History of the Franks
Book 6
5. While king Chilperic was
still at the villa mentioned above he directed his baggage to be moved
and made arrangements to go to Paris. And when I went to see him to say
goodby, a certain Jew named Priscus came in who was on friendly terms
with him and helped him buy costly articles. The king took him by the
hair in a gentle way and said to me: "Come, bishop of God, and lay your
hands on him." But he struggled and the king said to him: "O obstinateminded
and ever disbelieving race, which does not recognize the Son of God promised
to it by the voices of its prophets and does not recognize the mysteries
of the church prefigured in its own sacrifices." To these words the Jew
replied: " God never married nor was blessed with offspring nor allowed
any one to share his power, but he said by the mouth of Moses: 'See, see
that I am the Lord and except me there is no God. I shall kill and I shall
make alive; I shall wound and I shall heal.' & [note: The argument
is continued at length along this line between the Jew on the one hand
and Chilperic and Gregory on the other.]. Although I said this and more,
the wretched man felt no remorse and refused to believe. Then when he
was silent and the king saw that he was not conscience stricken because
of my words, he turned to me and asked to receive my blessing that he
might depart He said: "I will say to you, bishop, what Jacob said to the
angel, for he said to him, ' I will not let you go until you bless me."'
So saying he ordered water brought for our hands. After washing them we
prayed, and taking bread I thanked God and took it myself and offered
it to the king, and after a draught of wine I said farewell and left.
And the king mounted his horse and returned to Paris with his wife and
daughter and all his household.
6. There was at this time in the city of Nice a recluse Hospicius who
was very abstemious. He wore iron chains next his body and over these
a hair shirt and ate nothing but plain bread with a few dates. And during
Lent he lived on the roots of Egyptian herbs such as the hermits use,
which were brought to him by traders. First he would drink the soup in
which they were cooked and eat the roots next day. The Lord did not disdain
to work great miracles through him. For at one time the Holy Spirit revealed
to him the coming of the Lombards into the Gauls and he foretold it as
follows: "The Lombards," said he, "will come into the Gauls and will lay
waste seven cities because their wickedness has grown in the sight of
God, since no one understands, no one seeks God, no one does good to appease
the anger of God. For all the people are unfaithful, given up to perjury,
addicted to thievery, ready to kill, and from them comes no fruit of justice
at all. Tithes are not paid, the poor are not fed, the naked are not clothed,
strangers are not received with hospitality or satisfied with food. Therefore
this affliction has come. And now I say to you: ' Gather all your substance
within the inclosure of the walls that the Lombards may not take it, and
fortify yourselves in the strongest places."' At these words all stood
gaping and they said goodby and returned home with great admiration.
He also said to the monks: "You, too, depart from the place and take with
you what you have. For behold the people I have named draw near. " But
when they replied: "We will not leave you, most holy father," he said
to them: " Don't fear for me; for they will offer me insults but they
will not harm me unto death." The monks went away and that people came
and laying waste all they found, they came to the place where the holy
recluse of God was. And he showed himself to them at the window of the
tower. They went all round the tower but could find no entrance by which
they could come to him. Then two climbed up and pulled the roof off, and
seeing him bound with chains and clad in a hair shirt they said: " Here
is a malefactor who has killed a man and therefore is kept bound in these
fetters." They called an interpreter and asked him what crime he had committed
to be so confined in punishment. And he confessed that he was a homicide
and guilty of all crime. Then one of them drew his sword to strike at
his head, but his lifted right arm stiffened in the very act of striking
and he could not draw it back to him. He let go the sword and let it fall
on the ground. Seeing this, his comrades raised a shout to heaven begging
the saint to declare to them kindly what they were to do. And he made
the sign of salvation and restored the arm to health. The man was converted
on the spot and received the tonsure and is now reckoned a most faithful
monk. And two dukes who I listened to him returned safe to their native
place but those who despised his command perished wretchedly in the province.
Many of them were seized with demons and cried: " Why, holy and blessed
one, do you so torture and burn us?" And he laid his I hand on them and
cured them. After this there was a man of Angers who in a severe fever
had lost both speech and hearing, and when he got better of the fever
he continued deaf and dumb. Now a deacon was sent from that province to
Rome to obtain relics of the blessed apostles and other saints who protect
that city. And when he came to this infirm person's relatives they begged
him to take him as a companion on the journey, believing that if he reached
the tombs of the blessed apostles he would forthwith be cured. They went
on their way and came to the place where the blessed Hospicius lived.
After greeting and kissing him, the deacon told the purpose of his journey
and said he was starting for Rome and asked the holy man to recommend
him to ship captains who were friends of his. And while he was still staying
there the blessed man felt that power was in him through the spirit of
the Lord. And he said to the deacon: "I beg you to bring to my sight the
infirm person who is the companion of your journey." The deacon made no
delay but went swiftly to his lodging and found the infirm person full
of fever, and he indicated by signs that there was a humming in his ears.
The deacon seized him and led him to the saint of God. The holy man took
hold of his hair and drew his head into the window, and taking oil that
had been blessed, he took hold of his tongue with his left hand and poured
the oil in his mouth and on the top of his head, saying: "In the name
of my lord Jesus Christ let your ears be opened and let that power - which
once drove a wicked demon from a deaf and dumb man open your lips." Having
said this, he asked him his name, and he answered in a clear voice: "I
am called soandso." When the deacon saw this he said: "I give thee endless
thanks, Jesus Christ, who deignest to work such miracles by thy servant.
I was seeking Peter, I was seeking Paul and Laurence and the others who
made Rome glorious with their blood; here I have found them all, I have
discovered every one." As he was saying this with loud weeping and great
admiration the man of God, wholly intent on avoiding vanity, said: "Be
silent, beloved brother, it is not I who do this, but he who created the
universe out of nothing, who took on man for our sake, and gave sight
to the blind, hearing to the deaf, speech to the dumb; who bestowed on
lepers the skin they had before, on the dead life, and on all the infirm
abundant healing." Then the deacon said farewell and departed rejoicing
with his comrades. When they had gone a certain Dominic-this was the man's
name-who had been blind from birth, came to prove his miraculous power,
and when he had dwelt in the monastery two or three months praying and
fasting, at length the man of God called him to him and said: "Do you
wish to recover your sight?" And he replied: "I wish to know a thing unknown.
For I do not know what the light is. Only one thing I know, that it is
praised by men. But I have not deserved to see from the beginning of my
life until now." Then he made the holy cross over his eyes with oil that
had been blessed and said: "In the name of Jesus Christ our redeemer let
your eyes be opened." And at once his eyes were opened and he wondered
and contemplated the great works of God which he saw in this world. Then
a certain woman who, as she herself asserted, had three demons, was brought
to him. And he blessed her with a sacred touch and made the cross in holy
oil on her forehead and the demons were driven out and she departed cleansed.
Moreover he cured by his blessing a girl who was vexed with an unclean
spirit. And when the day of his death was drawing nigh he summoned the
prior of the monastery and said: " Bring iron tools to open the wall and
send messengers to the bishop of the city to come and bury me; For on
the third day I shall depart from this world and go to the appointed rest
which the Lord has promised me." Upon this the prior sent messengers to
the bishop of Nice to carry this word. After this one Crescens went to
his window and seeing him bound with chains and full of worms he said:
" O my master, how can you bear such tortures so bravely ? " And he replied:
"He comforts me in whose name I suffer this. For I tell you that I am
now freed from these bonds and am going to my rest." When the third day
came he laid aside the chains by which he was bound and prostrated himself
in prayer, and after he had prayed and wept a long time he lay down on
a bench and stretched out his feet and raised his hands to heaven and
thanked God and died. And immediately all the worms that were boring through
his holy limbs disappeared. And bishop Austadius came and most carefully
placed the blessed body in the grave. All these things I learned from
the lips of the very deaf and dumb man who as I related above was healed
by him. He told me many other miracles of his but I have been kept from
describing them by the fact that I have been told that his life has been
written by many persons.
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