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A14448 Here begynneth the lyf of saint katherin of senis the blessid virgin; Vita di S. Catarina da Siena. English Raymond, of Capua, 1330-1399.; Elizabeth, of Hungary, Saint, 1207-1231, attributed name.; Elizabeth, of Toess, Saint, 1297-1338, attributed name. 1500 (1500) STC 24766.3; ESTC S109658 218,906 188

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And yet not wythstondyng suche good occupacions She accused her self soo sharpely in confession and soo wyttyngly put her selfe in trespaas and offenses that yf hee cōfessour hadde not knowe her conuersacyon He myght haue supposed that she hadde trespased where she trespased not but rather deseruyd mede Loo ye maydens that heren and reden this boke alle this processe is for no thynge ellys I sayde but by that ye perceyuen this lytyll defaute In the whyche this holy mayde yelde her self soo mekely gylty Ye maye vnderstonde therby what per feccyon sheweth therafter by the gracyous yefte of our lorde the whiche her confessour reherseth in this wyse Bonauentura ryght as she was besy afore for to araye this holy mayde as the worlde asketh Ryght soo eftsones she besyed her for to enduce her in suche araye by her counseyll to the same apparaylle She myght in noo wyse inclyne the may dens herte nother generall nother specy all that she sholde shewe her bodely presence wylfully to the syghte of man to that entent oonly that she sholde be desyred the soner to be wedded all though her feruour of prayer and of swetenesse off medytaciō was slaked and wythdrewē from her for a tyme Att the laste oure lorde wolde not lenger suffre that hys spouse the whiche had soo specyally chosen sholde be withdrawe and taryed from hys speciall seruyce he wythdrewe from her in this wyse In a tyme whan the same Bonauentura the suster of the holy mayde sholde brynge forthe a chylde she was yet yonge y nough of age for to bere chyldren Take hede maydens therfore and see by thys How oure lorde is displesed wyth theym that ben aboute for to lette and wythdrawe theym that wolde serue hym specially in maydenhode and chastyte of lyuynge Thys Bonauentura as it is rehersyd after was alwaye full honeste in her maner of lyuyng bothe in worde and dede But by cause that she besyed her to drawe her suster to wordly thynges the whiche desyred to serue our lorde specyally She was smyten of hym and punysshed wyth a full sharpe deth Neuerthelesse our lord yet wrought full mercyably wyth hyr for as it was shewed afterward by reuelacyon to thys holy mayde she was in purgatory and suffred many greuous paynes And by the prayers of hir she was delyuered of payne and restored to blysse as she shewed afterward preuely to hyr confessour ¶ Whanne hyr suster Bonauenture was passyd out of thys worlde thanne thys blessyd mayde Katheryn clerely perceyued the vanyte of thys worlde and be ganne more feruentely and more gredylye trewely for to be torned to the louely ghostly clyppyng of hyr endeles spouse Jhesu cryste claymyng and accusynge hyr self gylty wyth Marye magdalene fallyng doune full streyte to the fete of oure lorde plenteuously shedyng out terys axynge Inwardly hys mercy praynge and thynkyng vncessably for hyr synnes that she myght deserue to hyr wyth Marye magdalene the wordes of confort of our lorde as he sayde to Marye thus ¶ Remittūtur tibi peccata tua ¶ That is to saye doughter thy synnes by foryeue the. And so she beganne to haue a synguler affeccyon to Mary magdalene For thanne in that tyme she enforsed hyrself wyth alle hyr myghtys to conferme hyr to Marye magdalene to haue the more grace in forgyuenes of hyr synnes Therfore afterward by encrece of deuocyon thys folow therof that our lord god the spouse of holy sowles and hys blessyd moder our lady Saynt Marye gaue Mary magdalene to thys blyssyd mayde in to a maystresse and to a moder as it shall be declared more openly wyth Inne forth by the helpe of Jhesu ¶ After thys the fende enemye to alle mankynde sorowyng that thus his pray was wythdrawe and delyuerd alle hole from hys power the whyche be lytell and lytell enforced to drawe it to hym And also consyderynge that thys holy mayde encreced more and more to renne quyckely to the tabernacle of mercy of hyr spouse Jhesu He thought felly and wylely to lette hyr of hyr ghostly purpose by the meyne of hyr faders howsholde besyeng hym by aduercytees and persecucyons to drawe hyr holy to the worlde that she sholde not be occupyed in suche ghostly excercyse puttyng in to the the mynde of hir fader and moder and also hyr brethern that in alle wyse she sholde be wedded That they myght so by hyr mene purchace somme manere of kynrede aboute thys besynesse the fende enduced hem so hyely that in asmoche as one of hyr doughters was passyd out of thys world they sholde be aboute to recouer the harme of hyr that was dede by hyr that was a lyue So ferforth that they were aboute to seke an husbonde for thys holy mayde ¶ Whan thys mayde perceyued and consydered the wyles of hyr ghostly enemye by Inspyracyon of our lord Jhesu A none myghtely and besyly she contynued in prayer and medytacyon and excercyses of penaunce to haue grace to flee the conuersacyon of men and soo shewed by open tokenys to hyr frendes that in noo wyse she was in purpose to be wedded to no dedely ne corruptyble spouse Syth it so is and was that she had taken so gracyously to hyr spouse in hir yonge tender age the vndedely kyng of endeles blysse Whanne the fader and moder kynne perceyued veryly that thys holy may de shewed perseueraūtly bothe by tokens and by worde that she wylled neuer to be wedded to none erthely man they thought to bowe hyr herte by a nother mene for to consente to theyr purpose They callyd to them a frende of therys a frere prechour the whyche they loued specyally and prayed hym entyrly that he wolde goo and counseyll that holy mayde that she sholde consente to there wylle To whome the frere answerde and sayde he wolde do that he myght But whan he came to thys mayde by communycacyon he founde hyr so stedfast in the purpose of maydenhode that by conscience he was so enduced to gyue hyr holsum counseylle and sayde Syth it is so that thou arte dysposed to serue our lorde god in maydenhede ageynst whyche purpose thy frendes ben aboute to lette the. Shewe the stedfastnesse of thyn holy purpose and cutte a waye alle thyn here of thy hede peraduenture they wold cesse of there pursuyte As soone as thys blessyd mayde herdethys hys counseyll she wrought there after as though she hadde I herde it of god And took a peyre of sherys anone and cutte awaye hir herys in the whiche she supposed she had synned greuously and that that she hated so moche she cutte it awaye ryght gladly fast by the he de And whanne she had I do she couerd hyr hede wyth a Coyf and so wente forthe alle ageynst the comyn custome of other maydens of the worlde wyth a kerchyf on hyr hede after the doctryne of saynt Powle And whan hyr moder Lapa aspyed thys that hyr doughter Katheryn vsed thus to couer hyr hede customably She asked hyr why she
greate pestylence contynued in the Cyte of Sene as it is rehersed afore there was an holy recluse in the Cyte of Sene and was called Scūs that louyd the whiche was touched wyth that same pestylence whan this holy mayde perceyued that she ordeyned that he sholde be brought to the hous of our gloryous lady gloryous vyrgyn mary the whiche was called also the hous of mercy where she her self wyth her felawes vysyted hym and ordeyned for althynge that was nedefull for hym in his sekenes and at the laste she came to him her self and tolde hym preuyly in hys ere and sayde thus Fader drede you not for thou shalt not deye for this sekenesse att this tyme but she wolde telle not thyng of this to Mayster Reymound and to her felawes the whiche prayed her to praye for hym that he sholde lyue For it semed to them that she was in doubte off his lyf as well as they were and therfore she ordeyned for hym medycins for to be heled by wherfore Mayster Reymaūd and alle her felawes were sory by cause all they louyd that holy man for his gode lyuyng Thenne at the laste his sekenes encresed more and more and drewe faste to the deth as it semed wherby al that sawe hym supposed he shold deye and prayed for the good passage of his soule And also the holy man wende he sholde haue deyed right anone In that same poynt of deth this holy mayde came and rouned in his ere saide to him the second tyme fader drede you not for thou shalt not deye at this tyme for this sekenes he vnderstod her wel all be it that his wyttes were in party dystrauȝt alienyd fro hym for the greuousnes of the payne he gaue more credence to her wordes thenne he dyde to his actuall payne of deth so it fyll afterward that the holy maydes wordes o●came the dedes of kynde nature Neuertheles he contynued in suche transite passyng the comyn tyme of other mani dayes to gyder but at the last as the spirite was in passyng as it semed The holy mayde came and sayde nowe the thyrde tyme in the seke mannys ere thus I charge the spyryte in the name of oure lorde Thesu Cryst that thou passe not Anon the spyryte resorted quycly agayn to the body And thenne the holy man toke strengthe to hym and ros vp and asked mete soo wythin a lytyll time he was all hole and lyued Afterward that the holy mayde was passyd out off this world many yeres that holy man that was called Scūs bothe in name and in dede After tyme he was hole he tolde to Maister Reymound and to other more what the holy mayde sayd to hym in tyme of his sekenes preuyly in his ere And he felte the myght of her vertuous wordes wherby the spyryte was called a gayn that was in the poynt of passyng And he afermed it to all folke that it was none naturall cause that restoryd hym agayn to his lyf but only the myght of god I shewed by his spouse katheryn To whom folke gaue credence by cause he lyued in grete vertu of holynesse and was knowen a famous man in the Cyte of Seene by xxxvj yere to gyder wythout ony repreue in hys lyuyng ¶ Ferthermore maydens I shalle telle you of another myracle that this hooly mayde wrought in mayster Reymound After tyme that the grete pestylēce was soo breme in the Cyte of Seene as it is rehersed a fore that alle folke fledde by cause that it was soo infectyf Soo that men and wymmen deyed wythout comforte and counseyll and kepyng mayster Reymoūde bythought hym that he was bounde to loue mennis soule castyng none peryll for his one bodely dethe by enfection of that pestylence purposed hym to goo aboute the Cyte and vyseted seke folke and comforted theym and dyde it in dede Neuertheles by cause he was alone in party in so grete a Cyte for to visyte and comforte the seke that vnethes he myght haue tyme or space for to ete to reste He was soo sente after fro one hous to another ¶ Soone after in a nyght it befyll he toke his reste and was wakyng at a certayn hour for to serue god He felte a greuaūce of a pestilence both in hys grynde or flancke and for fere he durst not aryse but lay styll and by thought hym off the passage out of this worlde he desyred gretely that it hadde be daye that he myght goo and speke wyth this holy mayde katheryne or thenne he were more seke In the mene whyle he hadde a feuer and the hede ache as the maner was off that pestylence sekenes soo that he was gretely payned and tourmentyd But yet he sayde his matyns as he myghte whan it was daye he called to hym hys felawe and wente to gyder as he myght to the holy maydes hous and founde her not at home for she was out to vysyte a seke body ¶ In the mene whyle hym thought she was soo longe and he so seke that he myght no thynge doo but lay doune there in a lytyll bedde prayeng all tho that we ren in the hous that they sholde sende for her assone as they myght She was sent after and came anone and perceyued that he was sore seke she knyled doune afore his bedde and crossed hym on the forhede wyth her honde And thenne she began to praye as she was wont to done in her soule Mayster Reymound behelde how she was rauysshed a fore hym hopynge of som̄e synguler grate for the prouffyte of his soule or of his body abode her long as him semed within a half an houre afterward or there aboute he felte all his body sterid to avomite wening that he sholde haue caste But yet was it not soo but hym thought that out of euery ▪ parte of his body was pulled out wyth a maner of vyolence somme maner of corrupcion And so began to wexe better at ese than he was yet or than the holy mayde was fully restoryd agayn to her bodely wyttes he was all hole saue a lytyl fevylnes bylefte in hym After tyme thys holy mayde hadde purchased of our lord that grace of the helthe she se●yd of that rauyshyng and badde her felawes shold ordeyne somme mete for hym whan he had receyued mete of her holy hondes she badde hym lye doun and ●este a whyle he dyde soo as she badde hym And whā he awoke he was as stronge as though he hadde not be seke Then̄e the holy mayde sayde vnto hym fader gooth and laboureth now for the helthe of sowles thanketh almyghty god that hathe delyuered you fro this parylle he went forthe to his custumably besynes and thanked god that hadde gyue suche vertu to hys blyssyd mayde Suche a lyke myracle our lorde wrought by this holy mayde to Fryer Bertylmewe in time of the same pestylence But yet that myracle was the more bi cause her long time was oppssid in that sekenes than Mayster Reymoūd
And by cause it was in all wyse lyke ellys therfore I passe ouer and reherce it not But I wolde ye vnderstood may dens that this holoy mayde shewed not oonly the dyuyne myracle of curacion in tyme of pestylence but also in other tymes and yet not only in the Cyte of Sene but also in other places But therfore one I shall declare at this tyme wherby ye may vnderstonde all other yf ye take hede wytely therto ¶ It befyll soone after that the general pest●lence the whiche is rehersed afore the many folke both men and wymmen as well relygyous and seculer But specyally certayn mynchis of the Cy●● of ●yse herde of the famous name of this holy mayde katheryn desyreden to see her and here her speke And by cause it was notlefull for theym to goo oute and seke her therfore they prayed her as well by lettres as by messengers that she wolde vouches ●f to come to ●yse seyeng to her that there she myght wynne many a son le the whiche sholde be to oure lord greate worshyppe Albe it that this holy mayde eschewed alwaye for to go fer about the contre yet she was soo ofte prayed wyth soo many messengers or messages that she was almoste constr●yned therto by prayer of lettres messages Thenne she had a recource to prayer as she was wont to done and asked our lorde mekely declaracion of that doubte that she stode in and what she sholde doo somme off theym that were counseyllers to her saide that it was best for her to goo and som̄e sayde nay wythin a fewe dayes afterward she had an answere of our lord as she beknewe afterward to mayster ●eymound that she shold not tarye but algatys she sholde goo to speke wyth hys seruauntys and his spouse dwellyng in the same Cyte of Pyse Thenne as a t●ewe obedyencer by leue of Mayster Reymound her confessour she wente to Pyse whome folowed afterward Mayster Reymound wyth a certeyn of hys bredren for to here confessyons For many ther were that came to her whā they herde her speke soo ●eruent wordes of loue were steryd therby to contrycion And le●t they sholde be lette fro trewe conuersacyō falle agayn in to the fendes snares after suche cōpuccion she wold beidde theim go to confession be shryue without ony taryeng And by cause her confessyon was ofte tymes delayed for defaute of confessours therfore ofte tymes she desyred that she myght haue confessours by her to whom she myght sende suche repentaunce And therfore Maister Reymound and his two felawes hadde power of the pope by bull for to here and assoyle all tho that were endu●ed to confessyon by this holy mayde Whā she came to Pyse she was receyued in a burgeys hous that was called Gerardus the whiche Gerad vpon a daye brought wyth hī a yonge man of xx yere of age alle seke of the feuers to this holy mayde besechinge her that she wolde praye for his helthe for he tolde her that he was vexid xviij monethes to gyders wyth the feuers soo that it was none daye but that he hadde it And therto it was so myghty to him that it hadde brought hym soo lowe and that is well sene by hys chekes and by hys body And●● myght neuer by none medecyn be made hoole Thenne the holy mayde hadde grete compassyon in herte of that yonge man she asked hym how longe it was a goo that he was shryue of hys synnes and toke penaunce he sayd not many a yere therfore it is sayde she that our lord hath yeue the this ●oorge for thou hast not purged thy soule by holy confessyon soo longe tyme. Therfore sone goo forthe anone to confession and cast out that venim the whiche enfecteth alle thy body whan he was confessyd and ●ame to her agayne she put her holy honde vpon his sholders and sayd to hym thus Goo sone in pee● of our lord ●hesu cryst for it is his wyll that thou be nomore vexed wyth tho feuers as she sayd it was fro that time forward he was not vexed therwyth Within fewe dayes after he came again to the holy mayde and thanked her of her curacion and sayde openly afore a● folke that he hadde neuer the feuers sythe she a voyded it by the vertu of our lord ●ff this bereth wytnes Mayster Reymound for he sawe that myracle And other wytnesse there were ynow by Gerad the childes moder and many other afterward the yonge man puplychid that miracle by all ●●e contree suche another byfyll in the Cyte of Seene but moche more ▪ merueylous by cause the sikenes was more perylous ¶ There was a suster of penaunce of saynt Domynyke in the same ●yte off Seene that was called Gemina the whiche loued well this holy mayde she had a sekenes of hir throte the whiche was called the s●ynce by contynaunce of tyme the sekenes encresyd soo that it made her throte soo streyght that vnethe she might drawe her brethe ▪ but almoost ofte tymes was strangelyd Thenne she wente to this holy mayde prayed her as she myght speke seyenge thus moder I shaldeye but ye helpe me this holy maide hadde soo grete compassyon of her that she toke her holy honde and crossed her throte ▪ ¶ And anone wythout ony taryenge t●e sekenes avoyded and soo she that come wyth grete sorowe went home wyth grete gladnesse And tolde it soone after to her confessour But by cause somme what I haue tolde you of curacions done to the body by this holy mayde to diuerse persones therfore I shall telle you now of a grete notable myracle that our lorde wrought ●i this blessyd holy mayde ¶ It befyll that this holy mayde wente in a tyme fro Pyse to Auyoun wyth whome wente two good deuoute yonge men that wrote the lettres that this holy Mayde wolde sende The one was called Neryus that afterward ●as a deuoute recluse And the other was ca●led Stephene that was afterward a monke of the charterhous And a good vyrtuous lyuer therto to the same ●yte of auyoun wente als● mayster Reymoūd ¶ It happed whan they were entred in to the Cyte of auyoun the forsayd Neryus was seke wyth a merueylou● sykenes in his bowellis that he myght haue none reste neyther nyght ne daye But cryed and wayled ofte tymes and he might not lye in his bedde but creped about on hondes and on feet and sought reste and yet myght none fynde This was tolde to the holy maide and she badde mayster Reymound sende afleches to helpe hym For other comforte wolde she none gyue mayster Reymoūd dyde soo and there was none leche that myght ese him but rather he was the more payned I trowe for that ende allone by cause our lord wolde worke that myrarle in his spouse katheryn At the last leche said to maister Reymoūd that they myght not prouffyte in hym And therfore they hadde none truste in his lyffe ¶ Whan Mayster Reymound hadde tolde this to his
speke wyth this hooly mayde katheryne Thenne of charyte he lefte his owne nede and wyth his speciall frende to thys holy mayde katheryns hous wenyng that he sholde haue foūde her there but her felawes answerd hym that longe a go she went to chirche and come not home yet ¶ Whan mayster Reymond herde thys he was admerueylyd and came agayn to chyrche wyth his frende and foūde her there in a corner of the chirche knelyng rauysshed as she was wount to be and somme of her felawes wyth her Off whom he asked how longe that holi mayde katheryne hadde be there they saide alle this masse tyme and more that he prayed theym for to excite her assone as they myght for hys frendes is come for to speke wyth her And he myght not tarye Whan she was cesyd of her rauysshyng mayster Reymound toke her asyde and tolde her of his dysese vnder fewe wordes by cause the other man his frende sholde not be lette Anone she smylyd vppon mayster Reymound and askyng hym thus gladly Fader sought ye not all aboute he sayde yes Thenne she sayde why haue ye soo grete sow we therfore And wyth that she smiled ●ft ●●is went soo forth for to speke wyth the pryour off the charterhous In the mene tyme mayster Reymound abode somwhat I comforted but not fully vnto the tyme he wyst how it myght be soo awaye Whan she hadde full doo wyth the Pryour of the Charterhous and delyuerd hi of an answer that he came for She tourned her to mayster Reymoūde agayne Thenne Mayster Reymound sayd to her thus Moder I too we it be ye that hath awaye that partycule of the holy hoste she wyth smyling saide nay but it was another that toke it awaye from you therfore be ye nomore sory therfore ne for it ne seke nomore for it for I telle you ye shall neuer fynde it Thenne Mayster Reymond prayed her that she wolde tell hym al hole how it myght be To whom she sayde thus Fader take nomore sorowe for that partycle for yf I shall sholde saye the soth to you as to myn confessour myn ghostely fader that partycule was brought to me I receyued it by the reuerend hondes of our reuerend lord almyhty god swete gloryous Jhesu cryst And I shal tell you the cause why This daye I was in purpos wyth a grete desyre for to be houseled but myn felawes gaue me counseyll for to cese that I shold not be hoseled in as moche as som̄e grutched wyth all After whos counseyll I wrought was purpos for to cese but myn desyre was so grete therto that I prayed our lord almighty god of helpe he in his own reuerēd ꝑsone aperit to me gaue me that partycle wyth his ▪ owne reuerend hondes And therfore fader bee not sory there is none necligence in you as for that pertycule After this reuelacion Mayster Reymound was ryght ioyefull by cause the thaghte of his concience was put awaye from hym Suche myr●c●e our reuerend lord almyghty god shewed in the reuerend holy sacrament of the au●ter by the merytes of his honde mayde holy katheryne of Sene Also there were many other feythfull folke and trewe that sayde ▪ thei ●awe ofte tymes whā Mayster Reymo●de houselyd this hooly mayde kathery●e of Sene the swete holi ghooste flede out of his hondes in to her mouth the whiche Mayster Reymound perceyued neuer saue this he perceyued that The swete reuerende hoste made anoyse in her mouth whan she had receyued it a● though a stone hadde bee caste in her mouth from a ferre contree ¶ Now thus shall I make an ende off the grete merneylousnes of that reuerende swete holy sacramente of the aulter telle you of dyuerse myracles that befylle to this holy mayde saynt katheryne of sene aboute certayn relykes of sayntes ¶ This holy mayde katheryne of Sene hadde onys a reuelacion as she tolde pryuely to Mayster Reymound her confessour that she sholde be sette in the same degre of ioye in the blysse of heuen And be felawe wyth saint Agnes the whiche was a suster of the mount of Pollycita Wherfore this holy mayde katteryn of sene desyred ofte tymes wyth alle her herte for to bysyte the relykes of saint Agnes ¶ But now ye maydens by cause ye shall knowe how bertuous a lyuer that saint Agnes was whan she was here in erthe I shall tell you shortely vnder fewe wordes This holy mayde Saynt Agnes suster of the mount of polly●yta the same tyme that she sholde be borne off her moder there was in the chambre there her moder chylded a greate merneylous lyght that all th o the whiche were in the same chambre myght clerly see it And whan she was born it cesyd By this ye may knowe of what merite she shold be in the syght of our reuerende lord almighty god afterward that soo soone in the begynnyng receyued the merueylous light of our reuerend lord almyghty god After tyme she was born she encresyd vertuously more and more in al tyme of the yeres and at the laste she made two monasteryes of maydens and lyeth berye●… in the toun in the whiche is shewed by our reuerend lorde almyghty god in her cōtinuelly many woūderful miracles And amonge all other myracles whā she was passid out of this worlde her body was not buryed but lefte vpon erthe all hooll wythout ony corrup●ion Wherfore other deuout folke that knewe her by her ly●●e consyderyng how many merneylous thynges oure reuerend lorde almyghty god shewed in her wold haue bawmed her swete body that it myght so be k●pte vpon the erthe wyth miracles whan thei cam to bawme it they sawe how there came out of the toes of the feet and of the fyngers of the hondes droppes of bawme the whiche bawme is kepte yet in to this daye for a relyke amonges the susters of the same place This myracle was shewed for this cause that alle folke sholde knowe that she hadde none nede for to be bawmed outward whan oure reuerend lorde almyghty god hadde bawmed her wythin forth Ferthermore the same hour that she passed out of this worlde in the tyme of the nyghte infantes both mayde chyldren and other as they laye in her moders beddes cryeden and sayeden that now suster agnes is passeth out of this world and is a saint in●heuen On the morowe thyse in fantes drewe theym togyder in a companye and wolde suffer none corrupte child come amonges theym and wente eche of theym as in pro●●ssyon wyth candeles in her handes to this monastery wher su●ter Agnes passed out of this world ofofferyng to that mayde maydenes oblacion Many moo myracles our reuerend lord almyghty god shewed by that holy Mayde saint Agnes in the syght of alle peple wherfore she is had euery yere in grete reuerence wyth deuoute oblacion of many brennyng tapres for to see that holy maydes body this holy mayde katheryne
the delyueraunce of them whiche were acombred and vexed wyth fendes C x ¶ Item of the yefte of prophecye And how by that yefte she delyuerd many mē and wymmen fro perylles bothe of body and of sowle C xj ¶ Item of myracles whiche oure lorde wrought by this holy mayde and vyrgyn in herbes breed and wyne And other thinges that hadde none lyf C xij Item of the ofte resceyuynge of the holy sacrament of the aulter And of myracles the whiche oure lorde dyde to hyr touching that holy sacrament and other holy relyques of saintes Ca xiij   HEre begynneth the thyrde parte wherin is rehersyd Capitulum j the deyeng of this holy mayde and vyrgyn myracles that were I shewed after her deth And fyrst of the wytnesses whiche were present at hyr passyng and enfourmed the auctur of this boke whiche and what they were Cap ij ¶ Item of the merueylous thynges whiche befyll a yere and half to fore the deth of this holy mayde and vyrgyn And of the martyrdome that she suffred bodely of the wycked fendes wherof at the laste she hadde her bodely dethe C iij ¶ Item how this holy mayde and vyrgyn desyred to be vnbounde from the body and be wyth cryst And that is preuyd by a deuoute prayer whiche she made And is put in the ende of another boke whiche she made and what is in that boke generally and shortely it is wryten in this boke wyth the same oryson c iiij ¶ Item of the time that she passed and whan she passed out of this worlde and of the sermō whiche she made to her gostely dyscyples and susteren tofore her passyng And how she informed them in generall and in speciall how they shold gouerne theym whan she were go● And of a vysyon whiche was shewed to a matrone in the houre of her passyng Ca v ¶ Item of tokens and myracles whiche oure lorde wrought after hyr dethe of this holy mayde and vyrgyn bothe tofore her beryeng and after that is to saye of myracles whiche were knowe And for many that were not knowe Cap vj ¶ Item of the myghty and stronge paciens whiche this mayde and vyrgyn shewed openly from her fyrst age and yonge in to her deth by the whiche vertu clerly it preuyd that ryghtfull she is worthy to haue the name of holynesse in goddes chirche in erthe ▪ whan she is made so fayre and gloryous in goddes chirche in heuen and in this chapytre is a recapitulacion of all that is sayd to fore For worthynes and also for werynes of reders And also for yf eche man may not haue al thys legende they may haue the substaunce of this martyr tofore her compendyously rehersyd in the last chapytre ¶ The fyrst chapytre of this fyrst parte is of the progenye of this holy mayde vyrgyn gloryous saint katheryn of sene and of other maters whiche befyll touchyng her or she went out openly abrode And of her fader and moder and of the condycions of theym Capitulū primū IN the cite of Geene in Italye and of the prouynce of Tuskane ther was a man his name was Janes or Jacob and his fader was callyd in the comyn speche of the contree Beuencasa This James was symple vertuous wythout fraude or deceyte to ony man dredynge god and fleyng alle euyll After the deth of his fader and moder he toke a wyf of the same Cyte her name was lapa She was a woman wythout suche malyce that is vsed amonge men that ben now in our tyme all be it that she was full besy aboute that longeth to houshold and about meynye and seruauntes as it was knowen openly to all that knewe her whyle she liued here in erthe whan they bothe were ioyned to gyder in matrymonye and lyuyd vertuously in symplycite suffycient habondaunce they hadde of temperall godes and they bothe of gentyll and commendable byrthe Our reuerende lorde blessyd lapa graciously fulfylled hyr plentuously wyth the birthe of chyldren as an habondaunt vyne in the hous of Jacob whiche was her husbond For eche yere almost she conceyued and bare a sone or a doughter and ofte fythes ij sones or two doughters After tyme this Jacob was passeth out of this worlde Lapa his wyf as for a synguler laude and commendacion rehersyd and saide to mayster Reymonde the confessour of this holy mayde and vyrgyn and glorious martyr katheryn that she was euer of soo lyke dysposycion and soo moderate in worde that what occacion euer came or trouble or trybulacion he exceded neuer in speche by hasty ne angrye worde but whan he saw ony of his meyny greued or herd hem speke angerly or bytter wordes anon he comforted eche of theym wyth a glad ●here and sayde in the maner of that contree A brother good day be to the be not troubled speke not suche wordes which falleth ne semeth not vs to speke ¶ And in speciall lapa his wyf wherseth that whan on a tyme one of his neybours dysesyd hym wrongfully asked hym a grete som̄e of monye whiche he owed not by none reason ▪ and soo moche he vexed hym that symple mā wyth the might of other frendes and supplanted hym wyth grete wronges that he brought hym to the losse of alle his godes And in alle this tyme this good man myght neuer suffre in his presence a man to curse hym wronge ne to speke of hym harme in noo wyse In soo moche that he blamed his wyf Lapa wyth softe wordes and sayd suffre dere wyf the good day be to the for our lord shall shewe hym therrour he shall be oure defendour whiche wordes were founde southe afterward for the veryte was shewed openly as lyke to a myracle And he for payne that he hadde in his conscyence delyuerd agayne how moche he hadde errid in his wrongfull persecucion to the good man Jacob Thyse wordes sayde Lapa to mayster Reymonde to whos wordes he yaue full truste for as it was knowe to all that knewe her she was of soo moche symplenesse at her age of xxiiij yere that though she wold haue lyed she ●●wde not haue feyned suche a lesyng And soo was the commyn testymonye of alle tho that knewe her husbonde Jacob that was he a man ful symple by Innocencye and ryghtfull alwaye fleyng from euyll Also this good mannys softenes in speche was soo vertuous that alle his meyny namely wymmen dame sels taught in his soole myght not speke ne here noo worde that were not semely or dyshoneste In so moche that one of his doughter whiche was callyd Bonauentura was wedded to a yonge man whiche was callyd Nycolas of the same Cyte wyth whome were conuersaunt many other yong men of hys age by cause he hadde nother fader ne moder And thyse men and he wythout ony refreynynge of tongue spake eche to other ▪ and he wyth other And they wyth hym foule wordes of dyshoneste mater This Bonauentura att the laste toke therof soo grete an
cause I made avowe also that I shold neuer take husbond but hym alone Therfore now syth I am come by the sufferaunce of oure lord to a more perfyght age and knowleche and vnderston dyng wytte wete ye ryght well this is the same purpoos whiche is soo myghty and stroonge in myn sowle that it were more possyble hard flynt stones rather to be made nesshed than myn herte shold be wythdrawe fro this holy pnrpos and therfore the more ye laboure aboute thys thynge the more tyme ye lese Wherfore I counseyll you that ye leue of alle maner suche tretyng of weddynge as touchyng myn persone For therin shall I neuer fulfylle your wyll by cause that I sholde rather be obedyent to god than to man therfore yf ye wylle haue me suche one in your hous that I now serue god in this purpoos and for to be a commyn seruaunt to serue you all I am redy in all that I can or may to doo you seruyce gladly And yf ye wylle receyue me but for this cause that ye wylle putt me out of your hous I doo you well to wete that in noo wyse myn herte may be wythdrawe fro this holy purpos ¶ I haue an husbond and a spouse cryste Jhesu soo rychely and soo myghtely that wyll not suffre me in noo wyse to lacke no thyng But he wyll mynystre to me all that me nedeth Whan she hadde sayde alle thyse wordes alle that herde her speke fyll in wepyng and by cause of her plentnously syghynge and sobbynge they myght for that time gyue none answer They consyderid to the holy purpos of thys holy mayde the whyche they myght not wyth saye ne wythstonde they behylde also how styll the mayden had I kepte her how clene how pure vnto that tyme how bodely she declared her consciens by wordes of grete prudence also ouer more they sawe openli that she was rather diposed for to forsake her faders hous than for to breke her holy purpoos and soo they hadde nomore truste of her weddyng wherfore it lyked theym better for to wepe than for to gyue her answer Wythin a lytyll whyle after whan they hadde cesyd all her wepynge the fader that loued her soo tenderly had dredde of god and dred god soo hyghely hadde mynde of the coluer that he sawe and of many good dedes of the whiche she vsed The whiche dedes he gretely merueylyng gaue her suche an answere and sayde Dere doughter god forbede it that we sholde ony thynge wylle or desyre agaynste the wyll of god For the whiche wyll and fro the whiche wyll we knowe well thys holy purpoos cometh fro Therefore it is soo that we ben taught by longe experyence And now openly we see that thou art not steryd herto by the lyghtenesse of chyldhode but by feruent charyte of god Make thy vowe therfore frely and doo as the lyketh and as the holy ghoost techeth the ¶ And fro this tyme forward we shall neuer lette the from thyn holy purpoosne thyne ghostely excercise but only praye for vs besely that we maye bee made worthy to the promys and the byheste of thyn ghoostely spouse whom thou haste chose by his specyall grace in thyn tender age ¶ Thenne he tourned hym to hys wyf and to his chyldren and sayde none of you from this tyme forward be to my ne dere donghter greuous None be soo hardy from this tyme forward to let her in ony wyse to suffer her to serue her spouse freely and she to praye for vs be sely We myght neuer haue founde a better husbond to her thenne he is the whiche vochesauf to be so nere of our kynde for to wedde our doughter and haue her to wyf Therfore we haue none cause to pfayne vs sythe it soo is that we haue receyued now for a dedely man ▪ vndedely god and man to be her spouse ¶ Whan the fader hadde sayde thyse wordes wyth wepynge and wyth weylyng bothe of theym selfe and also of other that herde theym and hym speke and namely of the moder that louyd this mayde in maner flesshely then̄e this holy maide Katheryn ioyefully thanked oure lorde that brought her to this vyctorye and also her fader and moder wyth alle maner of lowenes dysposyng her self to vse profytably the lycence that was graūted to her And this is the ende of this chapytre ¶ But now I wylle ye knowen that redyn or heren this booke that Mayster Reymound confessour to this holy mayde knewe neuer by reuelacion of the fader that sawe the coluer the whiche restyd on this blessyd maydens hede for the fader was deed or thā Mayster Reymoūd knewe this blessyd mayde But he knewe it by reuelaciō of Cosyns that dwellyd in the faders hous the whiche cosins recorded and bare wytnes that the fader sawe suche a culuer wyth her ofte tymes And therfore he hadde her in greate reuerence and he wold in noo wyse that she hadde be lettyd or troublyd ¶ Of the vysyon that she sawe of saynt Domynyk bothe mayster Reymound her confessour afore hym knewe it by tellyng of this holy mayde And whan mayster Reymound examyned her of the wordes that she sayde laste to her fader moder and brederen and how she byhad her in her pesecucions she tolde hym alle by ordre mekely as it was ¶ Of the hardenesse of her bodely penaūce of afflyction what persecucion she fuffred therfore of her moder Capitulū vj WHan this deuoute mayde hadde receyued so large a lycence that was graunted her of longe tyme desyred afore She beganne ryght quyckely for to dyspose merueylously alle her lyf to the seruyse of god ¶ Att the begynnyng she asked to haue a lytyll chambre to her self and so had de it wherin she purposed to tourmente her body wyth penaunce as in a wyldernesse that she myght haue the more fredome of sowle for to serue our lord How moche and how harde penaunce she vsed in tourmentyng of her body And how grete loue she hadde in seyng of hyr spouse in that lytyll chambre there maye noo tongue suffre to telle Neuertheles I haue rehersed som what in generall of her grete penaunce And now I purpose to telle you maydens in speciall vnder fewe wordes the hardnesse of her penaunce soo that ye of the grete vertuous herbes of her holy lyuyng maye taste somwhat of the fruyte that growen aboute the herber bothe of the fyrst and of the laste And for the condycions and the kyndis of the fruyt it shall be declared by the helpe of god afterward And the cause why that in this place is rehersyd som̄e what of her fruyte full vertuous lyuing is for nothynge ellys But for the maydens sholde be the more able and redyer to ghostely excercyse In this lytyll chābre that was graunted her ofte tymes she consydered swetely the ghostely werkis of our old faders of Egypte And in ghostely werkys was to her soo moche the more merueylous and that
they sholde euer be aferd for soo thou mayst fynde wryten ¶ Beatus vir qui semper est pauidus That is to saye blessyd be that man that euer is feerfull ¶ Ferthermore oure lorde Ihesu Cryste sayde to her Doughter wylt thou that I shall teche the how thou mayste knowe myn vysyon from the vysyon of the fende To whom this holy mayde answerde full mekely and prayed hym that he wolde vouchesauf to teche her Thenne sayde oure lorde thyn soule may esely be taught by Inspyracyon and by worde for to dyscerne bytwene the one and the other But by cause that I wolde it myght prouffyghte as well to the other as to the Therfore I shall teche the by worde ¶ Doctours of holy chyrche whome I haue taught the trouthe seyn and soothe it is that myn vysyon begynneth wyth a drede but euer in the passyng it setteth a sowle in greate reste and sekernes It begyn̄eth wyth a maner of bytternes But euermore more and more it wexith swete And the contrarye herte dothe the vysyon of the fende It gyueth in the begynnyng as it semeth a maner of gladdenes or sykenes or ellys swetenesse But whan it passeth awaye euer it encreseth in the sowle dred and bytternesse This is the trewest knowleche for to knowe myn wayes from the fendes wayes ¶ The waye of penaūce and the kepynge of myn preceptys and commaundementes in the begynnyng it semeth harde and sharpe But the more a sowle prouffyteth in kepyng of theym the more esely it waxith ¶ The waye of synne in the begynnyng semeth full delectable but euer in encres therof a sowle is made more and more dampnable ¶ But yet shall I gyue the another token for to knowe myn vysyon from the vysyon of the fende Vnderstonde this for a sothe that sythe it soo is that I am trouthe euer of myn vysyons the sowle of man receyueth a greate knowleche of trouthe and by cause that the knowleche of trouthe is full necessarye to the soule as well to her self as to me that she may knowe me her self of the whiche knowleche she passeth out fro her self in settinge lytyll by her selfe and honoureth and worshyppeth me The whiche condycion properly is called the condycions of mekenes Therfore it were full nedefull that a sowle sholde thus knowe her self And soo be made meke by vysyon The contrarye is of the vysyon of the fēde sythe it so is that the fende is fader of lesynge and kynge of all the chyldren of pryde And he may not gyue but that that he hathe as his lesyng and pryde Therfore as of his visyō a soule semeth moche by her self and is made glad and 〈…〉 Joye The whiche is properly the condycion of pryde and so she is by lefte swellyng and bolnyng in pryde Then̄e therfore yf thou examyne and dyscusse dylygently in thy self mayste knowe whether vysyon come to the of trouthe or ellys of falsenesse yf it come of trouthe it maketh thyn sowle meke yf it come of falsenes by desceyte it maketh thyn sowle proude ¶ Thenne this hooly mayde whan she hadde herde thys she kepte this holsome doctryne full dylygently in her sowle and tolde it afterward to her confessour and also to other for her edyfycacion as it shall be rehersyd wythinforthe by the helpe of god And thenne began our lorde to shewed this holy mayde visyons reuelacyons plentuously soo ferforth that vnnethe myght be founde two men so homely in conuersacion to gyders as oure lorde Jhesu and she were to gyders For whether she prayed or redde or had medytacions or walked or slepte o wyse or other she was comforted many times whan she spake wyth other she hadde reuelacions or vysyons and spake in her sowle to our lord whyles her tongue spake outward to other But that myghte not longe contynue for her sowle was so wonderly I drawe vp to her spouse Jhesu that wythin a lytyll whyle afterward She was rauysshed out of her bodely felyng Out of this rauysshyng came many merueylous thynges that foloweth afterward ▪ as well of her grete abstynence as of her merueylous doctryne And also vpon myracles the whiche oure lorde shewed in her by her lyffe now than lest there be somme that wolde be in doubte whether this holy mayde hadde suche reuelacions or not I shalle telle you how her confessour Mayster Reymound preued it whether her reoelacions and vysyons were trewe or not At the begynnyng whan Mayster Reymound herde of her hye cōuersaciō of liuyng he begā to waxe homely wyth her in comunycacion wyth her for he coude not fele it verely that suche reuelacyons in her myght be trewe the whiche mystruste was for his better And therfore he enquyred by diuers menes and wayes to knowe whether they came of god or of the fende Or whether they were fals or trewe For thenne came to his mynde of ypocritis the whiche regnyd in his dayes and that he founde many dyscetys namely amōges wymmen whom the deuyll dysceyued wyth the vyce aboue all other creaturs Hyt came also in to his mynde how the fyrst womman Eue was deceyued and many suche other therefor he doubted the more of this holy mayde Whyle he stode long thus in suche a doubte it came to his mynde that yf he myght by hir prayers gete of our lord one grete contrycyon for hys synnes aboue the customable contrycyon that he was wonte to haue by that myght he knowe that all hyr vysyons reuelacyons dedys come of the holy ghost For ther may none gete suche a contrycyon but by yefte of the holy ghost And all be it that ther is none lyuyng that can saye whether he be worthy of god hate or loue Yet hertely contrycyon for synnes is a grete token of grace Mayster Reymond had not so sone thought thys that he went to thys holy mayde prayed hir hertely that she wold praye for hym to oure lord that he wouchesauf to for gyue hym the synnes the whyche he had done To whom thys holy mayde answerd sayd that she wold full gladly Than sayde mayster Reymond that he myght not be easyd in his desyre by hyr prayers onely but yf he had there of a bull that hys synnes were for gyuen Of whom thys holy mayde axed wyth a smylynge chere what bull he desyred to haue He answerd that in token of a bull he axed one grete contrycyon for hys synnes the whiche contrycyon thys holy mayde sayde he shold haue all redy Thenne that tyme hyt semed to mayster Reymond that she vnderstode clerely all hys thoughtes so he went from hyr On the morne it happed mayster Reymond for to be seek and laye don in his bedde whom kepte one of hys brethern a deuoute man the whyche was called Nycholas of Pyse The place ther he lay in seek was an how 's of sustres in as moche as he caught hys sekenes sodeynle Jorneyng by the waye Whan this holy mayde perceyued that he was seke She a●os
maidens face by cause euer the hooly mayde tourned awaye her face fro her Of this thynge her confessour hadde grete merueyle And in a tyme asked her why she dyde soo ¶ To whome she answerd and sayde Fader I am syker and ye hadde felt that stynche of synne that I felte in her ye wolde haue caste oute alle that is in your body for sqweymusnes Loo maydens all thyse ensamples haue I sett here for ye sholde knowe what excellent gyftes of grace our lord gaue to this hooly mayde by cause of her meke lyuyng ¶ Ouermore our ghoostely enemye the fend perceyuyng that this hooly mayde wan grete vertues by the seruyce that she dede to seke folke He thought by somme maner of wylle to wythdrawe her fro that holy besynes and yet myght he not For the more that he was aboute to lette her the more she encresyd vertuously by that occupacion ¶ It befyl in a tyme that one of the susters of penaunce whyche was called after the maner of the countree Andred This andred was touched bi the suffraūce of oure lorde wyth a greuous infyrmyte and that was in this thyse She hadde vppon her brest a sore the whiche was called a cancer And that fretid the flesshe rounde aboute and it was soo corrupte that there myght none come nyghe her for stynche But yf they hylde her nose And soo there was fewe or none that myghte suffre to come nyghe her ¶ whanne this hooly Mayde perceyued this she vnderstoode that oure lord had receyued that seke suster to her kepyng Thenne anone she came to her that wyth a glad there she comforted her and she serued her gladly to the laste ende of her sekenes that seke suster toke her seruyce the more freely in as moche as she consydered that all other forsoke her this holy mayde lefte no thynge vndo that was longyng to her seke suster encresyd neuer her abhomynable stynche neuer so moche She stode by her and opened her wounde wasshed it and wepte it and coueryd it ▪ and yet neuer she hyldeth she her nose for noo stynche ne shewed none token of lothsomnes ne neuer was heuy ne wroth of seruyce ne wery about her but gladli dyd her dilygēt seruyce soo that her seke suster had merueyle of the grete stedfastenes and of the grete sufferaunce and of the grete fulnes of loue and charyte that was in so yonge a mayde Of this grete loue and charyte that she shewed to that seke suster the fende had grete enuye and was aboute to lette that dede of mercy and of charyte after his power ¶ Fyrst vpon a daye as this holy mayde was aboute to vnoouere her wounde for to wasshe it and wype it to refreissh it agayn ▪ there came out suche an odoure of stynche that vnnethe her stomake myght suffer it But almost she was brought to a vomyte Assone as she perceyued that she arose agaynst her self wyth an hyghe wrathe and sayde to her skeymons flesshe in this wyse whether the wretched flesshe haste abhomynacion now of thyn suster the whiche oure lorde boughte wyth his precious blode thou mayste falle euery daye in the same sykenesse that she is in or in verse trewely thou shalt be punysshed therfore Anone she bowed done to the sore and hyld her nose and her mouthe open agaynst the wounde soo longe vnto the tyme she felt in her selfe that her skeymousnes was goo and soo she ouer came the flesshe that was contrary to the spyryte The seke suster behelde this and cryed to her merueylyng and sayde cecedere doughter corrupte not thy selfe wyth this foule stynkyng sore ¶ This holy mayde for alle her cryenge wolde not aryse vp vnto the tyme she felt her enemye was ouercome and so she arose vp and he auoyded awaye fro her for a tyme But he consyderyng that he myght not haue the maystry of her wrought wylyly agaynst her by her seke suster He put in her herte suche an heuenes agaynst this holy mayde that she lotheth her seruyce and by lytyll and lytyll that malyce soo encresyd that lothenes was tourned in to an hate For though she knewe well ynow that there was none that wolde serue her but she But yet she s●cyd not of that pryuy hate but brake out agaynst her in to a suspycious g●losye for that is the condycion of theym that lyuen in hate euer lyghtely for to leue a suspycious thought of them that they hate And at the laste she began to ymage ne and bere her an honde that whan she was not present wyth her she was aboute somme actuell synne flesshely in somme other preuy places ▪ ¶ Yet wold not this holy mayde neuer s●ce of her holy seruise aboute her notwithstondyng suspycious ymagynacions I put agaynst her For she wel that wylecome by the deuyll and the more besy she was aboute her the more wrathfull was her seke suster agaynst her by exortacion and excitacion of the fende that euer hated the dedes of charite In so moche that he steryd that seke suster to slander thys holi mayde openly of the filthe of vnclen̄e and that scland was so open that at the last whanne that it came to hir susters he ryng somme of the oldest and of the sted fastest cam to thys seke suster for to knowe the trouthe Thanne the seek suster as she sdaūdred hyr a fore ryght soo she contynued in the same sclaund to hir susters accusyng hir full foule actuell vnclennesse Of the whiche foule accusacy on thyse sustres were gretely a meruaylled and styred ageynst thys holy mayde and so was called forthe a fore them and sharpely rebuked wyth many repreuable wordes axyng of hir how she wold suffre hyr self so be deceyued for to lese hyr maydenhode To whome thys holy mayde answerd full pacyently and softely seynge thus ▪ Trewely ladyes and sustres by the grace of our lord Jhesu cryste I am a mayde And neuer wold she say other worde in blamyng of hyr that so had accused hyr but onely thus Trewely I am a mayde trewely I am a mayde Yet for all thys she cessyd neuer of hyr seruyse all be it that it was full heuysom to hir for to here suche wordes sclaundre But yet fyrst she serued hyr seek suster and afterward went to hir chāb●e for to praye for that was hyr most comforte in all suche dyseases There she prayed in soule more thenne in wordes by mouthe and that was in thys wyse O almyghty god my dere beloued spouse thou knowest well that the name of maydes is tender and lyghtly for to catche sclaundre namely of suche maydens that haue chosen the to be their spouse and that was the cause why that thou woldest that thy gloryous moder our lady Saynt Mary was commytted to Joseph that was called spoused hyr husbond for to kepe hyr name of virgynyte wythout sclaunder Thou knowest lord that alle thys sclaundre the whiche is putte vpon me is come by the fende ●he
fader of ●esynges by cause I sholde cesse of the besynes the whiche I haue begonne for thy loue Therfore lord I praye the helpe me that knowest well I am gylteles and suffre not thys wycked enemye the whiche was ouert● rowe by thy passyon to haue the maystrye of me Whanne she hadde prayed thus longe to our lord wepyng plenteuously Oure lorde appyred to hyr as she knowelechyd afterward in confessyon to hyr confessour mayster Reymond Holdyng in his ryght honde a golden crowne arayed with precyous margaryte stonys And in hys lyfte honde a garlonde of sharpe thornes seyng to hyr in thys wyse Dere doughter it is nedefull that thou be crowned wyth owne of thyse two crownes therfore chese whether thou hast leuer haue of thys two Ch●se now whether thou haddest leuer be crowned wyth the sha●pe crowne of thorne in thys ly● and that other to be reserued to the in euer lastyng lyf Or ellys for to haue this precyous crowne for to haue the other after thys lyfe Thenne thys holy mayde sayde Lord thou knowest well that I haue forsake myn owne wylle and chosen for to do after thy blyssed wyll therfore I dare not chese no maner thyng wythout thy plesaunt wyll Neuerthelesse by cause thou wylte that I shall answer I say thus that I chese rather in thys lyf euer to be cōfourmed to thy blessyd passyon and soo for to suffre peynes for thy loue After thyse wordes anone she toke of our lordes hondes the garland of thornes feruently and put it myghtely vpon hyr hede wyth a maner ef vyolence that the thornys percyd hir hede rounde about as hir thought in so moche that she had a peyne long afterward in hyr hede by prykynge of the thornys as she recorded hir self openly to mayster Reymond hyr confessour Than sayd our ford to hyr thus in my poure is al thyng and as I haue suffred this sclaūder to be areysed ryght so it is in my power to cesse it Therfore thou shalt contynue in that holy seruyse as thou hast be gonne gyue no stede to the sende that wold let the I shall gyue the full vntorye of thyne enemye that what that euer he hath Imagyned ageynst the it shall torne to hys owne hede for thy more ioye and hys more peyne Thus was thys holy mayde comforted and soo bode stylle in that holy seruyse But whanne thys sclaundre cam to hyr moder Lapa all be it that she was seker ynough of hyr doughter she was gretely styred by thys sclaunder sayd to hyr wyth myghty spyryte in thys wyse Doughter haue I not oft sayd to the that thou sholdest nomore serue that stynkyng woman loo what reward she hath gyue the for thy besye seruyse She hath sclaundred the full foule to all thy sustres yf thou euer serue hyr more or come to hyr neuer shall I calle ne name the my doughter afterward ne thou me thy moder Now was this the soty lest wyll of all For ther the fende myght not haue the maystrye of hir by sclaunde ryng of hyr seek suster he beganne wyth a maner of pyte to lette hyr of hyr holy seruyse by hyr moders mouthe Thenne was thys holy mayde astonyed somwhat for hir moders wordes And at the last she wente to hyr and knelyd afore hyr seynge to hyr thus Swete moder whether our lorde wolde be pleased yf we leue vndone the dedys of mercy to our negyhbours for theyr vnkyndenes Whether our sauyour lefte to raunsom vs by suffryng deth on the crosse for the reprouyng wordes and obloquye of men God knoweth moder your charyte also yf I lefte thys seek suster wolde do hir no seruyse there wolde none do hir seruyse And so she shold deye for defau●● Sholde we be cause and occasyon of hyr deth she is now a lytell deceyued of the fende perauenture here afterward our lorde wyll gyue hyr grace for to knowe hyr trespas By suche wordes lyke to thise at the laste she wan hyr moders blessyng and wente to the seek suster ageyn and serued hir so gladly as though she had neuer sayd euyll of hyr These ke suster was than astonyed and perceyued thenne that she had do amysse and beganne to haue sorowe contrycyon in hyr herte of hir sclaunder that she had put vpon hir Thenne our lord shewed mercy to hyr And for to make the good fame of hys mayde he shewed that seek suster in a tyme as she laye in hyr bedde a gracious vysyon that he wouchesauf to shewe to thys holy mayde vpon a daye whanne thys holy mayde wente to hyr chambre after hyr seruyse that she had do to that seek suster That same seek suster sawe as she laye in hyr bedde aboute the holy mayde a grete lyght comyng don from heuen of so grete mirthe swetenes that it made hyr for to forgete vtterly all hyr dyseases what thys myght mene clerely she wyst neuer but she loked aboute here and there And behelde the maydes face transformed or trāsfygured that hyr semed that she was not thenne Katheryn Lapais doughter but rather lyke to an heuenly creature gloryfyed that lyghte beclypped hyr rounde aboute And the more she behelde hyr the more she yelde hir self gylty in hyr sowle to our lorde of the sclaunder that she putt● vpon that holy mayde Whanne thys vysyon hadde tary●● a whyle the whiche appyred to the bodely eyen of that seek suster as it came so it passyd awaye after the whiche passyng the seek suster was long after comforted and also sorowfull for her trespas And anone she axed mercy of the holy mayde wyth sobbyng terys that she had so wyckedly trespassyd ageynst hyr and sclaundred hyr full falsely Loo maydens by that outward lyght our lorde gaf hyr an Inward lyght for to knowe how falsely she was deceyued by the fende Anone forthwyth whanne this holy mayde herde how mekely she axed forgyuenes She wente to hyr mekely and took hyr in her armes and kyssed hyr seyng to hyr thus full comfortably Dere moder I am not dysplesed wyth you in no wyse for I wote well it was the fendes malyce and not youres but I thanke yon wyth all my herte for ye loue me in that ye wolde I were kept clene And therfore I wyte you no thyng of all thys but the fende that hath wrought all this so malyciously ageynst me wyth suche wordes and lyke thyse Thys holy mayde comforted hyr seek suster and dyd hyr seruyse as she was wonte to do and whan she had do leste she shold haue spende hyr tyme in vayne she wente to hyr chambre and occupyed hyr in prayer In the mene tyme that the seek su ste knowleched hir gylty with wepyng and waylyng afore all thoo that came to hyr and sayd openly afore theym alle that by dysceyte of the fende she sclaundred the holy mayde wrongfully And she axed forgyuenes of hem alle For she sayde that she knewe well ynough that this mayde
chylde other whyle an hote brennyng ouen of fyre And whan the preste receyued that blyssed sacrament it semed to hyr that the fyre entred in to hym But whan she shold be houseled ofte tymes she tastyd so grete an odour of that blyssed sacrament that almost hyr body defaylled Euermore also whether she sawe or receyued the blyssed sacrament She receyued with all a newe ioye in hir soule so that many tymes she sholde daunce in hir body for ioye makyng a noyse that hyr felawes myght here hyr the whiche tolde it afterward to hyr confessour and he enquyred the trouthe whether it were so and founde it trewe and soo wrote it for a perpetuell recorde That sowne and that noyse was not lyke other maner comyn sownes of men but as it hadde be a noyse aboue comyn cours of kynde what meruayll was that though she made a ioyfull noyse aboue kynde Syth it so was that she hadde receyued an herte aboue kynde For after tyme that she hadde receyued that newe herte as it is rehersed afore she semed that she was not the same that she was afore ofte tymes she sayd to hyr confessour See ye not fader that I am not the same that I was afore but rather chaūged in to another persone O wolde god fader ye knewe that I fele for I trewe veryly yf a creatour knewe that I fele in my sowle he sholde be resolued made ryght esye were he neuer so harde For my sowle is full of melodye and ioye And it is meruayll to me how it may abyde in the body There is also grete hote brennyng of dyuyne loue therin that thys outward materyall fyre semeth me in cōparyson of that fyre rather colde than hote Also of that ghoostly hote is kynde led in my sowle as me semeth soo grete a loue of my neghbours that my thynketh I myght gladdely suffre for them bodely deth wyth grete ioye And ouermore out of that ghoostly hote is come to my soule a renewyng of purytee and mekenes in so moche that me semeth I am brought to the same purytee and mekenes that a chylde of foure or a fyue yere age is Inne All this she tolde to hir confessour preuely and to none other After tyme that thys holy mayde was thus fulfylled in hyr sowle of suche plente of newe gracys that were many notable vysyons shewed to hyr of whom somme I shall reherce by the grace of god ¶ Fyrste our lord Jhesu hys blessyd Moder and Marye magdalene appyred to gydres to hir and comforted hyr in hir holy purpose whome our lord axed and sayd Doughter what desyrest thou She wyth wepyng chere answerd sayd Lorde thou knowest what me nedeth better than I for I haue no wyll but thyne ne none herte but thyn hert Thenne came to hyr mynde how Marye magdalene commytted hyr self fully to our lorde whan she satte wepte at his fete Wyth that she felte the same swetenesse of loue that Marye magdalene felte that tyme whan she wepte Wherfore she behelde Marye magdalene Our lord ꝑceyued that and for to fulfyll hyr desyre he sayd Loo dere doughter for thy more solace and cōforte I gyue the Marye magdalene to be thy moder To whome thou mayst trustely go to and be comforted for to hir specyally I commytte thy gouernaunce For this grete gyfte this holy mayde thanked our lord wyth gpete mekenes reuerently deuoutly she comended hyr ghoostly gouernaunce to Marye magdalene prayng hyr that she wolde wouchesauf to take hyr vnder gouernaunce Syth our lord had specyally commytted hyr to her Fro that houre euer afterward the holy mayde called Marye magdalene hyr moder the whiche was not doo wythout grete mysterye as me semeth for as Marye magdalene lyued xxxiij yere in a ●oche wythout bodely mete and all that tyme was I occupyed in comtemplacyon Ryght so this holy mayde fro that tyme that she was endowed wyth these newe graces vnto the age of xxxiij yere afterward whiche yere she passyd out of thys worlde She was so occupyed in dyuyne contemplacyon that she hadde neuer nede all the tyme of bodely mete And yet as Marye magdalene was take vp in to the ayre by aungels seuen tymes in the day where she herde the pryuetees of god Ryght so this holy mayde for the more partye all hir yeres she was rauysshed fro hyr bodely wyttes by strengthe of the sowle that was occupyed in contemplacyon of heuenly thynges and so praysed our lord wyth aungels in so moche that often tymes hyr body was lyfte vp in to the ayre of the whiche many men wommen that sawe hyr for that tyme bare recorde Ouermore in that rauyssheng she sawe many meruayllous thynges spake preuely in tyme of hyr rauysshyng many hygh wordes of contemplacion of the whiche som I shall tell you afterward Hyr confessour saw hyr ones in a tyme rauysshed fro hyr bodely wyttes in the same wyse as it is rehersed afore and he herde hyr speke preuely thenne he came nere for to lysten clerely what she sayd and he herde that she sayd formably thyse wordes in latyn Vidi archana dei And that was sayd often tymes other wordes sayde she none but thoo Whanne she was restoryd ageyne to hyr bodely wyttes she cessyd not to reherse these same wordes cōtynuelly and it is nomore for to say but I haue seen the pryuetres of god Thenne hyr confessour desyryng for to knowe why she rehersed tho wordes so ofte axyd hyr in thys maner of wyse Good moder why rehersed ye soo ofte the wordes wyll not tell me what ye mene as ye were wonte to do She answerde I may not say none other wyse Hyr confessour axed hyr why and what is the cause ye were wont to declare me many thinges that our lord hadde shewed to you why wyll ye not do so now thēne she sayde I sholde haue as grete conscyence therof yf I sholde declare to you that I haue seen wyth my langage that is soo vnperfyte as I sholde haue yf I blasfemed our lord or Inhonoured hym for there is a grete dyffrence bytwene the vnderstondyng or intellecte of the sowle Illumyned of god the expressyng of wordes they seme contrary eche to other therfore as for this tyme I can not tell you what I haue saye for they ben vnspekable For this skylle me thynke that she was well commytted by the dyuyne prouydence of our lord to Marye magdalene that a faster shold be knytte to a faster and a louer to a louer And she that had so hygh contemplacyon to hyr that was soo hyghe in contemplacyon Also hir confessour rehersed of hir that after tyme she saw that vysyon of our lord hys blessyd mo● and Saynt mary magdalene that for that tymeit semed hyr that hyr herte went Inne by the syde of our lorde in to his herte and was made bothe one so that she felte hyr soule all for melte relented by the strengthe of
hys dyuyne loue that she ●●yed in hyr soule sayd ¶ Lorde thou hast wounded myn herte lorde thou hast woūded myn herte ¶ And this was on saynt margaretes day as she tolde to hyr confessour in preuytee ¶ Hyt befell also in another tyme the morowe after Saynt Laurence daye that this holy mayde cam to the chyrche for to here masse kneled nexte to the auter as she was wonte for to do for to see the blessyd sacrement because that she sholde not lette the preste at theautre by hyr grete sobbynghir confessour came to hyr warned her that she shold constreyne hir asmoche as she mighte fro suche grete sobbynges lest the prest were lette by hyr ¶ Th●nae anone she mekely as trewe obedyent mayden satte ferther fro the aulter prayed to oure lorde that he wold vouchesauf to Illumyne hir confessour that he myght see and knowe whether suche sterynges of the spyryte of god myght be mesured of man ¶ Thēne by vertu of that prayer hyr contessoure hadde so perfyte knoleche of feuoure of deuocyon by experience that he knewe fully by that that suche feruoures of the soule myght not be kepte wythin but nedes by strenthe of dyuyne loue yt muste breke out ¶ Ferthermore oftyme whan she was not houseled she desyred in hyr sowle for to receyue the blyssed sacramet of the aulture ¶ And oftymes she wold breke out and say deuoutly thus ¶ I wolde receyue my lorde Jhesu crystys body wyth that our lorde wolde appyre to hyr as he was wont to doo and to fulfylle hyr desyre he toke the maydens mouthe put it to hys blessyd wounde of hys syde and bad hyr receyue of ●s flesshe and of hys bloode as moche as she lyst ¶ Thenne she receyued plentuously of our lorde breste that she semed for pure loue she sholde hadde dyed by cause of the grete swetnes that she felte in her herte ¶ Hyt befyll also vpon Sanyt ●●exis day that this holy mayde prayed to our lorde deuoutly that he wolde vouchesauf to graūte hyr brēnyng desyre for to receyue hys flesshe and hys blood ¶ Wyth that she had d●a reuelacyon that she sholde be houseled on the morowe doubteles for it was forbeden hyr of the freres that she sholde not so ofte be houseled ¶ Thenne whane she hadde thys confortable reuelacyon She. prayed our lord that he wold wouchesauf to clenie hir herte agaynst the tyme she shold receyue hym that she myght the more worthely receyue hym ¶ In tyme that she prayed thus she felte a reyne comenge doun in to hyr soule in maner of a grete haboundant flood not of water or of suche other lyquore but onely of blood medelyd wyth fyre the whiche as hyr semed purgyd clensed so myghtely ●● rsowie that by strengthe of that tyre it re●o●ded in to the body and clensed also hyr body ¶ After thys on the morowe she was ●oseek that by no waye it semed to hyr she myght not goo one foot ¶ Neuertheless she doubted no thyng of the ꝓmysse o● our lord but trustyng to hym fully began to go to chyrche And whan she was come thyder she knelyd doun in a chapell besyde an aulter ¶ Thenne came to hyr mynde how she was enfourmed that she myght not be houseled of what prest she lyst but of suche that ben assygned to hyr ▪ ¶ wyth that she desyred hyr confessour sholde say a masse at that same aulter Anone oure lorde gaf hyr comforte that he sholde sing there Sodeynly our lord thenne touched the herte of hyr confessonr wyth deuociō that he sholdesaye a masse that day for he was in no wyll for to syng that day ne he wyste not that the holy mayde was come to chyrche ¶ Thenne at the steryng of our lorde he dysposed him to masse wente to the same aulter there the holy mayde was and abode our lordes behest at whiche aulter also he was neuer wont to synge ¶ And whanne he came he founde there this holy mayde axyng for to be houseled for charyte ¶ Thenne he rceyued that it was the wyll of god he sholde syng that day ¶ He sayd masse and at the ende of the masse as the maner is he came for to housele hyr this holy mayde at the aulter ende where she was redy for to receyue that blessyd sacrament ¶ Hyr confessour behelde and sawe hyr vysage all shynyng rede al for wepre wyth terys the whiche was to him a grete meruayll and Wuth that deuocion she receyued that blissed sacrament ¶ And after tyme she was houseled she was so plenteuously replete of our lorde that all that day she myght speke no worde to noo creature ¶ On the morowe hyr confessour axed hyr what hir eyled and what nowe grace she receyued the other day a fore by cause she was so shynnyng rede whan she receyued that blyssed sacrament she answorde thus ¶ Fader of what colour I was that tyme I wote nere but thys I knowe well whā I vnworthy wretche receyued that blyssed sacrament of your hondes it drewe me som to it that alle other thyng saue that allone wexed to me lothesom not onely temporall thynges dylectacyons of the worlde but also other comfortes pleysaunces were they neuer so ghostly wherfore I desyred prayed that all suche ghostly comfortes sholde be sequestryd frome so that I myght pleese god and ende lesly be I knytte to hym And also I prayed hym that he wolde take away my wyl gyue me hys wyll and so he dede right mercyably and sayd to me thus ¶ Loo dere doughter now I gyue the my wyll bi the whiche thou shalte be soo strong that what euer happe to the fro thys tyme for the warde thou shalt neuer be chaunged nestyred ryght so it was ¶ She was euer afterwarde dyspysed and sette lytell by of alle folke and was neuer the more styred ne troubled ageynsthem ¶ Ouermore yet this holy mayde sayd to her confessour Fader well wyll ye wete how our lorde serued me Trewely as a moder serued hyr lytell soukyng chylde whome she loueth tenderly ¶ A moder suffred other while hir childe stonde a ferre from hyr whyle she sheweth hym hirtete of hir breste and suffred hym to wepe longe tyme after hit but all that tyme the lawhed ¶ At the last whan she hath suffred it to wepe long tyme she gothe ther to wyth a lawhyng there and beclypped it in her armes and kyssed it and soo gyueth it hyr breste or she tete ¶ Ryght so ferde our lorde wyth me that day he shewed me hys blessyd wounde in his syde stondyng all a ferre from me ¶ And I for desyre that I hadde ther to putte my mouth to that blessyd wounde and wepte haboundantly ¶ Thenne our lorde sayd after tyme that he hadde so suffred me to wepe he came to me gladdely and tooke my sowle in hys armes and putte my mouthe to his wounde ¶ And thenne my sowle for that grete
onys ony maner of precepte of myn for the virgynyte ofthis body and soule and the grace of hys baptyme he kepte euer to me vndefoylyd ¶ And also ryght as here myn eternall and naturall sone the endeles worlde of my mouthe tolde and spake opēly to all the worlde that I badde hym say And therto bare wyttenes of trouthe Ryght soo Domynyke myn sone by adopcyon preche my trouthe openly to the worlde as Welle Amonges heretykes as amonges faythfus peple not onli bi hīself but also bi other of hī not only ▪ whyles he lyued in erthe amonges you But also bi his successours bi whom yet they precheth and shalle preche for ryght as my naturall and eternall sone sente his dyscyples for to preche ryght soo Domynyk myn sone by a dopcion sente his fryers And also ryght as myn naturall sone and eternall is myn word ryght Domynyke myn sone by adopcion is the prechour aboute of myn word wherfore of myn synguler gyfte it is gyue to hym and to his fryers for to vuderstonde the trouthe of min wordes not for to passe therfro Also ryght as myn naturall sone and eternall ordeyned and dysposyd all his lyff and his dedes by doctrynes and ensample to helthe off mannys soule ryght Domynyke myn sone by adopcion put all his besynes to delyuer out soules of the sorowe of errour and of synne And that was his pryncipall entent Whan he began his ordre that is for to say for helthe of soules therfore he may well be lyked to min natural and eternall sone sone Ihesu Criste This was the reuelacioy the whiche she comynyd to fryer Bertylmewe ▪ whan that sodeyn caas of lokyng asyde byfyll to her as it is rehersyd afore Now I shall procede forth of the remenaunt of the lyf of this holy mayde in reuelacions and visyons ▪ but fyrst I wolde ye knewe maydens that for the grete haboundance of greces and open reuelacions and visyons and for the gre●enes of loue therwyth The whiche this holy maydes soule was fulfylled She was ryght syke in her body and euer encresid in sekenes more and more for loue soo that she roo● nomore out of her bedde but laye styll euer newyng the loue of her spose seyng thus Aswete louely lord goddes sone and the sone of a mayden ▪ wyth suche many louyng ▪ wordes she praised oure lorde and her spouse She beleft wythout bodely mete and therto her spouse Jhesu Cryste the whiche gyuen her that fyre of loue by cause it sholde bren̄e more stōgely he apperyd to her ofte tymes Then ne sayd she to hym that was so febyll off the fyre of loue Good louely lord thou sufferest me so longe abyde in this wretched body and wylt not take me to thyn endeles presence I haue none Joye now off this wretchid lyf but only all myn ioye is for to seke the For I loue the Ihesu and none wythout the for what that euer I loue lord it is for the why am I ther for delayed soo longe ▪ fro thyn endeles presence ¶ Ha ha mekest and myldest lorde delyuer myn soule out of this pryson and out of this dedely lif To thise wordes that were sayd soo weylyngly oure lord answerd Dere doughter whan I liued in erthe amonge men I besyed me neuer for to fulfylle myn owne wyll but myn faders and albe it that I desyred to ete the laste paske wyth myn dysciples for to be wyth myn fader as they herd me ofte tymes saye yet I suffred paciently the tyme that was ordeined off myn fader soo must thou doo though thou desyre feruently to be onyd to me perfightely in the blesse of heuen yet thou muste abyde the tyme that I haue ordeyned Theenne she sayd to our lord louely lord sythe it soo is that it is not kynde to me as yet to passe out of this lyff thyn wyl be done Fiat voluntas tua But one thinge I beseche the whyles I lyue in this erthe that sythe I may not yet be onyd to that ī blysse ▪ graūte me as longe as I lyue in this lyf to be onyd to the with the bi parte taking of thy blessyd passiō the whiche was graūted to her ¶ For as she asked soo she hadde fro that tyme forward she hadde so moche experiens euery day in her herte īher body of the passions of our lorde as she tolde afterward preuyly to maister Reymoūd that she neuer felte suche a soor and that was in this wyse Ofte tymes she wolde sytte talke with mayster Reymound and teche hym of the passyon of criste affermyng myghtely that our lorde Jhesu cryste fro the tyme of his gloryous concepcion in to the tyme of the ende of his blyssyd passyon he bare euer the crosse of his deth in hys soule ▪ for the grete passyng desyre that he hadde for the helthe of mannys sowle For whan he was conceyued he was ful of grace and of wysdome and of charyte And it was none nede to hym for to encrece in hym afterward for he was perfyght ynow in theym at the begynnyng Therfore sythe it so was that he loued so perfyghtly god the fader and mankynde in herte seyng and consyderyng god the fader in trinite in maner depryued of his honour And also mankynde depryuyd f●o his blessyd ende he was soo tourmēted wyth compassyon in hym self vnto the tyme that he myght restore by his passyon the dewe honour to god the fader in T●inyte and endeles helthe to mankynde ▪ Also she sayde the affliction of his holy desyre was none lytyll payne But it was a grete payne And thefore it was that he sayde to hys dyscyples on schherthursday at the soper Deside●io desideraui manducare vobiscum hoc pascha ¶ That is I haue desyred wyth a grete desyre longe afore thys tyme to ete with you this paske and the cause was for he gaue theym in that soper an speciall ernest of helthe the whiche he wolde werke er thenne he purposed to ete wyth theym eftsones And therfore she alleggid for her the wordys of our sauyour where he sayth in another place Pater transfer calicem hūc a me That is fader put awaye this passion fro me that I shall now drynke the whiche wordes she expownyd thus and sayde Perfyght folke sholde not vnderstonde thyse wordes as symple folke done that our sauyour asked of his fader to put awaye and remeue hye paynefull passiō But thus fro the begynnyng of his gloryous concepcton vnto that tyme of his deth he dranke euer of that paynfull passyon by the grete desyre that he had off mannys helthe And thenne the more he drawe nere to the deth ▪ the more gredyly he desyred that drynke ▪ he asked therfore that it shold soone be fulfylled the whiche he hadde soo longe tyme desyred for the helthe of mannys soule that the dryke the whiche he hadde drunke soo longe afore sholde thenne be ended ▪ And thus this was not for to
to speke to ony man on erthe For ther is no speche in erthe that can expresse the preuytees in ony mānis tongue But this wote I well as ofte as I here of that mater I am tourmented so gretly in my sowle consyderyng where I was thenne where I am now that I can not tell my sorowe but wyth wepynge sobbyng Thenne mayster Reymond prayed hyr to tell him how that all this began in hyr She answerd sayde After tyme that I was fedde and comforted wyth many vysyons reuelacyons by our lordes mercy I fell seek for pure loue laye doun in myn bedde where I prayed our lorde Jhesu that he wolde delyuer me out of this wretchyd worlde and oned me perfytely to him The whiche for that tyme he wolde not graunte me But he graūted therfore as long as I lyued in this lyf shold be partyner of his passyon in asmoche as it is possyble a dedly body for to suffre and soo she tolde hym all that that is rehersed afore And more ouer she sayd loo fader by suche experyence of hys passyon I am made so seke by the strengthe of loue that my sowle desyred no thyng ellys but for to be delyuered out of this world And the same fyre so encrecyd in my sowle that my herte often tymes defayled departed a sonder and my soule was vtterly delyuered out of the body Neuerthelesse it was but a lytell tyme that was my sorowe Then ne eftesones mayster Reymond axed hir how long tyme hyr sowle was out of the body She sayd as they that kepte hyr were aboute to haue beryed hyr foure houres or thēne she reuyued ageyn Yet he axed hyr what she sawe for that tyme why came the soule ageyne to the body she answerd thus Fader that tyme my sowle sawe vnderstode ioye of blessyd sowles and peynes of synners And as myn mynde wold suffre me wordes wolde suffyce to expresse them I shall tell you My sowle sawe the diuyne essen cyall beyng of god and that is the cause why I am soo lothe vnpacyent to lyue in this worlde and had not be the loue of hym the loue of crysten people for whiche my sowle was restoryd to the body ageyne I sholde had defaylled dyed for sorowe The hyghest comfort that I haue is whan I suffre ony dysease for that I haue the perfyte vysyon of god therfore trybulacyons ben not heuysom to me but comfortable as ye may knowe other that ben conuersaunt wyth me I sawe also the peynes of dampned sowles and peynes of sowles that ben in purgatory the whiche I can not expresse perfytely wyth no maner of wordes For yf wretched synners sawe the leste peyne that is there they had leuer chese bodely deth an hondred tymes yf it were possyble thēne for to suffre o daye the leste peyne that is there But specially I sawe hem ponys shed syngulerly that had synned in matrymony the whiche hadde not kepte hem to gyder honestly as they sholde do but folowed the dylectacions of theyr lustys Of this mayster Reymond hir confes sour axed hyr why that synne in specyall was more greuously punysshed thenne other synnes syth it so is that it is not the most greuous synne She sayd for this skylle For they had not soo grete conscyence of that synne ne so grete contrycy on as they had of other synnes but rather they offended in that synne thenne in ony other That synne the whiche a synner chargeth not for to remoue by penaūce is a grete synne be it neuer soo lytell Thenne this holy mayde proceded forthe in hyr mater sayd thus also Fader whāne I had seen all thyse ioyes and thes peynes wenyng my self that I hadde fully be delyuered out of this body Oure lorde sayde to me seest thou not doughter what ioye they lacke and what peyne they haue that offenden me Torne ageyn therfore to thy body tell to the peple theyr errour and theyr peryll And wyth that worde I was astonyed for to torne ageyne to the body and sore aferde Thenne our lord sayd to me it is profyte to mennys soules that thou torne ageyne and thou shalte not lyue the lyfe that thou hast lyued a fore ne kepe the solytarie allone in chambre but thou shalte goo a brode to wynne sowles I shall euer be wyth the and goo wyth the bothe goyng and comyng Thou shalte bere the worshyp of my name and of ghoostly doctryne afore grete and smale laye people and clerkys and a fore Relygyous folk also I shall gyue the bothe mouth and wytte for to speke that none may wythstande the. I shall also bryng the afore bysshoppys and curates of sowles for to confounde there pryde Whyles our lorde spak thyse wordes sodeynly my soule was restored ageyne to my body And whanne I perceyued that I hadde grete sorowe that I wepte thre dayes and thre hyghtes to gyders wythout cessyng And yet I can in no wyse absteyne ne refreyne me ther fro whanne it cometh to my mynde how sodeynly I was come fro the grete ioye vnto this prysone of the body What wonder is it therfore fader though myn herte to brest euery day consyderyng the grete excellent ioye that tyme that I hadde the whiche now it is ferre fro me but all is done for the sowle he le Therfore ther shall no man meruayle though I loue them passyngly to whome our lord hath bede me warne them of theyr synfull lyuyng for I haue lefte for them a grete ioye for a certeyn tyme I wote not how long Therfore as saynt Poule seyth They ben now my glorye my crowne my ioye All thys I saye to you fader to all other for to putte out of youre hertes the passyon of grutchyng in tyme comyng whan I shall be homely amonges all men Whan mayster Reymond herde all this vnderstode them after the grace that was gyue hym he ꝑceyued in hys herte that for the incredulytee and blyndnes of men all that she sayde sholde not be publysshed Wherfore he for bade bothe the freres the sustres that all the whyle this holy mayde lyued in erthe they sholde not pupplysshe that matree He perceyued also of somme that folowed fyrst hyr doctryne how they wente backward for they coude not ne myghte not take hyr wordes But leste he sholde offende god yf he hadde hydde it hymself wythout wrytyng he wrote it for a perpetuell recorde after hyr dyssece not whyle she lyued Now maydens for to knowe veraly that al this is sothe I shall tell you wytnes of recorde that were present wyth this holy mayde whan all thyse thynges befyll hyr In that same tyme whan this holy mayde drewe nye to the deth as it semed as it is rehersed afore There drewe aboute hyr wymmen and other ghoostly doughters of herys they sent after hyr fyrst confessour frere Thomas for do be present at hyr
wyll of god Neuerthelesse though in maner she bowed our lord to hyr prayers yet she myght not enclyne hir moder wyll by hyr exortacyons ¶ Thenne our lord spake to hys spouse Katheryne and sayde Telle thy moder that she hath now no nede to passe out of this worlde but tyme shall come that she shall desyre for to deye and then̄e she shal not haue it and that was sothe ¶ Hyt befyll that she lyued in to a grete age and sawe many aduersytres in hyr dayes as well of persones as of theyr goodys in so moche that she sayde ofte tymes in heryng of many folke suche wordes Whether our lord Ihesu hath put a soule in my body that it shall neuer be delyuered thens So many chyldren and doughters grete and smale yong and olde ben dede and I may not deye ¶ Now I shall cesse of this mater and procede forthe in the fyrst mater that I began Lapa this holy maydes moder was of so harde herte that she wolde in no wyse dye ne by confessyd ne thynke in noo wyse on hyr soule he le ¶ Thenne oure lorde for to appyre more meruayllously in hys spouse Katheryne denyed in maner as it semed hys fyrste graunte And suffred Lapa to drawe fast toward the deth wythout confessyon Whan this holy mayde perceyued that she lyfte vp hyr eyen to heuen wyth wypyng terys sayd to our lord thus A a lord god ben thise thy behestys that thou hast graunted me that none of my faders houshold shold perysshe is this thy mercyable byheste that saydest my moder sholde not passe hens ageynst hyr wyll I see well now that she shall dye wythout sacramentys of holy chyrche Therfore I beseche the by alle thy mercyes that thou suffre me not to be deceyued and that I goo not hens a lyue vnto the tyme thou haste yolde to me my moder reuyued in soule and body ¶ These wordes and these meruayllous cause herde thre wimmen of Sene that were present ¶ Whan hyr moder as it semed by syghte and felyng was dede soo that they were aboute for to go home ageyne to theyr howses leuyng Lapa there for dede yf it had not ben that the holy mayde prayed as she dyd and therfore they abode the lenger Of the maners of these wymmen I shall tell you afterward ¶ Thys holy mayde contynued long in prayers at the last our lord herde hyr prayers gracyously and quyckened the soule and the body ageyne of Lapa that she lyued afterward vnto the tyme she was foure score yere of age and nyne wyth grete torment of herte for many aduersytres that she suffred as it was prophecyed to hyr afore by hyr doughter this holy mayde ¶ Of this myracle were wytnesse one Katheryne and Angelyna sustres of penaunce and also Lysa this holy maydes cosyn they were present whan Lapa was leyde forthe for dede and herden how this holy mayde prayed to oure lorde thus Lorde ben these thy behestys that thou behote me as it is sayd afore Of the remeynaunt of hyr age whan she was restoryd ageyne to lyf bare wyttenes many one Lo ye maydens here may ye knowe of what meryte this holy mayde was wyth our lord Ihesu that delyuered hyr faders soule out of purgatory and reduced hyr moders soule in to hir body ageyne meruayllously ¶ Another meruayllous thyng shall I tell you It happened that ther was a comyn pestylence of bocchys reygnyng in the Cyte of Sene soo that it oppressyd bothe men and wymmen yong and olde to the deth that comynly they dyed wythin two dayes or thre at the ferthest the whiche sekenes feryd many a man ¶ Thenne mayster Reymond wente aboute to vysyte seek folke and comforted them in god no thyng chargyng of the Infeccyon of that pestylence touchyng hys bodely deth soo that he myght wynne soules Whanne he hadde so vysyted them for werynes that he had in goyng aboute he restyd hym in a chyrche of our lady where to he hadde a grete deuocyon and namely for the persone of the same chyrche was a blessyd lyuer and well knowen wyth thys holy mayde Katheryne the whiche persone was called Syr Mathewe ¶ It befyll fewe dayes after that mayster Reymond wente out by the morowe for to vysyte seek folke as he was wonte And as he came by the chyrche of our lady for deuocyon that he hadde to our lady in that place and also for affeccyon that he hadde to the persone syr Mathewe he wente for to loke how he ferde Sodeynly whan he was entred in to the chyrche he sawe syr Mathewe bere vp in to hys chambre semynge as he hadde be dede by vyolence of that pestylence For he hadde lost bothe colour of hys face and strengthe of hys body and also hys speche ¶ Thenne mayster Reymond axed of other aboute what hym eyled They answerde and sayd that the nyght afore aboute one after mydnyght he was vppe for to vysyte a seek body And wyth Inne lytell tyme afterward he was take wyth the pestylence Here of was mayster Rymond ryght sorye folowed hym vp to his chambre as other dyd and then ne satte doun by hym Wythin a whyle after whan he was layde in hys bedde he recouered his spyrytes ageyne and callyd mayster Reymond to hym prayeng hym of confessyon and so was shryuen clene of hys synnes as he was ofte wonte to do After tyme that he was assoylled mayster Reymound axed how it stode wyth hym and he answerd and sayd ageyne that it greued hym so sore in hys grynde or in the flanke that it semed to hym his thygh wolde falle awaye and not onely the thygh but also the hede fareth as though it were departed in foure partyes by payne and ache that he suffred ther Inne Thenne mayster Reymond touchyd tastyd hys poūse and founde well that he hadde a passyng feuer Wherfore he had hys menye that they sholde bere hys water to leches and so they dyd But mayster Reymound folowed soone after to knowe verayly what the leches wolde saye To whome the leche sayde thus Thys man is take wyth the pestylence and therfore I drede me that the how 's of our lady shall wante and lacke a good persone ¶ Thenne axed mayster Reymond whether he myght be holpe by ony maner remedye of medycynes he sayd that he sholde assaye But he hadde no grete trust in noo medycynes by cause the sykenes was ryght greuous Thus mayster Reymond departed from hym wyth grete sorowe euer prayeng by the waye to our lord in hys soule that he wolde wouchesauf to saue hys bodely lyf Yet a whyle for hys example to many ¶ In the mene whyle this holy mayde herde saye that syr Mathewe was seek whome she loued tenderly for hys vertuous lyuyng Anone she wente home to hym and as soone as she sawe hym she cryed to hym and sayd ¶ Aryse vp syr Mathewe aryse vp for shame is it now tyme to lye a bedde Sodeynly thenne atte hyr callyng
companye as they satē at the mete Stephene the felowe of Neryus roos vp wyth a grete spyryte went to the holy maydes chambre sytyng doune on his knees and prayed her mekely that she wyll not suffre his felowe Neryus to deye in suche a straunge contree To whom this holy mayde answerde thus sone why art thou heui thou sholdest not be sory for thy felawe For our lorde wyll rewarde hym in blysse for his pacyence in sufferyng of that sekenes Then̄e he sayd agayn dere moder yett here myn prayer at this tyme and helpe hym for I wote well ye may and ye wyll Thenne she sayd well sone I see well that thou art not in will to conforme the to the wil of god as I haue tolde the Therfore sythe I see that thou art soo tourmentyd for hym come to me to morowe whan I go to here masse and be houselyd and reduce this mater to myn mynde And I shall sende vp thyn prayer to god And thou shalt praye for me that I maye be herde Thenne stephen was well apayed wyth this vyheste●erly on the morowe he mette wyth this holy mayde goyng for to here masse Assone as he aspyed her he fyldoune on his knees and prayed her that she wolde not forgete hym of that he spake to her the day afore After tyme whan she was ho●elyd she was rauysshed from her bodely wyttes and prayed our lord for that seke man Soone after she was restoryd ayen to her bodely wyttes and came to the same Stephene smylyng the whiche abode her there of an answere and sayde vnto hym thus Sone thou hast the grace that thou hast asked Thenne he asked her whether Neryus shold be deliuerd of his sekenes She sayd ye wyth that he wente gladly to his felawe and badde hym be of good there for he shall be hole and soo he was full tendaunt aboute for to recouer hym In tyme of his mynystracion aboute hī it happed the same Stephene to be seke lay doune in his bedde of a passyng feuer Whan the holy mayde knewe that she hadde grete sowwe and went to hym and asked hym what sekenes he hadde And she perceyued by touchynge of hys ponse that he was vexed wyth a strong feuer Anone wyth a greate feruour o●● spyryte she sayde thus I charge the feuer by the vertu of obedyence that tho● goo out of this man thenne went the feuer a waye and he wos vp all hole with out ony taryeng and thanked oure lorde of his grete grace that he shewed to hys spouse Katheryne Another notable myracle I shall telle you of a suster of penaunce the whiche was called Johan dwellyng in the Cyte of Sene In a tyme that our holy fader pope Gregory that lyued that tyme was in the cyte of Sene at the byddyng of our holy fader Gregorye this holy mayde was sent to Florence to make pees betwene hym his rebell children of florēce the whiche mat is to longe to tell here But this mater shall hau● a chapytre by hit self afterward by the helpe of god And whan she was come to Florence wyth hyr a felawe of here 's the whiche was called Johan for to trete for the pees betwene our oure holy fader and that rebell people The people sette lytell by hyr wordes but s●laundred hyr meruayllously set hyr at nought Then ne she was counseylled for to withdrawe hyr a whyle vnto the tyme that they were cessyd of theyr malyce She dyd so but yet she sayd that she wold neuer passe out of that cyte in to the tyme they were accorded and pees were cryed thorugh out all the cyte of Florence as she sayde so it was Thenne she wente a syde was lodgyd a lytell besyde the cyte where sodeynly hir suster Johan was seek in hyr foot so that hyr foot was all forswo●land ther wyth for payne of hyr foot she had a grete ●eruent axes and so she was in double wyse tormented that she myght not goo wyth hyr Thy● holy mayde was heuy therof wolde in no wy●e leue hyr behynde le●t s●launder sholde spryng She prayed to our lord for helpe that he wold wouche●auf mercyably to helpe hyr fel●we all the whyle that she prayed hyr suster was a slepe And whan she awoke she was all hole as though she had I had no sykenes Anone she arose vp went wyth this holy mayde as quykly as euer she dyd afore ¶ Of this myracle many one thanked our lord that sawe it the whiche had wrought soo gracyously by hys spouse Katheryne Yette shall I tell you another meruayllous thynge that our lord wrought by hyr in the cyte of Tholetane Whan this holy mayde was entred in to the Cyte of Tholetane she took hir Inne and anone she wente in to hir chambre as she was wonte to do In to the whiche mayster Reymond was come on the popes message Sodeynly thenne he herde in the stretys of the Cyte of wymmen that an holy wommā was come entred in to the Cyte Then ne soone after cam men and after wymmen to hyr Inne axed where thys holy mayde was They of the Inne myght not hyde hyr but they suffred wymmen onely to goo in to hyr speke wyth hyr Thenne ther was one of the wommen that hadde a lytell chylde whos whombe was meruayllously swolle And they prayed this holy mayde that she wold take that childe in hyr armes at the begynnyng she refused it by cause of vayn glorye but at the ●ast she was ouercome by pyte and dyd as they had hyr as soone as she took that chylde in hir hondes anone the childe deliuered from him moche wynde so that at last hys bely aswagyd and was as small as euer it was soo the chylde was hole All be it that mayster Reymond sawe not this myracle yet ther was so open speche therof in the Cyte of Tholetane that it came to the bysshopys ere and sent after mayster Reymond prayed hym that he myght speke wyth the holy mayde for the childe was neuewe to a vycary of hys And than this holy mayde came spake wyth the bysshop of many vertuous maters Many moomeruayls our lord wrought by this holy mayde that ben not wryten in this book But these fewe I haue wryten to you maydens by cause that ye shall the sonner gyue credence that our lord Jhesu Cryste dwellyd in this holy maydens soule the whiche principally wrought all thyse meruayllous werkys wytnes of tho maters the whiche ben reherced in this chapytre ben reherced afore in tho places where these my racles were shewed and thus endeth this chapytre ¶ Of myracles wrought by thys holy mayde a boute the delyueraunce of them whiche were encombred and vexyd wyth fendes Capitulum lx Owre lorde all myghty Ihesu cessyd not to shewe outward the Fertue that he gaue Inwarde to hys spouse Katheryne by many meruayllous werkes The vertue therfore of our lorde Ihesu cryst
angmented so myghtly in the brest of this holy mayde that not onely it was shewed to seek bodyes as it is reherced afore but also it was shewed in voydyng of wycked spyrytes as it shall be declared in this chapytre by the helpe of god Ther was in the Cyte of Sene a man the whiche was called mychael that vsed the craft of wrytyng whan he was passed in yeres of age by consent of hys wyf he was in purpose to leue the worlde serue our lord more specyally thenne he was wonte And also for to make two doughters of hys mynchyns in a monasterye in the same Cyte of Sene endowed in worshyp of saynt Johan the Enange lyst so hys lyst was fulfylled And at the last by a pryue dome of god one of his doughts the whiche was made a myn then that was called Laurencyana of vill yere of age or there aboute was vexed with a fende so that all the monasterye was vnquyeted by hyr vexacyon And at the last by comyn assent they sent after hyr fader delyuered ageyne hys doughter for they wold nomore haue hyr in the monasterye as long as she was so vexed Whan she was take out of the monasterye the fende spak wythin hir by the childys mouth many wondre thynges all in latyn wordes so many herde questyōs ther to pupplysshed many pryue synnes in sclaunder of many folke by the whiche it myght well be vnderstond that he was no good spyryte Of this vexacyon hyr fader moder and other of hir frendes were ryght sory wente aboute to dyuerse relyques of sentes for to seke helpe grace that her doughter myght be delyuerd of that spiryte And specyally they trusted gretely in the relyques of saynt Ambrose the whiche was a frere prechour to whome our lord graunted a synguler gyfte to put awaye wycked spyrytes soo that hys cope yf it had be layde vpon ony creature that had be vexed wyth a wicked spiryte it sholde be auoyded where fore the same chylde was brought to the frere prechours leyde vpon a tombe of saint ambrose hys clothes were leyde to the childe and the fader the mod prayed in the mene whyl the helpe ef god of the sente that the chylde myght be socourre But yet for that tyme were they not herde Not for no synne that euer they dyd But I trowe be cause that the syguler remedyes was reserued to this holy mayde Thenne was it counseylled to the fad mod for to presente hyr doughter to Pratheryne the holy mayde they sent to the holy mayde prayenge hyr that she wolde helpe they re doughter And she sent ageyn answer sayd that often tymes defayled departed a sonder and my soule was vtterly delyuered out of the body Neuerthelesse it was but a lytell tyme that was my sorowe Then ne eftesones mayster Reymond axed hir how long tyme hyr sowle was out of the body She sayd as they that kepte hyr were aboute to haue beryed hyr foure houres or thēne she reuyued ageyn Yet he axed hyr what she sawe for that tyme why came the soule ageyne to the body she answerd thus Fader that tyme my sowle sawe vnderstode ioye of blessyd sowles and peynes of synners And as myn mynde wold suffre me wordes wolde suffyce to expresse them I shall tell you My sowle sawe the diuyne essen cyall beyng of god and that is the cause why I am soo lothe vnpacyent to lyue in this worlde and had not be the loue of hym the loue of crysten people for whiche my sowle was restoryd to the body ageyne I sholde had defaylled dyed for sorowe The hyghest comfort that I haue is whan I suffre ony dysease for that I haue the perfyte vysyon of god therfore trybulacyons ben not heuysom to me but comfortable as ye may knowe other that ben conuersaunt wyth me I sawe also the peynes of dampned sowles and peynes of sowles that ben in purgatory the whiche I can not expresse perfytely wyth no maner of wordes For yf wretched synners sawe the leste peyne that is there they had leuer chese bodely deth an hondred tymes yf it were possyble thēne for to suffre o daye the leste peyne that is there But specially I sawe hem ponysshed syngulerly that had synned in matrymony the whiche hadde not kepte hem to gyder honestly as they sholde do but folowed the dylectacions of theyr lustys Of this mayster Reymond hir confessour axed hyr why that synne in specyall was more greuously punysshed thenne o ther synnes syth it so is that it is not the most greuous synne She sayd for this skylle For they had not soo grete conscyence of that synne ne so grete contrycyon as they had of other synnes but rather they offended in that synne thenne in ony other That synne the whiche a synner chargeth not for to remoue by penaūce is a grete synne be it neuer soo lytell Thenne this holy mayde proceded forthe in hyr mater sayd thus also Fader whāne I had seen all thyse ioyes and thes peynes wenyng my self that I hadde fully be delyuered out of this body Oure lorde sayde to me seest thou not doughter what ioye they lacke and what peyne they haue that offenden me Torne ageyn therfore to thy body tell to the peple theyr errour and theyr peryll And wyth that worde I was astonyed for to torne ageyne to the body and sore aferde Thenne our ford sayd to me it is profyte to mennys soules that thou torne ageyne and thou shalte not lyue the lyfe that thou hast lyued a fore ne kepe the so lytarie allone in chambre but thou shalte goo a brode to wynne sowles I shall euer be wyth the and goo wyth the bothe goyng and comyng Thou shalte bere the worshyp of my name and of ghoostly doctryne afore grete and smale laye people and clerkys and a fore Relygyous folk also I shall gyue the bothe mouth and wytte for to speke that none may wythstande the. I shall also bryng the afore bysshoppys and curates of sowles for to confounde there pryde Whyles our lorde spak thyse wordes sodeynly my soule was restored ageyne to my body And whanne I perceyued that I hadde grete sowwe that I wepte thre dayes ende of this chapite It nedeth not for to reherce the wytnesses of euery acte that was done in this chapytre for it is made mencion of forthwyth at euery acte ī the same chapytre ¶ Of myracles whiche our lord wrought by this holy mayde in breed wyne herbes ▪ and other thinges that had none lyff Capitulum xj BY cause at the begynnyng whā Adam was made our lord ordeyned a rewle to all tho that obeye● to hym perfyghtly that all thynges sholde obeye to them Therfor maydens in this nexte chapytre I shall telle you how to this holy mayde obeyden alle creatures by cause she obeyed perfyghtly to god In the tyme
cōsydere and vnderstonde that the boke was not endyted by none naturall kyndely wytte But only by the infusyon of the swete gloryous holy ghoste ne I doubte not that all tho the whiche bee vnderstondyng men and dylygently serche the sentences shall rede that boke and of that boke they shullen say the same that I saye After tyme she had made that boke oure holy fader pope vrbane the vj that knewe this holy mayde in auyoun and had grete deuoucion in her wordes and in her vertuous lyuyng sent to Mayster Reymound her confessour that he sholde stere her to come to Rme for to vysyte the sain●●s that ben there Mayster Reymounde dyde soo but she was soo full of dyscrecion that she answerd agayn in this wyse Fader many of this Cyte of Sene and also of our owne susters by cause of mingoyng aboute hider and thyder ●en sklandred therby and seyn that it is not semely to a Relyous mayde for to go so aboute all be it I hope to oure gloryous lorde almyghty god that I haue not offedyd in myn goyng aboute For by obedyence of our gloryous lord almyghty god by his vycar in erther and for the helthe of soule I wente thyder that I went And therfore leest I ben to theym mater of sklander by myn own wyll I purpos not to remeue out of the Cyte ¶ Neuertheles yf the gloryous louely Crystis vicar wyll algatis that I come his wyll be done and not myn And therto I praye you goo to hym and praye him that he vouchesaf to sende me worde by you of his wyll that they the whiche ben so sklandred by min goyng aboute Now ye maye clerly knowe that I toke not that iorney vpon me by min own wyll Mayster Reymound wente and tolde to the pope all this mater he sente agayn by hym that she sholde come by the vertu of obedyens Thenne assone as she herd this com̄aūdement as a trewe douhter of obediens she spedde her faste and came to Rome with a grete company both men wym̄en many moo wolde haue come had she not forbede thē ▪ Whan oure holy fader the pope saw her he was glad ioyeful he desyred that she shold seye som̄e word of exortaciō to the cardinalis that weren there present namely for the scisme the whiche began the same tyme And so she dyde full vertuously made eche of them stedfastly stronge wyth many swete wordes and sentences and counseylled them that they sholde not drede for nothynge notwythstondynge the scisme the whiche began but to stand myghtely and drede noman and procede forth in thynges that longen to our gloryous lord for he is mighty ynow to mayntene theym whan she had made an ende of her wordes our holy fader the pope was gladde and rehersed her wordes tournyng to hys Cardynales and sayde Loo brederen the more vnfeytfull we be the more reprouable we ben in the syght of our gloryous lorde almyghty god this woman hath shamed vs all she sholde rather be aferd thā we by cause she is a woman yet in that we be aferde she is not aferde but conforted vs wyth her good counseyls Certen we ought all to be ashamed wherfor sholde our gloryous lord god Ihesus Crystus vicar be aferd ▪ Trewele though all the worlde were agaynst hym our gloryous lord god Ihesus cryste is myghtyer thēne it And it is not possyble that he wil forsake his chyrche wyth suche wordes many moo lyke thyse our holy fader the pope comforted the Cardinalis and commaunded this holy mayde in our gloryous lord god graunted her for her selfe and for her frendes many special graces Within a fewe dayes afterward it came to our hooly faders mynde that he sholde sende this holy mayde katheryne wyth a nother maide that was called katheryne and was one of the ghostely doughters of saint Brygytte of swethe the whiche saint Brygytte was canonysed by pope Bonefas the ix ▪ to dame Johan the quene of cycely that openly rebelled agaynst hooly chyrche and gaue greate fauour to Scismatykes that both two maydens the whiche were well knowen wyth the quene of Cycely sholde wythdrawe her from her errour Thenne this holy maide katheryn of Seene herde this she wolde in none wyse wythdrawe her fro this holy obedyens but oblysshed her self for to goon ¶ The other katheryn of swethe in noo wyse wolde take that iournaye vpon her but refused it in presence of mayster Reymound Thenne mayster Reymound bythought hym that the fame of holy maydens is ryght tendre and a lytyll ●●otte of synne thought they be not gylty therin Is sklaunderous to theym Also he thought that she to whom thyse maidens sholde be sente myght by counseyll of her and many aboute her to lye awayte in the waye that thyse maydens sholde not come to her presens and soo to be letted off her purpos And also they maydens myght not escape wythout a grete sklander al be it they myght be gyltles thyse thoughtes Mayster Reyymound tolde our holy fader To whom our holy fader answerd and sayde thus thou seyst well mayster Reymoūde It is better they goo not than goo After this tyme mayster Reymound wente tolde this to this holy mayde Anone she tourned her to Mayster Reymound and sayde thus wyth a myghty voyce Fader yf saint Agnes and saint Margarete and other maydens sholde haue thought thus they shold neuer haue had the crowne of martyrdome whether we haue not a spouse that can delyuer vs out of the hondes of wycked men kepe our clennesse amonges the fylthy companye of lecherous meyny all suche thoughtes ben but veyn thoughtes And come out rather of the defaute of lytyll feythe thenne of very wysdome All be it that Mayster Reymound was thus made ashamed of his imperfection yet he hadde a grete gladnes of her perfeccion consyderyng and nothynge in his herte the stedfastenesse and stabylnes of her faythe Neuertheles by cause that our holy fader had ordyned that tho two maydens sholde not go on that Journay he durste noo more meue to hym of the mater ¶ Loo maydens this is rehersed here by cause ye shold know how stedfastly this holy maydes foot was set in the feyth of perfecciō ¶ Furthermore whan our holy tader had ordeyned that these maydens sholde nott go he ordeyned that mayster Reymonde sholde goo to Fraunce Supposyng that he myght torne kyng Charles out of hys errour by enbassatour bytwene but yere myght he not For the kynges herte was so enduratin malyce wolde not torne for he beganne to be auctor and begȳner of that scysme After tyme mayster Reymond knewe the wyll entent or our tader he came to aske counseyll of this holy mayde what were best for hym to do thenne all be it that she was lothe to wante hys presence yet she gaue hȳ coun●eylitor to obeye to the byddyng of oure holy fader And among all other thynges she sayde
haste gyue gyftes and make satysfactyon for thyn gyftes and answer for theym gyuyng to me a lyght of grace that thou maye yelde thankynge to the wyth the same lyght of grace Clothe me an make me that I maye bee arayed wythe thyn endeles trouthe that I maye renne this dedely waye wyth very obediens and wythg the lyght of the moost holyest teytn Loo maydens as nere as I myght and coude I haue translated worde for worde the wordes of the booke And prayer that this holy mayde of the whiche gyfte ye besely take hede ye maye wors●ippe the excellence of thys blessyd mayde not only as for her maner of ●yuyng but also for the doctryne of trouthe the whyche is ryght meruelous I sayde and namely of a woman ¶ Furthermore ye maye perceyue by thy se wordes that she desyred gretely to bee vnbounde of the body and be with cryste for she knewe and vnderstoode well that it was moche beter to be wyth cryst than to lyue in this lyf And therfore her desire euer encrecyd vnto the tyme she had fulli her desire and her full weddyng oned off the swete gloryous holy ghost the whiche was promytted vnto her in her yonge age whan she receyued of our gloryous lorde almyghty god the rynge of spousa●le as it is rehersyd afore in the laste chapytre of the fyrst party for in the nexte chapytre shall be declared how this holy mayde and virgyn passyd out of this world ¶ Of the tyme whan this h●oly mayde passed out of this world and of a sermen that she made to her ghoostely dy●●yples and susteren to ●ore ●er passyng ¶ ●nd how she enformed them in generall and. enspecyall how they sholde gouerne they whan she was goo ¶ And or a vy●y●n whiche was shewed to a matrone in the houre of passyng Capitu●um v WHanne this holy mayde perceyued and vnderstode by the reu●lacy●n that the houre or her dethe drewe nygh She drewe to her a● her ghostely dyscyples to whom she spa●e generally a longe notable sermon of exortacion to the encrece of vertu In the whyche exortacyon she expressyd somme certayn notabylytes the whiche I purpos to wryte in this boke ¶ The ●y●●te notable doctryne that she taughte was thys That whatso euer he bet at cometh to the seruyce of god Yf he wyll haue good t●e●ely it is nede●ull for hym that he make his herte naked from all sensyble loue not out of certayn persones but of euery creature what that euer he be than he hold stretche vp his soule to our reuerend lord maker symply wyth alle his desyre o●● his herte for an herte may not holy be yeuen to god but it be fre fro all other loue opyn symple wythout doub●lnesse soo she affermed of her selfe that it was alle her● principall labour besynes fro her yong age vnto the tyme euer for to come to that ꝑfection also she sayd she knewe well that to suche a state of ꝑfectiō in the whiche al the herte is gyue to our gloryous lord almyghty god a soule may not come ꝑfyghly whyles she answerd other whyles she smyled as though she hadde soorned the wordes that she herde of hyr enemyes other whyles she was enflammed in loue of the holy ghost but one worde they marked well that herde hyr whan she spak in this ghoostly batayll After tyme she had be styll a cert●yn tyme hering as it semed the wordes that were put ageynst hyr of hyr enemyes wyth a gladde chere she answerd thus Mayne glorye neuer but ve ray trowe glorye honour of my forde Jhesu cryst it was These wordes by the dysposycyon of oure forde were not sayde wythout cause for ther were many ghoostly men wymmen wened that for the grete graces that our lord had gyuen hir she had sought praysyng of the peple or ellys that she had som maner dylectacyon there Inne therfore they sayd she desyred to be conuersaunt among men in so moche that som wold saye to mayster Reymond hir confessour thus why ●enneth this womman thus about yf she desyre to serue god Why abydeth she not at home in hyr celle herto it may be answeryd as she answeryth afore to hyr ghoostly enemyes in hir passyng thus vayne glory neuer but ve ray trewe glory of my lord Ihesu cryst it was as though she myght answere thus I ranne not aboute ne dyde none other maner ghostly werke for vayne glorye but for the honour glory of my lord Ihesu crystis name That it was so the mayster Reymond bereth recorde of treuthe that herde hyr confessyon bothe generall specyall wherfore he recordeth for a sothe that all that euer she dyd hit was done for the worthyp of god and not for praysyng of men in so moche that she thou●t on noo man as for the tyme but whan she prayed for them so ordeyned for theyr bodely nede So that it myght be veryfyed of hyr the wordes of the apostle where he seyth thus Nostra conuersatio in celis est That is oure conuersacyon is in heuen so she what that euer she dyd in erthe hyr con●sacion was in heuen After tyme thenne she had long contynued in that long ghostely batayll wyth hyr enemyes she resorted ageyne to hyr self made a generall confessyon openly the whiche is callyd the confytro● axyng forgyuenes eftsonys ●o lowyng of doctryne exsample of saynt Martyne Saynt Jerom Saynt Austyn that shewed bothe in hyr dedys in hyr wordes that be a man neuer so excellent in vertue in this lyf he shold not passe out of this world wythout waylyng hertely penaunce for hys synnes In token here of Saynt Austyn in hys last ende whan he shold passe out of this worlde he ordeyned for to wryte to hym the seuen psalmes of penaunce for to be sette vpon the wall that he myght see tho psalmys as he laye in hys bedde The whiche psalmes he radde ofte wepte plenteuously in seyeng of them Also Saynt Jerom whan he sholde be dede he made a generall an open confessyon of hys synnes and defautes Saynt Martyne also in his laste ende taught hys dyseyples that a crysten man shold not deye but in asshys in heyre in token of meke hertety penaunce whom this holy mayde folowed in all maner of tokenes by shewyng of hertely penaunce axyng mekely many tymes oft absolucyon bothe of hyr synnes and paynes Thenne soone after she beganne to wexe more febler and febler but yette she cessed neuer of holy exhortacyon to all hyr dysciples bothe to them that were presente and to them that were absent And specyally that same tyme she charged all hyr dysciples to axe counseyll of mayster Reymond what doubte that euer they hadde And furthermore she had them saye to him whan he came home that he faylle not ne be not aferde for noo thyng that shall falle but euer contynue vertuously for she sayd that she
wolde be wyth hym and delyuer hym from all peryll And whan he doth ony thyng that he sholde not do I shall gyue hym warnyng she sayde for to amende Thyse wordes she sayd often tymes to tha last ende of hir passyng but the last worde that she sayd was this Domine in manus tuas comnendo spiritum meum And so that blyssed soule paste out of the body and was is complyd knytte to hir spouse Ihesu whom she loued so hyghly wyth an Indyuysyble and perpetuell on hede or vnyon The yere of our lord a thousand threhondred foure soore the nyne and twenty daye of Apryll the whiche was in the cyte of Rome and fyll vpon a sonday about the houre of tyerce that same and the same houre the sowle of this holy mayde appyred to mayster Reymond that was that tyme in ferre contreys and not by open bodely apparycyon but by mentall apparycyon seyng to hym in his soule suche wordes of comfort Drede the not for I am here for the I am in heuen where I may helpe the and defende be seker therfore drede not for I am here for the Wyth the whiche cōfortable wordes mayster Reymond was in maner astonyed ameruaylled what it myght be wenyng that this comforte hadde come from oure blyssed lady moder of mercy by cause he stood a fore an ymage of heres and sayd an Aue maria But yet neuertheles he was aferde to thinke so by cause him thought he was vnworthy to haue suche a comfort of hyr And so what it myght mene or what it myght be or whennys it myght come he nyst neuer But afterward in heryng of another reuelacyon of this holy mayde shewed to a deuoute matrone he vnderstood the better what it myght mene soo whens it myght come Of the whiche matrone I shall tell you The same tyme whan this holy mayde passyd out of this worlde there was in Rome a deuoute matrone that was called Semya the whiche hadde two men to hyr sones to whome she was euery daye bothe moder and seruant in makyng of theyr mete Thys deuoute matrone after tyme hyr husbonde was dede she purposed euer after to serue god and visyte by pylgrymage holy sayntes of Rome and she continued many yeres She hadde also in custome for to ryse at mydnyght and praye and afterward for to take a lytell rest syttyng or lenyng wyth hyr hede that she myght be the more quycker on the morowe erly for to go hyr stacyons of Rome It befyll soone after that whan this holy mayde Katheryn was come to Rome this deuoute matrone took knowleche of hyr and was often tymes edyfyed by hyr good exhortacyons and soo hadde a good ghoostly affeccyon to hyr and was ofte tymes homely wyth hyr in hyr how 's almost euery daye Neuertheles a ●ytell afore this holy mayde deyed she came not to hyr bycause of certeyn besynes that she hadde to done what for hyr pylgrymages and the purueyaunce of mete for hyr sones And therfore she wyst not that this holy mayde passyd Thys deuoute matrone Semya arose vp atte mydnyght as she was wonte for to doo and praye a longe tyme to gydre she purposed for to reste a lytell by cause she wolde vp by tymes on the morowe for to here nasse and thenne for to be besye aboute hyr chyldren mete She dyde soo but euer she was trayueylled in hyr slepe that she sholde O wretche the fende hath deceyued the she ●se vp thenne and wente about for to seke in paryshe chyrches where somme hole masses were aseyeng as she wente she herde a be●le rynge to a masse in an how 's of Nonnys she was gladde thenne thyder she wente and lefte hyr wortys vnpy kyd vnwashe for hast and shytte hir do ●e bare the keye wyth hyr whan she came the masse was in the begynnyng wyth that she sayd to hyr self thus Now I wote well the fende hath not deceyued me as I wende Neuertheles as moche as she wyste well that the mete of hyr sones myght not be redy or they came home to mete she was sory but for the comforte that she hadde in hyr mas●e she commytted all to god prayeng hym that he wold wouche sauf to kepe hir that day fro heuy wordes of hyr chyldren the whyche were growen men for she was sore aferde to dysplease them soo she herde forthe all the hye masse whan the hye masse was done as she went● home she mette wyth hyr sones comynge homward to mete seyeng to hyr thus Moder hye you faste for it is tyme to go to mete She answerd ageynefull esely and sayd Good sones abydeth a whyle ye shall go to mete anone Whanne she was entred in to hir hous she founde hyr mete all redy ynough and the wortys all redy in the potte well soden at the full she was than astonyed than ked our lord that she had herde hyr masse and so badde hir sones sytte done to mete in the name of Jhesu thynkyng in hyr self that after none she wolde go vysyte the holy mayde Katheryne all the mete tyme she thought moche in that vysyon how it was cōfermed wyth so grete myracles In the mene whyles hyr sones commended theyr mete sayd that it was beter sesoned that tyme than ony mete that they hadde eten afore many a daye but the deuoute matrones ●erte was alwaye vpon the vysyon seyeng wythin hyr selfe thus O moder Katheryne and crystis spouse Yet for all thys she wende not that she hadde be dede And whan hyr sones were a gone hadde et● she wente to Katherynes hous and knockyd at the dore herde none answere it was sayd hyr of the neyghboures there about that she was walkyd out for to vysyte holy places yet in treuthe hir susters were wythin waylyng And wolde not suffre none to entre in to the tyme they hadde axyd counseyll how they shold be●y the body At the last it was determyned amonges them that on the morowe the body shold be ladde to the frere prechours there for to do the seruyse as god wold ordeyne by counseyll so it was done But as soone as the body was come to the chyrche the people folowed for to touche hir fet● or hir clothys so that bothe the freres also hir sustres and other of hir dysciples were aferde lest they sholde haue borste toren hyr clothys therfore they sette the body wythin the chauntell of a chapell that was endued in the worshyp of Saynt Domynyk What that fyll afterwarde I thynke to declare you in the nexte chapytre by the helpe of god Casuelly whyles thys was adoyng Semya the Matrone came Inne the mene tyme and axyd what that noyse and concourse of people myghte mene Hyt was tolde hyr that Katheryne of Sene was passyd oute of thys worlde hyr body was in the chyrche wherfore the people gadred soo faste for to see it Anone whanne she herde
goddis chirche in heuen And in this chapytre is a recapytulacion of all the holy fyll of this gloryous saint and virgyn afore sayde for werynesse of reders Also yf eche mā may not haue all the hole holy lyf of this gloryous saint and virgyne afore sayde Thenne maye he haue the substaūce of it here compendyously rehersyd Capitulum vltimum THe holy doctour saynt Gregorye seyth in hys dyalogus that the vertue of pacyence is more commendable thenne shewyng of myracles This is the cause why our moder holy chyrche whā she wodel Canonyze ony saynte fyrste she enquyreth of the vertue of pacyence Thenne of the shewyng of myracles that is for two skylles One is for many euyll lyuers haue do wond thynges shall do that semeth myracles all though they be none as Symon magus dyd Antecryst shall do in hys tyme. Another is by cause som ther hath ben that haue done shewed myracle by ●tue of our lord Ihesu the whiche haue be dampned afterward as Judas all tho thou our lord speketh of in the gospell where he sayth that som shall stande on the lyfte syde on the day of the generall dome saye to hym in excusyng of them self Lord haue we not in thy name shewed do wonderfull myracles To whome our lord shall answere ageyne say Go ye from me werkers of wickydnes by thyse two skylles ye may vnderstonde the holy chyrche in erthe may not only be certyfyed by myracles whether the ꝑsone be holy or not by whom they be shewed all be it that they shewe presumpcyon of holynesse And namely tho myracles that ben shewed after the deth of a ꝑsone for they were no sayntes at whos graues myracles ben shewed Yet were possyble that our mercyable lord sholde haue them excused yelde them after theyr meke beleue the whiche beleuen that they be sayntes Not for them that ben there beryed but for the glorye the ioye of hys owne name lest they the whiche beleue in hym be defrawded from theyr desyre wherfore our mod holy chyrche in erthe that is gouerned by the holy ghost desyryng for to be certefyed of tho merites of holy sayntes as moche as it is possyble in this lyf enquyreth specyally of theyr vertuous lyuyng of tho thynges that they wrought whyles they lyued in erthe Soo our lord Ihesu hyr spouse taught hyr to do whan he sayd Ex fructibus eorum cognoscetis eos That is of hyr werkys ye shall knowe them for it folowed aftward in the same place where that clause is wryten afore that a good tree may not bryng forthe euyll fruyte What ben thyse fruytes Trewely no thyng ellys but werkys of loue charyte bothe of god and of our neyghbours But by cause of these werkys of charyte ryght as they be plesaunt to our lord ryght so they ben dysplesaunt to the fende So that he is about in all that he can may for to lette the dedes of charyte bothe by hym self also by the worlde that is by worldly lyuers Wherfore it is full necessarye to holy lyuers to haue pacyence ꝑceueraūce yf they wyll be rewarded for theyr mede in blysse by the whiche pacyence they may conserue them kepe them in good loue of god and of theyr good neyghbours notwythstōdyng all maner ꝑsecucyons Therfore it was that Saynt Powle assygned the fyrst condycyon of charyte pacyence whan he sayd Caritas paciens est That is charyte is pacyence Loo maydens this is the cause why oure moder holy chyrche in erthe requyreth more after the pacyence of a saynte yf he sholde be Canonyzed thenne after the myracles for among all ●tuous werkys yet pacyens is the grettest wytnesse of holynesse And this is sayd maydens be cause that ye shold not be in doubte of this holy maydens holynes for she had that vertue of pacyence full blyssedly As I shall tell you by the helpe of god of your good prayers rehersyng all hir dedes of pacyence by recapytulacyon of this hole legende namely for wery reders that thynken an houre in deuoute redyng is lenger than a daye and yf they were occupyed in tales tryfles thenne them semeth the long day ●hort thenne an houre Vnderstonde well maydens that this holy mayde Katherin ꝑceyued that the vertue of pacyence myȝt not haue his gracious werkyng in a soule but fyrst vnlefull thynges were remeuyd awaye from it namely suche vnlefull thyngys that ben e●●ytable to the lustes of the flesshe wherfore or thenne she came to the age of exꝑyence of flesshly lustes She ●emeuyd awaye myghtly all suche as suche thynges that sholde styre hyr wh●n she came to age And yet she dyd not this wythout Inspyracion notable vision of our lord by the whiche Inspiracōn whan she was ●j yere of age she saw our lord arayde as a bisshop sytting in a ry●t fayre chambre ouer the chirche of the f●ere p●echours Wyth whome she sawe a●so saynt Johan Euangelyst whyles she behelde our lord he lokyd vpon hyr full benyngly mekely and blyssed hir After this holy vysyon hyr soule was fulfylled wyth ꝑ●y●e loue that she putte awaye all chyldren condycyons gaue hyr selfe anone to prayer to penaunce and therin she encrecyd ꝑfytly that in the nexte yere after whan she was of vij yere of age she made a vowe of madenhode afore an ymage of our lady not sode●●ly but wyth grete delyberacyon afore as it is openly declared in the seconde the thrydde chapytre of the fyrst ꝑtye Furthermore by cause that this holy mayde wyst well that abstynence was necessary for to kepe the purpose of maydenhode Therfore she gaue hir to grete abstynence in hyr yong age ꝑfourmed it meruayllously For as it is reher●●d in the thrydde chapytre of the fyrst ꝑ●ye in the vj chapytre of the same partye more largely the began preuely to leue flesshe And thenne as she encrecyd in age lytel lytell she lefte all maner etynge of flesshe therto she dranke no wyne but whan it was medled wyth wat●r so that it had all most lost hys ●ast hys colour of wyne And whan she was xv yere of age she lefte bothe wyne flesshe all maner of metes out take brede rawe herbes Also whan she was xx yere of age she lefte brede took hir onely to dyetyng of rawe herbys soo contynued in that maner of lyuyng vnto the tyme our lord gaue hir a newe maner of gracious lyuyng whan she lyued without ony maner of mete that was whan she was xxv or xxvj yere of age as it is openly declared in the vj chapytre of the fyrst partye where is rehersed the cause the maner why wherfore she came to suche estate And where also is answered suffycyentely to them that grutched to that maner of lyuyng Whan this holy mayde hadde thus fully o●come the styryng of synnes that she came to the ꝑfyte vertue of
all offenses of hym ye were it neuer so lytyll and. thenne she sayd haue thou for certayne doughter that noo moystour of pleasyng deuocyon or gyfte of grace or vertu descēdyth ꝑfytely from god in to mannes herte but by deuoute prayer of soule and sharpe bodely traueyll ¶ For after that a mā perfytely offereth to god two mytes the whiche he hath that is his soule and his body and ordeyneth hym to his seruyse and honoure oure lorde god of hys hyghe graces begynneth to gladde that mannes sowle in soo moche that he n ay not bere it but for swetnes and for wondryng it fareth as it were in hit self as a man that were dronke of swete wyne and myghty putte out of hym selfe that may not bere it for feblynes of hede And thenne that soule knowed that she hath noo thyng doun pleasyng to god for to haue soo grete comforte before And she holdeth more vnder vyle and more worthy dyspyte thenne euer she helde hyr before but afterwarde whanne suche a soule torneth ageyne to hyr self she yeldeth thankynges and louynges to god wyth deuocyon and affeccyon of wyll and woldeth hir vnworthy of grace And wyth moche drede storeth hyr selfe as vnkynde ageynste soo greate a benefactour And god seyeng hyr euer waxe more meke thorught the gyftes that she receyueth he took more hede to gyue hyr moogyftes of grace in soo moche that as it were that he fulfylled hyr desyre in this worlde Soo that hyr thynketh that hyr dwellyng is in heuen wyth god and not in erthe wyth men here and thynked also that she hath paradyse in hyr self Soo I knowleche that it befyll wyth me whyle I lyued in erthe and whanne I was alle brennyng in goddes loue and felyd soo moche swetenes in hym that for hym alle the worlde was vyle to me Ones whan I was a lone wyth deuocyon in my preuy chambre Loo sodeynly the Aungell Gabryell stood by me and as the Gospell seyth sheylled me and sayde Aue gracia plena c. Off the whiche salutacyon whanne I herde it fyrst I was fer●e but afterwarde that I was comfor●ed wyth hys holy and swete speche and made seker not doubtyng thyse thynges to be sothe that he shewed I fyll to the erthe and knelynge wyth my hondes ioynde I honoured and sayde Ecce ancilla domini fiat michi secundum verbum tuum That is to saye Loo here the seruaunt of god be it done to me after thy worde The whiche worde sayd anone I was rauysshed and in soo grete fulnesse of goddes grace enbasshed me that I neuer felte soo moche swetenesse and comforte in my soule And in that rauysshyng goddes sonne took flesshe of my puryst blood wyth oute ony wem of me or 〈◊〉 delyte The cause why god dede this grace to me was feyth and mekenes wyth whiche I troweth in fulfeyth the Aungellys wordes and meked me and dressed me all to goddes wyll And therfore he wouchesaue to gyue me soo moche grace And soo thou my doughter in alle thynges that god heteth or dothe to the haue thou not in mistrowyng ne yenstōd hym not seyeng lord why doest thou this to me But by exsample of me saye Ecce ancilla domini c. And ony tyme be not fulfylled as it is hyght to the or ellys it is taken fro the that was gyuen to the of god Blame thy owne self and thynke that thou hast done somme trespas before the syghte of goddes mageste for the whiche goddes sentence is chaunged for he hath wyll to purchace the lyf wythouten ende he nedeth to be buxom of herte to the commaundementes and loue hym self to god by veray mekenesse and obedyence for the contrayous of tho synnes pryde and Inobedyence of our fore faders Adam and Eue for the whiche they lost the grace and the dygnyte that they were made in ¶ Ouer that thenne in another tyme on the vygyle of the natyuyte of oure lorde whan Elysabeth Crystys seruannt was duryng in longe prayer and asked mekely of god wyth moche de●ocyon and fallyng of terys that he wolde gyue hyr grace by the whiche ●he myght loue hym wyth all hyr herte The blyssed mayden was besyde and sayd to hyr who is he that loueth god wyth all hys herte whe●e it be the Elysabeth And whan she d●ede to af●erme and sayd that she loued god wyth all hyr herte And therfore she was styll and answerd noo thyng thenne the blessyd mayde sayd to hyr wolde thou that I say who loueth god perfytly For certeyn Bartholomew thapostle loued hym well Laurence the ma●tyr Johan the Euan gelyst and other apostles and martyrs And therto she sayd woldest thou for the loue of hym ben slayn rostyd or drynk venym And whan she durst not afferme ne denye that she wolde suff●e this thynges for the name of cryst Thenne the blyssed mayden sayd In stedfastnesse I say the doughter yf thou wold for loue of god be spoyled of all worldly thynges and garmentes of thy now mynde or wyll soo that thou wyll noo thyng haue ne ●oueyte in this world I wyll procure to the of my sonne the mede that Bartholomew hath for his fleyeng and yf thou be●● paciently wronges and reproues and all maner of wronges born of the thou shalte haue the mede that Laurence had for the rostyng of his body And whan thou art reproued soorned and se●●● at nought of other yf thou be●e it gladly and mekely thou shalt haue the mede that Johan the Euangelyst had for the drynkyng of venyme And yf thou wolde be t●ewe to me and be buxom to me I wolde be nyghe to the to fulfyll all that is sayd before I wold be wyth the euer helpyng the whan it is spedfull to the. Ouer that another tyme as saynt Elysabeth prayed and in hir prayeng she thought wyth deuocyon of sowle and in what wyse the blyssed mayde prayed as she had shewed hyr as it is sayde before The blyssed mayde answerd hyr In prayeng doughter I dyde as he that wyll newe make a fayre well fyrst he gothe to the roote of the hyll vnder whiche the water spryngeth and herken●th besyly vn● what syde the veynes of water gothe whan he sought hym by herkynge thenne he begynneth to delue in that syde of the hyll tyll he fynde an able begynnyng of a welstede fro the spryngyng veynes and afterward he dressyth water in to the well stede the whiche he maketh large and fayre and clene After that he maketh a wall all about the well and in the myddes of the well a stone pylar fastned in it pypes all aboute thorugh the whiche the water may passe out of eche half more prop●●tably to the vse of men This dyd I ghostely for thenne wente I to the hyll where I besyly herkened and lerned the lawe of moyses and all the x commandementes Thenne fonde I the veyne of water whan I lerned in redyng thynkyng and prayeng that the wellhede begynnynge
heuynes that she fyll in to suche sykenes that fro day to daye more more she waxed lene and vanysshed almost awaye and ryght feble Her husbonde sawe this and asked hyr the cause of her heuynesse and sekenesse And she answerd and sayde I was norysshed in myn faders hours and there was I neuer wonte to here suche wordes as I here now euery daye And so was I neuer taught of my fader and moder wherfor knowe it for sothe but this dishoneste of speche bee avoyded fro this hous wythin a shorte tyme ye shall see me deed whan her husbond herde this bothe he avoyded that vngoodly langage ▪ and the felawshyppe and therwyth he was edefyed moche more than euer he was before ▪ as well of the vertues lyuinge of the fader and moder as of her doughter that was his wyf And anone he forbode his felawes neuer more to speke suche maner wordes in her presens and nomore they dede and soo the softenes the honeste of Jacob his hous amendyd in moderaunce And the dyshoneste of Nycolas hous whiche hadde weddyd Jacob his doughter ¶ Ferthermore ye shall vnderstonde the Jacob vsed the crafte of makyng of colours wherwyth wollen and wolle clothes ben dyed This crafte vsed bothe he and his sonys In that contree they ben called dyers wherfore full wonderfully god ordeyned that a dyers doughter shol be made the spouse of the Emperour of heuen As ye shall see by goddes grace after in this boke Somme of this that I haue shewed in this chapytre was knowe to the more parte of the cyte And som̄e her confessour had of the sayd mayde katheryn and of her moder and of many relygyous persons and of seculers whiche were neybours and of kynrede to the same Jacob and to his wyf ¶ Of her byrthe and of the merueylous werkinge whiche our lord wrought and shewed in the chylhode of this holy vyrgyn and mayde Capitulū ij Whan this forsayd Lapa whiche was lyke a fructuous vyne by fulfyllyng the wyne of Jacob her husbonde in bryngyng forth full ofte bothe sones and doughters It befyll aboute the laste tyme of the berynge of chyldren by the ordynaunce and dy sposycyon of our lordis mercy that she conceyued brought forth two doughters freell and febyll by nature But moche more freell by of bodely strengthe as semed outward ▪ but strengthe and stabylnesse they hadde in the syght of god ¶ Whan Lapa the moder besely behelde theym she thought well that she suffysed nought to nourysshe them bothe forthe wyth her owne mylke wherfore by a good auysement she commytted that one to smother noryse And that other she wythhelde and kepte stylle to be norysshed forth wyth her owne mylke And soo it befyll by the ordynaunce of our lorde that she chosed that doughter to her owne kepyng ▪ whiche our lord of euerlastynge tyme hadde chose vnto his spouse Bothe they resceyued the grace of baptysme And all be it that they were of the nombre of goddes chose chyldren Yet the forsayd mayde was called katheryn and that other was called Johan This later suster whan she hadde receiued this grace of baptysme in the same grace she went forth to heuen For in short tyme after she passed out of this worlde Katheryne abode stylle sukkyng on her moders brestes by goddes ordynaunce she shold drawe to heuen a longe cheyn● of soulis And for as moche as Lapa the moder consyderyd that katheryn abode that other was deed She nourysshed her more dyligently hopyng that she was chose to abyde and be goddes chyld And ofte sythes this moder lapa wolde saye to maister Reymond her confessour to this holy mayde that she louyd katheryn passyngly aboue alle the sones and doughters that euer she hadde She sayde vnto hym also that she conceyued soo ofte that she myght neuer nourysshe ony chylde of her wyth her owne mylke ¶ Katheryn she nourysshed forth in to the ende of the tyme that she neded to be vnder the nourysshe And in alle that tyme she conceyued not as it semed that oure lorde for that doughter hadde graunted her a tyme of reste of traueylyng of the byrthe of chyldren and in a token that she myght come to the ende of conceyuyng and byrthe in that doughter whiche sholde after ateyne and gete the ende of alle perfection ¶ But yet this moder Lapa after the nouryssyng of katheryn ▪ ones she conceyued and bare a doughter whiche was called Johan And there she made an ende of beryng of chyldren after that she hadde bo●en xxv chyldren Whan this mayde was thus broughte forth and halowed to god And whan she hadde lefte the mylke and toke to ete brede whyle she wente aboute alone She began to be soo acceptable and soo byloued to all tho that sawe her and soo wyse and wonderfull wordes she spake that vnnethes her moder myght holde her in her owne hous Eche man aboute of her neybours and of her kynrede lad her home wyth theym and glad they were who myght haue her to here her wyse speche And that they myght haue felawshyp and the gladenesse of that yonge mayde Soo that of a maner gladdenesse and of a passyng solace they called her not by her owne ryght name katheryn but Eufrosyna and what meued them to calle her soo they wyst not theym self but she afterward somme tyme wolde saye and suppose that it was a mystery by cause she purposed to folowe saynt Eufrosyne in lyuyng Her confessour that wrote this legende supposed that the yonge mayde in her chyldis speche vsed somme maner of sownynge that nyghed or acorded to that n●me Eufrosyne And soo in maner as they wolde reherce her wordes they called her soo by that name Neuertheles what euer it was that appieryd she burgenyd out in her chilhode as a tree by ony suche shewyng what fruyt was brought forth Afterward in her olde age the wysdome and the prudence of her speche connyng and the swetenesse of her holy conuersacion myght not be rehersed wyth tongue lygthly wryte wyth penne by theym that knewe only the veryte of thys whiche hadde very experyence She hadde also an Inward werkynge whyche shewed well ▪ not only by her speche but by her cōuersacion wher thorugh many mennys sowlis were drawe to god And hadde thorugh her grace grete lykyng and sauour in god in somoche that all heuynesses were excluded of all mennys hertes whiche were conuersaunt wyth her ▪ and not only that but all thinges that noyed the sowle was put awaye Also the remembraunce of eche noye or angwysshe was take awaye And of this folowed eche man soo grete reste and stabylnesse of sowle whiche they hadde byfore that euery man woundred of theym self and made Joye wyth a newe maner of gladdenesse and eche man in his owne sowle cryed and sayde Here it is good for vs to be ▪ Make we thre tabernacles for our dwellyng place And of this none woūder for douiles ▪ he was there