully

to do what he ought, he perceived; the pious Father pious tears

emitted. But now to the order of his life,

whence somewhat we have digressed, to return we intend.

ANNOTATIONS.

CHAPTER II.

The Acts of Augustine in Italy up to his death.

[11] After moreover in the same island of Sicily, of

which above we made mention, from Sicily into the Province of Siena passed, was the same venerable

Father in the habit of the holy Religion clothed, and

there not for much time with his Brothers associated;

it happened a certain Brother of Siena, by name

Bindus Nenni, by obedience of the Order to the island

the same to come. Whom seeing the man of God, asked

of the places of the Siena province; and learned there

to be places from the habitation of men remote, and for

to be free for God very apt: and license from the superior

obtained, he came to the Siena province, with few and

vile clothes clothed, to the Brothers of that province wholly

unknown, to God moreover known and approved. And

placed in a certain hermitage, which to S. Barbara dedicated

had been founded near the castle of S. Flora, to God alone

he was free: and so much he delighted that he seemed

to the of the Blessed troops to be present, and of blessed quiet

the reward to taste. Because moreover he was not known

of what kind and how great he was, humbly he lives at S. Barbara's: there were imposed on him humble

services of the house; which he himself with humility assiduous and

charity fervid fulfilled. He made the begging-quests, purged

the house, the platters and other house furniture

washed; but also all other things, of his prior life the haughtiness wholly

laid aside, voluntarily he exercised. Although he was

humble and abject in his own eyes, considered however the Brothers

his perfect conversation, and the gravity of his morals, and

the words of life which always from him came forth,

and gladly him they heard. There was moreover there

Prior a certain Brother of Siena, Brother Bonus called,

was Vicar of the Lord Rainald Bishop of Siena:

who considering his goodness and counsels most salutary, to Rosia he is led away:

beyond what he saw of him estimated, and was delighted

with his humility, gravity of morals, and

of his eloquences the sweetness. When therefore the same Brother

Bonus from the Convent of S. Barbara was transferred to the place

of S. Antony, with himself him he led: and another following

year made Prior of Rosia also with himself retained; and

although him he did not recognize, he venerated as a father:

in which place Blessed Augustine remaining, though unwilling, was made known and manifest.

[12] When the Brothers of the convent of Rosia a certain in

the Court had a question, by occasion of a writing by himself made, in which already the Brothers were succumbing; and of this too greatly were saddened, since from

this a certain possession they would lose, from which the Convent

much was sustained; willed God a lamp,

which long under a bushel had been, upon the candlestick of the Holy

Religion to place, that it might shine to all who in it

were. Seeing therefore the holy man the Brothers' minds

perturbed, and knowing to the Brothers an injury greatest

to be done, the Proctor he approached, asking for himself secretly

something to write. The Proctor indeed derided

him, not knowing that to read he knew or to write: he

however persevering to ask, reached to him paper, a reed-pen,

and ink, as he had said. He wrote moreover few

words, but of science much: which writing he exhibited,

to be handed to the Proctor adversary the Lord James,

father of the Lord Nerus de Pagliaresis. Which writing when

read the Lord James, the words' brevity and of science

the virtue considering, said: The devil, or an Angel, or

the Lord Matthew de Therano, is recognized and indicated by a former fellow-student. with whom I was studying

at Bologna, who is dead in the conflict of the Lord King

Manfred, this writing composed. And hearing from the Proctor

that a certain Brother rustic and ignorant

this writing composed, he said: No, I say, so

it is. And at once descending to the place of the Brothers Hermits

of Siena, the summoned Prior Brother Placitus and many

other Brothers asked, who was this kind of Brother, and

of what country, and how he came hither. And from the response

of the Brothers his conditions known, he suspected

to be who he was: and at once going to Rosia, and seeing

whom dead he thought, marveling at his humility,

he fell into embraces and kisses of him, the tears of devotion

not being able to contain. And when asked him

the same venerable Father, not to perturb his peace

by manifesting him; by no means he acquiesced, but said to the Brothers:

Brothers, you have a treasure hidden; this for

is the better man of the world; hold therefore him as is fitting:

but also your question is terminated for you. Began

therefore the Brothers him to venerate, and to him reverence

to exhibit. He himself moreover with true humility founded, honors

and all reverence rejected; and works

servile not dismissing, altogether thus remained.

[13] It happened moreover, Blessed Augustine in the hermitage remaining,

the venerable Father Brother Clement, then

of the Order General, to the Siena convent to come: Made a Priest with the General the Constitutions he ordains:

who hearing the most celebrated report of him, the summoned

him into his Companion assumed: and leading him

to the Court, though unwilling, a Priest ordained.

Associating therefore both together, they composed

the Constitutions and manner of living of the Order, with much

ordinance and sanctity shining; where of the cult of God,

of the charity mutual, which of the Brothers each one to

laymen, of the reception and nurture of Novices,

of the election of the Officials of the Order, of the penalties to be imposed

for faults, and of the rest others, which to the manner of living of the Brothers pertain, so wisely and discreetly

are treated, that nothing can be judged to be added or diminished.

[14] Remaining therefore both Venerable

men for some time in the Court, asked Pope

Nicholas of the General to be given him one Confessor in

his Court, sufficient and suitable: is created Penitentiary of the Pope. who being existent

the Supreme Pontiff together with the Cardinals in consistory,

led Blessed Augustine, a man suitable and

proved. And seeing the Cardinals despised in habit,

in face austere and rigid, to the General they said:

From what wood did you bring him? Led therefore

Blessed Augustine to the feet of the Supreme Pontiff, and ignorant

to what he was led; when the Pope imposed on him his hands,

his authority bestowing; so bitterly to weep

he began, that the Pope and Cardinals he provoked to

wailing. There was in him an appetite, to the hermitage, where before

he had been associated, to return, that to God alone as he was wont

he might be free. The Supreme moreover Pontiff and the Lords

Cardinals, knowing his humility, and

holy conversation, and of his science the eloquence,

more than can be believed venerated him.

Although the pious Father was forced to remain in the Court

in body, in mind however he dwelt in the hermitage, as

after a time appeared manifestly. He remained moreover the Venerable Father in the Court above-said Penitentiary

of the Supreme Pontiff for years twenty-two, to the supreme

Pontiff and the Lords Cardinals more than can be believed

acceptable and gracious. So much for the grace

of God overflowed in him, that the very Supreme Pontiff and

the Lords Cardinals with a pious him venerated affection.

And when sometimes, by zeal of justice supported not only

by beseeching but by rebuking he reproved, most patiently

they heard, God in His servant venerating: of so great

for judgment and so celebrated counsel he was, that they seemed

from heaven to have sounded the words and counsels, which often from

him came forth.

[15] In that moreover time in which the pious Father in the Court

dwelt Roman, Elected General, it happened a General Chapter

at Milan to be celebrated: in which Chapter the same Venerable

Father unanimously and concordantly into General of the Order,

though absent, by all of the Chapter was

elected. Which election by no means he accepted: nor

would he have accepted, unless by the Supreme Pontiff the Lord Boniface

he had been to accepting compelled. He presided moreover

over the Order for years two, with much charity, humility,

and of justice zeal supported. Humble in exhorting, severe

in correcting: to all benign, though to himself

austere: and because most grievous it was to him the wonted peace

and sweetness of devotion and contemplation to leave,

and to others' care to attend; after a biennium he abdicates: he hastened of governance

the burden to lay down. For since by the custom of the Order a Chapter

from triennium to triennium to be celebrated was wont,

he himself the pious Father overcome by the of governance tedium, in the year

second of his governance, a Chapter at Naples to be made

instituted; where although by the Order he was urged to govern,

by no means he acquiesced. In which also Chapter the devout

King, namely Charles father of King Robert, both

of the Order and of the holy man to the devotion affected, the head

of Blessed Luke the Evangelist to the Order handed over, instituting

every year that of Blessed Luke the feast solemnly to be celebrated

there should be (which up to the present day is kept)

where both the King and the Queen and other Royal persons, he receives the head of S. Luke the Evangelist. both

of the very S. Luke by devotion, and of the above-said King

by institution, to come together were wont.

[16] The laid down therefore of governance burden, to the Court

by no means he returned; but at once, all other things omitted, to

the desired solitude: and in a certain Hermitage,

which in honor of S. Leonard had been founded,

with few to himself joined Brothers, He acts in the Hermitage of S. Leonard: he rested in

the shade of divine contemplation and of spiritual sweetness;

and dismissed all other cares, to God alone he was free.

And now to blessed quiet to himself he seemed to be present:

nor could however the light, but that it be manifested, lie hidden.

For other men of Siena far remaining, hearing

the report of his sanctity him came to: whom

he by the word of life and of sanctity by example all refreshed:

nor was there anyone so impassioned and so afflicted,

who not consoled from him departed, he consoles the afflicted: and who God

not venerated in him. For also a certain noble man

the Lord John Provost, of Salibenis called,

when from the death of his mother he was so afflicted that it wearied

him even to live; by the counsel of his friends to

him came: and hearing the sweet exhortations of him,

more than could be believed marveling, said: I would not wish

my mother to live, for I so great a consolation

by no means would have perceived.

[17] When moreover had stood the same Venerable Father

in the same hermitage years nearly ten, after the governance

of the Order he had dismissed, his death foreseen piously he dies. willed him God from the world's

exile and of his flesh the burden to free: and began, beyond

the manner accustomed of his infirmity, troubles other

of the body to sustain. And the voice of God him calling understanding,

to many Brothers he said, and asked that to his

death they should be present: from which it is manifest his death

by spirit to have known. Coming moreover to the very

of life extreme, so of sound mind and sense always he remained,

as if no alteration he had in his body.

And when there were present at his death many Nobles of Siena,

to them and to the Brothers all it was plain from his gesture, him

to the eternal banquets to come invited: and so the assisting

him Brothers and praying, his spirit to God he rendered.

[18] Was moreover his death revealed to a certain

great and proved for a long time, who was called

Brother Peter of Camerata, who about twenty years

remaining in a certain hermitage, where was one place of the Order

left, [his death to another far placed is revealed.] by license of the Order in great austerity

and sanctity of life remained. He also Blessed Augustine

with a great was affected love. When therefore the Brothers wished

Blessed Augustine in the last things nearly placed to refresh,

they sent two Brothers, Brother namely Bonaventure

of Monte-Puliciano, and Michael of Podium

Bonizi, to the said Brother Peter of Camerata: whose

dwelling remained from the city nearly miles XIV, that

he might deign to come and visit so great a Father. Which Brother

Peter, having gone forth a little outside his cell to meet

those Brothers, before to him their purpose they opened,

said with a certain tearful voice: Brothers, not

is it necessary, that I should come: our Father indeed Augustine

has migrated to heaven, and I have recommended his soul

just now to God. Returning moreover the Brothers sent,

knew at the same hour, in which they had come and such

words had heard, Blessed Augustine to God his spirit to have rendered.

From which manifestly is plain, that the same Blessed Peter,

in his cell corporeally so far remaining,

was in spirit present, as was plain in the effect.

ANNOTATIONS.

p. Joseph Pamphilus in the Chronicle calls the Relics of the head of S. Luke, which today with much veneration in the church of S. Augustine at Naples are kept.

q. The convent of S. Leonard is distant 4 miles from Siena, and one from the monastery Lecitan: it is surnamed della Silva del Lago: of it more widely below is treated, and also in Herrera part 2 folio 33, who says, in the year 1251 it was united to the very Lecitan convent.

r. To Octavius Cajetanus, from Jordan, he is called John surnamed Salimbenius.

s. Nay the year tenth only had begun with the beginning of May.

t. In the year 1309 on the second day of Pentecost, 19 May, as below is confirmed.

u. Herrera tome 2 page 241 an elogium of him has with this beginning: Blessed Peter of Florence, from the place of Camerata, where a blessed life he led, from Camerata surnamed, with the spirit of prophecy, and many miracles shining, departed from Life.

CHAPTER III.

Miracles after death.

[18] A certain youth of Massa, laboring in

upon him in so great quantity, There are raised the dead a youth that dead thence

drawn out he was. His sister moreover, seeing her brother

dead, recommended him to Blessed Augustine, that

if him from the dead he should raise, that she would come to the monument

of him with feet unshod, and one image

beautiful and great, as he was himself, she would make: and

the prayer made devoutly, he himself his eyes opened, and something

eatable took. Stayed moreover dead for

freed he was. A certain girl, daughter of a certain Mezaiolus

of the Lord Hugo, and a girl: fell into a certain pit full

of water, and was suffocated. Her father and mother sought her for a day one, and the day following at terce

found again her. Taking moreover her and drawing out

of that pit, they brought back to the house: and

vowed her to Blessed Augustine, that if that young one he should raise,

that they would make to him a certain great reverence.

[19] a serpent is vomited out: A certain one of the county of Siena slept in

through his mouth into the body of the same. He came moreover

to Siena, and no physician found, who him from that

serpent free could. Withdrawing moreover from Siena

as if desperate, a certain one who was at the gate of the city

said to him. Why do you not make a vow to Blessed Augustine

of the Brothers of the Order of S. Augustine, and you will be freed? Who

at once recommended himself to Blessed Augustine most devoutly:

and before many bystanders that serpent went out, through the mouth

of him who had suffered, and freed he was.

[20] A certain youth of Siena had suffered a great

infirmity in the lower part, namely that ruptured

he had been: is cured twice a hernia: stayed moreover in that infirmity for

made freed he was. The vow moreover which he promised

to Blessed Augustine to make, he did not make: and at once that

evil, which first he had, again he had, and

suffered afterward that infirmity six

months: and again vowed himself to Blessed Augustine devoutly,

and the vow made freed he was from that infirmity: and what

to him he promised he offered to Blessed Augustine.

[21] for nourishing an infant milk obtains an old woman. A certain woman of Siena bore a girl,

and that young one had not milk, whence she could

nourish her daughter: was moreover poor the young one,

whence she could not give to a nurse on account of poverty

too great. The mother moreover of that young one, who bore

that girl, was a widow, and a great time had stood

that she had not milk. Vowed indeed herself to Blessed Augustine,

that if of milk to have she could, that the daughter of her daughter

she might nourish, that she would make to him that reverence

which her poverty could satisfy: and the prayer made

at once milk she had, and the daughter of her daughter she nourished,

and the vow which to him she promised she made.

[22] A certain little boy son of the Lady Mona Margaret,

wife of Miguccius the Lord John Paganelli of Siena, is cured the head of an infant broken,

was in a cradle: and his nurse leading the cradle that

he might be calmed, it happened that the little cord of the cradle was broken,

and the boy struck his head against the wall: whence, from the striking

of the head against the wall, made was his head like

Whence his mother wept strongly, and cried out sharply,

because she saw her son so badly handled.

Whence Mona Nera of the Lord John Paganelli began the head

of the boy to refit, as if it were wax: and so refitting

she vowed the boy to Blessed Augustine, that if him from that

evil he should free, him she would offer upon his altar, clothed

in the manner as if he were a Friar: and the vow made

most devoutly, at once the boy began to weep, and the breast

to suck, and freed he was. And him his mother carrying

to the place, to him did as she promised.

[23] The wife of Bindus de Maladerata of Siena, one day

fell to the ground, and falling so placed her hand

to the ground, that to herself she might not make a great harm; a needle clinging to the hand is drawn out. but

her hand: whence that Lady received the greatest

pain, and there came not out blood on account of this, so

that she could not perceive what was in her hand:

and she making many attempts, and going to

the baths, nothing profited. And stayed that needle in the hand

of her for a year: whence that she coming to the feast

of Blessed Augustine, standing before the altar, vowed herself to him,

that if from that evil her he should free, a great reverence

to him she would make. And the prayer made began she

with the other hand that part, in which was the needle, to rub:

and at once appeared the point of the needle: and seeing

the needle, before many bystanders she draws out the needle from

her hand, and freed she was, and the reverence which to him

she promised she fulfilled.

ANNOTATIONS.

APPENDIX I.

An Examination for the proof of the ancient cult in the year 1638.

Augustine Novellus, Prior general of the Order of Hermits of S. Augustine, at Siena in Etruria (S.)

FROM THE MS. PROCESS.

[1] By the mandate of the General an inquisition being made, In God's name. Amen. Since the most Reverend

Father Master Giles of Milan,

Syndic and Prior General of the Augustinian

Religion, on days lately elapsed had written letters

to the most Reverend Father Master Aurelius de Salvenienis

of Castiglione of Florence, at present of the Convent

of the Augustinian Religion at Siena Prior; and other

letters had written to the R. P. Otho Petruccio of Siena

of the same Religion, about to cause, as they said, to be authenticated

the memorials, miracles and other things which in these

places of Blessed Augustine Novellus might be found; in execution

of the aforesaid letters a Chapter being convoked,

in the above-said Venerable monastery, by the said

most R. P. Prior of his Confraters, were

for this kind of effect two elected and deputed Fathers

of the same Convent, namely the R. P. Otho Petruccio

of Siena aforesaid, and the R. P. James Orlandinus

likewise of Siena and Syndic of the same Convent,

as both they and the said most R. P. Prior said

to appear in the book of deliberations of the same

Convent. Hence it is therefore, that in the year from the salutary

of our Lord Jesus Christ Incarnation 1633, Indiction

seventh by the style of Siena, on the day indeed XXII of December,

Urban VIII supreme Pontiff sitting,

Ferdinand of Austria III of the Romans Emperor elect

reigning, and the Most Serene Lord Don Ferdinand

Great of Etruria Duke V our Lord happily

reigning.

[2] there are found at Siena the altar, image and body of the Saint; I the Notary, the election of me made standing by

the same for their Notary to the effect aforesaid,

since I had seen how many times in their Church at Siena

to be the altar of the same Blessed, in a panel painted standing

in the midst of trees, clothed in the Augustinian habit, and

having an Angel at his ear, and a book red in

his hands; and in the same panel some miracles of the same

Blessed, and that in the altar is a marble chest with this

inscription particular, Here Lies the Body of Blessed Augustine

Nov. of Siena of the Order of Hermits, and to which there stands before it

continually a lamp lit; I went together with the said most Reverend

Fathers in the first place to the place named Val di

Rosia, distant from the city of Siena by miles IX

about, where is a certain church in the midst of woods,

named S. Lucia di Val di Rosia of the said

most Reverend Fathers, where continually remain two Fathers

of the same Religion, one a Priest, the other indeed a layman:

and is celebrated at least every feast day a Mass, and twice in

the year two solemnities, on the feast namely of S. Lucia and on the

feast of the dedication of the said Church, in Valle Rosia, an image; with a great of the peoples

neighboring concourse. And beholding divers things,

both within and without the walls of the said church, among

other images of Saints divers in the loggia of the said

church, we saw an image on the wall painted,

like that of the above-said altar in their church principal

at Siena; namely in the midst of two trees,

having at one ear an Angel. And because not

rightly was known the Angel, for the humidity and swelling

with saltpeter, and the distance from the ground, therefore

we took ladders; and ascending to it, we saw and

knew rightly to be an Angel. And on a sheepskin parchment,

above a tablet placed in the sacred shrine, in an ancient

character written we saw these formal words, namely

In the year of the Lord 1276, of Clement Pope

the Fourth the III, by the work of Blessed Reinerius restored was the church

this, and adorned with pictures, paraments and Relics.

Then the most Reverend Bishop of Volterra,

moved by the goodness and sanctity of the Fathers of this place, consecrated

the aforesaid church, to the honor of God and

of His most holy Mother, and also of the glorious Father S.

Augustine and S. Lucia Virgin and Martyr: and so

I attest for the truth, I the Notary above-written.

[3] and in the convent of S. Leonard, Departing thence afterward on the same day, and making

Leonard, far from Siena by miles four about,

having entered the church with the most Reverend Fathers of the same

convent, after with knees bent somewhat

we prayed, together also with some rustics of the same

place of S. Leonard, and the most Reverend D. Angelus,

Curate of the church of the Community of S. Columba, a place

contiguous, both of souls and also of the people of S. Leonard,

we saw a picture entire, near the pulpit and altar

of the said church, like the above-said and very well conserved:

and by all and publicly, without questioning

by the said most R. D. Angelus, afterward indeed

by others below-written but questioned, was said and

affirmed, to have heard publicly, the same image to be

of Blessed Augustine Novellus. And descending from the said church

by a stair of twelve steps, a double image. somewhat

narrow, we entered a certain oratory or chapel;

and we saw an altar with the below-written pictures,

or images ancient in a panel, that is, the Blessed

Virgin Mary in the midst, then S. John Baptist,

S. Augustine, S. Leonard clothed in the formal habit

black of the said Religion of D. Augustine (for within

the hood black seems delineated white, in

the middle girt with a belt, and in the hands a book red

having) and Blessed Augustine Novellus, with

an Angel at the ear as above, and with these words, S. Augustine.

In which oratory within the wall we saw

about, of the length indeed of arms three about,

where is a likeness of our Lord Jesus Christ praying

in the garden painted, and is within a seat, of this kind

arched surrounding it: and before toward the altar, where stood

to God praying the said Blessed Augustine Novellus,

is a proportioned kneeler of the length of the arched

aforesaid: to which place flow together the peoples, to sit

and to prostrate themselves on the second day of Pentecost the day of his

death, partly devotion's sake, partly indeed that from

some sickness they may convalesce, as the aforesaid and

below-written respectively spontaneously testified the most R.

D. Angelus, Priest Curate of the church of S. Columba

aforesaid, of the age of years sixty: who said also

in his above-said church to have on silk painted the said

Blessed, with the arms of the Noble Azzolini

of Siena, the breast touched in the Sacerdotal manner;

and Sanctes Augustini de Pepis of years sixty

five, an image in the church of S. Columba. and Dominicus Antonii de Gazzeis of years

sixty five, and Dominicus Joannis de

Joris of years fifty four, and John

Baptist Antonii de Gagliardis of years forty

five, the sacred things touched, at my of the Notary below-written

delation swore, before the below-written witnesses,

to be of the same Blessed Augustine Novellus, and devotion's

sake of him made, and so to have heard publicly; and always

from their elders to have heard, that such things venerated

were; themselves too and all others to have venerated,

and still in the same veneration to remain.

In the walls of the said oratory, having in the vaults

divers of divers Saints pictures, His deeds done are expressed by a picture in the vault. with the Evangelists

likewise painted, are painted, namely the said

Blessed's admirable entry into the Augustinian Religion;

his bad health lying in bed, where

he is seen sending to be called the Religious, which twice repeated

in two other following places is seen;

when of the said Religion he took the habit from one of the said

Augustinian Religion Brother, he is seen with knees

bent, reverence making to the Crucified, clothed

in the habit of the Religion aforesaid; are seen also many

poor and lame, having recourse to him, alms

and grace about to carry back: are seen other particulars,

but not rightly are perceived for the time's antiquity, and the head with splendors:

which therefore are passed over: but well

and rightly is seen the same Blessed's head with splendors,

and some other persons prayer openly having

with one religious: is seen the very Blessed a book

holding, and beside or on one part is seen standing a herdsman:

likewise with splendors he is seen praying before a Cross etc.

[4] I Dominicus Julii of the late John de Boschis,

Notary public and citizen of Siena, the Notary and Witnesses subscribing. because these I saw

and heard, therefore required into a note I took, and into

this public form I reduced, and with my wonted sign

I fortified, to the praise of God, of the most Blessed Virgin mother

Mary, of D. Dominic, of S. Lucia, and of Blessed Augustine

Novellus. The acts aforesaid were in the said places, and (as to

those things which were seen and heard) in the church of S. Leonard

of the Convent of S. Leonard, before and present Bartholomew

of the late Jerome del Banda, and Sebastian

of the late Jerome of Siena, rustics in the aforesaid commune

of S. Columba, on the day XXIII of the said month.

[5] Returned to Siena, together with the most R. P. Master

Otho, I betook myself to the great Hospital of S. Mary

of the Stairs: and the previous license of the most Illustrious Rector of that

place D. Lawrence de Daccis a Noble of Siena, In the hospital is a picture of him giving the habit to its Rector. I went

into the place named il Pellegrinario, or the Infirmary

old, where are very many pictures

of divers Saints, Blessed, Evangelists,

Prophets, and the like: among which of the year

one thousand four hundred forty-second,

with an excellent hand painted and very well conserved,

painted Blessed Augustine Novellus I saw, clothing

with the habit of a Rector the Rector of the Hospital, with

these below words precise. How S. Augustine

Novellus gave the habit to the Rector of the Hospital.

[6] On the day following, namely XXIV of the same month

and year, The Life and miracles in a double Ms. together with the said most Reverend Fathers, I went I

the Notary above-said into the Archive of the said Convent

of S. Augustine of Siena: and I saw two books in quarto

leaf, one on sheepskin parchment with covers

wooden and its clasps of brass at the end; and another

on ordinary paper, without covers, but in an ancient

character written and well preserved, in which are

described the Life and many miracles of the said Saint.

[7] In the church of the same Convent I saw an altar with

most Reverend Fathers, lay the body of the said Blessed, before it had been sent

into the aforesaid marble chest: in

which wooden chest are four pictures ancient, but

with a good hand and well conserved, which they said to be

in memory of the said Blessed: the first namely, when

sick he lay in bed, and his servants he sent to be about to call

the religious of the Religion aforesaid, but in the act

of their departing one greatly is humbled, the other

looks back whence he departs. In the second are seen two Fathers,

together with the said servants, and D. Augustine in

the air, the calling of the Blessed, the assumption of the habit, who with his hands pushes them back to the said Blessed sick.

The third contains the said Blessed with splendors

golden, clothed in a tunic, scapular and hood white,

and a belt black, kneeling before an altar, nay

before a Religious in the church in the Augustinian habit

clothed, resembling a Superior of the said Religion; and him

receiving there the habit black with much

humility, having behind his servants, now in other

garments clothed than before, when they led

the Religious to the sick man. In the fourth picture appears

the said Blessed with his golden splendors, in garments

sacred clothed, the ordination, kneeling before a Bishop in a black

garment clothed, putting on him a chasuble: from which

appears his to the Priesthood ordination. There standing

are seen other Friars of the same Religion. In

the sacristy in a square panel painted, of the height of one

arm about and of the breadth like, appears a certain

Religious, in the Augustinian habit with splendors

golden, denoting the Blessed or Saint:

at whose left is painted a Bishop, having a pastoral staff,

in the Augustinian habit clothed before the door of the church,

receiving a certain head in a basin, with splendors

golden, with pomp reached forth by a certain

King, having with him many in various garments clothed

and adorned, with the standard of the King, half black

and half white above, with a great Cross golden with

other six Crosses small intermediate, and in the part

black are seen some lilies golden, and in the top likewise

said to be of the same Blessed, receiving at Naples

gratis the Lord Luke the Evangelist's head. And because these I saw,

read and heard I the Notary public, therefore here publicly

I attest required. There follows the subscription of Fabius

Sergardius Patrician of Siena, General Vicar of the most Illustrious

Archbishop and of witnesses two.

[8] In God's name Amen. In the year of the Incarnation

aforesaid, on the day XXVIII of the month aforesaid… Called

I the Lord Boschus, who above by the aforesaid R.

P. Master Otho Petruccio of Siena, again into the aforesaid

of Siena Church, under the title and devotion of S. Augustine

otherwise of Blessed Augustine Novellus, among some

little pictures existing in the altars (one namely

under the name and devotion of S. Stephen Protomartyr,

of the Noble Lords de Pinis; An image in the altars of S. Stephen and the other

of the most ancient and most noble family de Ghinuccis,

vulgarly the altar of Our Lady of the childbirth) about to see

the images there therefore placed in the altars aforesaid;

among the little images of divers Saints

and Blessed, I saw in that of the Lords de Pinis

painted a Saint or Blessed, of whom there is not there

written nor sculptured a name, having a book

red in his hands, and at his right ear a dove:

which said the aforesaid P. Master Otho Petruccio to be

in honor of this Blessed. In that moreover named

of Our Lady of the childbirth…of the most ancient family

de Ghinuccis, I saw a picture of the said Blessed, and of the Mother of God. with an Angel

at the ear, but somewhat effaced by age, and below

in an ancient character these words, Saint Augustine

Novellus: which all the pictures are of the same

or like habit of the Augustinian Religion; declaring

further, in the hands of the said Blessed in the altar of Our

Lady, to be painted a book red like the above-said.

In faith of which etc.

ANNOTATIONS.

APPENDIX II.

Testimonies of the cult and Relics sent to Termini in Sicily, under the day XX of April in the year 1620.

Augustine Novellus, Prior general of the Order of Hermits of S. Augustine, at Siena in Etruria (S.)

FROM THE MS. PROCESS.

[9] We the below-written make faith, how

true it be, The feast on the 2nd day of Pentecost. that in the city of Siena in the convent

of S. Augustine of the Fathers of the same Order, in each

year is celebrated the feast of Blessed Augustine Novellus of the Order

of S. Augustine, on the second day of Pentecost, beginning

from the first Vespers, in which a procession being instituted

there is going to his altar, singing the hymn, Magne

pater Augustine: and while the Fathers approached the altar,

they sing the Antiphon: Augustine the way of morals,

the norm You are of monks, to the citizens join us of the Heavens

the throng, who you of Doctors professes the canon.

Then the Verse, pray for us Blessed Augustine, that worthy

we may be made etc. And is added the Prayer: Creator of all,

as below. On the very moreover feast day is sung a Mass solemn

of the Holy Spirit occurring, and at the second Vespers

is repeated the Procession, as at the first Vespers.

So it is Master Brother Bartholomew de Ricciolinis of Florence,

Prior of the Convent of S. Augustine of Siena.

I Brother Christopher of Siena Secretary confirm.

And these, partly in Italian, partly in Latin, Vincent Auria

subjoined to the Life by him published, as received from the Register of privileges,

where are noted the privileges and other things of the most splendid

city of Termini, making faith and subscribing

Antony Mola Master Notary. He adds then

from the same Register, under the same Notary's faith, a testimony

Archiepiscopal of the body of Blessed Augustine Novellus in

the city of Siena, and his adoration and miracles, of this

tenor.

[10] Ascanius Piccolomineus de Aragona, by God's and

the Apostolic See's grace Archbishop of Siena, The Archbishop of Siena to all

and singular… elders due reverence,

to the rest indeed greeting in the Lord… Since

to a just one petitioning is not to be denied assent, and of truth

on the part of the most Splendid City of Termini, to

the honor of omnipotent God and His Saints,

and namely of Blessed Augustine Novellus, we have been required,

that of the within contained a testimony of truth

we should bear; therefore preceding a diligent upon the below-written

of some worthy of faith, an inquisition made by means of their

Oath had, examination previous, moreover

Novellus, in the church of the Reverend Brothers of the Order

of Hermits of S. Augustine in this Siena city, and

so upon the same had full information; by the tenor

of our presents faith undoubted we make

and testify, how in this city and church

present of the Order of S. Augustine, the body and altar of the aforesaid

Blessed Augustine Novellus, of the aforesaid Order is found

erected with a sepulchre marble, under an inscription,

namely: Here Lies the Body of Blessed Augustine

Novellus of the Order Hermit, and his image,

and figure with an Angel at the ear right placed,

and four prodigies depicted, namely; A boy by a dog

to death torn, and through Blessed Augustine Novellus

to health restored. Likewise a boy from a high falling window,

and on the ground prostrate, by the same Blessed's vow rose

unhurt. Likewise a boy, the head crushed, to death come,

by the same Blessed's vow unhurt appeared. And at last

rose, by the Blessed's invocation. Likewise we testify how

are found at the said altar and sepulchre,

the said Blessed's body, and image and figure, and before a lamp

day and night lit: the aforesaid publicly are venerated,

and worshipped. the feast to be celebrated To the said Blessed's cult and honor

the Brothers of the said convent, in each year, on the day first

and second of Pentecost, together with a Priest,

in a cope of silk clothed bearing a thurible, with a great

of people confluence, devotion and veneration,

the Hymn of the common of Confessors, namely Iste

Confessor, singing, with wax torches at the same Blessed's

altar both placed and lit, from a most ancient and

never prescribed and without interruption of any

time length, processionally by an immemorial

custom approached and approach; and the completed

of the said Blessed Hymn; and the body and altar

incensed, the cantors with a loud voice chant; Pray for

us Blessed Augustine Novellus, the Choir responds; That

worthy we may be made of the promises of Christ: the Priest

moreover chanting says; Let us pray. Creator, founder,

and distributor omnipotent and merciful God, who

Blessed Augustine Novellus Your Confessor

an eremitical life to lead, and with miracles to glitter made;

grant we beseech to us Your servants, so his

life and morals to imitate, that with him partakers we may be

of the glory of the Blessed: through our Lord etc. We attest

also, how at the said altar of Blessed Augustine

Novellus daily a Mass is celebrated, and at his altar Masses to be made. we

not repugnant, and the Apostolic See tolerating.

This public cult for the said Blessed Novellus,

for years three hundred to have been employed, always and continuously,

and at present to be employed and rendered, ascertained

it is; as is plain evidently. In testimony of all which.

Given in our Palace, holding, on the day twentieth

of November 1632. The Archbishop of Siena.

Bernard Bartolinus Notary, and Chancellor by

mandate.

[11] Thus far he, of his See in the year third, which then

very long he held, by Ughellus tome 3 col. 665 praised, as

one who no less by doctrine and virtue shone, than his brother

the Duke of Amalfi in leading in Belgium Catholic armies,

for the of the Royal provinces defense. The same, I know not

by what occasion, again after thirty years, under the day IX of January

1663, a like nearly Testimony wrote,

whose original with the R. P. M. Augustine Trabucco,

of Palermo of the Order Hermit, found

Vincent and published, nor worth the labor it seems to repeat:

only I note from this more specially to be clear, that the Altar of the Blessed is

in number the fifth, from the hand left of the entrance of the church.

He adds also this very Testimony, an icon, in which

is painted the effigy of the same Blessed, with splendors,

at the ear right an Angel speaking, in his hand

two trees; to have at the right two, and other two

miracles at the left; the first, demonstrating an infant by

precipitate; the third, a certain one ascending in

in a cradle sleep taking, while by the mother unnaturally

broken the cord, the boy slipped on the ground, a great

wound suffers, by the Blessed's intercession freed.

In which some diversity appears, from the manner in which the same

miracles explained had been before years thirty. Namely

in marble: therefore easy was after so many years

the explanation somewhat to be varied, remaining the same of the miracle

substance. Says also this testimony, that Several vows

of the faithful from the obtained graces are hanging, in number

seventeen: and is assigned a Hymn the same as above,

Iste Confessor: whence is understood, within the year of this century

XX and XXX, a change made, and ceased to be used

the hymn, Magne Pater Augustine: and deservedly, because

this Hymn, for the festivities of the very holy Doctor

composed, ought not to another to be applied, with danger of confusion

thence sometime to come.

[12] There follows finally in Vincent Auria the Act

of the most Illustrious and most Reverend Don Ferdinand de Andrada,

Archbishop of Palermo, of the relics of Blessed

Augustine Novellus, in the City of Termini (which here

by an ancient name Himera is called) and his adoration

permitted. We Ferdinand de Andrada and Castro,

by God's and the Apostolic See's grace Archbishop of Palermo, Two fragments of bones

of the Council of his Catholic Majesty

etc. to all and singular these presents about to see, to read,

and likewise to hear known we make and testify,

since the Reverend Don Julius Regna, Protonotary

Apostolic, formerly Archpriest of the greater of Himera

city church, of our Palermo diocese, had accepted

in the Plain of the maritime and fishing of the same

city, and there had adored in the presence of very many

Priests and Clerics, both secular

and regular, and of the Spectable Jurats the Syndic

and Secretary and Master Proctor of the city

aforesaid, the below-written relics of Blessed Augustine Novellus

of the Order of Hermits of S. Augustine, namely two

fragments of bones of the arm, vulgarly called ficili, upon

which is in part some skin and flesh with hairs

affixed, from the body of the said Blessed Augustine, as below,

taken and in a certain box wooden placed, conveyed,

and brought by the late P. F. Joseph li Maistri Doctor

of Sacred Theology of the Order of Friars Minor Conventual of S. Francis,

of the aforesaid Spectable Jurats Proctor; to whom they were

in the city of Florence by the Most Serene Lord

Don Cosmo Medici the second, given to the Termini-folk by the Grand Duke, Great

of Etruria Duke fourth, in the name of the University

of the said city consigned, and to the same Most Serene Grand

Duke as a gift given by the Father Master Prior of the Convent

of the said Order of Hermits of S. Augustine of the city

of Siena, and by the same Father Prior taken

from the body of the said Blessed Augustine Novellus, in the church of the same

convent existing, in which church the aforesaid

body is adored and venerated: and this, standing

the license of the most Eminent Lord Cardinal de Auria,

formerly Archbishop our Predecessor, to the aforesaid

Spectable Jurats granted, of entering into the same city

of Termini the Relics aforesaid, which were

by the said Reverend Archpriest de Regna

received, to the effect that them he might bring and convey

into the said greater church, and there deposit in

the name of the said Spectable Jurats, in the name of the University

and People aforesaid; as to be seen is from the series

of the Act of this kind of consignation, celebrated before the notary

Jerome de Martino of Himera, on the day

twentieth of the month of July of the year 1620. And when the said

Father Master Joseph li Maistri life withdrawn, with a particle of flesh given to that Proctor, before

his death had declared, another fragment of flesh

small, which with him remained, to have been of the said

Relics of the said Blessed Augustine Novellus, by him carried

into the said city of Termini, and to him consigned by the said

Most Serene Great of Etruria Duke; it was by

the mandate of the said most Eminent Cardinal Doria Archbishop

predecessor of ours provided, the said

fragment of flesh to be kept with the said two present

Relics, and to be venerated as with the said

proper proven, as were the said Relics

into the said greater Termini church brought,

and to public cult exposed: as also from the series of an Act

of this kind of mandate made, in the acts of the Court spiritual

of the said city on the day XX of October, XI Indiction 1627,

and of the Faith of the Reverend Don Francis Anfuso, Vicar

forane of the same city made, under the day XXX of the month

of June lately past, XIII Indiction of the instant 1645,

we saw to be contained, to which both in all things

and through all things let there be relation. There was therefore to us

supplicated by the said Spectable Jurats and Syndic

of the aforesaid Himera city, that standing the writings

and acts aforesaid of Blessed Augustine Novellus, which in the said

greater Himera church are conserved, to grant

we would deign. We indeed attending the aforesaid Blessed Augustine

Novellus' body's veneration, are permitted to be exposed to public veneration. which hitherto

in the said church of the said convent of Saint Augustine

of the city of Siena is kept, and this kind of people's

of the Himera city devotion toward this Blessed,

we gave a Judge in the cause the Reverend Don Francis

Salerno, by virtue of an act of this kind of election

made in the acts of our Archiepiscopal, on the day XXVIII

of the said month of June 1645, whether the Relics aforesaid

to be adored and venerated can. And it was by the said de

Salerno to us reported, the Relics aforesaid (attended

and well considered the writings aforesaid) to be adored

able and venerated. For this it was, the Promoter cited first

Fiscal of our Archiepiscopal, under the day first

of the present, by the said de Salerno, by our mandate

made a provision on the back of the said memorial with

the writings aforesaid, under the day 4 also of the present, that

they have license of exposing and adoring the relics

of Blessed Augustine Novellus, as before, and let be made letters

in form, and the oath stand among the acts. Therefore

by the tenor of the presents the same license, and faculty

we give and grant, the above-said of Blessed Augustine Novellus

Relics in the said greater Himera church publicly

to be exposed able, and by all of Christ's faithful

duly and piously as before to be venerated and revered, and processionally

through the same city in each year to be led around

on the day of his Translation, as the same body

of Blessed Augustine Novellus in the said church of the Convent of S.

Augustine of Siena aforesaid is venerated, adored, and revered.

In faith of which the present we gave, with our

subscription and the seal which we use sealed.

At Palermo on the day VIII of July, XIII Indiction 1645, Ferdinand

Archbishop of Palermo. By the mandate

of the most Illustrious and most Reverend Lord Archbishop

of Palermo. Antoninus Camali Master Notary of Jerome

de Albano Acting. In expressing by ciphers the number

of the Indiction, a double of the printer error to be corrected

was; one at the end, where was noted the Indiction 15, which

above after the middle rightly was noted 13: and another there

after the middle a little before, where in place of the Indiction 11, begun

with September of the year 1627, wrongly was numbered the Indiction 15.

OF BLESSED BARTHOLOMEA OR ELIZABETH

VIRGIN OF THE THIRD ORDER OF THE SERVANTS OF BLESSED MARY

AT SIENA IN ETRURIA. A HISTORICAL COLLECTION.

Her cult, elogium, relics.

A.D. 1348.

Commentary

Bartholomea or Elizabeth Virgin, of the Third Order of the servants of Blessed Mary, at Siena in Etruria (B.)

BY THE AUTHOR D. P.

[1] Archangel Gianius of Florence, in the Annals

of the Order of the Servants of Blessed Mary, about the year

1618 published, book 2 of the Century

2 begins from the year 1248, Her memory as Blessed in the Annals of the Order and the Fasti of Siena.

in which a plague immense, from the Sicilian shores suddenly arisen,

an entire nearly triennium held, with the greatest of men

and beasts slaughter through the world whole; to the very

Order also mournful, on account of the death inflicted on its ninth General

Matthew. This death, in the month of November undergone,

of Siena, who also Bartholomea, before

the sacred of the Blessed Virgin habit she had received,

was called. For on which day, he says, of S. Pudentiana

Virgin the memory is venerated, on the XIV Kalends of June, from

the prison of the flesh to heaven she was translated. He makes mention of the same

on this day in his Fasti of Siena our P.

Sebastian Conti of Pistoia, the elogium's argument from Gianius

borrowing, under the sole name of B. Bartholomea. We from

the fountains, when we can, more gladly drawing, the of more elegant

style curious reader to those Fasti we refer, and

of Bartholomea or Elizabeth herself the deeds, as in

the Chronicle of the Order they are narrated, from Gianius we receive.

[2] The most prudent Virgin Bartholomea, who also

Elizabeth de Vajariis, By the institution of B. Francis of Siena a life she leads, of Siena, a Sister of the third Order

of the Servants, and of Blessed Francis the most beloved disciple,

of so great a master the footsteps having followed, to the same beatitude

merited to come: of whom indeed the same is the labor

glorious, the same surely ought to be the reward and wages

copious. Which indeed wages how she has

obtained that woman sacred, it is fair to assert. For

(as relate the Annals of the monastery of Siena) taught by

Blessed Francis, a vow of chastity she vowed and inviolably

observed; the counsels, as precepts, she fulfilled; fasts

and macerations of the flesh were to her the most sumptuous banquets,

prayer likewise and sacred confession, chaste eloquences, which

always she had before her mouth: for fifty times in the day and

fifty times in the night Christ and the Virgin Mother of God

she saluted, that the remission of sins and

of mind jubilation she might obtain. Sins daily to expiate

she strove, nay at the feet of Priests fallen,

certain things with tears herself accusing she confessed, in

which scarcely anything of defilement appeared, those namely

which in childhood idly she had said.

[3] Relate some, that, when her body she refreshed

with bread, by a demon she was assailed with these words, and variously is tempted. O glutton!

what do you merit by eating? She indeed the enemy's frauds

knowing, so much the more to eat she strove,

by how much the serpent cunning by envy was tortured.

Many other things of this Virgin's temptations and abstinence

are said by the Fathers, which all are omitted. Only

this to all be known, that her ashes

at Siena remain in the edifice of the Servants of Blessed Mary the Virgin,

which still with miracles shine: the head of the dead one shines with miracles. her indeed venerable

Head, upon the heads of the infirm placed, them

from languors cures, and at the same time the possessed by a demon

frees. That also seems of it by no means in silence

to be passed over, that the same Head, long after

death cast into fire (whether that by chance happened,

or that some of it proof be made) unburnt

and unhurt as before, all marveling and venerating,

remained. Her image, anciently painted,

appears in the Sisters of our Order manner clothed, with

and a crown at the girdle. But if anyone her

food at the table blessing with a demon standing by

should paint, the matter perhaps more nearly, according to her

narrated history, would attain; and her type from

other of this kind of Blessed images more elegant

without doubt would represent.

[4] Thus far Gianius, of the Annals more ancient to the words

some things (as appears) adding of his own, nor incongruously. unhurt by fire about the year 1570. P. Sebastian

affirms, the miracle of the unhurt by fire Skull a hundred

years about from the time of his writing, that is about

the year 1570 to have happened; and it in the of Siena of the Servants

temple, in a precious enclosed shrine, to be kept. Of the temptations

indeed of the Blessed herself he adds, that the enemy, though daily

routed, dared upon the dying Bartholomea

with stronger snares to rise. Opportunely however,

he says, was present conspicuous from heaven the most beneficent of the serving

her Virgins Patroness; and the tartarean dark-dweller

eliminated, up to her last breath, no

less than a blessed to her eyes serenity, a serene

to the lying one's breast tranquillity she kept. in some elevation of bones separated from them. Now

said moreover the veneration of the Head, for so many years of which the beginning to be assigned cannot be continued, the Ordinaries knowing and not contradicting,

an argument is, her without doubt

with the Siena-folk to have been held always for Blessed; and makes

also verisimilar, some of the body elevation

and translation, either under some altar, or to a more honorable

in the church monument, already formerly to have been made; in

which the Head from the rest of the body, for the greater of the faithful convenience,

separated was; although of this kind of elevation or translation

neither the author, nor the time, nor circumstances other

now are commemorated, nor of the burial even first or second

the place is shown any more.

[5] Of the afore-mentioned Blessed Francis we treated on the XVI of May,

and saw in n. 4, an excessive of women familiarity

to him by the envious objected to have been; and him, that

the occasion of calumny he might cut off, humbly having besought

to have obtained deafness, through which from all of men colloquy

he might be excused. her with Blessed Francis familiarity. Among those Bartholomea to have been and

with him to have borne a part of the injurious sharp-tongue, for of her virtue

appears to confirm the conjecture, by which one would lay,

her of those two Virgins one to have been, who him

preaching a globe fiery to have seen affirmed

above his very head. Less even

foundedly might say now first someone, that the same was that noble and holy

of Siena Matron, who, in the same as the Blessed expired

hour, beheld him brighter than the sun before the sight

of the most holy Trinity to be led, and on his head

Neither however either is repugnant to the reason of the times, since Francis

for whole twenty-three years before Bartholomea died;

or is foreign to her sanctity exceeding, which

the aforesaid sufficiently and superabundantly confirm.

OF BLESSED ANDREW OF PESCHIERA,

OF THE ORDER OF PREACHERS IN THE VALTELLINA.

PRELIMINARY COMMENTARY.

Of the Summary of the Life, the cult, the translation.

A.D. 1480.

Preface

Andrew of Peschiera, of the Order of Preachers in the Valtellina (B.)

D. P.

[1] Of the Sanctuary or Martyrology of Como,

in the year 1675 printed, the author D. Primus

Aloysius de Tattis, of the Congregation

Somascan Theologian and of the holy Office Consultor, The cult at Morbegno,

at the XIV Kalends of June notes

At Morbegno, of the Valtellina

of Blessed Andrew of Peschiera of the Order of S. Dominic, and his

long elogium weaves; and in the Annotations these he subjoins.

His life's compendium, from the ancient of the Morbegno cenobium

monuments, and from S. Benignus the Abbot's Acts

manuscript, published at Como in the year of the Lord

1644 Lactantius Guarinonus of the Order of Preachers:

with whom agree, John Michael Plodius

and Leander Albertus on the illustrious men of the Order of S.

Dominic; Lazarus Carafinus in the Catalogue of the Saints

and Blessed, whose bodies are kept in

the diocese of Como; Francis Ballarinus, of the Chronicle

of Como in part 3 ch. 2, and others. Of these Leander

in book 5, into the Lives of Blessed Venturinus and Conradinus interweaving a nomenclature

of certain men, with exalted sanctity shining,

with the title of Blessed in the margin, this only says, Andrew

of Peschiera at Morbegno shines with miracles. With more prolix

words, but scarcely more significant, uses

Bellarinus; and buried he says about the year of the Lord

1490. In this however both him to err, as much as

those who the year 1485 define, convicts the Epitaph

with a more prolix of virtue elogium published in Plodius

or Pius book 3 §. 48: for it is said, that

[2] In one thousand four hundred he died eighty under years.

The certain day, says Primus-Aloysius, is unknown: to which

was substituted another of the Reposition or Elevation,

when namely the venerable of the same bones a more decent

obtained tomb, in the year 1497.

Adorn him to these very times several little images

of wax and of silver, which not only a singular

of the peoples observance toward the blessed man,

but also the supernal his intercession attest

upon those, who by some pressed sickness his patronage

implored. Not yet is he enrolled in

the Album of the Saints, although everywhere by all is held

Blessed, and before his Relics a lamp pendent always

burns. Thus far the Author of the Martyrology; who asked

the very one, which he alleges, of Lactantius the Summary to communicate,

kindly did. It indeed since besides the elogium of the life it contains

the history of the Translation afore-noted, and some miracles,

it will be congruous in Latinity to give. First however I note,

Morbegno a notable town, where the Blessed here is venerated

to the Adda river, from Rhaetia sprung and into the Como

lake at length plunging itself, to lie adjacent, on its bank right,

there nearly where into the very river another smaller flows in,

Bito called.

ACTS

From the Italian of Lactantius Guarinonus of the Order of Preachers.

Andrew of Peschiera, of the Order of Preachers in the Valtellina (B.)

FROM THE ITALIAN OF LACTANTIUS GUARINONUS.

[1] Peschiera a, of the Dominion Venetian a fortress, to the blessed Father

Andrew of being born the place gave, in a family

of Greeks, as much indeed as to gather is permitted from the Life

having entered, an age surely opportune and mature

for entering upon of the remaining of life's course counsels, The entry into the Order of Preachers having considered

the vanity of secular pleasures and the uncertitude

of riches, to the transitory all sent a renunciation;

and a secure of salvation port regarding, where he might be

outside the tumults and storms by which the world is tossed,

he chose the most holy Order of Preachers,

by doctrine and sanctity as much as possible flourishing.

He received himself moreover into the Congregation

Lombard, which then as a dawn rising

glittered with the rays of most holy men, the whole Order

illuminating. In this so fervently he ran

to perfection, he tills the Valtellina that quickly its summit he obtained;

wherefore nor he feared himself to give into the public, that

he might shine to the world, who burned for God. For indeed (if not

deceives us the Life aforesaid of S. Benignus) very young

he came into the Valtellina, and before was founded

the venerable Convent of S. Antony: where from

one another divided those zealous preachers of truth, one

from one, the other from the other part were busy of the inhabitants

the minds to kindle to virtue; uncertain in what precisely

year; but this certain, that the Convent aforesaid

was built about the year 1465, under

the governance of the first there constituted Prior P. Brother Bartholomew

Maggii of Como, as in the books of accounts is demonstrated.

[2] by sermon and example All of Andrew the Preachings, to his institute conformable,

to this tended, that of the peoples he should care the conversion,

their minds deeply imprinting the contempt

of mundane and the love of celestial things.

Which to him marvelously succeeded, since in the whole valley no

however small place he left unaccessed,

in which he did not sow God's word, so much more penetratingly

the hearts striking, by how much of a more profound humility

and Apostolic simplicity by examples he went before.

Outside the Convent about to spend the night, with the poor

more gladly and more frequently he lodged than with

the rich; more this to be expedient judging, whether for diminishing

in his hearers the estimation of the comforts

of this world, or for continuing the more austere

which he used of food manner, with only bread from millet

grains made and chestnuts and water content, nor unless

hardly to lie wont: with a glad nonetheless always

countenance, of God mostly speaking, and the charity to him

by his hosts corporally bestowed spiritually

remunerating. It is not easy to explain, with how great he burned

zeal for all to Christ to be gained: a true

surely of his great Patriarch Dominic son, he dies in the year 1480 whose

breast not other had been than a furnace of love toward

the neighbor. In whose obeisance this servant of God whole

himself expended and over-expended, until

of mortal life the term he attained, of rare sanctity footsteps

after himself leaving, in the year 1480; and therefore of celestial

honors worthy esteemed by all.

[3] That moreover the devotion of the peoples toward this of the afflicted

consoler, the father of the poor, the master

of the ignorant, is translated in the year 1497 and the leader of sinners more might be kindled

after his death; willed God that in the year

1497, from the of the common burial humility

raised the bones should be carried to a tomb, in a chapel of S.

Roch erected, with due honor; painted above

his image radiated, and subscribed, Pray for

us Blessed Andrew of Peschiera. On each side painted

also were his miracles of the chief two, of whose

memory together with the picture was covered with lime,

by the incurious of the to be conserved antiquity men,

when in the year 1627 the chapel of S. Roch was whitened:

there remain however up to today votive little panels several,

with anathemas of silver and of wax, and a lamp before

the sepulchre burning, from that perhaps time in which first

the tomb erected was, with this Epitaph anciently

inscribed.

Brought forth Andrew with a fortunate Peschiera birth,

Of the high-speaking Order who the fortunate yokes bore.

he is praised in the Epitaph, He preferred at a slender, sumptuous than to eat at a table,

The arduous things of the cloister to whom sweet made love.

He imbued with auspices happy these peoples;

Of Christ's the asserter of Religion he was.

The very many things which he did living and by death pressed

Prodigies, these proclaim how great his grace.

To this one worth the labor so often to relieve the poor wretches,

He unfolds immense with piety his bosoms.

In one thousand four hundred he died eighty under years,

Who here reposes, of the Valley and of Morbegno mindful.

[4] Time nonetheless, by which slacken and grow tepid

even most fervent beginnings, gradually had extinguished

of the peoples the devotion: The cult renewed about the year 1623 and 1630, this therefore that

they might resuscitate the Morbegno-folk, in the year 1623 with new

ornaments the tomb they adorned. Which done grew warm

again the ancient toward the blessed man religion,

especially in the year 1630 raging an epidemic plague:

when of the Community of Morbegno the Magistracy,

among other things a vow made of caring for the of the sacred bones

Translation at the cost of crowns two hundred,

if, what it hoped, it should obtain from God; and to the same

soon others by making a testament added legacies various.

It was begun therefore the following soon year of such

was of that business the care: is decreed a new translation in the year 1641 but the public of those times

calamities, and which various supervened impediments,

the matter deferred up to the Priorate of the Reverend P. Brother

Thomas Fontana; under whom so much was advanced,

that in the year 1641, when he already was of his office discharged

and it was vacant, the last hand was applied

to the work, on the occasion of the coming into the Valtellina,

on account of certain his businesses, the most Illustrious and most Reverend

D. Lazarus Carafinus Bishop of Como.

[5] Then indeed it was agreed between the most illustrious Syndics

of Morbegno and the Fathers of the Convent of S. Antony,

that through their on each side proctor, the Bishop of Como consenting: namely

the most Illustrious D. Peter Antony of Castello

of S. Nazarius, a suppliant for this libel they should offer,

as was done they having gone forth in the encounter of his most Illustrious

and most Reverend Lordship, then in

the Convent residing; by which he was asked to favor the counsel,

undertaken to the honor of one Blessed, so greatly

honored by the people, esteemed by the Dominican Religion,

and by the very Bishop entered in the tablets of the Martyrology

of Como, with this most worthy elogium:

Brother Andrew of Peschiera of his morals the piety by miracles

after death wrought showed: that nothing be said

of John Michael Pius of Bologna, Inquisitor

of Milan and formerly of Lombardy Provincial,

and of Leander Albertus most honorably of him

having spoken. It was added, at Peschiera the country of the Blessed, in the church

greater an altar to be had, to his name dedicated, with a lamp

before it burning, as testified

the most Illustrious and most Reverend Bishop of Verona.

[6] These heard approved his most Illustrious and most Reverend

Lordship, who the tomb opening and praised of the parties supplicating

the devotion: to which that he might comply, he resolved

before all things by himself to be inspected the chest.

Therefore having assumed into testimony men some noble

of the Morbegno place, to the church he betook himself; and

the doors closed behind him he went to the chest, of brick work

fabricated, and founded upon a spacious stone: and

all things diligently described in a Process thereupon

made, he ordered to be broken by the masons the tomb

from one end. This done there appeared inside a wooden chest

red, outside with a linen cloth wrapped; and it thence

drawn out and unsealed we saw, with great solace

of all, the venerable bones of him who so faithfully served

the Lord; with which a glass phial, and

in it a membrane wrapped, and with words of this kind

inscribed. he finds the testimony of the first Translation, This is the body of the venerable Father and

blessed Brother, Andrew of Peschiera, who for a long time

through this Valley's towns and villages preached,

never nearly, unless when to wash he wished, his garments

drawing off; beds plainly leaving, and upon twigs

always sleeping; foods delicate rejecting, with millet

bread, chestnuts, and of water drink his life sustaining;

with the poor most gladly lodged, and them by examples

rather than of words by leaves to live well

persuading. With a holy end he rested in the year 1480, in

the convent of Blessed Antony the Abbot; and in this mausoleum

laid 1497 on the day XIX of the month of May,

through the Venerable Brother Dominic of… From the other

of the membrane part was written: This blessed Father's

soul among the Heaven-dwellers placed, no one

of those knowing is who doubts, both through the zeal which

most fervent he had of souls, both through the testimony

of all: and as is said Venerable… both

therefore the miracles, with which him after death the Lord

to decorate willed… For while with

even in the spaces by dots noted.

[7] These read through and transcribed, were collected

the sacred bones into a linen cloth, and replaced within a little box

new, and the bones he transfers into a portable chest, which with three seals sealed within a cell

Lordship should return from Ardenno. Meanwhile every which way

was diffused the report of the future Translation:

was sent also someone to Peschiera, to invite of that

place the Chief men, that they might choose from their number

some about to be present at the solemnity. Finally returned

after the businesses performed to Morbegno the most Illustrious and most Reverend

Lord on the day VIII of June, 8 June, and on the morrow

(for Sunday it was) to complete all things desiring; the aforesaid

sacred bones he replaced within a box of lead,

within with a silk cloth clothed, sealing it over

certain silk bands to it drawn around. After

that of Musicians from divers places summoned a choir

notable, with great pomp, led down the deposit

venerable to the church, singing the Hymn,

Iste Confessor: and the most Reverend P. Brother Peter Martyr

of Acqua-nigra Inquisitor of Como, to the solemnity

invited also himself, in a pluvial cope clothed

stood at the foot of the stairs, from the dormitory of the convent

leading to the church; which whole in the manner of a noble

theatre marvelously was adorned, with little trees h of equal

tallness. Not far from the steps, upon which

rises the sanctuary, before a numerous Clergy, and nearly in the middle of the church, erected

was an altar, with six candlesticks and a Cross silver,

with seats on each side in order placed up to

the beginning of the steps of the sanctuary, for receiving the Lords

Curates and other Ecclesiastics, designated for

the ministry of the Pontifical Mass and the processional pomp

to honor. Then were begun the Vespers

of Blessed James i the Venetian Dominican, the Office

making the most Reverend Father Inquisitor, before

the most Illustrious Lord Bishop. By his moreover disposition,

all things most studiously and most wisely arranging,

were summoned the Protonotaries Apostolic,

Archpriests, Provosts, Curates, and other all

Ecclesiastics, especially from the territories of Morbegno

and Traona k: and it was ordered that on the very evening

preceding be rung the bells all of the said

territories for an hour entire.

[8] on the morrow the sacred things Pontifically done By such an invitation and also affixed through divers places

papers, excited those whom I said Lords, on Sunday

morning with a notable retinue from everywhere they came together.

The sacred moreover of Mass Office with Pontifical rite and chant

performed the Lord Bishop; and in praise of the

Blessed a panegyric had from Milan summoned a most celebrated

Father, Thomas Reina l of the Society of Jesus.

The Mass finished was raised the Blessed's banner silken,

on each side his image painted exhibiting; which

affording to his sanctity: which however rain, lest a hindrance

to the Procession it should be, soon ceased. The banner moreover

that bore the most Illustrious D. Peter Antony of

Castello of S. Nazarius: there following two Confraternities

under their each banner, then under

its Cross the Fathers of S. Antony, of whom thirteen

from Como and Milan had come, the Fathers also

Reformed of Traona, Processionally it he carries around, the Fathers Capuchin,

the Clergy finally secular very numerous, in chasubles,

dalmatics, surplices and copes clothed, for

each one's grade. Then there was carried before the very most Illustrious one

and the of the sacred bones venerable bier the Crozier

Pastoral, by a certain Ecclesiastic titled,

whom there followed torch-bearers six, all Nobles

of Morbegno; and behind the most Illustrious one himself, to whom

for of devotion the tenderness frequent from his eyes flowed

tears. He with his own shoulders among the first

the sacred bones bore, until others and others in order

should succeed by changed turns, as changed also

those Nobles who of the canopy portable the shafts sustained:

there following again other torch-bearers six, and

D. Diocletian Bergaminus of Peschiera, also a torch

bearing among noble men two. Nothing I say

of the cries of the energumens at the sight of the sacred

deposit raised, nor of the of the persons devout

acclamations glad, and of others' pious tears.

[9] At the church's entrance was built with a beautiful

artifice a triumphal arch, with a notable apparatus of triumphal arches, according to the laws of perspective inward

leading, inscribed with verses and with other furnished

ornaments, upon columns two; so that on the side

right were apses two, with as many statues

and a Cherub, each apse with its as it were wings

embracing, below moreover this elogium:

Sits Andrew near the of Benacus m why waters?

A great fisher what, unless a river, loves?

under other two on the side left statues, above

impending a Cherub, below thus was read:

To Andrew the across-bones-bearing why jubilations do you bring forth?

Me by a word into life glad also himself bore n.

In the bases of the columns was expressed a figure of a Lion,

and under of the very arch the hemicycle hung Angels

flying two, having in the middle a shield ancestral

of the most Illustrious Lord. The eminent above the door

wall woven into the form of garlands ivy

surrounded, and also the image of the very Blessed, under which

such was read an inscription: To Blessed Andrew of Peschiera,

in this once notable valley of souls a lover exceptional,

the sacred renew obsequies you Morbegno-folk. Hither vows,

minds, funeral offerings give. Festive to the bier let leap

joys: tears either let express or let explode gladness.

[10] and with a various of public gladness argument. On the gable of the door rose pyramids four,

and between them a statue of S. Antony, as the Patron

of the church: and at last from the very frontispiece basilican

summit hanging a banner precious, at the will of the light

breeze fluctuated: sounding meanwhile the Morbegno

bells all. At the head of the area before the church

lying open, by which there is going into the streets of the town, at one

or other square stood pyramids two with the insignia

of the Community and of the very Blessed: and from the other

of the area part stood a third pyramid, to the door greater corresponding.

When moreover it came to the market of the very

town, there occurred another triumphal arch,

and next to it a fountain wine good flowing, from the liberality

of a certain person much devoted to the Blessed. Of the houses

moreover the walls with pictures, garlands, and clusters

to be clothed the common of all testified gladness,

by whatever pomp it was led; arches also triumphal

others in other places were seen, until there was returned

to the area of the Convent. Here the sacred bier on their shoulders

received the Dominican Fathers four, to be brought

into the church: who it there placed

upon the altar, the Blessed's Breviary religiously kept. and left to the veneration of the people

that day, together with the very Blessed's Breviary manuscript,

which within a silver chest placed

lay at the foot of the altar. And in this manner

performed that festivity was. Afterward a certain devout

to the Blessed person brought two crutches under-armpit wooden,

on a certain morning found before the altar of S. Mary

Magdalene, which is of the most Illustrious Lords

Castelli, there (as he believed) left by someone,

in his feet maimed and divinely healed.

[11] Certain graces to him attributed, both then, Now indeed to be narrated by me it is, what deposed

John Mateselli of Gerola, as wrought

in the person of his daughter Antonia of months eighteen;

to whom had befallen a continuous certain tremor, with a fever

and a nodding of the eyes assiduous, and an inappetence

of maternal milk. In this state she was brought to D. Priest

Orlandus Curtoni, Curate of Bema,

that her evil he might know and to her bless.

He after some prayers over her recited, persuaded the father,

that the convent of Morbegno of S. Antony approaching,

he should devote her to S. Dominic of Soriano,

and take of the Oil of the lamp before the image of the Saint

burning, and with the same anoint the little one.

He did what to him persuaded was; with the oil moreover

which he received, he wished to be mixed something of another lamp,

before the deposit of Blessed Andrew burning, that with multiplied

intercessors more easily what he desired he might obtain.

Thus instructed and home coming there met him

his wife rejoicing, and saying; I believe that

of blessing something with you you bring: because our daughter

suddenly healed is. He anointed her nonetheless solicitous

the father, and sound thereafter she persevered. This moreover

happened in the year 1642. The same said John

to himself to have happened in his son the preceding year, in the very in which

the Translation was to be made time, when him to S. Dominic

of Soriano and to Blessed Andrew he had commended. and formerly in the year 1488.

There is also in the Convent of S. Antony a book old

of the incomes of the monastery, concluded in the year 1645,

in which is read that in the year 1488,

to Saint Father Dominic, and to Saint Vincent

Ferrer, and to Blessed Andrew vowed sixteen pounds, to be given

to the Convent, if through these Saints' merits children

to him should grant the Lord: of which vow a possessor

made I believe, because afterward in the very book in his hand

he noted that the aforesaid money he had paid.

ANNOTATIONS.

p. When you read S. Dominic of Soriano, do not think of this name the Abbot of Sora, whose Acts we gave 22 January: for to be understood is, the very holy of the Order of Preachers

Patriarch, whose image in the year 1530 from heaven brought to the Sacristan of the church of Soriano in further Calabria, with so great immediately began to shine miracles, that of that image copies, everywhere through the churches of the Order multiplied and to veneration exposed, everywhere nearly it now is found, under the name of S. Dominic of Soriano: of whose there miracles a book good and large in the year 1634 at Messina in the Italian tongue again published Silvester Frangipanius.

Notes

a. The fortress Sangrum (in Dionysius Faber chapter 3 wrongly the fortress Fangri) a place sufficiently fortified at the river of the same name, by some also called Sanguineum: for Sangre to the Italians, is Blood. Maphæus Vegius here notes the Town Signia and calls the citizens Signini: indeed wrongly; for in Etruria that town is.
b. Vernare, as below from the sense is gathered, here is to sing, as namely birds in the springtime are wont.
c. Crapollus seems to be said for Toad, by the French Crapaut. Maphæus puts Beetles: Marinus Scorpions, caterpillars, tarantulas and other venomous reptiles.
a. The Mountain of Murone, commonly Morono, in the territory of Sulmona and Hither Abruzzo.
b. The Mountain of Magella, commonly Majella, in the same tract, but toward the East of the city, since the former place is toward the North. Leander Albertus describes elegantly this mountain at page 392, where also he mentions the habitation of S. Peter Cælestine.
c. Namely S. Peter of Morone himself.
d. A meal, that is a dinner, furnished with cooked foods, and perhaps meats.
e. Vincentius Spinelli in book 2 adds: There is preserved even today that miraculous lamp reverently in a corner of the church, nor can it be discerned of what material it is fabricated, but it tends to an ashen color.
f. Better perhaps, they happened.
a. In the Ms. of Riccius here is prefixed the Title, The Faith of the eleven Cardinals, in what manner Brother Peter of Morone was elected Pontiff in the year 1294.
b. Latinus is addressed Brother, because he was of the Order of Preachers; as also Cardinal Matthæus of the Order of the Minors.
c. Geraldus, and in the epitaph in Ughellus Gerardus, of whom and the other here named Cardinals it can be read in Ciaccone.
d. So the Ms. of Riccius. Faber, the word Sermonis being omitted, reads, ponderaremus [we should weigh].
e. Beraldus de Gout, Archbishop of Lyons, soon by Cælestine created Cardinal of Albano: below de Glotho he is surnamed by Ptolemy of Lucca.
f. Leonardus Mancinus, Bishop of Orvieto, Archbishop of Siponto.
g. Faber wrongly reads and printed Portuensem, not noticing, that a Cardinal one of the chief, was not to be named in the last place after the Bishops: but the Bishop of Patti and Lipari in Sicily Pandulfus this was, until the year 1296, according to Rocchus Pyrrhus.
h. Faber corruptly Aleapolionis, and then Mandagato.
i. Charles of Anjou, brother of S. Louis King of France, with his French expelled from Sicily, and then in the present Neapolitan kingdom dwelling.
k. Saya, whether it is a wood for the Apulians I know not.
l. In the Annals is added both of the Clergy and of the people, but is expressed an enormous multitude of more than two hundred thousand.
m. Landulphus Brancatius of Naples was present at the creation of Clement V in the year 1305.
n. Brother Thomas de Ocra, dead in the year 1300 before Abbot of S. John, of the Cælestine Order, whose Life as of a Blessed Telera describes.
o. Joannes de Castro cæli, a Cassinese monk indeed and Provost of S. Benedict of Capua he was, before in the year 1282 he was created Archbishop of Benevento: but never Abbot.
a. Terra laboris, in Italian Terra di Lavoro, to the ancients Campania felix; if it was once more widely extended, so as to comprehend also the County of Molise, the various opinions of others about the homeland can somehow be reconciled; yet there is no great diversity in the place to be named, of which below more opportunely.
c. Our Manuscript, five iron circles: but since none of the others, who have also read the same Bull, mentions more than one circle; I do not dare to prefer that reading to the common one.
e. Panseria, in Italian Panziera, seems to be derived from Panza (which to the Italians and French sounds the belly), to the Teutons Pense.
f. Faber, exhortationibus.
g. The two following are lacking in the Manuscript of Strozza.
h. Likewise this miracle.
k. For the two following miracles in the Manuscript of Strozza it was thus read: "Two women also contracted in the arms, who also had as it were totally lost the right side, placed upon the tomb of the holy man, forthwith were wonderfully healed."
l. Faber abstains from this solemn conclusion.
m. The year and day of the Canonization is lacking, which our Codex and Bernard Guidonis opportunely designate: the former in the Manuscript Deeds of the Pontiffs, asserting that it was done at Avignon, on the III Nones of May, on a Saturday, in the year of the Lord 1313, but in the 17th year from his death: the latter in the Life of Clement V in Bosquet, writing thus: "This Pope Clement, in the VIII year of his Pontificate, of the Lord's Incarnation 1313, on the fifth day of May on a Saturday, at Avignon canonized Brother Peter of Morrone, formerly Pope Celestine, and under the name of St. Peter noted him in the Catalogue of the Holy Confessors, in the 17th year from the death of St. Peter." Namely in that year the Dominical letter was G. But the memory of this Canonization is inscribed on the said 5th day of May in the monastic fasti of Wion, Dorganius, Menard.
n. Manuscript of Strozza, Of the exceeding Festivity: but, as I said, the style of the Lessons here edited has been changed, wherefore we shall indicate only the more notable discrepancies.
o. Ferentino, an Episcopal city of the Hernici in old Latium, now Roman Campania, near the Latin Way.
a. The Vatican Codex, I know not whether also the Sulmona one, is inscribed as with a common title of the whole work, Life of St. Celestine V.
b. So the Vatican Manuscript. The Sulmona transcript everywhere writes Vellus-aureum: nor does it disagree from the genius of the author, to be more clearly known below, that as what to the ancients was Velabrum, known to Tibullus and even today (with admirable constancy and most rare in like cases) called Velabro, he by equal right thought could be called by him Vellus-aureum, by which the authors of the middle age, affecting a Latinity by no means Latin, called it Velum-aureum. It is probable that there was a market of small wares, when Papias in Cange testifies the sellers were called Velabri.
c. The Pontifical See was vacant from the death of Clement V, in the year 1314, 18 April, to the election of John XXII in the year 1316, 5 September: and this epistle is noted below as given 1319, 28 January.
d. Probably in the first year after the completion of the whole work: which yet he did not then likewise send, because he wished to correct it at leisure: but he caused them to be described anew at the end of the book, with the same Epistle with which they had been sent, where we also shall give them.
e. He calls it the original, not as if the autograph, but described from the autograph sheets in order and in a beautiful character by a copyist; but (as will appear below) not everywhere having attained the mind of his author: who, would that he had had leisure to reread each thing against his own Sheets! for he would have found the hasty copyist, often deceived by abbreviated notes, often by interlineations and erasures, the order of words being changed, sometimes also of lines, rendering the sense not rarely scarcely intelligible by conjecture, especially in prose; for in verse the very reason of the meter could direct the wavering scribe. So far also the Sulmona Manuscript can be called Original, because the Vatican one, and if any others are anywhere extant, are taken from it.
f. All those little glosses are accurately transcribed in our transcript; yet we shall give in the Annotations only those which seem to make more to the purpose, with * added that it may appear to be of the Author, not ours.
a. At the very beginning all things were so distorted, that for the sake of avoiding offense I was forced to transpose the words; which I found thus ordered, or more truly disordered: "Since this of each new work of deeds done, of him beginning the exordium, is turned over in the mind, so the things done and to be uttered, and in it especially graven by the colors of meter, by graceful preambles to declare." Hereafter it will nowhere be necessary to use such great license, but by a modest transposition of one or another word it will be permitted to integrate the sense in this Prose: nor yet shall I scrupulously note each thing, since I shall not see that this pertains to the faith of history: but what you find enclosed in [ ], know to have been added by me for the sake of supplying the sense.
b. Whoever should have said Actor for Auctor I have not hitherto found: but lest anyone here think some mystery to lie hidden I observe that in book 3 v. 358 and afterward often God is called the Actor of the human race: wherefore, although I find it almost always so written, Auctor will unhesitatingly everywhere be put, since from the mind of the Author himself it is the same.
c. The Church of St. George in Velabro, or Velum aureum in the IX Region of the City, called Ripa, under the Palatine Mount.
d. Taberna meritoria, according to our Alexander Donatus, who most accurately scrutinized all things, was in that place where now is the church of St. Mary-across the Tiber. But since below the Author says himself born across the river of the Tiber stream, and near the church of St. George there is none noted by the title of the Mother of God; the necessity appears of interposing the word, born, in a context otherwise not intelligible.
e. I am mistaken, unless the name of Perna be from the name Petrina, a feminine diminutive from the Masculine Petrus: but from this, that the author himself testifies himself Roman and born of the Stephaneses, Oldoinus rightly corrected Ciacconius, having judged after others, that this one also was a nephew of Boniface VIII, just as were Francis and Benedict Caetani, the one promoted by Celestine the other by Boniface, but of Anagni. Wherefore if between these and our Author there was any consanguinity, it must have been so remote, that it could not come into consideration.
f. The Manuscript again, the one (fem.), but the masculine plural adjective withdrawn, and the matter itself indicates that both parents are treated, and so the correction was necessary.
g. The Manuscript, Parvulus: but that it ought to be read Parisius, where the author studied, the soon following particle there declares, surely to be referred to the name of the place, which lies under an error: but since after the studies of Arts he consequently says that he returned into the parts of Italy; it appears that he completed those beyond the mountains, nor was there at that age any more famous study than the Parisian.
h. For he in fact wrote nothing, but only thought to write, as he said above.
i. Ciacconius therefore would have erred and his Continuators, when they write Jacobus assumed to the first Creation of Cardinals, made in the I year of the Pontificate, on 17 December, nor acknowledge any other creation after this before the year 1298, 14 December. Yet the creation of Jacobus cannot long be deferred, and of others perhaps several attributed to the first Creation by Ciacconius and others: but it must have been made in the four Ember days of the next following Lent,
k. The number of the Chapter was written by the cipher 9, and so also below the Chapters of this work are noted by ciphers, which if the author himself employed them, it will follow that the use of them, first shown to Europe in the year 1240, was quickly dispersed through all the Provinces.
a. Bishop illustrious in religion, was elected Roman Pontiff: who within the year lying bedridden, fallen with dysentery at Perugia, died.
a. For Nicholas IV was ordained in the year 1288 on 25 February, on the day of St. Matthias (inasmuch as it was a bissextile year), and died in the year 1292 on the 18th day of April. This seems to have been John Cholet, who caused his body to be transferred into Gaul, most magnificently buried at the church of St. Lucian of Beauvais, with a silver statue of him placed also upon the tomb, and an epitaph which thus ends: "The year producing eight from a thousand three hundred, on the fourth before the Nones of August, is the light of the dying one."
c. The Manuscript: "Concerning which matter, Boniface himself not knowing it": from which words making no sense, lightly changed, we see this said, that, while he wrote that he reserved these things for the time of the future successor, although then thinking nothing yet about Boniface, he yet designated his Pontificate to be described in grand meter; as he afterward did: and hence further it would follow that the prior work about Celestine was composed before the election of Boniface.
d. Dogma also below will sometimes occur for Order, Institute.
e. According to the Style of the Roman Curia the new year began from the Nativity of the Lord, which many also in Germany and Italy held: concerning which matter authors may be seen in Cange: and the thing is plain from very many Manuscript Martyrologies beginning thence. Thus John Hocsemius of Liège, writing about the year 1348 ch. 7, "In the year," he says, "of the Lord 1272 a little before the Nativity of the Lord, or 1273 a little after the Nativity, according as then the Date is changed in the Roman Curia."
f. Frigium properly is the border or crown, which led around the Pontifical tiara, simple up to these times, was made double by Boniface VIII, finally by Urban V 320 years ago tripled: which same tiara is also called the Kingdom, and in Nicholas Alemannus in the treatise on the Lateran Ruins p. 129 the Phrygium is described from Suger, an Imperial ornament of the head, in the manner of a helmet, fitted together with a golden circle.
g. The Manuscript: "And exhibited praise to him acquiescing." But these and other things to be said more distinctly in the meter itself easily wash away what the one of Ailly writes more harshly against Boniface.
h. These are reckoned from 24 December, on which he was elected, to the II of October, on which Boniface died: otherwise to those numbering from 16 January, on which he was consecrated, according to the style of the Pontifical Bulls, there would only be 8 months, 27 days. Meanwhile the error of the cipher had to be corrected, by which it was written, 21 days.
i. This was Eleanor or Eleonora: but the conditions of the Peace are extant in Raynaldus in the Annals at the year 1303, in which it was made, num. 24.
k. There is extant a Manuscript book in the Vatican Library, and now printed in vol. 25 of the new Library of the Fathers, of the last Lyons edition.
l. Of this sepulchre, destroyed on account of the renovation of the Vatican Basilica, you have an accurate image in the new edition of Ciacconius, prepared by our Oldoinus.
m. But the pertinacity of the Cardinals, unwilling to proceed to election, lasted beyond 26 months, and at length in the year 1316, on 5 September, was named Pope John 22.
n. Unknown, that is, unusual.
a. Discord] is to be understood under the name of envy, according to the marginal little gloss of the Author, the like of which hereafter we shall distinguish other little glosses by a similar asterisk * here from our observations: so also below v. 88 it is also called a livid mind, for a discordant one. I say here, that is, in these Annotations: for the asterisk * placed in the Poem remits the Reader to the various Readings of the Manuscript itself, which will be subjoined to the Annotations.
b. By the sphere of the neck understand the round tonsure of the Pontifical crown, commonly the Crown, which the rites of consecrating the Pontiff prescribe to be anointed with sacred Chrism. So below in book 2 of the Coronation of Boniface v. 59 the Spherical neck is said, the same Crown.
c. This verse the Author alleges, and to some extent explains, in the little Preface after the syllabus of the Chapters of the last work on the Canonization: but by gold he understands the yellowing ear of the grain itself: and this clearly appears there in book I, v. 14, when the Poet asks, that under the shadow of the Saint "the yellow gold of the produced seed may grow ruddy."
d. The Exequies of Nicholas IV were celebrated in the Liberian Basilica or St. Mary Major, in which the bones of the humbly buried one were elevated in the year 1574 by Felice Peretti Cardinal of Montalto, and honored with a marble monument; of which monument our Oldoinus exhibits an image in his new Ciacconius.
e. The Prophet says: "I will raise up over them one shepherd" (Ezek. 34,23) and that was the Theme of Lord Latinus, Bishop of Ostia and Dean of the Cardinals.
f. Degenerate weights, balances or unjust weights, that is, votes.
g. Because the Cardinals were only twelve.
h. The Author here played, taking Latium, that is into the broad or the broad way, that is laxity of manners: which he hints to be the cause of the disasters received, which he soon enumerates.
i. Acre being taken by the Sultan Melech-seraf in the year 1291 on 19 May, whatever was left to the Christians in Syria came into the power of the enemy: but Tripoli had been taken by the Sultan Melech-Messor in the year 1289 on 26 April.
k. Peter King of Aragon, the Gauls being expelled, on whom the Apostolic See had conferred the kingdom of Sicily, had invaded it in the year 1281: and in it he had as successors his sons born second and third, namely James, and (this one, by the death of his brother Alphonsus, having returned into Spain) Frederick: who also strove to claim for himself Sicily on this side of the Pharos, that is the Neapolitan kingdom.
l. "That is, they teach," says the little Gloss.
m. For there, Honorius being dead, the election of the same Nicholas had also been celebrated.
n. At St. Sabina on the Aventine Mount Honorius 4 had built houses for himself, and after his example Nicholas 4 at St. Mary Major: which lest it pass into a custom, the Author dreads, and reprehends.
o. He understands the Vatican Basilica, and the Pontifical Palace joined to it.
a. That is, while they wish in turn to prescribe a law to themselves.
c. For just now as before they were discordant.
d. Namely of the great Penitentiary.
e. That is, among the Brothers.
f. Who impeded the office of the Penitentiary committed by Nicholas IV, and confirmed by the College of Cardinals the See being vacant to the Cardinal of Porto, to whom the people of Narni, coerced by him, were ill-disposed.
g. That is, they demanded, as above they knocked, they wept.
h. All the lesser Penitentiaries.
i. Who was the great Penitentiary.
k. For the Cardinals, when the one of Porto yielded, restored to him the office of the Holy Penitentiary: limitedly however: but it is said that he surpassed his colleagues, that is, overcame by his discretion.
l. Charles II surnamed the Lame. So Albizius the Florentine in the Stemmata of Christian Princes folio XVII.
m. Of Charles the first, who was King of Sicily.
n. For he conquered Manfred and afterward Conradin, this one the grandson of Frederick II, by his son Conrad King of Sicily, claiming Sicily by paternal right; that one the bastard of the same Frederick, who left as guardian to the little son by his dying brother, had occupied the kingdom by tyranny: certainly the cause of each was most diverse, and therefore the victory over Manfred had the best success, but that over Conradin, heaped with the cruel punishment of an innocent, drew after itself the ruin of the victor himself: for thenceforth the fortune of himself and his posterity collapsed backward, as soon follows.
o. For Charles I died his son being captured: but the son Charles II was captured by Roger de Loria, Prefect of the Aragonian fleet for King Alphonsus, in the year 1284: and first detained in Sicily, but after the death of his father, was led away into Aragon.
a. That is, of the Zodiac, which is drawn in an oblique orb between the tropics of Cancer and Capricorn.
b. At the winter Solstice, the sun running through the sign of Capricorn, looks nearest at the Serpent, placed at that part of this Tropic; just as at the opposite part of the other Tropic, the Hydra is discerned.
c. For the Vacancy lasted two years and a fourth part of the third.
d. The Author courteously avoids responding to the question, whether the election of Br. Peter of Morrone was from inspiration, or the toleration of God. So the Author himself.
e. That is, the Holy Spirit.
f. For the Bishops stand on the right side, the Deacons on the left.
g. For the See was just then vacant, and therefore no seat had been placed at the head of the Consistory or Conclave, where otherwise the place of the Pontiff was.
h. That is, through a narrow [way]. It seems therefore to be indicated, that the youth riding through a narrow way with loosed reins, was somewhere dashed, and thence died.
i. Pensare, that is, to think, a word common to the Italians, French, Spaniards, as also a common origin with the German Peinsen.
k. The one of Tusculum, John Buccamazzi.
l. That nocturnal visions are understood appears more clearly below v. 67.
m. The feast of All Saints, 2 November: but these things were done at the end of June: between which and November four months intervene.
n. The Campanian, who was called Benedict, and afterward was Boniface VIII.
o. This the Author at the end of the work v. 196, takes as an argument of the prophetic Spirit in Peter, who by this understood that it would come to pass, that he would sometimes call the Cardinals Brothers, being made Pope.
a. small house lies founded, and neighboring the cell:
a. Dimittunt, that is, they Omit.
b. Of the middle way, that is, of the Zodiac.
c. Scarlettum, i.e. purple, to others Scarlata, scarlatum, which some derive from the Arabic Yxquerlat, signifying the same, Cange indicates.
d. The Jaws of the Apennine in Picenum commonly Foce, not far from the entrance of Abruzzo, distant from Perugia 50 miles toward the East, from that place whence two rivers are born into contrary parts; the Nera, to be plunged into the Tiber, Umbria being crossed; and the Aso, hastening to the Adriatic sea.
e. Populus, commonly Popolo, a town distant from Sulmona 9 miles, where the waters, irrigating the valley of Sulmona, are mingled with the river Aterno.
f. For the mountains of Rajano are to the west, and near are certain high crags, which stand to the North; and so on three sides the valley of Sulmona is shut in by the mountain.
g. Behind those plowing.
h. The Abbey of the Holy Spirit.
k. Who was Br. Onuphrius of Cornu, of Aquila.
l. That is, Against: for at the evening hour the shadows fall against the East.
m. That is, On account of which they sweated copiously.
n. That is; for so it pleased him, although it was not decorous enough, that any one etc.
o. He says, Hard, because the space was not covered except by sky and earth.
a. twelvefold of men, by the divine gift.
a. pillow; or a leather sack rough with knotted hairs, [clothing more harshly,]
a. The Saint indeed himself numbers seven: but even hence it appears, that that writing of his did not come to the hands of the Author when he wrote: which also he himself below num. 549 confirms, professing that he heard, not read, what he narrates about the life of the Saint.
b. The mother was called Mary.
c. Because the other son had been a Cleric, and was dead.
d. For the demon, a body being assumed, feigned himself divine, and said to the mother, I see a peril to underlie.
f. Euntem, i.e. going forth.
h. Tonsas, that is, sheep.
i. That is, the pious counsels of the youth, above 93 conscita is written, and that is more legitimate from the verb conscire, but the difficulty is in the quantity of the penult.
k. Vaecordia, i.e. pusillanimity, hesitation, by no one is taken away, i.e. by no one is relieved or resolved.
l. The Castle of Sangro.
m. I fear lest here something has dropped out, the hemistichs of two different verses being badly joined.
n. On the ridge of the mountain of the Peligni: today it is called the church of St. Mary of the altar.
o. Rospi, according to the vulgar tongue of those parts, are literally called Toads.
a. Peter de Colonna, who accompanied him in descending.
b. Of the Abbey of the Holy Spirit.
c. Namely the laymen, ignorant of ecclesiastical rites and rights, thus creep in.
d. Sent to the Cardinals at Perugia.
e. That namely the Cardinals should write back to him upon these things.
f. Magnificent and spacious; yet not level, but in the manner of hills.
g. For it is not yet wholly inhabited: but the people of Aquila divided the land into parts, hoping it to be filled.
i. That is, they commended, as more fitting to his state.
k. The Author approves, that it would have been better to ride a horse with humility: but from this that Lord Peter rode an ass, he says an example could be taken.
l. If he had borne himself as well in the Papacy, as he bore himself before the Papacy.
m. Bartholomew of Capua.
n. The Archbishop of Benevento.
o. That is, the Pontiff singularly sublime.
a. Omnis, that is, totally.
b. That is, he committed.
c. Ductus, i.e. induced by others.
d. Inexperienced in things to be done.
e. I have the matter more clearly in the margin: How he as it were compelled the Monks of Monte Cassino to take his habit.
f. Otherwise, who namely took the habit of the Celestines cheaply.
g. Because he made several Cardinals, whom he did not know.
h. Matthew the Red and James de Colonna. But you see that it is familiar to this Author the name of Leader in calling both the Pontiff and the Cardinals, or also the secular Princes.
i. In which the ordination was made, namely 18 September in the Ember days: for in the year 1294 the Dominical letter was C.
k. Bartholomew of Capua.
l. For that Hugo had had inscribed one of his friends, among the others who were to be Cardinals: and suddenly, when the publication of the other Cardinals had been made, he did not hear his named: about which the said Hugo Cardinal was greatly stupefied.
m. On account of the harshness of his life, or because in this he showed himself hard and harsh.
n. For the Cardinals consented.
o. In the Council of Lyons concerning the constraining of the Cardinals. But this is the 2nd Constitution of Gregory X on Election: in which is prescribed the form of the Conclave and its laws; but it had never thereafter been reduced into practice, and the innovation of Celestine also would have been void, if his successor Boniface had not confirmed it: but so it is observed today.
a. great part of the nobles rushing: who with their voice sought
a. little letter, by which he had been taught, if to yield worthy
a. race vain in faith, a race perfidious to heaven,
a. The above-said namely.
b. For he made for himself a certain little cell in a part of the hall of the King's house.
c. The Pheasant. Aldrovandus Ornithology book 13 ch. 5 confirms this from Tertullian; and refers the cause to the stupidity of that animal.
d. Through which power was given to three, written indeed, but not yet bulled.
e. For neither did he seem to himself to be in that perfection, in which he had been in the lesser state.
f. Namely, the Author of the work: for orally he said to him what follows: after the cession however.
g. For any one commonly can yield, and the Author continues specially how individuals can yield.
h. Religare, i.e. to loose.
i. Namely the Pope, to whom alone is such power concerning a Bishop.
k. The Prior, Abbot, Bishop.
l. That is, the Superior.
m. That is, all the Saints.
n. That friend, whom Celestine consulted.
o. For there are several causes of yielding: namely old age and the desire of a humble and private life.
a. Pontiff persuades. Thou knowest not, illustrious Father, thou knowest not,
a. pomp ran out to meet with manifold soldiery:
a. Hope conceived, i.e. conceived, by which namely he had hoped one of his faction to be elected.
b. Namely not able to dissemble his rancor: how then can the saying of Ptolemy of Lucca in the Annals stand? that Boniface, although he had much exasperated King Charles at Perugia, yet by his ministrations and astuteness was made not only Lord of the Curia, but also a friend of the King. Platina blames the same, as one who came to the Pontificate not without the crime of ambition. More openly also Ciacconius says, that he went to the King by night: and made hope to him of recovering Sicily, if by his work he were made Pontiff, and so acted with the Cardinals through the King that they should not elect another. But we think all these things were fabricated by his rivals. At length however Charles collected himself, and to the Elected, of whose favor he greatly stood in need, deferred every kind of obedience, present with his son at the Coronation, as below in book 2 v. 215 will be read.
c. Radient, i.e. they irradiate, illustrate.
d. For Anagni is situated on a hill, the head of the old Hernici. Virgil book 7 of the Aeneid: "They cultivate the Hernican rocks, whom rich Anagni feeds." And Silius Italicus (of whom he glories himself as also of Virgil the Author in the Preface): "Cerealian Anagni with fruitful glebes."
f. For there were three of Anagni Roman Pontiffs, namely Innocent III, Gregory IX, and Alexander IV, all elected within the hundred years just elapsed, namely in the years 1198, 1227 and 1254.
g. The title, namely the Doctoral, as Ciacconius and others understand it.
h. By Martin IV made Deacon Cardinal of St. Nicholas in the Tullian Prison, and by Nicholas IV Presbyter of SS. Sylvester and Martin in the mountains, the title of Equitius, as the same Ciacconius.
i. Because Campania is the garden of B. Peter, by others surnamed Felix, today Terra di lavoro, because in cultivating it labor is most usefully expended.
k. Celestine, pure of crime, but deceived by frauds.
l. That is, headlong to lavish anything.
m. That is, the burning coal.
n. An empty membrane, but bulled, says Ptolemy of Lucca.
o. Orbita, i.e. the revolution of the year, renewed, for now a new year by the style of the Roman Curia had begun from the feast of the Nativity.
a. On the Lord's Day the XVII Kalends of February as Ciacconius has it.
b. For the sun then was in Aquarius.
c. That is the Camisus: for the Pope does not use the Amice properly, but the Humeral, which is commonly called the Fano.
d. That is the gemmed mitre, from which behind through the neck the infulae flow down.
e. I would understand the broad-stripe or golden brooch interspersed with gems, by which the Cope is bound, were it not soon said, that the Pontiff proceeded clothed with the Chasuble or Planeta: therefore you may understand the pectoral Cross, gleaming with similar gems.
f. The stole lowered to the heels, through the shoulders and arms.
g. The Tunicella commonly so called, and Dalmatic.
h. Understand the horns of the mitre itself.
i. Understand, it is the office, or, it pertains to him.
k. That is, white vestments, for the grade of each one.
l. A multitude of foreign Bishops, then perchance present or brought for the sake of beholding.
m. I hesitate and do not determine whom I ought here to understand, whether the knights deputed to the Pontifical guard, or the throng of Clerics, mixed with the Levites or Deacons.
n. Neither do I grasp this, nor does a conjecture occur which pleases enough.
o. In the crown or manifold circle of the Chiefs.
o. That is the Orsini family, devout to the Church excelling the rest, that is, to the Roman; then in those times the more famous Colonna, Savelli, Stephaneschi, Conti, Annibaldi.
a. Of this little while the Pontifical thus: "Since for the most part, before these things are completed, the hour is rather late, and a long way to the Lateran remains, and many things there are still to be performed, the Pontiffs and Fathers were sometimes wont for the sake of sustenance to take a little food. A refection is prepared in the atrium of the house of the Archpresbyter of the Basilica for the Pontiff and Cardinals, for the other Prelates in the neighboring houses of the Canons. The Pontiff being crowned they come to the refection, and meanwhile the things which are opportune for the Procession are prepared." So of old: but now by the building of the new Basilica, those houses being cast down, all things must be done in the neighboring Vatican Palace.
b. That Nactum is written for Nattum, according to the manner of that age, I easily grasp: but nattum for Natta (which signifies a mat) I have not yet found: whatever it be it appears that the saddle-cloth or dorsal covering of the horse is understood: and again it is repeated v. 209 under the covering of the cloth.
c. That is Paul the Apostle, who says of himself, 1 Cor. 14, "I will chant with the spirit, I will chant also with the mind."
d. The Manuscript, or joined, I corrected but joined: but Juncta bicornix to me seem to be said the two trumpeters, added to this equestrian legion, which it is permitted to esteem to have been of the Pontifical guard.
e. Maniplos, i.e. the order of the maniples.
g. Cuspide, i.e. with a needle.
h. Grana, to the Italians is the berry of a certain tree, like ivy, whose use is for the dyeing of that which they call scarlet.
i. For so the Pontifical prescribes, that after the King, or another great Prince, who perchance was present, has led the horse a little, two great Nobles be substituted in their place, and be changed, surely at certain stations.
k. I understand the chiefs of the Roman Senators.
l. Riga, i.e. a line, to the Germans Ryke, that it may appear the word is Lombardic.
m. In the Margin it is thus read: "Of the Subdeacon carrying a cloth for wiping the nose," which obedience a little after ceased, as appears from the following Prose: where Gausape, which to the ancients signified a military and shaggy garment, or also a shaggy carpet, is called tobalia that is a Napkin or towel; whence in the Manuscript Customs of Catalonia in Cange, "to sit at someone's gausape," is the same as at table, or to be someone's guest.
n. That the Prefect of the City is invested with the mantle Cange teaches from the Acts of Innocent III in the Glossary, and it itself is described in the Roman Ceremonial, woven about with a golden border, open on the right side: in which it is distinguished from the Pluvial, or Pontifical Mantle: and the same is also numbered among the Royal paraments.
o. Below in the Prose for Caliga is said Zanca, which the Cruscan Academics interpret a shin, but it appears here to be taken for the covering of the shin or a greave: the same variety of colors is noted in the Pontifical umbrella.
a. part praises, a part is eager for wealth, a part strives to play
a. This verse, which was required for completing the sense, we added of our own, conformably to those things which we read in the Pontifical, that it pertains to the Prior of the Deacons and the Chamberlain to take care that the order of the Procession be kept.
b. That above the mass of Hadrian, by which the Tiber is to be crossed by the bridge, is beheld erected the effigy of the Holy Angel, whence both to the citadel and the bridge now commonly the name, is most known: thus far therefore when the pomp had proceeded, to restore the orders the Prior of the Deacons and the Chamberlain, whom I mentioned, ran forward, before that pomp began to cross the bridge.
c. Empty ferlas, i.e. pure ferules, fortified with no point.
d. Scala, i.e. the order of each one.
e. Lustraverat, i.e. he had illustrated, adorned.
f. Validae per cuncta, i.e. good, legitimate.
g. Ancae, i.e. the hips or haunches of the horses.
h. Senii, i.e. of old time.
i. Extollat, i.e. he may elevate, despise.
k. For Clerus in Greek, in Latin is rendered Lot; whence the name to the Clerics, given to God as it were in lot and proper peculiar possession.
l. Namely the Pontiff: but of this ceremony nothing the Pontifical: whence neither is it permitted to determine, in what place it was done; we can however conjecture in the very area of St. Peter, when now the Pontiff began to proceed, that it was done, and that by the Clergy of that Apostolic Basilica.
m. Between the Ghetto (so the quarter of the Jews is called) and Parione, where they met the Pontiff, in the middle lies the Campus Martius, in which a very old tower furnished with a clock, and now comprehended within the houses of the Pii, to which they had convened about to go to meet.
n. Caecula, a diminutive from Caeca, dim-sighted.
o. The square of Parione, giving the name to one of the 13 Regions of the City, from the area of Monte Giordano (into which from the bridge it is come by the straight way of the bankers, commonly of the Banchi) gradually relaxing itself, has for a base the houses of the Vicini, where in the public
a. stranger, a despiser of the world, and the supernal citizens
a. fever is present, and goads the old man, and the sacred things obtained
a. Cardinal was the Roman Apex, of the Gascon stock,
a. Wonderful, not by reason of the meter or style, because this would be vain: but by reason of the matter, which was wonderful: just as the election of him who was a Hermit, and the renunciation of the Papacy.
b. He says well, earthy nature: whence in Job, "who dwell in houses of clay and have an earthen foundation."
c. Charity, which alone remains in heaven, Faith and hope ceasing.
d. For few are like, who would renounce the Papacy.
e. Because he was not of such capacity, that it had been expedient.
f. And he had more known in the desert the contemplative life.
g. By the successes, namely unforeseen and unexpected, ardent, i.e. burning with solicitude; unless you prefer to read Secessibus.
h. For there was a young companion whom he took with him.
i. He understands the parrot.
k. To seek Br. Peter: for Boniface did not manifest, namely that he wished to keep Peter with him.
l. Vestia others everywhere name it, as also today it is called: but by a certain affectation of the ancient etymon, as if taken from the Goddess Vesta, the Author seems to say Vesta.
m. That is, the Hermit, desiring to subtract himself from the public light.
n. The author excuses superabundantly added, que.
o. Pope Boniface. The Author therefore praises Peter, that after the delights of the desert tasted again, he followed the Pastor calling him away thence.
a. That is, the inquisition committed by the Pope upon the life and miracles: of which commission above mention was made, namely in the Prose preliminary to the whole work num. 18.
b. That is, serving, or subserving the examination.
c. To commit someone is said by the Italian and French phrase, what the Latins would say to commit something to someone; and Commissaries are designated to hear the witnesses: but perhaps it is to be read in the plural Certos, that several Commissaries named for this cause may be understood.
d. For that examination was made in many places, both at Milan and Vienne, by some Prelates; and at Avignon, by the Pope and the Cardinals.
e. The frail one, that is a man, to bring forth, i.e. to pronounce and define a Saint.
f. Of so great a one, understand, Man or moment.
g. Carpere, i.e. to learn.
h. For the manner most fitting, to prove someone's life and miracles, is proof by fit witnesses.
i. In the Consistory, as they call it, secret.
k. The Manuscript "nostrique simul" and in the margin it is said "The conjunction superabounds, Quæ, for the sake of the verse." But I preferred to substitute another synonymous word in favor of the reader, by which there would be no need of a license, obscuring the sense.
l. That is, within the space which the seats occupied.
m. Pensum, i.e. pondered and weighed.
n. Below book 3 v. 99 Ructare is noted to be put for to say.
o. Because it pleased him, that the Prelates wished and supplicated for his canonization.
a. sure faith, that this one is in heaven. The miracles not yet
a. For his life was too rustic and harsh, which the Author in the first book described seriously, in that Chapter, "There is a place of Abruzzo."
b. Mirum, i.e. a miracle, is proved from this that it is done instantaneously.
d. The physicians call it Hectica, that is habitual and difficult to be loosed, yet common usage prefers to pronounce Ethica, without any respect to ethos (by which manner and custom is noted) to which otherwise it could not altogether ineptly be referred.
f. Rich in the future, but in this age as to temporal riches poor: or also Rich now, as to spiritual riches.
g. Pacta, i.e. compacta [joints].
h. I.e. two women, placed upon the tomb immediately were healed.
i. Tractae, i.e. contracted.
k. For in the canonization of Peter, which is contained in the Bull of Pope Clement, these miracles are placed.
l. Ructabimus, i.e. we will say. So since here the Author himself explains himself, it is plain what he meant using the same word in the preceding book v. 52, likewise book 2 of the Acts v. 461 "they belch murmurs." But note that it is everywhere written not ructare, but ruptare.
m. That is, not wont without cause to wander through those very mountains, in which he dwelt.
n. For although snow is in itself white, yet falling it makes the time dark.
o. For in the part by which the split hill was otherwise crossed, now the way was lacking, snow filling that gap.
a. To this last little work the Author writes such a title: "Here begins the Legend of B. Peter Confessor and Pontiff of Morrone": and indeed he had destined the Legend to be divided by himself into Lessons for Matins, but why this was not done the reason is soon rendered in the Epistle, which in the Manuscript is called a Prologue, inscribed, not to the Abbot, but to the Prior General and Definitors of the general Chapter, and that after the election of John XXII made in the year 1316 5 September: for the Author mentions the past Vacancy. But who was that Prior General? Lelius Marinus book 4 ch. 11 at the end names Matthew of Comena, as if he had ruled the Order as General Abbot for a whole six years from the year 1314 to 1320. Let the Celestine Fathers see, whether their Generals, inasmuch as they presided over the whole Order, were not at the beginning called Priors: for it can scarcely be, that the Cardinal erred in the title, accustomed to the style of the Curia, and so after the manner of the Roman Curials most accurate in defining titles.
b. Although under the Venetian dominion there are two places, called Romanum; likewise another Romanium, commonly Romagno: yet the homeland, whence this Peter has his name, I would rather believe to be sought in the Kingdom of Naples.
c. I wish to learn whether these were ever received for the use of the choir by the Celestine Fathers: it is certainly long that they were not in use.
d. Alleluia is added: because nearly always the feast of St. Peter falls in the Paschal time.
f. The Manuscript thus has: "The following two Antiphons the same Jacobus Cardinal, Deacon of St. George ad Velum-aureum composed, after the first epistle placed at the beginning of the book was made": hence it comes that in the Prologue premised no mention is made of the Antiphons.
g. Finally at the end of the book that same Epistle under the same title as first is woven again, I know not for what cause, unless to testify anew the affection of the Author toward the Order, on the occasion of the aforesaid Antiphons, sent perhaps in the year 1320 or later.
a. Not only did he appear to his mother, but truly before all he so came forth, in that manner in which some are wont to be born helmeted, namely with a part of the afterbirth wrapped about the head, which is esteemed a presage of rare felicity. Tellera in the Italian Life adds, that the little skin enveloping the little one, was so variegated with black and white, that it referred the colors of that habit, with which the Order to be born from him was to be endowed.
b. Marinus ch. 3 says, that Peter was even then a Cleric.
c. The Author of the 22nd Conference in Cassian ch. 6 is indicated, where these things are prolixly and beautifully narrated: but also in the preceding Chapters similar things to the Doctrine here proposed are delivered: and the same can be made from Palladius of the Lausiac History Chapter 68.
d. Surius, with a more Latin phrase, by domestic custom.
a. Surius renders it the Penitential Psalms.
b. Maffei says, "The bread, with which he fed, was always for a long time before baked, and often teeming with worms, hard also like a stone, which could scarcely be broken much less cut: which he also was wont through the summer to put to the heat of the sun, that it might be rendered more baked and drier."
c. Surius wrote only four Lents: but the six Tellera part 3 ch. 2 thus divides; that the first was that which is commonly called the Greater, common to all Christians: the second from the 2nd Feria after the Octaves of Easter to Pentecost (and to this makes what he himself wrote Opusc. 1, part 1 ch. 2. "Although some say that those fifty days, which are from Easter to Pentecost, are exempt from fasting; if however anyone from devotion fasts, he is not to be prohibited: and would that we had always fasted!") the third from the feast of SS. Peter and Paul to the feast of the Assumption of Mary, of 45 days: the fourth of 47 days, from the Exaltation of the Holy Cross 14 September to the end of October: the fifth of 46 days, from the day of the Four Holy Crowned ones 8 November to the Nativity of the Lord: the sixth, from the Epiphany nearly to the greater Lent.
d. Maffei: "Twenty days being passed."
e. The same adds: "But also at another time of Lent he set about no lighter things than these. For his companions being left he inhabited a certain hollowed rock, with bare body, clothed only with a hairshirt: and he himself confessed that he never passed a harder Lent, on account of the excessive harshness of the cold."
f. That Council of Lyons was celebrated in the year 1274, from the 7th day of May to the 17th of July.
g. Maffei adds the cause, because in the Lucca and Pistoia territory, when the citizens on both sides were agitated with most grave hatreds, the ways were troubled by most wicked robbers, who lay in wait not so much for the goods as for the life of those passing. Yet not among these, but with these and other confederate Guelfs was the war against the Pisans, as the more certain witness of these matters Ptolemy of Lucca writes at this very year 1274. And it has thus: "In this same year the Guelfs of Tuscany, namely the Florentines, Sienese, Pistoians, Pratesi, those of San Miniato, San Gimignano, Volterrans, Collesi, with the Lucchese made a society against the Pisans, and the war lasted two years."
h. Maffei: "Going this way the holy man one borne on a white horse and excelling in notable form seemed to accompany, and amicably to admonish that they should more cautiously look to their safety, on account of the hostile waylayers of the roads who lurked about. He having afterward gone on farther, from a certain wood which they had entered, three little robbers at once rushed upon him and his companions, as if having found a rich prey: but by a wonderful judgment of God, three serpents of equal number, as if they would seem about to bring help to the holy men, made an onset upon them. Who terrified and put to flight, when turning aside thence they had again assaulted them in another place, by three serpents again were driven and repelled and fled. At length their companions going far ahead, with restrained step exhorted that he should go back: for they perceived nothing changed in the mind of those waylayers, panting wholly to accomplish what they had conceived. But while they made their way back as quickly as possible, again that comely horseman, who first had made them more certain and cautious of the peril, which they afterward had met, meeting with a glad countenance; exhorted that they should be of secure mind: and leading them at once by the straight way, never, until they were rescued from all peril of the ways, left them uncompanioned: and when they came to a safe place, the town to which they were to set out being indicated, immediately disappeared."
i. This statute he himself being made Pontiff approved, by a Bull which is had vol. 1 of the Bullarium, and in part will be recited in the Supplement.
k. Maffei in particular adds these things: "Thereafter many monasteries left by others and desolate he repaired, and repaired gave them to be inhabited by his Monks: and especially the monastery called Faifoli, and dedicated to the name of the Virgin Mary, of which formerly the Abbot, whom we mentioned above, had first given him the habit of Religion. This when it was utterly neglected and ruined he restored, repaired, adorned, increased moreover with opulent estates which before were due to it and with a most ample assembly of monks, with great congratulation and veneration of all the peoples dwelling around … taken afterward with the love of solitude, withdrawing thence, he substituted in his place another man of holy life whom he knew. But the tyranny of a certain Simon a most powerful man urging, who for six years never ceased to inflict force and injury on the holy Monks, they migrated thence by the counsel and monition of the excellent Father: and into another monastery, which was called of B. John in Plano, where they might dwell more safely and tranquilly, transferred themselves, which also they likewise excellently repaired, and not long after rendered more adorned and opulent." Thus far he: we about those two monasteries will say more below. Faber wrongly expressed it of Fiesole, for Fiesole is a city of Tuscany once ample now small near Florence.
l. Some part of the miracles Maffei sets forth, before he begins to treat of the Order instituted: we have summarily reviewed them, and are about to relate them more fully below.
m. This place Surius thus changed. "For the most part he commanded his Brothers to sell the sheep and oxen and other animals of his monasteries, when he heard them multiplied: and from that money he both constructed new monasteries, and lavished on the poor. But the silver chalices and silken garments, and other precious ornaments of the churches, he took care to be sold or given to other churches, lest the Brothers should delight in precious things: for much was given to him, gold, silver, garments, wax and very many other things, which he through the monasteries of his Order, and also of other Religious, and through secular churches solicitously distributed."
a. Maffei describes the place in this manner. "It was on the highest summit of the mount of Maiella, distant from the plain about six miles; from which it was descended to a certain cavern, situated in the frontispiece of the valley, and there flowed past it a river, which the crowd calls Orfonte. This is that cold river Ufens, seeking its way through the lowest valleys, of which with a few letters corrupted Virgil makes mention Aen. VII. Nor truly was the descent thither easy. Wherefore that he might safely descend when it pleased, he had fabricated for himself with clever artifice wooden hooks, leaning on which, from every peril which threatened him he escaped more secure and free."
b. Maffei adds, chambers for guests, if any should have come.
c. Of these also a part Maffei sets forth, to be related more fully elsewhere.
d. The same thus continues. "And then indeed he chose for himself to inhabit Segezeano, a certain ancient town, a little house being fabricated there, which was distant from Sulmona two miles, but from the new monastery of the Holy Spirit only five hundred paces." And here Maffei ends the second Book, beginning thereafter the third.
e. Petrarch book 2 of the Solitary Life Sect. 3 ch. 18 calls him Robert of Salento, a disciple of St. Peter. Of him, as a Blessed, we have the Life to give on 18 July.
f. Of Charles Martel, in title only King of Hungary, already treated elsewhere.
g. Not Cardinals, but Legates of the Cardinals, namely the Archbishop of Lyons, and the Bishops of Orvieto and Patti, were in that company even to Aquila.
h. Maffei says this was done, when the holy man descended from the little ass in the town, which is called Castelvecchio: it is distant 8 miles from Aquila.
i. The same Maffei, "To all who then had stood by, with a more ample relaxation than was ever heard, he granted full and consummated pardon of all sins. The same he did on the eighth day after, that he might fulfil the desire of saving souls
a. great and most simple man. He also gave the same Indulgence to the church of B. Mary, which is called Collemaggio, every year on the day of his Coronation, and moreover strengthened it by the public privilege of Apostolic power."
k. On the very feast of St. Lucy this was done, writes Jacobus the Cardinal.
l. Here was inserted a passage from Petrarch citing Ambrose: whose words it is enough to have once above exhibited entire.
m. Maffei in this place heaps up examples of the Roman Emperors, who although Gentiles, yet judged the Empire either to be abdicated as an intolerable weight, or in fact abdicated it: whom it is of no use to enumerate, since they are known from the imperial history.
n. That schism began in the year 1378 after the death of Gregory XI, when at Rome was elected Urban VI, and against him at Fondi Clement VII, who after the death of Urban sat against the one subrogated to him in the year 1389 Boniface IX. But Clement dying about the year 1394 was succeeded by Peter de Luna, called Benedict XIII; and he sat partly against Boniface IX, partly against his successors Innocent VII and Gregory XII: but to this one and Benedict acceded a third in the year 1409 Alexander V, and he received a successor in the year 1410 John XXIII: until those three, who at once arrogated the Papacy to themselves, for the good of ecclesiastical peace, being deposed in the Council of Constance in the year 1415; at length was elected in the year 1417 Martin V, after the 37 years in which the Schism had lasted: and hence is understood that the present Life was written about the year 1408.
a. Namely Petrarch of the solitary life sect. 3 ch. 18, where widely he praises this abdication, as we saw.
b. The Abbot here of Cassino was Thomas de Rocca, who died in the year 1296 on the Nones of July. Maffei says, the Saint was then on the journey to the monastery of St. Germanus, which is at the foot of the mount of Cassino: and the following miracle he says was done in the town which is called Casale-novum, situated midway between Naples and Cassino.
c. Maffei calls him Thomas, and then he is said a most crafty man: Marinus, Theodoric of Orvieto, afterward Cardinal and Abbot of Cassino: but by this name M. Antonius Scipio knows no Abbot of Cassino: but for him the recognizer of Ciacconius found in the year 1295 Theodoric, Chamberlain of the Holy Roman Church and Elect of Pisa.
d. The same Maffei adds here, "Whence it came to pass that the Chamberlain, moved by a graver wrath, searched everywhere through the caverns and all the more secret places, and even compelled by oath all the Brothers of the greater monastery, now terrifying each with threats, now
e. The following Maffei thus narrates: "Then some days being passed there, when solicitously by the Pontiff day by day he was more sought, beyond the sea he resolved to go, hoping that by this way at least he might safely live. The counsel therefore being communicated with his two companions, he sought the sea: which as soon as possible was troubled, as if this by the will of God were prohibited. And a month being passed there, when the sea seemed pacified, again that one attempting the crossing, it began to be mingled with floods and agitated more. And at length when he had passed six days there, with a favorable breeze he entered the ship, sailing that day only about fifteen miles: for the sea raging again, he was carried to the shore near the city of Vestia. Where when he had remained nine days, he could not longer conceal himself: for being announced to the Governor of that city, immediately he was led to him: but he, as if having found an enormous prey, forthwith signified this to the Pontiff by letters. Nor was the Pontiff more sluggish who then was at Anagni, he sent to King Charles of Sicily commanding that as cautiously as he could he should take care for Celestine to be led to him: for not safely did he dare to do this, lest as it were suspect to himself he should be snatched from him in leading. The King obeyed the Pontiff: he sent fit and most powerful messengers, led the man back, and led back consigned him to him."
f. Vestia, commonly Viesti, or Vieste, on the extreme horn of Iapygia, which today is called Capitanata, and in that part of that province, to which from Monte Gargano the name is, distant from Anagni about 160 miles. By Faber it is wrongly called Ostia.
g. Lelius Marinus book 4 ch. 4 to those two adds a third a certain Lord Ludovicus, whose quality remained unknown, but the Patriarch of Jerusalem he calls William Estendard, great Chancellor of the Kingdom of Naples; and so we have hitherto unknown to us a successor of Radulf of Grandville, degraded by Pope Boniface, who between this one and Antony Bishop of Durham, for the year 1305, bore the Patriarchal title.
h. Whence also his setting out was slower, says Maffei.
i. Maffei, "Affirming that he had never done anything more freely, and would do it again were it not yet done."
k. The same Maffei thus in few words enumerates about ten miracles. "At B. Martin of Valle-gaudii, Peter born of that same place, who for ten years was utterly destitute of the force of his hands and lame in one foot; also Mary a woman of the same town, now a whole year gravely vexed by a demon, he freed; Matthew also of Salerno, who had utterly lost all force of one side. But also the light of the eyes to a certain one of the town of Maddaloni he restored. At Capua also to a boy, who born seven years had never spoken anything, he freed the tongue. Another boy also there of the town of Cervinara, who now for eight years had never been able to walk; and a certain Castellan, who had lost the strength of one arm, an excessive pain afflicting him, he rendered unharmed. He raised up moreover a certain lame man of the town of San Vito: he also made another speak of the town of Insula, when for a long time now he had not been able to speak anything."
l. The Archbishop of Cosenza Adam de Pusiaco, a Gaul, Chancellor of King Charles.
m. Maffei, "The Pontiff bade him to be summoned to him, asking many things, and inquiring much about his flight. But he prostrate, and suppliant fallen at his feet, with a constant mind rendered first an account of himself, then asked that he would permit him to lead the solitary life, which he had always so greatly desired: for it would come to pass that thus the highest peace of mind and tranquillity each would obtain. To whom he nothing assenting, fearing lest he should at some time to his own evil have granted it, resolved to bar him utterly from the colloquy of all and to enclose him more strictly. So therefore almost two months he detained him in the city of Anagni most secretly: for meanwhile he caused to be built in the town of Fumone a most strong and most fortified citadel, where he commanded him to be shut and kept with the greatest custody." But Maffei erred, that he believed the citadel could be built so quickly. A cell in the citadel, such as Celestine himself had defined, Boniface bade to be built: he being now persuaded that he would wish to stay there, as we prefer to believe Stephen the Cardinal, than these authors interpreting all things more malignly, as they had heard from the enemies of Boniface. Although it could be, God permitting it for the exercise of virtue, that beyond the Pontiff's intent the Saint was treated more harshly. The Monks also, who had taken the cession most ill, do not seem to have been able to receive a good opinion of Boniface, so as not to accuse him of inclemency: which it behoved here to be advised, lest the invectives, especially of Peter of Ailly writing in France according to the mind of the French, move anyone.
n. The Castle of Fumone, commonly Fumone, there in Latium near Alatri, distant from Anagni not more than 10 miles. A certain Italian Manuscript author a hundred years ago asserts, that anciently it was called the Castle of St. Simon, which name by use was thus corrupted.
o. "Those therefore being sick," says Maffei, "others who might succeed in good health were given, those being often changed."
a. Vincentius Spinelli adds to the mother the surname de Leonibus.
b. The same adds that the holy youth found here as if divinely both a kindled hearth and water brought in a vessel.
c. The same asserts this absolutely, which by another conjecturally written he had found, I fear however that he is not more certainly instructed than that one.
d. The same adds, "From the Bishop of Sulmona and the Chapter of St. Pamphilus he obtained license at the foot of Morrone to build a chapel, which on account of the slenderness of the work was quickly completed and consecrated to the Virgin Mother of God": and thence he digresses to the devotion of the Order toward this great Mother to be explained at length.
a. Vincentius Spinelli about that Simon adds, that after the departure of the monks, who, ecclesiastical censures being fulminated against the tyrant, had in vain striven to retain the place, fallen into a most grave disease he also incurred extreme poverty, and what is more miserable impenitent and excommunicate died.
b. Here consequently Vincentius continues to explain the gift of prophecy granted to the Saint, and the grace of cures and command over demons, examples being brought which either all or most are related below by Lelius: but among the rest he narrates a dragon, hostile to wayfarers, to have been put to flight by him; and thence he would have the insignia of the Order taken, where above three mountains a Cross planted is encircled by a serpent with lowered head, two branches of lilies rising on this side and that: but these indeed he says were given by the Kings of France, to insinuate that the Monks neither labor nor spin. Meanwhile Maurolycus in the Mare Oceano of Religions in the year 1613 defines that insignia by the Cross alone, around which is wrapped the letter S, in memory of the first and chief monastery of the Holy Spirit near Sulmona: and a Cross of this kind the Celestine monks in Belgium even today wear sewn to their garments: wherefore that about the Serpent, which no other older one related, becomes vehemently suspect to me.
c. Who would believe these things not to be taken from the very public instrument, to which the year and day of the month are so subscribed, as here they are indicated, namely 1287 14 September? Meanwhile Vincentius all these things, with the same circumstances of the chief persons narrates, as done in the year 1274, 18 June: and what is more wonderful, treating afterward of the Saint's withdrawal to Orfonte, he joins to him as a companion Francis of Atri, as if forgetful that he had already before made him Abbot general. From this and other heads I am persuaded, that as to history more is to be believed Lelius, as a far more accurate writer, and faithfully establishing the faith of the single things which he asserts by documents alleged: but to Vincentius it suffices the praise, that he employed a phrase in this age in Italy more esteemed, that is with grand metaphors and an exquisite culture of words adorned, shall I say? or obscured.
a. She appeared, as elsewhere Dathovada, to say her testimony in the order 40, whose words (since here they are sufficiently related entire) elsewhere we do not repeat: we only indicate, that her daughter Amicia agrees with the mother, Witness 41.
b. This was Alan, Witness 44, whose words also it is enough to be had in this place.
c. This Jabret was one of the four children of the aforesaid Dathovada: the others were Gaufrid Witness 48, and Anquoharita Witness 49, who referred themselves to the sayings of their aforesaid mother and sister.
d. On the 19th of May, and so in the year 1303, which also arises from the number of 27 years, everywhere indicated by the Witnesses.
a. Roger of Limoges sat in the year 1328, promoted to the Archbishopric of Bourges in the year 1343.
b. Ayquelinus or Aquilinus of Angoulême must have sat between William IV, known from the Vatican Register for the year 1328, and Elias II, found by the Sammarthani for the year 1363: who being ignorant of the time of Ayquelinus, placed him before William.
c. The monastery of St. Martin of Troarn of the Benedictine Order, commonly Troüard, had at this time as Abbot, according to the Sammarthani, William Aux Espaules, Canon of Coutances, perchance a Commendatary.
d. John 27 ordained in the year 1316 in the month of September.
e. Yvo was Bishop of Tréguier in the year 1327, who in this very year 1330 to Cornouaille, and finally in the year 1333 to the See of Saint-Malo was translated.
f. John Duke of Britain the third of this name from the year 1315 a most praised Prince, died in the year 1341.
g. Clement V ordained in the year 1305, had died in 1314, on 18 April, after whom for two years the See was vacant.
h. Philip VI King of France began in the year 1328, died in 1350.
i. Joanna his wife, daughter of Robert Duke of Burgundy, surviving her husband scarcely 14 days.
k. Guido of Britain, brother of Duke John; the Count of Penthièvre Argentré calls him.
l. A form of this kind see if you please in the Process of St. Francis of Paola on 2 April: for that which is here alleged, is not had inscribed to the present Process.
m. The name of the month is lacking in our transcript, it could have been noted the 4th Kalends of November; because the Brief dispatched on 28 November, before 9 December, could not be carried from Avignon to Tréguier, the interval being more than 160 leagues.
n. The feast of the Conception of B. M. on 8 December, in the year 1329 fell on the 6th Feria.
o. The land of the Occitan tongue, by others Occitania, commonly Languedoc.
a. certain noble girl appealing thither
a. new fact, [by a happy stratagem he frees her from harm.] and one peremptory to its decision:
a. The Vigil of St. John the Baptist, that is June 23, concurring with Saturday, marks the year 1330, dominical letter G.
b. This Saturday too after the Chains of Peter, that is after August 1, fell on the 4th day of the month.
c. By this formula the several depositions are begun, which it is enough to have set down once entire.
d. Surius (I know not whence the occasion of the error was taken) here expresses Azo as a man's name: the Neapolitans, following Surius, preferred to write Azonia; the Father's name is written Ahelorus also in both places, but less correctly. Albert notes, that the Saint himself was wont to sign, Yvo Hælorii of Ker-Martin. The same says, that the mother was of the family du Kenquis, which the French would call du Pleffy in the Parish of Pleumeurit-Jandy near the Rock of Derianus.
e. Witness VIII says Hælorius the father was the son of Lord Savaicus of Villa-Martini, Knight: whence I know not whether Surius formed the name of Cancietus the Knight.
f. In the notice of the Canonization, to be given for the Appendix of this Process, it is said S. Yvo was born of Munchi, and of the parish Munchi of the diocese of Tréguier, which to Albert is Menehi, a quarter of a league from Tréguier: who also says Yvo was born October 17, A.D. 1253, in Villa-Martini of the aforesaid parish.
g. Peter of Capella, from Bishop of Toulouse (which he had been made A.D. 1298) created Cardinal A.D. 1307, died 1312, and is said to have lived 120 years: accordingly he was very aged when S. Yvo heard him.
h. William of Blavia, made Bishop of Angoulême A.D. 1273, perhaps surviving the Saint himself.
i. To Albert from the vernacular la rue de Clos-Bruneau. The same says, the Saint's first abode was in the square commonly called, la rue au Fevre.
k. The same says, the Office itself was of 50 pounds annual income, a sum considerable at that time.
l. Curtile, a suburban garden, an estate. See Du Cange.
m. The Abbey of Relec, or (as Maurice writes) of Relics, is of the Cistercian Order, founded 1132.
n. Almost all who gave testimony, everywhere answered also concerning the public report of such matters as they deposed, which moreover it would be superfluous to note.
o. Coquinus, See Du Cange under the word Cocio, which is the same. It is plain that both are taken for a most vile man, and born only to the lowest services of the kitchen.
a. certain tunic and a certain over-cloak and hood
a. warren of lice; and then the said hair-shirt appeared.
a. Rauba, commonly Robe, a garment, and any furniture, of which see Du Cange under the word Roba: for under the word Rauba he derives another signification, by which that word is taken for spoil.
b. Bottones commonly Bouttons, little globes by which garments are fastened: thus sleeves somewhat buttoned are forbidden in certain statutes in Du Cange.
c. Epitogium, presently Supertunicale, from the Greek ἐπὶ and the Latin Toga.
d. Burellum or Cordetum, by some witnesses with the addition de Leonia named, from the place where it was made or chiefly sold, commonly Kar-leon, an Episcopal City in Brittany.
e. Persicus, a violet color, otherwise Perseus and Persus, to the French and Germans Pers, perhaps because the dye was brought from Persia: for as to the color of the Persian peach (to which some look) we know this to be yellow, not blue. Now the same color is more copiously brought from India by the Portuguese: and therefore the very material which serves for that dye is called by Merchants Indigo.
f. Foratus, Fourratus, whence presently Fourratura, the inner doubling of cloth, from the French Fourrer, to insert, to sew in.
g. Botæ, greaves, Bottes commonly.
h. Manerium commonly Manoir: said from Maneo for a house: see Du Cange.
i. Sotulares, shoes, to the French Soulliers, seem so called as if subtalares.
k. Camisia, an inner linen garment, wont to be worn immediately next to the flesh, French Chemise.
l. Canapium, woven of hemp.
m. Lanvalon, perhaps in the maps less correctly Lanvelin, 5 or 6 leagues from the city.
n. Capsilia, presently Capuceria, neither read elsewhere: it seems to signify the topmost edge of the garment, through which the head is put out.
o. Garenna, otherwise Warenna, where hares, rabbits and similar animals nest: it is taken also for a vivarium.
a. little straw beneath him. So also Dathovada
d. potage for himself and the other poor in the said Lent
a. Baletum, and presently Clida, by a word more usual to many other Witnesses, is called a hurdle, woven of rods or osiers, as here too is expressly noted.
b. S. Ronanus, as is indicated below in n. 38, is venerated at Quimper June 1.
c. S. Elau, Patron of the parish of Landelleau in Cornouaille. His Acts and the day of his cult I know not: only of him Fr. Peter Champion writes to me, that in his cemetery is a chapel separated from the principal edifice, where his sepulchre is seen in the manner of a stone sarcophagus.
d. Potagium, from the Teutonic word Pot, a cauldron, a kettle, any broth-like cooking chiefly of roots, pulse, herbs.
e. Paula, a delay of time.
f. Licentiare, to give license to depart.
g. Ad partem, by the French idiom, apart, separately.
a. good and upright man. Asked indeed how
a. shirt to go about, and to make pilgrimages, on account of
a. The name of vassals here is taken in a humbler notion, so as simply to signify domestic servants: of other acceptations see Du Cange.
b. Raba, to the French Rave, to the Germans Rape, a radish.
c. Ribaldus, an infamous man, lost, obscene: of which kind of men Du Cange has much.
d. Palefredus, anciently Paraveredus, in the middle age signified a riding horse.
e. Garcia, to the French Garce, a girl, a harlot.
f. Tabornum, in the more prolix Life n. 43 Taborinum, commonly Tambour, and this more fittingly to the Moorish origin (for from the Spanish Moors that word came to us) signifies, not a trumpet (as Albert translates) but a drum: whence Taburinus or Tambyrinus, a drummer.
a. certain tunic for himself, and that the tailor [a] came
a. hood, saying his Hours, as said she who speaks,
a. certain Geoffrey to take of the corn,
a. Tondurarius, how it is used for a Tailor, I know not: since Tonderare is the same as to shear.
b. Rocha-Deriani, is distant only one or another league from Tréguier.
c. An oven-full of bread, that is, as many loaves as one oven holds to be cooked at once.
d. To God, to the French, Adieu.
e. Bassetum, seems to be called a low table, from the root Bas.
f. A shilling's-worth of bread, that is, to the value of one shilling: thus a shilling's-worth of land is said, which yields one shilling annually.
g. Caristia, dearness of provisions, a word in the middle age most usual.
h. Goussæ, to the French the pods of any pulse are called.
i. Boissellus, a French measure, commonly Boisseau, otherwise also Boistellus.
k. Bladum, for corn, a most well-known word.
l. Burgensis, a citizen, so called from a burg.
m. Gastellus, commonly Gatteau, a cake, a wafer, made of the very flower of flour, eggs and other sweets.
n. Foassa, Focacia, Fogata, Fugatia and Fuatia, all sound the same, and signify a cake, not cooked in an oven, but at the household hearth, whence also they are named; to some it is also bread baked under the ashes.
o. Toalia, that is, a cloth.
a. beautiful bed according to his state, he himself
a. full dish of flour he distributed. Witness XIX said,
a. certain silver pyx very honorable,
a. certain man saying to him, Lord Yvo, come
g. nothing could they claim for themselves. Which done
a. The Archbishop of Tours from the year 1285 to 1289 was Olivarius; then after Philip and Burchard (who here cannot be understood) from A.D. 1294 to 1310 Reginald.
b. Inclusagium, as otherwise and presently below, Reclusagium.
c. Will be lost, that is, will be ruined or perish eternally. Something similar relates Albert in these words: A certain woman came to him, grieving because her son having left her had put on a monk: to whom the Saint: Do not mourn, for he will return, because he loves money too much: which so came to pass.
d. Culcitra puncta, of this see Du Cange. It seems moreover to be called puncta, for the reason that, the containing stuffing being stuffed between two cloths, it is sewn stitch by stitch.
e. Equus nardus, what kind it is called, I do not attain.
f. Truffare, that is to mock: Truffa, a game, a jest.
g. S. Tugdoalus is venerated November 30.
a. mirror and example: and that the life of others, however
b. of the said diocese was through the unskillfulness of the carpenters
c. of those who had prepared it, so short and curtailed, [The timber material he fits to the work by lengthening it:]
a. little milk upon the fire, the fire immediately ceased
a. certain one who was said to have a demon, sent
a. servant of Master Yvo, and Yvo Auspice his Clerk,
a. Lippa of bread, a morsel: for as this from the Latin Bucca, so to the French from the Teutonic Lip, a lip, is called Lippee.
b. Pont-ars, to Albert Ar-pont-losquet, on the road which from Tréguier leads to Land-wion.
c. Carpentarius, a worker in wood to the French.
d. Leve: is it the same which below in n. 150 is Lya? In the maps I find Lez and Ler?
e. Firmatus, that is closed, by the vulgar idiom, by which Fermer, is said to close.
a. certain window he had a Cross with the image
a. Thorofalen. I know not in which diocese this Archpresbyterate is to be sought.
b. The diocese of Axsolanum is nowhere known; so that altogether this writing is corrupted, for the correcting of which not even a suitable conjecture occurs.
c. The interlineations and erasures, made in the text, that is, supplements and corrections.
d. The Abbey of Bona-requies, commonly Bonrepos, of the diocese of Quimper of the Cistercian Order, founded in the year 1184.
a. boy of ten years, [The Fourth for three days lifeless,] on the Thursday of the Lord's Supper about
a. Priest they could not find who would him
a. half, fell into a fountain, which is near the house of the said Joanna, [There are raised, an infant submerged in a fountain,]
a. boy dead: and there appeared then in the chapel, in
a. and thence drawn out cold and dead; a vow and promise,
a. league, he went to the pond aforesaid, and entered, and
a. recommendation and vow by Joanna the lady
f. apart: as afterward she reported to the same one who speaks.
a. The pond of Portus-magnus, to Albert Porz-meur, who says the boy was of Garlan near Morlaix.
b. The water Guindi, Albert calls a river, and the parish whence the boy was born Bolezan, which in the maps seems to be put between Morlaix and Guingamp.
c. S. Sulliavus Abbot is venerated October 1, where it will be permitted to seek this place.
d. Hardelonus, is it from Hardéle a girl, as if a girlish girdle?
e. Balneare, for, to wash, does not seem to be reckoned among the barbarisms, since thence is derived the name Balneator, a word of the first Latinity.
f. Ad partem, in French Apart, separately.
a. man could have gone for the space of the drawing of four
a. Mortum, perhaps a village, Meur commonly called, in the wood of Poulamere near Rohan.
b. Brachiata, in French Brassee, a fathom.
c. A trunk in churches for receiving alms is placed, of which matter see Du Cange.
d. A liege-man is so called, by reason of fief or subjection, against anyone obligated to his Lord.
e. Maleta, a diminutive from the Teutonic Male, a bag.
f. The island Thiven, is it that which now Insula Bassa is called, opposite Roscou?
g. Marna, by others Marga, as it were the marrow of the earth, inasmuch as fat: for to the Germans Marg is marrow, and earth of this kind Margel by the same is called.
h. The island of S. Mandetus, nearest to the bay of Tréguier. The very S. Mandetus Abbot is venerated anniversarily November 18.
a. league, as it seemed to him, holding his staff in
a. ship. Before this heard Alan Clerici, Witness
a. certain rock. And Alan Clericus, parishioner
a. There seems to be indicated that bay of the sea, which between Vannes and Groizilium makes the Vigelania, commonly Vilaine, into the Ocean flowing.
b. Valletus to the French is called a servant: which diminutively to be said for Vassaletus very probably reckons Du Cange, and of this word's various signification learnedly discourses.
c. The transcriber's fault having mutilated the sense, it was needful somehow to supply it: the whole matter is more fully explained in the following Life n. 107. The Tabardus moreover is a toga, not only senatorial, but also of travel or military, having sleeves.
d. In French la Greve, so that la is only the article. It is moreover at Helior on the eastern side of a certain sandy estuary, about 3 leagues from S. Brieuc, having its name from its nature: because Greva is called sand, gravel, sea-shingle, sometimes also Grena is found: and at Paris a place known for the executions of the guilty by the Seine, is called la Greve.
e. Goumon, or (as elsewhere written) Govemon, below in n. 109 is rendered Seaweed.
f. Rupella a city with a port among the Poitevins, memorable for the stubborn defense of the Huguenots, Louis XIII besieging it and at length obtaining it.
g. The Port-Blessed, I believe to be in the estuary of the Odera, below Quimper entering the sea, where I find a village marked Benodet, that is Benedictum.
h. Rocha and Roccus, a rock.
a. S. Inflanus, commonly S. Efflam, is venerated November 6, where it will be permitted to seek into these places.
b. Potentiæ are called the under-armpit props, having gotten their name from their form: Eschasses properly to the French now are called what to the Latins are Grallæ, a thing far otherwise.
a. blind man, coming to the city of Tréguier,
a. stranger man he was. And that he was blind evidently
a. blind man, which his sight recovered he dismissed: and he saw him
a. small pea. Testifies this also Lord
a. half, [likewise a girl.] on account of an infirmity which she had had her sight
a. vow made to God and to Master Yvo by his mother and brothers,
f. vowed and rendered to the said Yvo, and thence by
a. In the year 1330, dominical letter G, the Wednesday after June 30, was July 4.
b. S. Jagu in the Life by Maurice n. 135 Jagutus, otherwise also S. Jagon or Jegon is said to have a Life in the new and third edition of the book of the Saints of Brittany, which edition we have not yet seen.
c. S. Leonarius, more commonly S. Leonard, is venerated in neighboring Aquitaine of Brittany, for the freeing of captives chiefly celebrated, November 6.
d. S. William Firmatus, is venerated in likewise neighboring Normandy April 24, where we gave the Life: we believe moreover the same to be he, who here is said in the diocese of Saint-Malo also to have a church.
e. William Bishop of Léon, by Albert surnamed de Kersazon, is said here to be written de Villa-sazon; our copy more corruptly de Valle-saure, ordained 1292, died 1327, June 15, according to Albert aforesaid.
f. Avotire, for Devovere, is new to us and foreign.
a. certain hole, in the manner of the point of a needle,
a. certain venomous worm on a certain night her in
a. horrible and dangerous swelling having in
a. or their skin, which was thick and swollen
a. stone, which was in the gum [e tauta] and jaw, came out into the mouth
a. monk of Pulcer portus of the diocese of Dol, saying
a. certain silver cup had lost, to Master
a. He would more properly have called it the scrotum.
b. Carreria, a road for carts: to the French Carriere.
c. The ankle of the foot, in more correct Latin is called Clavicula.
d. Fusellus, a diminutive from Fusus, a piece of wood round and small. Frustrum moreover for Frusto you may find written by many in the 14th century.
e. The ambiguous writing of our copy, whether Tauta or Tanta is to be read, does not distinguish: nor elsewhere have I found this word used for jaw.
f. The joint of the thumb, that is, the Articulus of the thumb: otherwise a word usual among the words of measure is Uncia, which is also called Pollex, the twelfth part of a geometric foot.
g. Bellus-portus, an Abbey of the Premonstratensian Order.
h. In the year 1312, dominical letter A, the first Monday of the month of March was the 6th day.
i. S. Cazou, who he is, and when he is venerated, I would gladly learn; and the Acts, if any survive, I would receive: Fr. Champion asked about him answered he knew nothing.
k. This is the Translation from Lycia to Bari in Italy, and is noted in the Martyrologies May 9.
l. Of S. Gilda, among the Armoricans most well-known, we treated January 29; but nothing there we noted, by reason of what figure spirals of this kind (such as perhaps also are those which by the Belgians are called Minne-stricken or Love-knots, by art and elegantly with a double plait drawn) are called Knots of Gildasius: nor when asked Fr. Champion and others skilled in Breton matters could anything about it teach.
m. Croc is a Hook to the French, whence the diminutive Crochet: yet something more and of which the loss would not be so easily reparable, than a vile hook or grapnel of wood, that word to the Breton sailors seems to indicate.
n. Roncinus or Runcinus, a common gregarious horse, perhaps a diminutive from the Teutonic Ruyn, which signifies a gelding or castrated horse.
a. parchment Codex in a large and elegant character
a. firm confidence bore, that if he were canonized,
k. Bishop of Nantes, filling Columns
l. of Mirepoix, and which is Conference VII, from Numbers
n. of Trivento for the Canonization of S. Yvo,
a. convent founded at the chapel of S. Trinity near
a. burial, and again under God's good pleasure we choose
a. certain number of Masses under a form presently to be
a. After the death of John III, whom in n. 2 we found for the Canonization of S. Yvo to have supplicated, occurring in the year 1342, under contention was the Duchy of Brittany, between John of Montfort, for whom the English; and Charles of Blois, for whom the French were acting. Was waged moreover the war most fiercely, with various fortune on both sides; nor Montfort being taken did the wife cease strenuously the matter to carry on for her husband: who escaping from custody and presently dying, about the year 1344, succeeded the son also John, called in the order of the Dukes of Brittany the Fourth, for the reason that the father never had peaceful possession, nay this to him had been by the sentence of the King of France adjudged away. This one moreover more fortunate and oftener victor, saw his adversary first in the year 1345 a captive led away into England (whose wife nonetheless strenuously the war pursued) and at length in battle slain in the year 1354, September 28: on which day we keep the Process for his canonization formed. And so an end received the contention, and John IV the surname of Conqueror. He himself moreover is, of whom here it is treated, already from the captivity of Charles, all things in Brittany by the Ducal and absolute right doing, except in a few places by Charles aforenamed's wife defended.
b. Foraturæ, here are put for Wares, perhaps so called from Forum, in which they are wont to be set out for sale: which however elsewhere Du Cange has not yet found.
c. Clement VI, was born of Malo-moute of the diocese of Limoges; before the Papacy called Peter Rogerii.
d. Two are found about these times named Peter, Bishops of Sabina: the former of Mortuus-Mare called, a Gaul; the other, of Barossus, a Spaniard: of whose succession and year of death authors do not agree. To me even hence it becomes probable, the former not to have died in the year 1345, but at least up to the year 1348 to have lived; which I should believe, this cause not to a Spaniard but to a Gallic Cardinal to have been committed; and therefore more gladly I assent to Frizonius saying, that the latter only was made Bishop of Sabina in the year 1348, not likewise that the former lived up to the year 1350.
e. Galhardus de Mot, a Cardinal created in the year 1316, lived up to the year 1357.
f. Namely, the war then most especially burning about the city of Tréguier, it was not permitted to the Bishop Yvo, whom in the year 1329 we saw in n. 4 elected Procurator, for that cause to Avignon to betake himself: and therefore another had to be substituted.
g. Who at this time bore the title of Patriarch of Antioch, I have not yet found out.
h. The Archbishop of Narbonne, from the year 1346 to 1375, was Peter le Juge, cousin of Gregory Pope XI.
i. Amanevus the Sammarthani call him from the year 1345, and a successor to have had they say his brother Bernard in the year 1348.
k. Oliver Salahadinus, Bishop of Nantes, from the year 1337 to 1354.
l. The Bishop of Mirepoix in Occitania, from the year 1342, was Peter de Pireto: and to this one succeeded John de Cojordano; whose notice the Sammarthani find from the year 1348 up to 1354. The former of the Order of Preachers was, and still lived in the year 1345; not yet however do we determine, which of them this Conference delivered.
m. The Bishop of Sigüenza, by the resignation of Peter Barrosi, Gonsalvus de Aguilar, made afterward Archbishop of Toledo.
n. The Bishopric of Trivento, under the Archbishopric of Benevento on the borders of Abruzzo, known in the Geographical map of the County of Molise: the series however of those Bishops exhibits the Italia sacra of Ughelli in the Appendix to Tom. 2 where Brother Jordanus Curti of the Order of Minors is found, in the year 1344 created, and 1348 to the Archbishopric of Messina in Sicily translated.
o. Galfridus, Bishop of Ferns in England, created in this very year 1347 at Avignon March 5: of whom Ware in the Bishops of Ferns, and Herrera in the Augustinian Alphabet.
a. Confessor the excellence such should have parents, who
a. Greek to a Breton for the composition of the name in
a. seed one in number she was in person, in virtue yet
a. boy, [which also the playthings of his boyhood proved,] if right and clean are his works. So
a. The Israelite kingdom commonly is said to have begun in the year of the World 2960, before Christ 1094: whence moreover was taken that fable about the antiquity of the British Kingdom, it does not please to scrutinize: the truer history first there a King Conanus Meriadecus, from the island of Britain brought over, acknowledges about the year of Christ 383.
b. If S. Peter for the sake of preaching the Gospel even into the island of Britain ran out, he could also to Armorica some ray of Christian light have brought.
c. That Eudo and Yvo the same name are, not easily will be proved, since from the very usage of the British common people Yves is said, not Euden. Much less should I believe either name to owe anything to the Greeks, although the Bretons' race presently to them refers our Author, and their idiom, augmented Greek to be says: for these all gratis to be feigned seem.
d. So also Ekkehard abundant bread, that is, copious, said.
e. Nay Esther: for from her book ch. 8 v. 16 was taken the versicle which follows.
f. Nor this is Solomon's, but Jeremiah's.
a. Master and Determiner he became: After
a. Catechumen and naked, in Christ reborn, his collateral
a. spouse fruitful he was made. For from them gathered
a. debtor, and of the gain to be reported a strict
a. candlestick, and as a city upon a mountain
a. scullion most commonly called; not sad
a. remedy of preservation and a heap of merits should appoint; [for the exercise and increase of virtue;]
a. Archas, perhaps to be written Archus: for Ἄρχος in Greek is Prince.
b. Albert le Grand, in the French Life of S. Tugdualus, only two years notes: the Latin, which sometime we had, with Hymn and Office, I know not how does not appear any more; wherefore another copy of it we desire, so much the more, by how much with more evident figments stained it seems.
c. Salarium, a military word, from camps transferred to of any labor the wage to signify, of which word much Mathias Martinius in the Philological Lexicon.
d. There are not in Job these words, Defender of widows; the order too of the words is other; and certain things as to the word, not the sense, changed you will find: which in other places of Scripture frequently to this Author happens, with biblical maxims for his preacher's office from memory to be recited accustomed: whence also to err him sometimes happens the memory failing, and one sacred book for another suggesting, which to him is to be pardoned.
e. Among the Tragedies, which under the name of L. Annæus Seneca everywhere are extant, although of various authors them to be more certain it is, one is Octavia, in which Nero's crimes prolixly are noted: but what is the other Tragedy, with Nero's title sometime inscribed, I know not; of some Christian, and indeed much more recent the work to be, from those things, which here without any species of meter are alleged, appears.
a. King delivered; and for the sacred to the same to be ministered,
a. King by the leadings adhering, to the throne here of grace
a. super-tunic, to another the super-tunic's lining, to another
a. blind man boots; and in place of a hood, a flap of the over-cloak over his head
a. voice while sleeping he heard, three times admonishing;
a. hollow stone, in which S. Eleau penance had done, sleeping he found. For a pillow he had chosen a biblical
a. little flour being added and somewhat of butter:
a. great of people multitude assembled, the people
a. sermon and afterward, with bent knees and clasped hands,
a. time for a year and beyond by paralysis struck, to be cured
a. Priest and Rector he was made, abounded. Orphans
a. father went away, and as a Saint him venerated:
a. distinguished and devout Lady formerly of Carenrez,
a. near death weigh, [gladly to it he aspires,] in which to me
a. nearer to me death, if it pleased God, I affect;
a. departure from us thus by death anticipated is expedient.
a. possessor deservedly was made, since by the witness of the Apostle,
a. passage hindering, just as Moses with a rod,
a. detriment to restore? To you behold my body and neck
a. little within himself praying, into the Architect
a. little before almost dead, in God and the word of the Saint
a. miracle was perpetrated in the timber for the Bridge Ars
a. miracle he did, of seven loaves large and sufficient
a. certain shining dove, with its brightness the whole
a. most evident was a testimony, [otherwise in the elevation a celestial light.] that
a. suffrage necessary, to a certain Recluse near the Rock
a. Merreamentum seems to be said, as if Materiamentum: it is said also Maëremeum, Merrenum, Meranna etc.; from these the ancient Frankish Maronner, to cut timber: of which more Du Cange in the Glossary.
b. Mango properly signifies him, who of boys or slaves or beasts to be set out for sale gain makes, or otherwise wares by polishing adorns, that more saleable he may make them: here indeed it is taken for a Horse-groom: and so below in n. 107 the Palfrey with the horse-dealer sent ahead is said, where in the Process n. 96 it is said the Palfrey with a vallet, that is a servant.
a. youth's death wailing, him to God and to S. Yvo
a. of three hours space; the mother from afar coming up,
a. certain Azenora of Plœguiel with a son
a. vow of a candle of his length and breadth annually
a. vow alive recovered and sound.
a. wax candle, the magnitude of his body embracing,
a. girl of the age of about three years with a grave infirmity
a. certain matron's suggestion upon this to S. Yvo
a. deep well near the cemetery for then of the city
a. flooding very great, through the bridge Ars
a. passage he made and his very horse into the pond,
a. certain island by a league from land distant for the sake of hunting to approach proposing, [15 imperiled in a tempest:] while they sailed
a. tempest and the sea's disturbance so strong arises,
a. ship laden with sea-earth crossing, arisen suddenly
a. tempest, shipwreck suffered: two indeed of
a. piece of wood from the sea rising he laid hold of: upon
a. certain rock, where at once the vow emitted miraculously
a. certain matron to be kept she had handed over. [A little girl her house burnt is kept safe.] And when
a. Monerius, to the French Meunier, a Miller: otherwise Molinatius, whence contracted it seems.
b. Niort in the Process n. 92, Mortum.
c. Lober, in the Summary of the Process Leombar: and in this manner in the transcribing of the names of places not a slight here and there appears diversity, which it did not please singly to note.
d. There is related here this case from the Summary n. 97, with so notable of certain circumstances a defect or difference, that to one comparing each place it appears it had been to be wished the of the very depositions context entire, both here and elsewhere, where now to the Summary we had to be content.
a. year and beyond so contracted made was, that neither to walk,
a. sudden and unexpected of divine retribution solace.
a. splendor her shining about and her warming
a. man of six annual pennies devoting, a brightness
a. miracle the memory commending, in the very forehead remaining.
a. very long time blind, [sight is rendered to a blind woman,] for obtaining of the eyes
a. second time by the demons to be vexed, and more terribly to cry out, [next to his sepulchre he is freed:]
a. league or thereabouts they had proceeded, he began to convalesce,
a. daughter had, [likewise a girl, one for a year,] for a year and beyond so demented and furious,
a. A horse with a pack-saddle, that is, with panniers furnished: for Bastum is panniers.
a. response she received in spirit that his sepulchre
a. stone one, which was in the very gum or jaw leaped back
a. relapse suffered, and for fourteen
a. citizen of Tréguier, by name Bleuzuena Goasqueder,
a. silver cup of the weight of one mark with a half
a. wooden boat-hook had lost, [and a sailor a punt-pole lost.] vows and prayers
a. calf of one month, to her after the mother left
a. true of S. Yvo particle and relics to public veneration
a. treasure, otherwise perhaps singly to be explained, in
a. day they had named, to the very S. Yvo sacred, in the year
a. pledge of his toward so salutary an institution love he offered,
a. place to be vacant it shall happen; an election by all of the Body,
a. laudable and holy, toward the Jurisconsults of Ghent, with the holy
a. particle even small of the relics, which from the liberal of so
a. delay, but that to his place would be consecrated the designated
a. numerous it called forth hearer; to whom when words had been made,
a. Seat had provided. The matter moreover in this order was performed.
a. solemnity to its Patron with a like rite to repeat. Finally
a. notable of him from silver statue, five feet high:
a. part some of the sacred Relics, for an excitement
a. solemn Mass, with most exquisite music by
a. certain hermitage to himself and to God to live; and thus of miracles
a. Rule of the monastic life, in some men of the Order of Friars
a. King and Lord he acknowledged Manfred, [he was in the year 1259 of King Manfred a Counsellor,] of whose Court
a. vacant, free, and natural possession
a. private lived, up to the day XIX of May of the year 1309,
a. chief man; to whom he annexes Brother John
a. Sicilian. But fully the suspicion purges the Scrutiny
a. new Confessor, the Relics fore-endowed. [especially he whose Life here, from worthy of faith received, is given.] But now to
a. supper to him exhibited and from him received. Or he was called
a. vow of virginity he held and kept. Which
a. house to the name of the Lord, a Father and Pastor future in
a. Judge, but a Father as it were by all he was held. Oaths
a. foundation of humility before the mass of the structure be procured;
a. fool, that by God he might be instructed: made was poor, that
a. To be pardoned to the Author, that in the manner of his age futile of names interpretations he prefixes. So know all and explode the practice in the History Lombardic or the Golden Legend of James de Voragine, who in the same with Blessed Augustine Novellus lived century, some before him years having departed life. Of whom and his interpretations of names, in the General Preface before the Acta Sanctorum of January it is said ch. 1 §4.
b. In Hebrew Matan is a gift. But why might it not from the Greek idiom have taken its origin, in which μάταιος, is the same as for us a man vain and demented, as one who from the vanity and folly of the world was to a better of living manner converted? why not the same as under other points Mattathias?
c. Of the castle Teranum above treated.
d. His father John de Termes, and grandfather Oliver, Frederick's Counsellors, are indicated in the Privilege of King Manfred.
e. Manfred, of Frederick the Emperor son bastard; for his brother Conrad administered the kingdom of Sicily from the year 1251; and this one in the year 1253, on the day 21 of May extinct, gradually the Sicilians to his allegiance drew; and afterward, in the year 1258 on the day 10 of August, King at Palermo was crowned.
f. This is Charles of Anjou, brother of S. Louis King of the Franks: by whom was vanquished Manfred in a conflict before the city of Benevento, in the year 1266 on Friday 26 of February, and slain.
g. Quæsta, the begging-collection of alms. S. Peter Thomas of the Order of Carmelites one quest made, bringing a thousand florins from the quest of one day. So Philip Mazzerius in his Life on 29 January n. 12.
h. That Hospital, or (as Ughellus in tome 3 of Italy sacred about to treat of the Siena Bishops column 619) calls it, the famous hospice of Scala, by Blessed Sororius founded: a work indeed of memory worthy, begun by a cobbler, and increased by the lapse of time by the collation of various and liberality, and its very income to eighty thousand ducats to rise is the report. We there were in the year 1661, and on the day VIII of October the whole this edifice we surveyed, on another occasion more widely of it about to treat. What moreover to this Hospital conferred Blessed Augustine, from this his Life the reader will know.
i. There is in the same a picture from the year 1442 made, in which Blessed Augustine confers on the related Restaurus the habit of Rector of the Hospital, with these words in Italian subscribed: How S. Augustine Novellus gives the habit to the Rector of the Hospital.
a. Brother sufficiently venerable and capable, who long afterward
a. Brother to have ought; of the office of Clerics and
a. Famous in the first place is the sacred Lecitan wood, which excellently described Ambrose Landuccius, in a book at Rome printed in the year 1675; where among the Blessed of this place is numbered Augustine Novellus. We were in the year 1661, on the day 12 of October in the Lecitan S. Saviour monastery, by the R.P. Bartholomew Moronti the Prior most kindly received, and we transcribed what to our studies pertained: it is distant from Siena scarcely an hour and a half's journey.
b. In the Mountains, commonly la Montagnata called, toward the Pontifical dominions, is beheld a town commonly S. Fiore called, with the title of a County distinguished, at the head of a river of the same name to it. Orlandus Malavoltus in part 2 of the Siena History book 5 at the year 1331, describes the controversy of the Counts of S. Flora with the city of Siena, and on what conditions peace was composed. In the Lecitan history page 68 is called the convent of S. Barnabas in Santa Flora, and page 61 only of S. Flora.
c. Some elogium of Bonus has the said Landuccius page 98, and Blessed calls him: Herrera in the Alphabet Augustinian part 1 page 92, Venerable names him.
d. Rainald was ordained Bishop in the year 1282, departed life in the year 1307.
e. The convent of S. Antony in Valle-Aspera in Ardinghesia, subject to the Lecitan Congregation, from the city of Siena distant is XVIII miles. Very much of this Convent is read in Landuccius page 57 and following.
f. The convent of S. Lucia in Valle-Rosia, 9 miles distant from Siena, as is said in the Appendix: more of it treats Herrera part 2 folio 357.
g. Clement of Osimo, of whom above we treated, dead in the year 1291 on the day 8 of April, by miracles renowned, as on that day in his Life we said.
h. Nicholas IV Pope was elected 25 November of the year 1277.
i. These years are very incomplete. For granted still in the year 1277 he was assumed, of that year few months, and few months of the year 1298, for completed years are to be taken, that the required years 22 be had.
k. He was elected 25 May of the year 1298.
l. This is Boniface VIII, who had succeeded in the year 1294, when himself of the Pontificate had abdicated S. Celestine V, as already we related in his Life.
m. In the year 1300 on the Kalends of May.
n. This is Charles II, son and successor in the kingdom of Charles the first his father, from the year 1285.
o. This is Robert, called the Wise and the Good, succeeded his father in the year 1309, dead in the year 1343, in which reigning this Life was composed.
a. certain pit, standing in the pit, earth fell
a. day and night, and by the prayers of Blessed Augustine to God
a. certain his field, and sleeping a certain serpent entered
a. great time: vowed moreover himself to Blessed Augustine, and the prayer
a. glass-vessel: was moreover the boy nearly six months.
a. needle was there where she had fallen, and it entered into
a. Massa, an Episcopal city under the Metropolis of Siena, from which it is distant 35 miles toward Populonia, 18 miles thence distant.
b. Mezajolus or Mezariolus, is called a colonist, the half of the fruits with the lord dividing, such as with us along the Meuse tract very many, in German Halvenaers: it is moreover to the Italians Mezo or Mezzo, the half.
c. Jordan, namely who ruptured was. Then the following miracles he omits. But at the end in Cajetanus these are added: For the rest Blessed Augustine's body in the oratory of S. Leonard in a marble sepulchre is kept, where each year on the next after the solemnities day, to his memory and name solemn and public honors are paid, to God's glory in His Saints. These there: to which in his Animadversions adds Cajetanus: the said marble sepulchre to be kept above an altar at the right of the greater altar, and he himself in the year 1597 to Siena to have come, and informed of the holy man's sepulchre, the oratory of S. Leonard to have gone to, and the sacred Relics of Blessed Augustine to have venerated. But these of some Relics: for the body to the monastery of S. Augustine in the city of Siena formerly was carried.
d. Mona, seems for honor's sake to be prefixed to the name of some Matron, as contracted from Madonna, My Lady.
e. Guastella seems to be taken for a phial or little glass vessel: for so I find that it is called Guastada: otherwise Guastellus and Wastellus a cake signifies, or a wafer of eggs, milk and fine flour tempered.
f. Punta to the Italians, to the French Pointe, that is, a Point.
a. journey to the convent under the title and devotion of D.
a. place arched, [Also with a frequent concourse on the 2nd day of Pentecost,] of the breadth of arms two
a. chest wooden ancient, [an old wooden chest, in which he is painted,] in which, as asserted the said
a. mitre and a cope, [the receiving of the head of S. Lucia] and behind many Religious
a. lily golden: which effigy the said most Reverend Fathers
a. I erred at the day 16 of May, in the preliminary to the Acts of S. Francis of Siena Commentary, deceived by the ambiguity of a response sent to me from Siena, when I believed, the style Notarial of the Siena-folk, from the of the Pisans and of many other through Tuscany cities usage, the common year's beginning to anticipate by nine months; when it was on the contrary to be established, that the Siena-folk, equally as the Florentines, the year prolong by three months beyond the Kalends of January, up to the XXV of March. So moreover very well are reconciled, first the Authors all, who Blessed Ambrose Sansedonius, on the XX of March dead, write to have died in the year 1286; although by those beginning the year from January it ought to be said dead 1287: then how the process of Blessed Francis of Siena, begun in the year 1622 in the month of October, lasted up to February of the same year, which to us had begun 1623 to be numbered from January. That moreover to be necessary is proved, both from the instruments of Blessed Ambrose, in the months of April and May made, and the XV Indiction with the year 1287 composing: then from this instrument, where the Indiction VII, in the month only of September begun, is composed with the year 1638, and deservedly is added By the Style of Siena; because by the style of neighboring Pisa it ought to have been written the year 1639.
b. Lodia, or Logia, signifies a portico annexed to a church.
c. The formal words in Italian are these: In the year 1276 of the Lord, the 3rd of the Pontificate of Clement IV, by the work of the Blessed Rinero, was restored this church, and adorned with picture, paraments and relics: and this done, the most Reverend Bishop of Volterra, moved by the goodness and sanctity of the Fathers of this place, consecrated the said church to the honor of God, and of His most holy Mother, of the glorious Father S. Augustine, and of S. Lucia Virgin and Martyr. Which we preferred in Latin to give. There was moreover in the said year 1276 Raynerius Ubertinus Bishop of Volterra, of whom consult Ughellus in tome 1 of Italy sacred, column 366. Who moreover was Blessed Reinerius, of the said restoration the author, we are ignorant; nor any mention of him do we find in Herrera in the Alphabet, Torellus in the Centuries, or other Augustinian writers.
d. Is venerated S. Leonard 6 November, and everywhere is painted in the Levitical habit, nor hitherto of the Augustinian writers anyone him enrolled among the Saints of his Order.
e. Decius Cardinal Azzolinus, in the year 1585 by Sixtus V created, for arms has six stars golden in a field blue in Ciacconius: but he of the Azzolini of Fermo is; whether moreover these common arms have with the Azzolini of Siena, I know not.
f. Volta, a vault, from the Chronicle Ms. of Saint-Trond on the Relics of S. Eucherius Bishop 20 February n. 1 and elsewhere.
g. In Italian thus it was: Come S. Agostino Novelo die l'abito a Rettore de lo Ispedale.
h. Coperta, that is, a Cover.
i. Ottone and Latone is called brass, and the latter word also to the Spaniards, French, English, and Belgians somewhat varied passed.
k. Patientia, a Scapular, not of nuns only (as I believed at the Life of S. Catharine of Bologna 9 March n. 37) but (as hence appears) also of men.
l. Baccinum, Bacile that is a basin, from the Teutonic Bac.
m. That Cross greater in a field white, seems the Duchy of Calabria to denote, although today that not golden, but red is figured; nor are made the six small crosses, here likewise expressed: The lilies golden in number indefinite, by the more ancient custom of the Kings of the Franks, even today to the Naples city for arms are, but in a field blue: which color, here perhaps from the beginning expressed, gradually passed into blackness.
n. Here seems to doubt the Notary, to which S. Augustine the sacred church be, and perhaps later restored it was, also under the name of Novellus, which at the beginning of the former only the name bore; as is plain from the instrument of the year 1201 in Herrera part 2 page 409, surely made before than Novellus was born.
o. There followed a Note of P. James Orlandinus of Siena, without a year in Italian written, after the Relic, of which below, to the Termini city (which he calls Terni) granted: by which is asserted among other things, through a space of three hundred years to be wont to be celebrated continually Masses at that altar, in which is deposited the body of the Blessed; and the very marble chest to be most ancient; then when that Note was written, to have lived there some Fathers, who asserted by themselves to have seen formerly two panels of white marble old, in which were sculptured certain miracles of the Blessed: that moreover the Note was written after the year 1620, is understood from the assigned Hymn, Iste Confessor, since in that still year (as presently will appear) another Hymn was recited.
a. testimony is with willing mind to be granted, and since
a. personal visitation of the altar of the aforesaid Blessed Augustine
a. man certain from a mountain most high falling, unharmed
a. book red holding, in the habit of the Order clothed, among
a. wolf devoured; the second, a girl from the height of a house
a. rock with a horse to the bottom rushing; the fourth, an infant
a. wolf from a dog; and a boy from a girl, was not easy to distinguish
a. whole half-year had preceded the happy death of the Blessed (as he calls her) Elizabeth
a. figure of the most holy Crucified in the right hand, a book in the left,
a. trial, scarcely I would doubt. Not so much of foundation
a. most precious crown by the Mother of God to be imposed.
a. town, of the diocese of Como, the cult and memory
b. Ms. of S. Benignus the Abbot. He of adolescence the years
a. Translation to be treated, and resumed sometimes thereafter
a. certain Apothecary [f]… The rest are lacking, by age corrupted,
a. certain was placed; until his most Illustrious
a. white above canopy furnished, and
a. moderate rain bedewed the sky, as a testimony
a. lover once of yours, now with the Heaven-dwellers a protector,
a. certain D. Andrew Rusca, to the most Blessed Virgin Mary,
a. Commonly Peschiera, in the territory of Verona, a place exceedingly fortified by nature, inasmuch as within the waters of the Benacus lake, situated at the mouth of the Mincio carrying itself thither, under the Dominion Venetian, 18 miles from Mantua, fewer from Verona distant.
b. S. Benignus the Abbot, in the Como Martyrology enrolled 12 February, by us shall be reported in the Supplement, when the Life here indicated and to us promised we shall have received.
c. The Congregation Lombard of the Order of S. Dominic had its beginning at Venice in the year 1391, as writes Michael Pius Part 2 Annotation 3.
d. The Bishop of Verona, from the year 1631 to 1649, was Mark Justinian, Patrician Venetian, in whom his of the Bishops of Verona Catalogue ends Ughellus.
e. Our copy, both here, and above in n. 2 by ciphers written, has 1485: but I cannot believe, that the Author of the Martyrology, if in that membrane he had thought truly such a number to have been read, less faith to the same, so few years from the Blessed's death written, would have been about to have, than to the Epitaph by which could be presumed a round number only to be expressed, lest a foot one should be redundant to the verse if it were written, In one thousand four hundred he died eighty-five under years.
f. By Apothecary I understand to be said an Aromatarius: as Aromata are called, Spices.
g. Ardenno across the Adda, from Morbegno distant about 8 miles.
h. Zandolinæ in the Italian text are read, a diminutive from Zandolo or Sandolo, which the Academicians della Crusca explain a tree, whose wood is of a color between red and yellow: so that the birch they seem to signify, which also in our Belgium most frequently is cut for the adornment of churches in this kind of festivities, especially at Brussels, where from the Soignes wood for such an end by permission of the King mostly gratis are sought, single to single columns to be applied. The name moreover, from origin Lombard, seems received from the Teutonic Sand, Sand; and so also to our birches perfectly it suits, which are not elsewhere nearly than in sandy regions found.
i. Blessed James the Venetian of the Order of Preachers, is venerated 31 May: but because in the year 1641 Easter was celebrated 31 March, and so the feast of Corpus Christi 30 May, was deferred the office of Blessed James up to after the Octave.
k. Traona across the Adda about 5 miles distant from Morbegno: which moreover in Italian were called squadræ (I know not whether rightly) territories to be rendered: for nor do I see what to this can make of the word squadræ commonly known signification, denoting a troop military, into a square arranged or wont to be arranged when there is fighting, whence also a name to it made.
l. Of Thomas Reina, a noble in the Society Preacher, the elogium see in the new Library of the Society of Jesus, published lately by Nathanael Sothuellus. More known he is moreover by his Lenten Sermons, four years before his death undergone at Rome there published in the year 1649: and others after death at Milan printed in the year 1671.
m. The name of Benacus indeed to our copy was lacking, but to be added the reason of the meter persuaded, and the situation of Peschiera, to whose name this verse alludes.
n. It seems this to be said in the person of the very Morbegno, in the form by which cities are wont to be represented: whence I gather the rest also of the statues, although by name not expressed, to have sustained the person of the towns, rivers, or lakes neighboring.
o. Bema a village 5 miles above Morbegno, at the Bito aforesaid.

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