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           Medieval Sourcebook:  
GREGORY I (DIALOGOS): Second Dialogue (Life of St. Benedict)                     
           
 THE  SAINT   PACHOMIUS  ORTHODOX   LIBRARY 
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 THE DIALOGUES OF SAINT GREGORY, SURNAMED DIALOGUS AND THE GREAT, POPE OF 
  
  ROME AND THE FIRST OF THAT NAME. 
Divided into Four Books, wherein he entreateth of the Lives and Miracles 
of the Saints in Italy, and of the Eternity of Men's Souls.
 Translated into our English Tongue by "P. W." and printed at Paris in  1608. Re-edited by Edmund G. Gardner in 1911, and again by the Saint  Pachomius Library in 1995.  
  THE SECOND BOOK OF THE DIALOGUES, containing the Life and Miracles of St.  
  Benedict (Bennet) of Nursia.  
   
PROLOGUE (spoken by GREGORY):  
 There was a man of venerable life, blessed by grace, and blessed in name, for 
  
  he was called "Benedictus" or Bennet: who, from his younger years, carried 
  
  always the mind of an old man; for his age was inferior to his virtue: all 
  
  vain pleasure he contemned, and though he were in the world, and might freely 
  
  have enjoyed such commodities as it yieldeth, yet did he nothing esteem it, 
  
  nor the vanities thereof. He was born in the province of Nursia, of 
  
  honourable parentage, and brought up at Rome in the study of humanity. But 
  
  for as much as he saw many by reason of such learning to fall to dissolute 
  
  and lewd life, he drew back his foot, which he had as it were now set forth 
  
  into the world, lest, entering too far in acquaintance therewith, he likewise 
  
  might have fallen into that dangerous and godless gulf: wherefore, giving 
  
  over his book, and forsaking his father's house and wealth, with a resolute 
  
  mind only to serve God, he sought for some place, where he might attain to 
  
  the desire of his holy purpose: and in this sort he departed, instructed with 
  
  learned ignorance, and furnished with unlearned wisdom. All the notable 
  
  things and acts of his life I could not learn; but those few, which I mind 
  
  now to report, I had by the relation of four of his disciples: to wit, of 
  
  Constantinus, a most rare and reverent man, who was next Abbot after him; of 
  
  Valentinianus, who many years had the charge of the Lateran Abbey; of 
  
  Simplicius, who was the third General of his order; and lastly of Honoratus, 
  
  who is now Abbot of that monastery in which he first began his holy life. 
   
CHAPTER ONE: HOW HE MADE A BROKEN SIEVE WHOLE AND SOUND 
 Bennet having now given over the school, with a resolute mind to lead his 
  
  life in the wilderness: his nurse alone, which did tenderly love him, would 
  
  not by any means give him over. Coming, therefore, to a place called Enside 
  
  and remaining there in the church of St. Peter, in the company of other 
  
  virtuous men, which for charity lived in that place, it fell so out that his 
  
  nurse borrowed of the neighbours a sieve to make clean wheat, which being 
  
  left negligently upon the table, by chance it was broken in two pieces: 
  
  whereupon she fell pitifully a-weeping, because she had borrowed it. The 
  
  devout and religious youth Bennet, seeing his nurse so lamenting, moved with 
  
  compassion, took away with him both the pieces of the sieve, and with tears 
  
  fell to his prayers; and after he had done, rising up he found 
  
  it so whole, that the place could not be seen where before it was broken; and 
  
  coming straight to his nurse, and comforting her with good words, he 
  
  delivered her the sieve safe and sound: which miracle was known to all the 
  
  inhabitants thereabout, and so much admired, that the townsmen, for a 
  
  perpetual memory, did hang it up at the church door, to the end that not only 
  
  men then living, but also their posterity might understand, how greatly God's 
  
  grace did work with him upon his first renouncing of the world. The sieve 
  
  continued there many years after, even to these very troubles of the 
  
  Lombards, where it did hang over the church door.  
 But Bennet, desiring rather the miseries of the world than the praises of 
  
  men: rather to be wearied with labour for God's sake, than to be exalted with 
  
  transitory commendation: fled privily from his nurse, and went into a desert 
  
  place called Sublacum, distant almost forty miles from Rome: in which there 
  
  was a fountain springing forth cool and clear water; the abundance whereof 
  
  doth first in a broad place make a lake, and afterward running forward, 
  
  cometh to be a river. As he was travelling to this place, a certain monk 
  
  called Romanus met him, and demanded whither he went, and understanding his 
  
  purpose, he both kept it close, furthered him what he might, vested him with 
  
  the habit of holy conversation, and as he could, did minister and serve him.  
 The man of God, Bennet, coming to this foresaid place, lived there in a 
  
  strait cave, where he continued three years unknown to all men, except to 
  
  Romanus, who lived not far off, under the rule of Abbot Theodacus, and very 
  
  virtuously did steal certain hours, and likewise sometime a loaf given for 
  
  his own provision, which he did carry to Bennet. And because from Romanus' 
  
  cell to that cave there was not any way, by reason of an high rock which did 
  
  hang over it, Romanus, from the top thereof, upon a long rope, did let down 
  
  the loaf, upon which also with a band he tied a little bell, that by the 
  
  ringing thereof the man of God might know when he came with his bread, and so 
  
  be ready to take it. But the old enemy of mankind, envying at the charity of 
  
  the one and the refection of the other, seeing a loaf upon a certain day let 
  
  down, threw a stone and brake the bell; but yet, for all that, Romanus gave 
  
  not over to serve him by all the possible means he could.  
 At length when almighty God was determined to ease Romanus of his pains, and 
  
  to have Bennet's life for an example known to the world, that such a candle, 
  
  set upon a candlestick, might shine and give light to the Church of God, our 
  
  Lord vouchsafed to appear unto a certain Priest dwelling a good way off, who 
  
  had made ready his dinner for Easter day, and spake thus unto him: "Thou hast 
  
  provided good cheer for thyself, and my servant in such a place is afflicted 
  
  with hunger": who, hearing this forthwith rose up, and upon Easter day 
  
  itself, with such meat as he had prepared, went to the place, where he sought 
  
  for the man of God amongst the steep hills, the low valleys and hollow pits, 
  
  and at length found him in his cave: where, after they had prayed together, 
  
  and sitting down had given God thanks, and had much spiritual talk, then the 
  
  Priest said unto him: "Rise up, brother, and let us dine, because today is 
  
  the feast of Easter." To whom the man of God answered, and said: "I know that 
  
  it is Easter with me and a great feast, having found so much favour at God's 
  
  hands as this day to enjoy your company" (for by reason of his long absence 
  
  from men, he knew not that it was the great solemnity of Easter). But the 
  
  reverent Priest again did assure him, saying: "Verily, to-day is the feast of 
  
  our Lord's Resurrection, and therefore meet it is not that you should keep 
  
  abstinence, and besides I am sent to that end, that we might eat together of 
  
  such provision as God's goodness hath sent us." Whereupon they said grace, 
  
  and fell to their meat, and after they had dined, and bestowed some time in 
  
  talking, the Priest returned to his church.  
 About the same time likewise, certain shepherds found him in that same cave: 
  
  and at the first, when they espied him through the bushes, and saw his 
  
  apparel made of skins, they verily thought that it had been some beast: but 
  
  after they were acquainted with the servant of God, many of them were by his 
  
  means converted from their beastly life to grace, piety, and devotion. And 
  
  thus his name in the country there about became famous, and many after this 
  
  went to visit him, and for corporal meat which they brought him, they carried 
  
  away spiritual food for their souls.  
  
CHAPTER TWO: HOW HE OVERCAME A GREAT TEMPTATION OF THE FLESH. 
 Upon a certain day being alone, the tempter was at hand: for a 
  
  little black bird, commonly called a merle or an ousel, began to 
  
  fly about his face, and that so near as the holy man, if he 
  
  would, might have taken it with his hand: but after he had 
  
  blessed himself with the sign of the cross, the bird flew away: 
  
  and forthwith the holy man was assaulted with such a terrible 
  
  temptation of the flesh, as he never felt the like in all his 
  
  life.  
 A certain woman there was which some time he had seen, the 
  
  memory of which the wicked spirit put into his mind, and by the 
  
  representation of her did so mightily inflame with concupiscence 
  
  the soul of God's servant, which did so increase that, almost 
  
  overcome with pleasure, he was of mind to have forsaken the 
  
  wilderness. But, suddenly assisted with God's grace, he came to 
  
  himself; and seeing many thick briers and nettle bushes to grow 
  
  hard by, off he cast his apparel, and threw himself into the 
  
  midst of them, and there wallowed so long that, when he rose up, 
  
  all his flesh was pitifully torn: and so by the wounds of his 
  
  body, he cured the wounds of his soul, in that he turned 
  
  pleasure into pain, and by the outward burning of extreme smart, 
  
  quenched that fire which, being nourished before with the fuel 
  
  of carnal cogitations, did inwardly burn in his soul: and by 
  
  this means he overcame the sin, because he made a change of the 
  
  fire.  
 From which time forward, as himself did afterward report 
  
  unto his disciples, he found all temptation of pleasure so 
  
  subdued, that he never felt any such thing. Many after this 
  
  began to abandon the world, and to become his scholars. For 
  
  being now freed from the vice of temptation, worthily and with 
  
  great reason is he made a master of virtue: for which cause, in 
  
  Exodus, commandment is given by Moses that the Levites from 
  
  five-and-twenty years and upward should serve, but, after they 
  
  came to fifty, that they should be ordained keepers of the holy 
  
  vessels. [Numbers 8:24-26]  
 PETER: Somewhat I understand of this testimony alleged: but yet 
  
  I beseech you to tell me the meaning thereof more fully.  
 GREGORY: It is plain, Peter, that in youth the temptation of the 
  
  flesh is hot: but after fifty years the heat of the body waxeth 
  
  cold, and the souls of faithful people become holy vessels.  
  
  Wherefore necessary it is that God's elect servants, whiles they 
  
  are yet in the heat of temptation, should live in obedience, 
  
  serve, and be wearied with labour and pains. But when, by reason 
  
  of age, the heat of temptation is past, they become keepers of 
  
  holy vessels; because they then are made the doctors of men's 
  
  souls.  
 PETER: I cannot deny, but that your words have given me full 
  
  satisfaction: wherefore, seeing you have now expounded the 
  
  meaning of the former text alleged, prosecute, I pray, as you 
  
  have begun, the rest of the holy man's life.  
  
 CHAPTER THREE: HOW BENNET, BY THE SIGN OF THE HOLY CROSS, BRAKE A 
  
  DRINKING-GLASS IN PIECES. 
 GREGORY: When this great temptation was thus overcome, the man 
  
  of God, like unto a piece of ground well tilled and weeded, of 
  
  the seed of virtue brought forth plentiful store of fruit: and 
  
  by reason of the great report of his wonderful holy life, his 
  
  name became very famous. Not far from the place where he 
  
  remained there was a monastery, the Abbot whereof was dead: 
  
  whereupon the whole Convent came unto the venerable man Bennet, 
  
  entreating him very earnestly that he would vouchsafe to take 
  
  upon him the charge and government of their Abbey: long time he 
  
  denied them, saying that their manners were divers from his, and 
  
  therefore that they should never agree together: yet at length, 
  
  overcome with their entreaty, he gave his consent.  
 Having now  taken upon him the charge of the Abbey, he took order 
  
  that regular life should be observed, so that none of them could, 
  
  as before they used, through unlawful acts decline from the path of 
  
  holy conversation, either on the one side or on the other: which 
  
  the monks perceiving, they fell into a great rage, accusing 
  
  themselves that ever they desired him to be their Abbot, seeing 
  
  their crooked conditions could not endure his virtuous kind of 
  
  government: and therefore when they saw that under him they 
  
  could not live in unlawful sort, and were loath to leave their 
  
  former conversation, and found it hard to be enforced with old 
  
  minds to meditate and think upon new things: and because the 
  
  life of virtuous men is always grievous to those that be of 
  
  wicked conditions, some of them began to devise, how they might 
  
  rid him out of the way: and therefore, taking counsel together, 
  
  they agreed to poison his wine: which being done, and the glass 
  
  wherein that wine was, according to the custom, offered to the 
  
  Abbot to bless, he, putting forth his hand, made the sign of the 
  
  cross, and straightway the glass, that was holden far off, brake 
  
  in pieces, as though the sign of the cross had been a stone 
  
  thrown against it: upon which accident the man of God by and by 
  
  perceived that the glass had in it the drink of death, which 
  
  could not endure the sign of life: and therefore rising up, with 
  
  a mild countenance and quiet mind, he called the monks together, 
  
  and spake thus unto them: "Almighty God have mercy upon you, and 
  
  forgive you: why have you used me in this manner? Did not I tell 
  
  you before hand, that our manner of living could never agree 
  
  together? Go your ways, and seek ye out some other father 
  
  suitable to your own conditions, for I intend not now to stay 
  
  any longer amongst you." When he had thus discharged himself, he 
  
  returned back to the wilderness which so much he loved, and 
  
  dwelt alone with himself, in the sight of his Creator, who 
  
  beholdeth the hearts of all men.  
 PETER: I understand not very well what you mean, when you say 
  
  that he dwelt with himself.  
 GREGORY: If the holy man had longer, contrary to his own mind, 
  
  continued his government over those monks, who had all conspired 
  
  against him, and were far unlike to him in life and 
  
  conversation: perhaps he should have diminished his own 
  
  devotion, and somewhat withdrawn the eyes of his soul from the 
  
  light of contemplation; and being wearied daily with correcting 
  
  of their faults, he should have had the less care of himself, 
  
  and so haply it might have fallen out, that he should both have 
  
  lost himself, and yet not found them: for so often as by 
  
  infectious motion we are carried too far from ourselves, we 
  
  remain the same men that we were before, and yet be not with 
  
  ourselves as we were before: because we are wandering about 
  
  other men's affairs, little considering and looking into the 
  
  state of our own soul.  
 For shall we say that he was with himself, who went into 
  
  a far country, and after he had, as we read in the Gospel, 
  
  prodigally spent that portion which he received of his father, 
  
  was glad to serve a citizen, to keep his hogs, and would willingly 
  
  have filled his hungry belly with the husks which they did eat: 
  
  who notwithstanding afterward, when he thought with himself of 
  
  those goods which he had lost, it is written of him that, 
  
  returning into himself, he said: How many hired men in my father's 
  
  house do abound with bread? [Luke 15]  
 If then, before he were with himself, from whence did he return 
  
  home unto himself? and therefore I said that this venerable man 
  
  did dwell with himself, because carrying himself circumspectly 
  
  and carefully in the sight of his Creator, always considering 
  
  his own actions, always examining himself, never did he turn the 
  
  eyes of his soul from himself, to behold aught else whatsoever.  
 PETER: Why, then, is it written of the Apostle, St. Peter, after 
  
  he was by the Angel delivered out of prison, that, returning to 
  
  himself, he said: Now I know verily, that our Lord hath sent his 
  
  Angel, and hath delivered me from the hand of Herod, and from 
  
  all the expectation of the people of the Jews. [Acts 12:11]  
 GREGORY: We are two manner of ways, Peter, carried out of 
  
  ourselves: for either we fall under ourselves by sinful 
  
  cogitation, or else we are, by the grace of contemplation, 
  
  lifted above ourselves: for he that kept hogs, through wandering 
  
  of his mind and unclean thoughts, fell under himself: but he 
  
  whom the Angel delivered out of prison, being also rapt by the 
  
  Angel into an ecstasy, was in truth out of himself, but yet 
  
  above himself. Both of them, therefore, did return unto 
  
  themselves; the one when he recollected himself, and forsook his 
  
  lewd kind of life; and the other from the top of contemplation, 
  
  to have that usual judgment and understanding, which before he 
  
  had: wherefore venerable Bennet in that solitary wilderness 
  
  dwelt with himself, because he kept himself, and retired his 
  
  cogitations within the closet of his own soul: for when the 
  
  greatness of contemplation rapt him up aloft, out of all question 
  
  he did then leave himself under himself.  
 PETER: Your discourse doth very well content me: yet I beseech 
  
  you to answer me this question, whether he could in conscience 
  
  give over those monks, whose government he had now taken upon 
  
  him?  
 GREGORY: In mine opinion, Peter, evil men may with good 
  
  conscience be tolerated in that community, where there be some 
  
  good that may be holpen, and reap commodity. But where there be 
  
  none good at all, that receive spiritual profit, often times all 
  
  labour is lost, that is bestowed in bringing of such to good 
  
  order, especially if other occasions be offered of doing God 
  
  presently better service elsewhere: for whose good, then, should 
  
  the holy man have expected, seeing them all to persecute him 
  
  with one consent? and (that which is not to be passed over with 
  
  silence) those that be perfect carry always this mind, that when 
  
  they perceive their labour to be fruitless in one place, to 
  
  remove straight to another, where more good may be done.  
 And for this cause, that notable preacher of the word, who was 
  
  desirous to be dissolved, and to be with Christ, unto whom to live 
  
  is Christ, and to die is gain [Phil. 1:21]:  and who not only 
  
  desired himself to suffer persecution, but did also animate and 
  
  encourage others to suffer the same; yet being himself in persecution 
  
  at Damascus, got a rope and a basket to pass over the wall, and was 
  
  privily let down. [Acts 9:25] What then? shall we say that 
  
  Paul was afraid of death, when as himself said, that he desired 
  
  it for Christ's sake? not so: but when he perceived that in that 
  
  place little good was to be done by great labour, he reserved 
  
  himself to further labour, where more fruit and better success 
  
  might be expected: and therefore the valiant soldier of Christ 
  
  would not be kept within walls, but sought for a larger field 
  
  where he might more freely labour for his master. And so, in 
  
  like manner, you shall quickly perceive, if you mark well, that 
  
  venerable Bennet forsook not so many in one place, that were 
  
  unwilling to be taught, as he did in sundry other places raise 
  
  up from the death of soul many more, that were willing to be 
  
  instructed.  
 PETER: It is so as you say, and plain reason teacheth it, and 
  
  the example of St. Paul alleged doth confirm it. But I beseech 
  
  you to return unto your former purpose, and to prosecute the 
  
  life of the holy man.  
 GREGORY: When as God's servant daily increased in virtue, and 
  
  became continually more famous for miracles, many were by him in 
  
  the same place drawn to the service of almighty God, so that by 
  
  Christ's assistance he built there twelve Abbeys; over which he 
  
  appointed governors, and in each of them placed twelve monks, 
  
  and a few he kept with himself, namely, such as he thought would 
  
  more profit, and be better instructed by his own presence. At 
  
  that time also many noble and religious men of Rome came unto 
  
  him, and committed their children to be brought up under him, 
  
  for the service of God. Then also Evitius delivered him Maurus, 
  
  and Tertullius the Senator brought Placidus, being their sons of 
  
  great hope and towardness: of which two, Maurus, growing to 
  
  great virtue, began to be his master's coadjutor; but Placidus, 
  
  as yet, was but a boy of tender years. 
   
 CHAPTER FOUR: HOW BENNET REFORMED A  MONK THAT WOULD NOT STAY AT 
  
  HIS PRAYERS. 
 In one of the monasteries which he had built in those parts, a 
  
  monk there was, which could not continue at prayers; for when 
  
  the other monks knelt down to serve God, his manner was to go 
  
  forth, and there with wandering mind to busy himself about some 
  
  earthly and transitory things. And when he had been often by his 
  
  Abbot admonished of this fault without any amendment, at length 
  
  he was sent to the man of God, who did likewise very much rebuke 
  
  him for his folly; yet notwithstanding, returning back again, he 
  
  did scarce two days follow the holy man's admonition; for, upon 
  
  the third day, he fell again to his old custom, and would not 
  
  abide within at the time of prayer: word whereof being once more 
  
  sent to the man of God, by the father of the Abbey whom he had 
  
  there appointed, he returned him answer that he would come 
  
  himself, and reform what was amiss, which he did accordingly: 
  
  and it fell so out, that when the singing of psalms was ended, 
  
  and the hour come in which the monks betook themselves to 
  
  prayer, the holy man perceived that the monk, which used at that 
  
  time to go forth, was by a little black boy drawn out by the 
  
  skirt of his garment; upon which sight, he spake secretly to 
  
  Pompeianus, father of the Abbey, and also to Maurus saying Do 
  
  you not see who it is, that draweth this monk from his prayers?" 
  
  and they answered him, that they did not. "Then let us pray," 
  
  quoth he, "unto God, that you also may behold whom this monk 
  
  doth follow": and after two days Maurus did see him, but 
  
  Pompeianus could not.  
 Upon another day, when the man of God had ended his devotions, 
  
  he went out of the oratory, where he found the foresaid monk 
  
  standing idle, whom for the blindness of his heart he strake with 
  
  a little wand, and from that day forward he was so freed from all 
  
  allurement of the little black boy, that he remained quietly at 
  
  his prayers, as other of the monks did: for the old enemy was so 
  
  terrified, that he durst not any more suggest any such cogitations: 
  
  as though by that blow, not the monk, but himself had been strooken.  
   
CHAPTER FIVE: OF A FOUNTAIN THAT SPRUNG FORTH IN THE TOP OF A 
  
  MOUNTAIN, BY THE PRAYERS OF THE MAN OF GOD. 
 Amongst the monasteries which he had built in those parts, three 
  
  of them were situated upon the rocks of a mountain, so that very 
  
  painful it was for the monks to go down and fetch water, 
  
  especially because the side of the hill was so steep that there 
  
  was great fear of danger: and therefore the monks of those 
  
  Abbeys with one consent came unto the servant of God, Bennet, 
  
  giving him to understand, how laborious it was for them daily to 
  
  go down unto the lake for water: and therefore they added, that 
  
  it was very necessary to have them removed to some other places.  
  
  The man of God, comforting them with sweet words, caused them to 
  
  return back again; and the next night, having with him only the 
  
  little boy Placidus (of whom we spake before), he ascended up to 
  
  the rock of that mountain, and continued there a long time in 
  
  prayer; and when he had done, he took three stones, and laid 
  
  them in the same place for a mark, and so, none of them being 
  
  privy to that he had done, he returned back to his own Abbey.  
  
  And the next day, when the foresaid monks came again about their 
  
  former business, he said thus unto them: "Go your way to the 
  
  rock, and in the place where you find three stones laid one upon 
  
  another, dig a little hole, for almighty God is able to bring 
  
  forth water in the top of that mountain, and so to ease you of 
  
  that great labour which you take in fetching it so far." Away 
  
  they went, and came to the rock of the mountain according to his 
  
  direction, which they found as it were sweating drops of water, 
  
  and after they had with a spade made an hollow place, it was 
  
  straightways filled, and water flowed out so abundantly, that it 
  
  doth plentifully, even to this day, spring out and run down from 
  
  the top to the very bottom of that hill.  
  
CHAPTER SIX: HOW THE IRON HEAD OF A BILL, FROM THE BOTTOM OF THE 
  
  WATER, RETURNED TO THE HANDLE AGAIN. 
 At another time, a certain Goth, poor of spirit, that gave over 
  
  the world, was received by the man of God; whom on a day he 
  
  commanded to take a bill, and to cleanse a certain plot of ground 
  
  from briers, for the making of a garden, which ground was by the 
  
  side of a lake. The Goth as he was there labouring, by chance 
  
  the head of the bill slipped off, and fell into the water, which 
  
  was so deep, that there was no hope ever to get it again. The 
  
  poor Goth, in great fear, ran unto Maurus and told him what he 
  
  had lost, confessing his own fault and negligence: Maurus 
  
  forthwith went to the servant of God, giving him to understand 
  
  thereof, who came straightways to the lake: and took the handle 
  
  out of the Goth's hand, and put it into the water, and the iron 
  
  head by and by ascended from the bottom and entered again into 
  
  the handle of the bill, which he delivered to the Goth, saying: 
  
  "Behold here is thy bill again, work on, and be sad no more."  
   
CHAPTER SEVEN: HOW MAURUS WALKED UPON THE WATER. 
 On a certain day, as venerable Bennet was, in his cell, the 
  
  foresaid young Placidus, the holy man's monk, went out to take 
  
  up water at the lake, and putting down his pail carelessly, fell 
  
  in himself after it, whom the water forthwith carried away from 
  
  the land so far as one may shoot an arrow. The man of God, being 
  
  in his cell, by and by knew this, and called in haste for 
  
  Maurus, saying: "Brother Maurus, run as fast as you can, for 
  
  Placidus, that went to the lake to fetch water, is fallen in, 
  
  and is carried a good way off."  
 A strange thing, and since the time of Peter the Apostle never 
  
  heard of! Maurus, craving his father's blessing, and departing 
  
  in all haste at his commandment, ran to that place upon the water, 
  
  to which the young lad was carried by force thereof, thinking that 
  
  he had all that while gone upon the land: and taking fast hold of him 
  
  by the hair of his head, in all haste he returned back again: and 
  
  so soon as he was at land, coming to himself he looked behind 
  
  him, and then knew very well that he had before run upon the 
  
  water: and that which before he durst not have presumed, being 
  
  now done and past, he both marvelled, and was afraid at that 
  
  which he had done.  
 Coming back to the father, and telling him what had happened, the 
  
  venerable man did not attribute this to his own merits, but to the 
  
  obedience of Maurus: but Maurus on the contrary, said that it was done 
  
  only upon his commandment, and that he had nothing to do in that miracle, 
  
  not knowing at that time what he did. But the friendly contention 
  
  proceeding of mutual humility, the young youth himself that was saved from 
  
  drowning did determine: for he said that he saw when he was drawn out of the 
  
  water the Abbot's garment upon his head, affirming that it was he that had 
  
  delivered him from that great danger.  
 PETER:  Certainly they be wonderful things which you report, and such 
  
  as may serve for the edification of many : for mine own part, the more 
  
  that I hear of his miracles, the more do I still desire.  
   
CHAPTER EIGHT: HOW A LOAF WAS POISONED, AND CARRIED FAR OFF BY A CROW. 
 GREGORY:  When as the foresaid monasteries were zealous in the love of 
  
  our Lord Jesus Christ, and their fame dispersed far and near, and many 
  
  gave over the secular life, and subdued the passions of their soul, 
  
  under the light yoke of our Saviour: then (as the manner of wicked 
  
  people is, to envy at that virtue which themselves desire not to 
  
  follow) one Florentius, Priest of a church hardby, and grandfather to 
  
  Florentius our sub-deacon, possessed with diabolical malice, began to 
  
  envy the holy man's virtues, to back-bite his manner of living, and to 
  
  withdraw as many as he could from going to visit him : and when he saw 
  
  that he could not hinder his virtuous proceedings, but that, on the 
  
  contrary, the fame of his holy life increased, and many daily, upon 
  
  the very report of his sanctity, did betake themselves to a better 
  
  state of life : burning more and more with the coals of envy, he 
  
  became far worse; and though he desired not to imitate his 
  
  commendable life, yet fain he would have had the reputation of his 
  
  virtuous conversation.  
 In conclusion so much did malicious envy blind him, and so far did he 
  
  wade in that sin, that he poisoned a loaf and sent it to the servant of 
  
  almighty God, as it were for an holy present.  The man of God received 
  
  it with great thanks, yet not ignorant of that which was hidden within.  
  
  At dinner time, a crow daily used to come unto him from the next wood, 
  
  which took bread at his hands; coming that day after his manner, the 
  
  man of God threw him the loaf which the Priest had sent him, giving 
  
  him this charge: "In the name of Jesus Christ our Lord, take up that 
  
  loaf, and leave it in some such place where no man may find it."  Then 
  
  the crow, opening his mouth, and lifting up his wings, began to hop up 
  
  and down about the loaf, and after his manner to cry out, as though he 
  
  would have said that he was willing to obey, and yet could not do what 
  
  he was commanded.  The man of God again and again bade him, saying: 
  
  "Take it up without fear, and throw it where no man may find it."  At 
  
  length, with much ado, the crow took it up, and flew away, and after 
  
  three hours, having dispatched the loaf, he returned back again, and 
  
  received his usual allowance from the man of God.  
 But the venerable father, perceiving the Priest so wickedly 
  
  bent against his life, was far more sorry for him than 
  
  grieved for himself. And Florentius, seeing that he could 
  
  not kill the body of the master, laboureth now what he 
  
  can, to destroy the souls of his disciples; and for that purpose 
  
  he sent into the yard of the Abbey before their eyes 
  
  seven naked young women, which did there take hands 
  
  together, play and dance a long time before them, to the 
  
  end that, by this means, they might inflame their minds 
  
  to sinful lust: which damnable sight the holy man beholding 
  
  out of his cell, and fearing the danger which thereby 
  
  might ensue to his younger monks, and considering that 
  
  all this was done only for the persecuting of himself, he 
  
  gave place to envy; and therefore, after he had for those 
  
  abbeys and oratories which he had there built appointed 
  
  governors, and left some under their charge, himself, in the 
  
  company of a few monks, removed to another place.  
 And thus the man of God, upon humility, gave place to the 
  
  other's malice; but yet almighty God of justice did 
  
  severely punish [Florentius'] wickedness. For when the foresaid 
  
  Priest, being in his chamber, understood of the departure 
  
  of holy Bennet, and was very glad of that news, behold 
  
  (the whole house besides continuing safe and sound) that 
  
  chamber alone in which he was, fell down, and so killed 
  
  him: which strange accident the holy man's disciple 
  
  Maurus understanding, straightways sent him word, he 
  
  being as yet scarce ten miles off, desiring him to return 
  
  again, because the Priest that did persecute him was slain; 
  
  which thing when Bennet heard, he was passing sorrowful, 
  
  and lamented much: both because his enemy died in 
  
  such sort, and also for that one of his monks rejoiced 
  
  thereat; and therefore he gave him penance, for that, 
  
  sending such news, he presumed to rejoice at his enemy's 
  
  death.  
 PETER: The things you report be strange, and much to be 
  
  wondered at: for in making the rock to yield forth water, 
  
  I see Moses; and in the iron, which came from the bottom 
  
  of the lake, I behold Eliseus; in the walking of Maurus 
  
  upon the water, I perceive Peter; in the obedience of the 
  
  crow, I contemplate Elias; and in lamenting the death of 
  
  his enemy, I acknowledge David: and therefore, in mine 
  
  opinion, this one man was full of the spirit of all good 
  
  men.  
 GREGORY: The man of god, Bennet, had the spirit of the 
  
  one true God, who, by the grace of our redemption, hath 
  
  filled the hearts of his elect servants; of whom St. John 
  
  saith:  "He was the true light, which doth lighten every 
  
  man coming into this world," [John 1:9].  Of whom, again, 
  
  we find it written:  "Of his fulness we have all received," 
  
  [John 1:16].  For God's holy servants might receive virtues 
  
  of our Lord, but to bestow them upon others they could 
  
  not; and therefore it was he that gave the signs of miracles 
  
  to his servants, who promised to give the sign of Jonas to 
  
  his enemies [Matt. 12:40]: so that he vouchsafed to die in 
  
  the sight of the proud, and to rise again before the eyes of 
  
  the humble: to the end, that they might behold what they 
  
  contemned, and those see that which they ought to worship 
  
  and love: by reason of which mystery it cometh to pass 
  
  that, whereas the proud cast their eyes upon the contempt 
  
  of his death, the humble contrariwise, against death, lay 
  
  hold of the glory of his power and might.  
 PETER: To what places, I pray you, after this, did the holy 
  
  man go: and whether did he afterward in them work any 
  
  miracles, or no?  
 GREGORY:  The holy man, changing his place, did not for all that 
  
  change his enemy.  For afterward he endured so much the more grievous 
  
  battles, by how much he had now the master of all wickedness fighting 
  
  openly against him.  For the town, which is called Cassino, standeth 
  
  upon the side of an high mountain, which containeth, as it were in the 
  
  lap thereof, the foresaid town, and afterward so riseth in height the 
  
  space of three miles, that the top thereof seemeth to touch the very 
  
  heavens:  in this place there was an ancient chapel in which the 
  
  foolish and simple country people, according to the custom of the old 
  
  gentiles, worshipped the god Apollo.  Round about it likewise upon all 
  
  sides, there were woods for the service of the devils, in which even 
  
  to that very time, the mad multitude of infidels did offer most wicked 
  
  sacrifice.  The man of God coming thither, beat in pieces the idol, 
  
  overthrew the altar, set fire to the woods, and in the temple of 
  
  Apollo, he built the oratory of St. Martin, and where the altar of the 
  
  same Apollo was, he made an oratory of St. John:  and by his continual 
  
  preaching, he brought the people dwelling in those parts to embrace 
  
  the faith of Christ.  
 The old enemy of mankind, not taking this in good part, did not 
  
  privily or in a dream, but in open sight present himself to the eyes 
  
  of that holy father, and with great outcries complained that he had 
  
  offered him violence.  The noise which he made, the monks did hear, 
  
  but himself they could not see:  but, as the venerable father told 
  
  them, he appeared visibly unto him most fell and cruel, and as though, 
  
  with his fiery mouth and flaming eyes, he would have torn him in 
  
  pieces:  what the devil said unto him, all the monks did hear; for 
  
  first he would call him by his name, and because the man of God 
  
  vouchsafed him not any answer, then would he fall a-reviling and 
  
  railing at him:  for when he cried out, calling him "Blessed Bennet," 
  
  and yet found that he gave him no answer, straightways he would turn 
  
  his tune, and say:  "Cursed Bennet, and not blessed:  what hast thou 
  
  to do with me?  and why dost thou thus persecute me?"  Wherefore new 
  
  battles of the old enemy against the servant of God are to be looked 
  
  for, against whom willingly did he make war, but, against his will, 
  
  did he give him occasion of many notable victories.  
  
CHAPTER NINE:  HOW VENERABLE BENNET, BY HIS PRAYER, REMOVED AN HUGE STONE. 
 Upon a certain day, when the monks were building up the cells of 
  
  the same Abbey, there lay a stone which they meant to employ about that 
  
  business: and when two or three were not able to remove it, they called 
  
  for more company, but all in vain, for it remained so immovable as though 
  
  it had grown to the very earth: whereby they plainly perceived that the 
  
  devil himself did sit upon it, seeing so may men's hands could not so 
  
  much as once move it: wherefore, finding that their own labours could do 
  
  nothing, they sent for the man of God, to help them with his prayers 
  
  against the devil, who hindered the removing of that stone.  The holy man 
  
  came, and after some praying, he gave it his blessing, and then they 
  
  carried it away so quickly, as though it had been of no weight at all.  
  
CHAPTER TEN:  OF THE FANTASTICAL FIRE, WHICH BURNT THE KITCHEN. 
 Then the man of God thought good that they should presently 
  
  before his departure dig up the ground in the same place; which being 
  
  done, and a deep hole made, the monks found there an idol of brass, which 
  
  being for a little while by chance cast into the kitchen, they beheld 
  
  fire suddenly to come from it, which to all their sight seemed to set the 
  
  whole kitchen on fire; for the quenching whereof, the monks by casting on 
  
  of water made such a noise, that the man of God, hearing it, came to see 
  
  what the matter was: and himself beholding not any fire at all,which they 
  
  said that they did, he bowed down his head forthwith to his prayers, and 
  
  then he perceived that they were deluded with fantastical fire, and 
  
  therefore bad them bless their eyes, that they might behold the kitchen 
  
  safe and sound, and not those fantastical flames, which the devil had 
  
  falsely devised.  
  
CHAPTER ELEVEN: HOW VENERABLE BENNET REVIVED A BOY, CRUSHED 
  
  TO DEATH WITH THE RUIN OF A WALL. 
 Again, as the monks were making of a certain wall somewhat 
  
  higher, because that was requisite, the man of God in the 
  
  meantime was in his cell at his prayers. To whom the old enemy 
  
  appeared in an insulting manner, telling him, that he was now 
  
  going to his monks, that were a-working: whereof the man of God, 
  
  in all haste, gave them warning, wishing them to look unto 
  
  themselves, because the devil was at that time coming amongst 
  
  them. The message was scarce delivered, when as the wicked 
  
  spirit overthrew the new wall which they were a building, and 
  
  with the fall slew a little young child, a monk, who was the son 
  
  of a certain courtier. At which pitiful chance all were passing 
  
  sorry and exceedingly grieved, not so much for the loss of the 
  
  wall, as for the death of their brother: and in all haste they 
  
  sent this heavy news to the venerable man Bennet; who commanded 
  
  them to bring unto him the young boy, mangled and maimed as he 
  
  was, which they did, but yet they could not carry him any 
  
  otherwise than in a sack: for the stones of the wall had not 
  
  only broken his limbs, but also his very bones. Being in that 
  
  manner brought unto the man of God, he bad them to lay him in 
  
  his cell, and in that place upon which he used to pray; and 
  
  then, putting them all forth, he shut the door, and fell more 
  
  instantly to his prayers than he used at other times. And O 
  
  strange miracle! for the very same hour he made him sound, and 
  
  as lively as ever he was before; and sent him again to his 
  
  former work, that he also might help the monks to make an end of 
  
  that wall, of whose death the old serpent thought he should have 
  
  insulted over Bennet, and greatly triumphed.  
  
CHAPTER TWELVE: HOW BY REVELATION VENERABLE BENNET KNEW 
  
  THAT HIS MONKS HAD EATEN OUT OF THE MONASTERY. 
 Among other miracles which the man of God did, he began also to 
  
  be famous for the spirit of prophecy: as to foretell what was to 
  
  happen, and to relate unto them that were present, such things 
  
  as were done in absence. The order of his Abbey was, that when 
  
  the monks went abroad (to deliver any message) never to eat or 
  
  drink anything out of their cloister: and this being diligently 
  
  observed, according to the prescription of their rule, upon a 
  
  certain day some of the monks went forth upon such business: and 
  
  being enforced about the dispatch thereof to tarry somewhat long 
  
  abroad, it fell so out that they stayed at the house of a 
  
  religious woman, where they did eat and refresh themselves. And 
  
  being late before they came back to the Abbey, they went as the 
  
  manner was, and asked their father's blessing: of whom he 
  
  demanded where they had eaten: and they said nowhere. "Why do 
  
  you," quoth he, "tell an untruth? for did you not go into such a 
  
  woman's house? and eat such and such kind of meat, and drink so 
  
  many cups?" When they heard him recount so in particular, both 
  
  where they had stayed, what kind of meat they had eaten, and how 
  
  often they had drunk, and perceived well that he knew all 
  
  whatsoever they had done, they fell down trembling at his feet, 
  
  and confessed that they had done wickedly: who straightways 
  
  pardoned them for that fault, persuading himself that they would 
  
  not any more in his absence presume to do any such thing, seeing 
  
  they now perceived that he was present with them in spirit.  
  
CHAPTER THIRTEEN: OF THE BROTHER OF VALENTINIAN THE MONK, 
  
  WHOM THE MAN OF GOD BLAMED FOR EATING IN HIS JOURNEY. 
 A brother also of Valentinian the monk, of whom I made mention 
  
  before, was a layman, but devout and religious: who used every 
  
  year, as well to desire the prayers of God's servant, as also to 
  
  visit his natural brother, to travel from his own house to the 
  
  Abbey: and his manner was, not to eat anything all that day 
  
  before he came thither. Being therefore upon a time in his 
  
  journey, he lighted into the company of another that carried 
  
  meat about him to eat by the way: who, after the day was well 
  
  spent, spake unto him in this manner: "Come, brother," quoth he, 
  
  "let us refresh ourselves, that we faint not in our journey": to 
  
  whom he answered: "God forbid: for eat I will not by any means, 
  
  seeing I am now going to the venerable father Bennet, and my 
  
  custom is to fast until I see him." The other, upon this answer, 
  
  said no more for the space of an hour. But afterward, having 
  
  travelled a little further again he was in hand with him to eat 
  
  something: yet then likewise he utterly refused, because he 
  
  meant to go through fasting as he was. His companion was 
  
  content, and so went forward with him, without taking anything 
  
  himself.  But when they had now gone very far, and were well 
  
  wearied with long travelling, at length they came unto a meadow, 
  
  where there was a fountain, and all such other pleasant things 
  
  as use to refresh men's bodies. Then his companion said to him 
  
  again: "Behold here is water, a green meadow, and a very sweet 
  
  place, in which we may refresh ourselves and rest a little, that 
  
  we may be the better able to dispatch the rest of our journey." 
  
  Which kind words bewitching his ears, and the pleasant place 
  
  flattering his eyes, content he was to yield unto the motion, 
  
  and so they fell to their meat together: and coming afterward in 
  
  the evening to the Abbey, they brought him to the venerable 
  
  father Bennet, of whom he desired his blessing. Then the holy 
  
  man objected against him what he had done in the way, speaking 
  
  to him in this manner: "How fell it out, brother," quoth he, 
  
  "that the devil talking to you, by means of your companion, 
  
  could not at the first nor second time persuade you: but yet he 
  
  did at the third, and made you do what best pleased him?" The 
  
  good man, hearing these words, fell down at his feet, confessing 
  
  the fault of his frailty; was grieved, and so much the more 
  
  ashamed of his sin, because he perceived that though he were 
  
  absent, that yet he did offend in the sight of that venerable 
  
  father.  
 PETER: I see well that the holy man had in his soul the spirit 
  
  of Eliseus, who was present with his servant Giezi, being then 
  
  absent from him.  
  
CHAPTER FOURTEEN: HOW THE DISSIMULATION OF KING TOTILAS WAS 
  
  DISCOVERED AND FOUND OUT BY VENERABLE BENNET. 
 GREGORY: You must, good Peter, for a little while be silent, 
  
  that you may know matters yet far more important. For in the 
  
  time of the Goths, when Totilas, their king, understood that the 
  
  holy man had the spirit of prophecy, as he was going towards his 
  
  monastery, he remained in a place somewhat far off, and 
  
  beforehand sent the father word of his coming: to whom answer 
  
  was returned, that he might come at his pleasure.  The king, as 
  
  he was a man wickedly disposed, thought he would try whether the 
  
  man of God were a prophet, as it was reported, or no. A certain 
  
  man of his guard he had, called Riggo, upon whom he caused his 
  
  own shoes to be put, and to be apparelled with his other 
  
  princely robes, commanding him to go as it were himself to the 
  
  man of God; and to give the better colour to this device, he 
  
  sent three to attend upon him, who especially were always about 
  
  the king: to wit, Vultericus, Rudericus, and Blindinus; charging 
  
  them that in the presence of the servant of God, they should be 
  
  next about him, and behave themselves in such sort as though he 
  
  had been king Totilas indeed: and that diligently they should do 
  
  unto him all other services, to the end that both by such 
  
  dutiful kind of behaviour, as also by his purple robes, he might 
  
  verily be taken for the king himself.  Riggo, furnished with 
  
  that brave apparel, and accompanied with many courtiers, came 
  
  unto the Abbey: at which time the man of God sat a little way 
  
  off, and when Riggo was come so near that he might well 
  
  understand what the man of God said, then, in the hearing of 
  
  them all, he spake thus: "Put off, my good son, put off that 
  
  apparel, for that which thou hast on, is none of thine." Riggo, 
  
  hearing this, fell straightways down to the ground, and was very 
  
  much afraid, for presuming to go about to mock so worthy a man, 
  
  and all his attendants and servitors fell down likewise to the 
  
  earth, and after they were up again, they durst not approach any 
  
  nearer to his presence: but returned back to their king, telling 
  
  him with fear, how quickly they were discovered.  
  
CHAPTER FIFTEEN: HOW VENERABLE BENNET PROPHESIED TO KING 
  
  TOTILAS, AND ALSO TO THE BISHOP OF CAMISINA, SUCH THINGS AS WERE 
  
  AFTERWARD TO FALL OUT. 
 Then Totilas himself in person went unto the man of God; and 
  
  seeing him sitting afar off, he durst not come near, but fell 
  
  down to the ground: whom the holy man (speaking to him twice or 
  
  thrice) desired to rise up and at length came unto him, and with 
  
  his own hands lifted him up from the earth, where he lay 
  
  prostrate: and then, entering into talk, he reprehended him for 
  
  his wicked deeds, and in few words told him all that which 
  
  should befall him, saying: "Much wickedness do you daily commit, 
  
  and many great sins have you done: now at length give over your 
  
  sinful life. Into the city of Rome shall you enter, and over the 
  
  sea shall you pass: nine years shall you reign, and in the tenth 
  
  shall you leave this mortal life." The king, hearing these 
  
  things, was wonderfully afraid, and desiring the holy man to 
  
  commend him to God in his prayers, he departed: and from that 
  
  time forward he was nothing so cruel as before he had been. Not 
  
  long after he went to Rome, sailed over into Sicily, and, in the 
  
  tenth year of his reign, he lost his kingdom together with his 
  
  life.  
 The Bishop also of Camisina used to visit the servant of 
  
  God, whom the holy man dearly loved for his virtuous life. The 
  
  Bishop, therefore, talking with him of King Totilas, of his 
  
  taking of Rome, and the destruction of that city, said: "This 
  
  city will be so spoiled and ruined by him, that it will never be 
  
  more inhabited." To whom the man of God answered: "Rome," quoth 
  
  he, "shall not be utterly destroyed by strangers: but shall be 
  
  so shaken with tempests, lightnings, whirlwinds, and 
  
  earthquakes, that it will fall to decay of itself." The 
  
  mysteries of which prophecy we now behold as clear as the day: 
  
  for we see before our eyes in this very city, by a strange 
  
  whirlwind the world shaken, houses ruined, and churches 
  
  overthrown, and buildings rotten with old age we behold daily to 
  
  fall down. True it is that Honoratus, by whose relation I had 
  
  this, saith not that he received it from his own mouth, but that 
  
  he had it of other monks, which did hear it themselves.  
  
CHAPTER SIXTEEN: OF A CERTAIN CLERGYMAN, WHOM VENERABLE BENNET 
  
  FOR A TIME DELIVERED FROM A DEVIL. 
 At the same time a certain clergyman, that served in the church 
  
  of Aquinum, was possessed: whom the venerable man Constantius, 
  
  Bishop of the same city, sent unto many places of holy martyrs 
  
  for help: but God's holy martyrs would not deliver him, to the 
  
  end that the world might know what great grace was in the 
  
  servant of God, Bennet: wherefore at length he was brought unto 
  
  him, who, praying for help to Jesus Christ our Lord, did 
  
  forthwith cast the old enemy out of the possessed man's body, 
  
  giving him this charge: "Go your way, and hereafter abstain from 
  
  eating of flesh, and presume not to enter into holy orders, for 
  
  whensoever you shall attempt any such thing, the devil again 
  
  will have power over you." The man departed safe and sound, and 
  
  because punishment fresh in memory useth to terrify the mind, he 
  
  observed for a time what the man of God had given him in 
  
  commandment. But after many years, when all his seniors were 
  
  dead, and he saw his juniors preferred before him to holy 
  
  orders, he neglected the words of the man of God, as though 
  
  forgotten through length of time, and took upon him holy orders: 
  
  whereupon straightways the devil that before had left him 
  
  entered again, and never gave over to torment him, until he had 
  
  separated his soul from his body.  
 PETER: This holy man, as I perceive, did know the secret counsel 
  
  of God: for he saw that this clergyman was delivered to the 
  
  power of the devil, to the end he should not presume to enter 
  
  into holy orders.  
 GREGORY: Why should he not know the secrets of God, who kept the 
  
  commandments of God: when as the scripture saith: "He that 
  
  cleaveth unto our Lord, is one spirit with him?" [1 Cor. 6:17]  
 PETER: If he that cleaveth unto our Lord, be one spirit with our 
  
  Lord, what is the meaning of that which the Apostle saith: "Who 
  
  knoweth the sense of our Lord, or who hath been his counsellor?" 
  
  [Rom. 11:34], for it seemeth very inconvenient to be ignorant of 
  
  his sense, to whom being so united he is made one thing.  
 GREGORY: Holy men, in that they be one with our Lord are not 
  
  ignorant of his sense: for the same Apostle saith: "For what man 
  
  knoweth those things which belong to man, but the spirit of man 
  
  which is in him ? Even so, the things which belong to God, no 
  
  man knoweth, but the spirit of God."  And to show 
  
  also that he knew such things as belong to God, he addeth 
  
  straight after: "But we have not received the spirit of this 
  
  world, but the spirit which is of God." And for this cause, 
  
  again he saith: "that eye hath not seen, nor ear heard, nor it 
  
  hath ascended into the heart of man, those things which God hath 
  
  prepared for them that love him, but God hath revealed to us by 
  
  his spirit." [1 Cor. 2:9-12]  
 PETER: If, then, the mysteries of God were revealed to the same 
  
  Apostle by the spirit of God, why did he then, entreating of 
  
  this question, set down these words beforehand, saying: "O the 
  
  depth of the riches of the wisdom and knowledge of God: how 
  
  incomprehensible be his judgments, and his ways investigable?" 
  
  [Rom. 11:33]  
 And again, whiles I am thus speaking of this matter, another 
  
  question cometh to my mind: for the prophet David said to our 
  
  Lord: "With my lips have I uttered all the judgments of thy 
  
  mouth," [Ps. 118 (119):13]. Wherefore, seeing it is less to know, 
  
  than to utter: what is the reason that St. Paul affirmeth the 
  
  judgments of God to be incomprehensible; and yet David saith that 
  
  he did not know only them, but also with his lips pronounce them?  
 GREGORY: To both these questions I have already briefly 
  
  answered, when I said that holy men, in that they be one with 
  
  our Lord, are not ignorant of the sense of our Lord.  For all 
  
  such, as do devoutly follow our Lord, be also by devotion one 
  
  with our Lord; and yet for all this, in that they are laden with 
  
  the burthen of their corruptible flesh, they be not with God: 
  
  and so in that they be joined with him, they know the secret 
  
  judgments of God, and in that they be separated from God, they 
  
  know them not: for seeing they do not as yet perfectly penetrate 
  
  his secret mysteries, they give testimony that his judgments be 
  
  incomprehensible.  
 But those that do with their soul adhere unto him, and cleaving 
  
  unto the sayings of the holy scripture, or to secret revelations, 
  
  acknowledge what they receive: such persons both know these things 
  
  and do utter them: for those judgments which God doth conceal they 
  
  know not, and those which he doth utter they know: and therefore 
  
  the prophet David, when he had said: "I have with my lips uttered 
  
  all the judgments;" [Ps. 118(119):13], he addeth immediately, "of 
  
  thy mouth:" as though he should plainly say: Those judgments I may 
  
  both know and utter, which I knew thou didst speak, for those things 
  
  which thou dost not speak, without all question, thou dost conceal from our 
  
  knowledge.  
 Wherefore the saying of David and St. Paul agree together: 
  
  for the judgments of God are incomprehensible; and yet 
  
  those which himself with his own mouth vouchsafeth to speak, are 
  
  uttered with men's tongues: because men may come to the 
  
  knowledge of them, and being revealed, they may be uttered, and 
  
  by no means can be kept secret.  
 PETER: Now I see the answer to my question. But I pray you to 
  
  proceed, if anything yet remaineth to be told of his virtue and 
  
  miracles.  
  
CHAPTER SEVENTEEN: HOW THE MAN OF GOD, BENNET, DID FORETELL THE 
  
  SUPPRESSION OF ONE OF HIS OWN ABBEYS. 
 GREGORY: A certain noble man called Theoprobus was by the good 
  
  counsel of holy Bennet converted: who, for his virtue and merit 
  
  of life, was very intrinsical and familiar with him. This man 
  
  upon a day, coming into his cell, found him weeping very 
  
  bitterly.  And having expected a good while, and yet not seeing 
  
  him to make an end (for the man of God used not in his prayers 
  
  to weep, but rather to be sad), he demanded the cause of that 
  
  his so great heaviness, to whom he answered straightway, saying: 
  
  "All this Abbey which I have built, and all such things as I 
  
  have made ready for my brethren, are by the judgment of almighty 
  
  God delivered to the gentiles, to be spoiled and overthrown: and 
  
  scarce could I obtain of God to have their lives spared, that 
  
  should then live in it." His words Theoprobus then heard, but we 
  
  see them to be proved most true, who know that very Abbey to be 
  
  now suppressed by the Lombards. For not long since, in the night 
  
  time, when the monks were asleep, they entered in, and spoiled 
  
  all things, but yet not one man could they retain there, and so 
  
  almighty God fulfilled what he promised to his faithful servant: 
  
  for though he gave them the house and all the goods, yet did he 
  
  preserve their lives. In which thing I see that Bennet imitated 
  
  St. Paul: whose ship though it lost all the goods, yet, for his 
  
  comfort, he had the lives of all that were in his company 
  
  bestowed upon him, so that no one man was cast away.  
   
CHAPTER EIGHTEEN: HOW BLESSED BENNET KNEW THE HIDING AWAY 
  
  OF A FLAGON OF WINE. 
 Upon a certain time, Exhilaratus our monk, a lay-brother, whom 
  
  you know, was sent by his master to the monastery of the man of 
  
  God, to carry him two wooden bottles, commonly called flagons, 
  
  full of wine: who in the way, as he was going, hid one of them 
  
  in a bush for himself, and presented the other to venerable 
  
  Bennet: who took it very thankfully, and, when the man was going 
  
  away, he gave him this warning: "Take heed, my son," quoth he, 
  
  "that thou drinkest not of that flagon which thou hast hidden in 
  
  the bush: but first be careful to bow it down, and thou shalt 
  
  find what is within it." The poor man, thus pitifully confounded 
  
  by the man of God, went his way, and coming back to the place 
  
  where the flagon was hidden, and desirous to try the truth of 
  
  that was told him, as he was bowing it down, a snake 
  
  straightways leaped forth. Then Exhilaratus perceiving what was 
  
  gotten into the wine, began to be afraid of that wickedness 
  
  which he had committed.  
   
CHAPTER NINETEEN: HOW THE MAN OF GOD KNEW THAT ONE OF HIS 
  
  MONKS HAD RECEIVED CERTAIN HANDKERCHIEFS. 
 Not far from his Abbey, there was a village, in which very many 
  
  men had, by the sermons of Bennet, been converted from idolatry 
  
  to the true faith of Christ. Certain Nuns also there were in the 
  
  same town, to whom he did often send some of his monks to preach 
  
  unto them, for the good of their souls. Upon a day, one that was 
  
  sent, after he had made an end of his exhortation, by the 
  
  entreaty of the Nuns took certain small napkins, and hid them 
  
  for his own use in his bosom: whom, upon his return to the 
  
  Abbey, the man of God very sharply rebuked, saying: "How cometh 
  
  it to pass, brother, that sin is entered into your bosom ?" At 
  
  which words the monk was much amazed for he had quite forgotten 
  
  what he had put there; and therefore knew not any cause why he 
  
  should deserve that reprehension: whereupon the holy man spake 
  
  to him in plain terms, and said: "Was not I present when you 
  
  took the handkerchiefs of the Nuns, and put them up in your 
  
  bosom for your own private use?" The monk, hearing this, fell 
  
  down at his feet, and was sorry that he had behaved himself so 
  
  indiscreetly: forth he drew those napkins from his bosom, and 
  
  threw them all away.  
  
CHAPTER TWENTY: HOW HOLY BENNET KNEW THE PROUD THOUGHT OF 
  
  ONE OF HIS MONKS. 
 Upon a time, whiles the venerable Father was at supper, one of 
  
  his monks, who was the son of a great man, held the candle: and 
  
  as he was standing there, and the other at his meat, he began to 
  
  entertain a proud cogitation in his mind, and to speak thus 
  
  within himself: " Who is he, that I thus wait upon at supper, 
  
  and hold him the candle? and who am I, that I should do him any 
  
  such service?" Upon which thought straightways the holy man 
  
  turned himself, and with severe reprehension spake thus unto 
  
  him: "Sign your heart, brother, for what is it that you say?  
  
  Sign your heart": and forthwith he called another of the monks, 
  
  and bad him take the candle out of his hands, and commanded him 
  
  to give over his waiting, and to repose himself: who being 
  
  demanded of the monks, what it was that he thought, told them, 
  
  how inwardly he swelled with pride, and what he spake against 
  
  the man of God, secretly in his own heart. Then they all saw 
  
  very well that nothing could be hidden from venerable Bennet, 
  
  seeing the very sound of men's inward thoughts came unto his 
  
  ears.  
  
CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE: OF TWO HUNDRED BUSHELS OF MEAL, FOUND 
  
  BEFORE THE MAN OF GOD'S CELL. 
 At another time, there was a great dearth in the same country of 
  
  Campania: so that all kind of people tasted of the misery: and 
  
  all the wheat of Bennet's monastery was spent, and likewise all 
  
  the bread, so that there remained no more than five loaves for 
  
  dinner.  The venerable man, beholding the monks sad, both 
  
  rebuked them modestly for their pusillanimity, and again did 
  
  comfort them with this promise: "Why," quoth he, "are you so 
  
  grieved in your minds for lack of bread? Indeed, today some want 
  
  there is, but tomorrow you shall have plenty": and so it fell 
  
  out, for the next day two hundred bushels of meal was found in 
  
  sacks before his cell door, which almighty God sent them: but by 
  
  whom, or what means, that is unknown to this very day: which 
  
  miracle when the monks saw, they gave God thanks, and by this 
  
  learned in want, not to make any doubt of plenty.  
 PETER: Tell me, I pray you, whether this servant of God had 
  
  always the spirit of prophecy, when himself pleased, or only at 
  
  certain times?  
 GREGORY: The spirit of prophecy doth not always illuminate the 
  
  minds of the prophets; because, as it is written of the Holy 
  
  Ghost that "he breatheth where he will" [John 3:8], so we are 
  
  also to know that he doth breathe likewise for what cause, and 
  
  when he pleaseth. And hereof it cometh, that when king David 
  
  demanded of Nathan whether he might build a temple for the 
  
  honour of God, the prophet Nathan gave his consent; and yet 
  
  afterward utterly forbad it. From hence likewise it proceedeth 
  
  that, when Eliseus saw the woman weeping, and knew not the 
  
  cause, he said to his servant that did trouble her: "Let her 
  
  alone, for her soul is in grief, and God hath concealed it from 
  
  me, and hath not told me." [4 Kings 4:27] Which thing almighty 
  
  God of great piety so disposeth: for giving at some times the 
  
  spirit of prophecy, and at other times withdrawing it, he doth 
  
  both lift up the prophets minds on high, and yet doth preserve 
  
  them in humility: that by the gift of the Spirit, they may know 
  
  what they are by God's grace: and at other times, destitute of 
  
  the same Spirit, may understand what they are of themselves.  
 PETER: There is very great reason for that you say. But, I pray 
  
  you, let me hear more of the venerable man Bennet, if there be 
  
  anything else that cometh to your remembrance.  
  
CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO: HOW, BY VISION, VENERABLE BENNET 
  
  DISPOSED THE BUILDING OF THE ABBEY OF TARACINA. 
 GREGORY: At another time he was desired by a certain virtuous 
  
  man, to build an Abbey for his monks upon his ground, not far 
  
  from the city of Taracina. The holy man was content, and 
  
  appointed an Abbot and Prior, with divers monks under them: and 
  
  when they were departing, he promised that, upon such a day, he 
  
  would come and shew them in what place the oratory should be 
  
  made, and where the refectory should stand, and all the other 
  
  necessary rooms: and so they, taking his blessing, went their 
  
  way; and against the day appointed, which they greatly expected, 
  
  they made all such things ready as were necessary to entertain 
  
  him, and those that should come in his company. But the very 
  
  night before, the man of God in sleep appeared to the Abbot and 
  
  the Prior, and particularly described unto them where each place 
  
  and office was to be builded. And when they were both risen, 
  
  they conferred together what either of them had seen in their 
  
  sleep: but yet not giving full credit to that vision, they 
  
  expected the man of God himself in person, according to his 
  
  promise. But when they saw that he came not, they returned back 
  
  unto him very sorrowfully, saying: "We expected, father, that 
  
  you should have come according to promise, and told us where 
  
  each place should have been built, which yet you did not." To 
  
  whom he answered: "Why say you so, good brethren? Did not I come 
  
  as I promised you?" And when they asked at what time it was: 
  
  "Why," quoth he, "did not I appear to either of you in your 
  
  sleep, and appointed how and where every place was to be 
  
  builded? Go your way, and according to that platform which you 
  
  then saw, build up the abbey." At which word they much 
  
  marvelled, and returning back, they caused it to be builded in 
  
  such sort as they had been taught of him by revelation.  
 PETER: Gladly would I learn, by what means that could be done: 
  
  to wit, that he should go so far to tell them that thing in 
  
  their sleep, which they should both hear and know by vision.  
 GREGORY: Why do you, Peter, seek out and doubt, in what manner 
  
  this thing was done? For certain it is, that the soul is of a 
  
  more noble nature than the body. And by authority of scripture 
  
  we know that the prophet Abacuck was carried from Judea with 
  
  that dinner which he had, and was suddenly set in Chaldea; by 
  
  which meat the prophet Daniel was relieved: and presently after 
  
  was brought back again to Judea. If, then, Abacuck could in a 
  
  moment with his body go so far, and carry provision for another 
  
  man's dinner: what marvel is it, if the holy father Bennet 
  
  obtained grace to go in spirit and to inform the souls of his 
  
  brethren that were asleep, concerning such things as were 
  
  necessary: and that as Abacuck about corporal meat went 
  
  corporally, so Bennet should go spiritually about the dispatch 
  
  of spiritual business?  
 PETER: I confess that your words have satisfied my doubtful 
  
  mind. But I would know what manner of man he was in his ordinary 
  
  talk and conversation.  
  
CHAPTER TWENTY-THREE: OF CERTAIN NUNS ABSOLVED AFTER THEIR 
  
  DEATH. 
 GREGORY: His common talk, Peter, was usually full of virtue: for 
  
  his heart conversed to above in heaven, that no words could in 
  
  vain proceed from his mouth. And if at any time he spake aught, 
  
  yet not as one that determined what was best to be done, but 
  
  only in a threatening manner, his speech in that case was so 
  
  effectual and forcible, as though he had not doubtfully or 
  
  uncertainly, but assuredly pronounced and given sentence.  
 For not far from his Abbey, there lived two Nuns in a place by 
  
  themselves, born of worshipful parentage: whom a religious good 
  
  man did serve for the dispatch of their outward business. But as 
  
  nobility of family doth in some breed ignobility of mind, and 
  
  maketh them in conversation to show less humility, because they 
  
  remember still what superiority they had above others: even so 
  
  was it with these Nuns: for they had not yet learned to temper 
  
  their tongues, and keep them under with the bridle of their 
  
  habit: for often did they by their indiscreet speech provoke the 
  
  foresaid religious man to anger; who having borne with them a 
  
  long time, at length he complained to the man of God, and told 
  
  him with what reproachful words they entreated him: whereupon he 
  
  sent them by and by this message, saying: "Amend your tongues, 
  
  otherwise I do excommunicate you"; which sentence of 
  
  excommunication notwithstanding, he did not then presently 
  
  pronounce against them, but only threatened if they amended not 
  
  themselves.  
 But they, for all this, changed their conditions 
  
  nothing at all: both which not long after departed this life, 
  
  and were buried in the church: and when solemn mass was 
  
  celebrated in the same church, and the Deacon, according to 
  
  custom, said with loud voice: "If any there be that do not 
  
  communicate, let them depart": the nurse, which used to give 
  
  unto our Lord an offering for them, beheld them at that time to 
  
  rise out of their graves, and to depart the church. Having often 
  
  times, at those words of the Deacon, seen them leave the church, 
  
  and that they could not tarry within, she remembered what 
  
  message the man of God sent them whiles they were yet alive. For 
  
  he told them that he did deprive them of the communion, unless 
  
  they did amend their tongues and conditions. Then with great 
  
  sorrow, the whole matter was signified to the man of God, who 
  
  straightways with his own hands gave an oblation, saying: "Go 
  
  your ways, and cause this to be offered unto our Lord for them, 
  
  and they shall not remain any longer excommunicate": which 
  
  oblation being offered for them, and the Deacon, as he used, 
  
  crying out, that such as did not communicate should depart, they 
  
  were not seen any more to go out of the church: whereby it was 
  
  certain that, seeing they did not depart with them which did not 
  
  communicate, that they had received the communion of our Lord by 
  
  the hands of his servant.  
 PETER: It is very strange that you report: for how could he, 
  
  though a venerable and most holy man, yet living in mortal body, 
  
  loose those souls which stood now before the invisible judgment 
  
  of God?  
 GREGORY: Was he not yet, Peter, mortal, that heard from our 
  
  Saviour: "Whatsoever thou shalt bind upon earth, it shall be 
  
  bound also in the heavens: and whatsoever thou shalt loose in 
  
  earth, shall be loosed also in the heavens?" [Matt. 16:19] whose 
  
  place of binding and loosing those have at this time, which by 
  
  faith and virtuous life possess the place of holy government: 
  
  and to bestow such power upon earthly men, the Creator of heaven 
  
  and earth descended from heaven to earth: and that flesh might 
  
  judge of spiritual things, God, who for man's sake was made 
  
  flesh, vouchsafed to bestow upon him: for from thence our 
  
  weakness did rise up above itself, from whence the strength of 
  
  God was weakened under itself.  
 PETER: For the virtue of his miracles, your words do yield a 
  
  very good reason.  
  
CHAPTER TWENTY-FOUR: OF A BOY THAT AFTER HIS BURIAL WAS CAST 
  
  OUT OF HIS GRAVE. 
 GREGORY:  Upon a certain day, a young boy that was a monk, 
  
  loving his parents more than reason would, went from the Abbey 
  
  to their house, not craving the father's blessing beforehand: 
  
  and the same day that he came home unto them, he departed this 
  
  life. And being buried, his body, the next day after, was found 
  
  cast out of the grave; which they caused again to be put in, and 
  
  again, the day following, they found it as before. Then in great 
  
  haste they went to the man of God, fell down at his feet, and 
  
  with many tears beseeched him that he would vouchsafe him that 
  
  was dead of his favour. To whom the man of God with his own 
  
  hands delivered the holy communion of our Lord's body, saying: 
  
  "Go, and lay with great reverence this our Lord's body upon his 
  
  breast, and so bury him": which when they had done, the dead 
  
  corpse after that remained quietly in the grave. By which you 
  
  perceive, Peter, of what merit he was with our Lord Jesus 
  
  Christ, seeing the earth would not give entertainment to his 
  
  body, who departed this world out of Bennet's favour.  
 PETER: I perceive it very well, and do wonderfully admire it.  
  
CHAPTER TWENTY-FIVE: HOW A MONK, FORSAKING THE ABBEY, MET 
  
  WITH A DRAGON IN THE WAY. 
 GREGORY:  A certain monk there was so inconstant and fickle of 
  
  mind, that he would needs give over the Abbey; for which fault 
  
  of his, the man of God did daily rebuke him, and often times 
  
  gave him good admonitions: but yet, for all this, by no means 
  
  would he tarry amongst them, and therefore continual suit he 
  
  made that he might be discharged.  The venerable man upon a 
  
  time, wearied with his importunity, in anger bad him depart; who 
  
  was no sooner out of the Abbey gate, but he found a dragon in 
  
  the way expecting him with open mouth, which being about to 
  
  devour him, he began in great fear and trembling to cry out 
  
  aloud, saying: "Help, help! for this dragon will eat me up." At 
  
  which noise the monks running out, dragon they saw none, but 
  
  finding him there shaking and trembling, they brought him back 
  
  again to the Abbey, who forthwith promised that he would never 
  
  more forsake the monastery, and so ever after he continued in 
  
  his profession: for by the prayers of the holy man, he saw the 
  
  dragon coming against him, whom before, when he saw not, he did 
  
  willingly follow.  
  
CHAPTER TWENTY-SIX: HOW HOLY BENNET CURED A BOY OF LEPROSY. 
 But I must not here pass over with silence that which I had by 
  
  relation of the honourable man, Anthony, who said that his 
  
  father's boy was so pitifully punished with a leprosy, that all 
  
  his hair fell off, his body swelled, and filthy corruption did 
  
  openly come forth.  Who being sent by his father to the man of 
  
  God, he was by him quickly restored to his former health.  
  
CHAPTER TWENTY-SEVEN: HOW BENNET FOUND MONEY MIRACULOUSLY 
  
  TO RELIEVE A POOR MAN. 
 Neither is that to be omitted, which one of his disciples called 
  
  Peregrinus used to tell: for he said that, upon a certain day, 
  
  an honest man, who was in debt, found no other means to help 
  
  himself, but thought it his best way to acquaint the man of God 
  
  with his necessity: whereupon he came to the Abbey, and finding 
  
  the servant of almighty God, gave him to understand, how he was 
  
  troubled by his creditor for twelve shillings which he did owe 
  
  him. To whom the venerable man said that himself had not so much 
  
  money, yet giving him comfortable words, he said: "Go your ways, 
  
  and after two days come to me again, for I can not presently 
  
  help you": in which two days, after his manner, he bestowed 
  
  himself in prayer: and when upon the third day the poor man came 
  
  back there were found suddenly upon the chest of the Abbey, 
  
  which was full of corn, thirteen shillings: which the man of God 
  
  caused to be given to him that required but twelve, both to 
  
  discharge his debt, and also to defray his own charges.  
 But now will I return to speak of such things as I had from the mouth 
  
  of his own scholars, mentioned before in the beginning of this 
  
  book. A certain man there was who had an enemy that did notably 
  
  spite and malign him, whose damnable hatred proceeded so far 
  
  that he poisoned his drink, which, although it killed him not, 
  
  yet did it change his skin in such sort that it was of many 
  
  colours, as though he had been infected with a leprosy: but the 
  
  man of God restored him to his former health: for so soon as he 
  
  touched him, forthwith all that variety of colours departed from 
  
  his body.  
   
CHAPTER TWENTY-EIGHT: HOW A CRUET OF GLASS WAS THROWN UPON 
  
  THE STONES, AND NOT BROKEN. 
 At such time as there was a great dearth in Campania, the man of 
  
  God had given away all the wealth of the Abbey to poor people, 
  
  so that in the cellar there was nothing left but a little oil in 
  
  a glass. A certain sub-deacon called Agapitus came unto him, 
  
  instantly craving that he would bestow a little oil upon him.  
  
  Our Lord's servant, that was resolved to give away all upon 
  
  earth that he might find all in heaven, commanded that oil to be 
  
  given him: but the monk that kept the cellar heard what the 
  
  father commanded, yet did he not perform it: who inquiring not 
  
  long after whether he had given that which he willed, the monk 
  
  told him that he had not, adding that if he had given it away, 
  
  that there was not any left for the Convent. Then in an anger he 
  
  commanded others to take that glass with the oil, and to throw 
  
  it out at the window, to the end that nothing might remain in 
  
  the Abbey contrary to obedience. The monks did so, and threw it 
  
  out at a window, under which there was an huge downfall, full of 
  
  rough and craggy stones upon which the glass did light, but yet 
  
  continued for all that so sound as though it had never been 
  
  thrown out at all, for neither the glass was broken nor any of 
  
  the oil shed. Then the man of God did command it to be taken up 
  
  again, and, whole as it was, to be given unto him that desired 
  
  it, and in the presence of the other brethren he reprehended the 
  
  disobedient monk, both for his infidelity, and also for his 
  
  proud mind.  
  
CHAPTER TWENTY-NINE: HOW AN EMPTY BARREL WAS FILLED WITH OIL. 
 After which reprehension, with the rest of his brethren he fell 
  
  to praying, and in the place where they were, there stood an 
  
  empty barrel with a cover upon it: and as the holy man continued 
  
  in his prayers, the oil within did so increase, that the cover 
  
  began to be lifted up, and at length fell down, and the oil, 
  
  that was now higher than the mouth of the barrel, began to run 
  
  over upon the pavement, which so soon as the servant of God, 
  
  Bennet, beheld, forthwith he gave over his prayers, and the oil 
  
  likewise ceased to overflow the barrel. Then he did more at 
  
  large admonish that mistrusting and disobedient monk, that he 
  
  would learn to have faith and humility, who upon so wholesome an 
  
  admonition was ashamed, because the venerable father had by 
  
  miracle shown the power of almighty God, as before he told him 
  
  when he did first rebuke him: and so no cause there was why any 
  
  should afterward doubt of his promise, seeing at one and the 
  
  same time, for a small glass almost empty which he gave away, he 
  
  bestowed upon them an whole barrel full of oil.  
   
CHAPTER THIRTY: HOW BENNET DELIVERED A MONK FROM THE DEVIL. 
 Upon a certain time, as he was going to the oratory of St. John, 
  
  which is in the top of the mountain, the old enemy of mankind 
  
  upon a mule, like a physician, met him, carrying in his hand an 
  
  horn and a mortar. And when he demanded whither he was going: 
  
  "To your monks," quoth he, "to give them a drench" [i.e. a large dose 
  
  of veterinary medicine].  
 The venerable father went forward to his prayers, and when he had 
  
  done, he returned in all haste, but the wicked spirit found an 
  
  old monk drawing of water, into whom he entered, and 
  
  straightways cast him upon the ground, and grievously tormented 
  
  him. The man of God coming from his prayers, and seeing him in 
  
  such pitiful case gave him only a little blow with his hand, and 
  
  at the same instant he cast out that cruel devil, so that he 
  
  durst not any more presume to enter in.  
 PETER: I would gladly know, whether he obtained always by 
  
  prayer, to work such notable miracles; or else sometimes did 
  
  them only at his will and pleasure.  
 GREGORY: Such as be the devout servants of God, when necessity 
  
  requireth, use to work miracles both manner of ways: so that 
  
  sometime they effect wonderful things by their prayers, and 
  
  sometime only by their power and authority: for St. John saith: 
  
  "So many as received him, he gave them power to be made the sons 
  
  of God." [John 1:12] They, then, that by power be the sons of 
  
  God, what marvel is it, if by power they be able to do wonderful 
  
  things? And that both ways they work miracles, we learn of St.  
  
  Peter: who by his prayers did raise up Tabitha; and by his sharp 
  
  reprehension did sentence Ananias and Sapphira to death for 
  
  their lying. For we read not, that in the death of them he 
  
  prayed at all, but only rebuked them for that sin which they had 
  
  committed. Certain therefore it is that sometimes they do these 
  
  things by power, and sometimes by prayer: for Ananias and 
  
  Sapphira by a severe rebuke, St. Peter deprived of life: and by 
  
  prayer restored Tabitha to life. And for proof of this, I will 
  
  now tell you of two miracles, which the faithful servant of God, 
  
  Bennet, did, in which it shall appear most plainly that he 
  
  wrought the one by that power which God gave him, and obtained 
  
  the other by virtue of his prayers.  
   
CHAPTER THIRTY-ONE: OF A COUNTRY FELLOW, THAT, WITH THE ONLY 
  
  SIGHT OF THE MAN OF GOD, WAS LOOSED FORM HIS BANDS. 
 A certain Goth there was called Galla, an Arian heretic, who, in 
  
  the time of King Totilas, did with such monstrous cruelty 
  
  persecute religious men of the Catholic church, that what priest 
  
  or monk soever came in his presence, he never departed alive.  
  
  This man on a certain day, set upon rapine and pillage, 
  
  pitifully tormented a poor country man, to make him confess 
  
  where his money and wealth was: who, overcome with extremity of 
  
  pain, said that he had committed all his substance to the 
  
  custody of Bennet, the servant of God: and this he did, to the 
  
  end that his tormentor, giving credit to his words, might at 
  
  least for a while surcease from his horrible cruelty.  
 Galla hearing this tormented him no longer: but binding his arms fast 
  
  with strong cords, drave him before his horse, to bring him unto 
  
  this Bennet, who, as he said, had his wealth in keeping. The 
  
  country fellow, thus pinioned and running before him, carried 
  
  him to the holy man's Abbey, where he found him sitting before 
  
  the gate, reading upon a book. Then turning back to Galla that 
  
  came raging after, he said: "This is father Bennet, of whom I 
  
  told you": who looking upon him, in a great fury, thinking to 
  
  deal as terribly with him as he had with others, cried out aloud 
  
  to him, saying: "Rise up, sirrah, rise up, and deliver me 
  
  quickly such wealth as thou hast of this man's in keeping."  
 The man of God, hearing such a noise, straightways lifted up his 
  
  eyes from reading, and beheld both him and the country fellow; 
  
  and turning his eyes to his bands, very strangely they fell from 
  
  his arms, and that so quickly as no man with any haste could 
  
  have undone them. Galla, seeing him so wonderfully and quickly 
  
  loosed, fell straight a-trembling, and prostrating himself upon 
  
  the earth bowed down his cruel and stiff neck to the holy man's 
  
  feet, and with humility did commend himself to his prayers. But 
  
  the venerable man for all this rose not up from his reading, but 
  
  calling for some of his monks commanded them to have him in, and 
  
  to give him some meat. And when he was brought back again, he 
  
  gave him a good lesson, admonishing him not to use any more such 
  
  rigour and cruel dealing. His proud mind thus taken down, away 
  
  he went, but durst not demand after that anything of the country 
  
  fellow, whom the man of God, not with hands, but only with his 
  
  eyes, had loosed from his bands.  
 And this is that, Peter, which I told you, that those which in a 
  
  more familiar sort serve God, do sometime, by certain power and 
  
  authority bestowed upon them, work miracles. For he that sitting 
  
  still did appease the fury of that cruel Goth, and unloose with 
  
  his eyes those knots and cords which did pinion the innocent man's 
  
  arms, did plainly shew by the quickness of the miracle, that he 
  
  had received power to work all that which he did. And now will I 
  
  likewise tell you of another miracle, which by prayer he obtained 
  
  at God s hands.  
  
CHAPTER THIRTY-TWO: HOW BY PRAYER VENERABLE BENNET RAISED 
  
  UP A DEAD CHILD. 
 Being upon a day gone out with his monks to work in the field, a 
  
  country man carrying the corpse of his dead son came to the 
  
  gate of the Abbey, lamenting the loss of his child: and 
  
  inquiring for holy Bennet, they told him that he was abroad with 
  
  his monks in the field. Down at the gate he laid the dead body, 
  
  and with great sorrow of soul ran in haste to seek out the 
  
  venerable father. At the same time, the man of God was returning 
  
  homeward from work with his monks: whom so soon as he saw, he 
  
  [the country man] began to cry out: "Give me my son, give me my son!"  
 The man of God, amazed at these words, stood still, and said: "What, 
  
  have I taken away your son?" "No, no," quoth the sorrowful father, " 
  
  but he is dead: come for Christ Jesus' sake and restore him to 
  
  life."  
 The servant of God, hearing him speak in that manner, and 
  
  seeing his monks upon compassion to solicit the poor man's suit, 
  
  with great sorrow of mind he said: "Away, my good brethren, 
  
  away: such miracles are not for us to work, but for the blessed 
  
  Apostles: why will you lay such a burthen upon me, as my 
  
  weakness cannot bear?" But the poor man, whom excessive grief 
  
  enforced, would not give over his petition, but swore that he 
  
  would never depart, except he did raise up his son.  
 "Where is he, then?" quoth God's servant.  
 He answered that his body lay at the gate of the Abbey: to which 
  
  place when the man of God came with his monks, he kneeled down 
  
  and lay upon the body of the little child, and rising, he held up 
  
  his hands towards heaven, and said: "Behold not, O Lord, my sins, 
  
  but the faith of this man, that desireth to have his son raised to 
  
  life, and restore that soul to the body, which thou hast taken away."  
 He had scarce spoken these words, and behold the soul returned back 
  
  again, and therewith the child's body began to tremble in such 
  
  sort that all which were present did behold it in strange manner 
  
  to pant and shake. Then he took it by the hand and gave it to 
  
  his father, but alive and in health. Certain it is, Peter, that 
  
  this miracle was not in his own power, for which prostrate upon 
  
  the ground he prayed so earnestly.  
 PETER: All is most true that before you said, for what you 
  
  affirmed in words, you have now verified by examples and works.  
  
  But tell me, I beseech you, whether holy men can do all such 
  
  things as they please, and obtain at God's hands whatsoever they 
  
  desire.  
  
CHAPTER THIRTY-THREE: OF A MIRACLE WROUGHT BY HIS SISTER 
  
  SCHOLASTICA. 
 GREGORY: What man is there, Peter, in this world, that is in 
  
  greater favour with God than St. Paul was: who yet three times 
  
  desired our Lord to be delivered from the prick of the flesh, 
  
  and obtained not his petition? Concerning which point also I 
  
  must needs tell you, how there was one thing which the venerable 
  
  father Bennet would have done, and yet he could not.  
 For his sister called Scholastica, dedicated from her infancy to our 
  
  Lord, used once a year to come and visit her brother. To whom 
  
  the man of God went not far from the gate, to a place that did 
  
  belong to the Abbey, there to give her entertainment.  And she 
  
  coming thither on a time according to her custom, her venerable 
  
  brother with his monks went to meet her, where they spent the 
  
  whole day in the praises of God and spiritual talk: and when it 
  
  was almost night they supped together, and as they were yet 
  
  sitting at the table, talking of devout matters, and darkness 
  
  came on, the holy Nun his sister entreated him to stay there all 
  
  night, that they might spend it in discoursing of the joys of 
  
  heaven. But by no persuasion would he agree unto that, saying 
  
  that he might not by any means tarry all night out of his Abbey.  
 At that time, the sky was so clear that no cloud was to be seen.  
  
  The Nun, receiving this denial of her brother, joining her hands 
  
  together, laid them upon the table: and so, bowing down her head 
  
  upon them, she made her prayers to almighty God: and lifting her 
  
  head from the table, there fell suddenly such a tempest of 
  
  lightning and thundering, and such abundance of rain, that 
  
  neither venerable Bennet, nor his monks that were with him, 
  
  could put their head out of door: for the holy Nun, resting her 
  
  head upon her hands, poured forth such a flood of tears upon the 
  
  table, that she drew the clear air to a watery sky, so that 
  
  after the end of her devotions, that storm of rain followed: and 
  
  her prayer and the rain did so meet together, that as she lifted 
  
  up her head from the table, the thunder began, so that in one 
  
  and the very same instant, she lifted up her head and brought 
  
  down the rain. The man of God, seeing that he could not by 
  
  reason of such thunder and lightning and great abundance of 
  
  rain return back to his Abbey, began to be heavy and to 
  
  complain of his sister, saying: "God forgive you, what have you 
  
  done?" to whom she answered: "I desired you to stay, and you 
  
  would not hear me, I have desired our good Lord, and he hath 
  
  vouchsafed to grant my petition: wherefore if you can now 
  
  depart, in God's name return to your monastery, and leave me here 
  
  alone."  
 But the good father, being not able to go forth, tarried 
  
  there against his will, where willingly before he would not 
  
  stay. And so by that means they watched all night, and with 
  
  spiritual and heavenly talk did mutually comfort one another: 
  
  and therefore by this we see, as I said before, that he would 
  
  have had that thing, which yet he could not: for if we respect 
  
  the venerable man's mind, no question but he would have had the 
  
  same fair weather to have continued as it was, when he set 
  
  forth, but he found that a miracle did prevent his desire, 
  
  which, by the power of almighty God, a woman's prayers had 
  
  wrought. And it is not a thing to be marvelled at, that a woman 
  
  which of long time had not seen her brother, might do more at 
  
  that time than he could, seeing, according to the saying of St.  
  
  John, "God is charity" [1 John 4:8] and therefore of right she 
  
  did more which loved more.  
 PETER: I confess that I am wonderfully pleased with that which 
  
  you tell me.  
  
CHAPTER THIRTY-FOUR: HOW BENNET SAW THE SOUL OF HIS SISTER 
  
  ASCEND INTO HEAVEN. 
 GREGORY: The next day the venerable woman returned to her 
  
  Nunnery, and the man of God to his Abbey: who three days after, 
  
  standing in his cell, and lifting up his eyes to heaven, beheld 
  
  the soul of his sister (which was departed from her body), in 
  
  the likeness of a dove to ascend into heaven: who rejoicing much 
  
  to see her great glory, with hymns and lauds gave thanks to 
  
  almighty God, and did impart the news of this her death to his 
  
  monks, whom also he sent presently to bring her corpse to his 
  
  Abbey, to have it buried in that grave which he had provided for 
  
  himself: by means whereof it fell out that, as their souls were 
  
  always one in God whiles they lived, so their bodies continued 
  
  together after their death.  
  
CHAPTER THIRTY-FIVE: HOW HE SAW THE WHOLE WORLD 
  
  REPRESENTED BEFORE HIS EYES; AND ALSO THE SOUL OF GERMANUS, 
  
  BISHOP OF CAPUA, ASCENDING TO HEAVEN. 
 At another time, Servandus, the Deacon, and Abbot of that 
  
  monastery, which in times past was founded by the noble man 
  
  Liberius in the country of Campania, used ordinarily to come and 
  
  visit the man of God: and the reason why he came so often was, 
  
  because himself also was a man full of heavenly doctrine: and so 
  
  they two had often together spiritual conference, to the end 
  
  that, albeit they could not perfectly feed upon the celestial 
  
  food of heaven, yet, by means of such sweet discourses, they 
  
  might at least, with longing and fervent desire, taste of those 
  
  joys and divine delights. When it was time to go to rest, the 
  
  venerable Father Bennet reposed himself in the top of a tower, 
  
  at the foot whereof Servandus the Deacon was lodged, so that one 
  
  pair of stairs went to them both: before the tower there was a 
  
  certain large room in which both their disciples did lie.  
 The man of God, Bennet, being diligent in watching, rose early up 
  
  before the time of matins (his monks being yet at rest) and came 
  
  to the window of his chamber, where he offered up his prayers to 
  
  almighty God. Standing there, all on a sudden in the dead of the 
  
  night, as he looked forth, he saw a light, which banished away 
  
  the darkness of the night, and glittered with such brightness, 
  
  that the light which did shine in the midst of darkness was far 
  
  more clear than the light of the day. Upon this sight a 
  
  marvellous strange thing followed, for, as himself did afterward 
  
  report, the whole world, gathered as it were together under one 
  
  beam of the sun, was presented before his eyes, and whiles the 
  
  venerable father stood attentively beholding the brightness of 
  
  that glittering light, he saw the soul of Germanus, Bishop of 
  
  Capua, in a fiery globe to be carried up by Angels into heaven.  
 Then, desirous to have some witness of this so notable a 
  
  miracle, he called with a very loud voice Servandus the Deacon 
  
  twice or thrice by his name, who, troubled at such an unusual 
  
  crying out of the man of God, went up in all haste, and looking 
  
  forth saw not anything else, but a little remnant of the light, 
  
  but wondering at so great a miracle, the man of God told him all 
  
  in order what he had seen, and sending by and by to the town of 
  
  Cassino, he commanded the religious man Theoprobus to dispatch 
  
  one that night to the city of Capua, to learn what was become of 
  
  Germanus their Bishop: which being done, the messenger found 
  
  that reverent Prelate departed this life, and enquiring 
  
  curiously the time, he understood that he died at that very 
  
  instant, in which the man of God beheld him ascending up to 
  
  heaven.  
 PETER: A strange thing and very much to be admired. But whereas 
  
  you say that the whole world, as it were under one sunbeam, was 
  
  presented before his eyes, as I must needs confess that in 
  
  myself I never had experience of any such thing, so neither can 
  
  I conceive by what means the whole world can be seen of any one 
  
  man.  
 GREGORY: Assure yourself, Peter, of that which I speak: to wit, 
  
  that all creatures be as it were nothing to that soul which 
  
  beholdeth the Creator: for though it see but a glimpse of that 
  
  light which is in the Creator, yet very small do all things seem 
  
  that be created: for by means of that supernatural light, the 
  
  capacity of the inward soul is enlarged, and is in God so 
  
  extended, that it is far above the world: yea and the soul of 
  
  him that seeth in this manner, is also above itself; for being 
  
  rapt up in the light of God, it is inwardly in itself enlarged 
  
  above itself, and when it is so exalted and looketh downward, 
  
  then doth it comprehend how little all that is, which before in 
  
  former baseness it could not comprehend. The man of God, 
  
  therefore, who saw the fiery globe, and the Angels returning to 
  
  heaven, out of all doubt could not see those things but in the 
  
  light of God: what marvel, then, is it, if he saw the world 
  
  gathered together before him, who, rapt up in the light of his 
  
  soul, was at that time out of the world? But albeit we say that 
  
  the world was gathered together before his eyes, yet were not 
  
  heaven and earth drawn into any lesser room than they be of 
  
  themselves, but the soul of the beholder was more enlarged, 
  
  which, rapt in God, might without difficulty see that which is 
  
  under God, and therefore in that light which appeared to his 
  
  outward eyes, the inward light which was in his soul ravished 
  
  the mind of the beholder to supernal things, and shewed him how 
  
  small all earthly things were.  
 PETER: I perceive now that it was to my more profit that I 
  
  understood you not before: seeing, by reason of my slow 
  
  capacity, you have delivered so notable an exposition. But now, 
  
  because you have made me thrughly to understand these things, I 
  
  beseech you to continue on your former narration.  
  
CHAPTER THIRTY-SIX:  HOW HOLY BENNET WROTE A RULE FOR HIS MONKS. 
 GREGORY.  Desirous I am, Peter, to tell you many things of this 
  
  venerable father, but some of purpose I let pass, because I make 
  
  haste to entreat also of the acts of other holy men:  yet I would 
  
  not have you to be ignorant, but that the man of God amongst so 
  
  many miracles, for which he was so famous in the world, was also 
  
  sufficiently learned in divinity:  for he wrote a rule for his 
  
  monks, both excellent for discretion and also eloquent for the 
  
  style.  Of whose life and conversation, if any be curious to know 
  
  further, he may in the institution of that rule understand all 
  
  his manner of life and discipline:  for the holy man could not 
  
  otherwise teach, than himself lived.  
  
CHAPTER THIRTY-SEVEN:  HOW VENERABLE BENNET DID PROPHESY TO HIS 
  
  MONKS THE TIME OF HIS OWN DEATH.  
 The same year in which he departed this life, he told the day of 
  
  his holy death to his monks, some of which did live daily with 
  
  him, and some dwelt far off, willing those that were present to 
  
  keep it secret, and telling them that were absent by what token 
  
  they should know that he was dead.  Six days before he left this 
  
  world, he gave order to have his sepulchre opened, and forthwith 
  
  falling into an ague, he began with burning heat to wax faint, 
  
  and when as the sickness daily increased, upon the sixth day he 
  
  commanded his monks to carry him into the oratory, where he did 
  
  arm himself with receiving the body and blood of our Saviour 
  
  Christ; and having his weak body holden up betwixt the hands of 
  
  his disciples, he stood with his own lifted up to heaven, and as 
  
  he was in that manner praying, he gave up the ghost.  Upon which 
  
  day two monks, one being in his cell, and the other far distant, 
  
  had concerning him one and the self-same vision:  for they saw 
  
  all the way from the holy man's cell, towards the east even up to 
  
  heaven, hung and adorned with tapestry, and shining with an 
  
  infinite number of lamps, at the top whereof a man, reverently 
  
  attired, stood and demanded if they knew who passed that way, to 
  
  whom they answered saying, that they knew not.  Then he spake 
  
  thus unto them:  "This is the way," quoth he, "by which the 
  
  beloved servant of God, Bennet, is ascended up to heaven."  And 
  
  by this means, as his monks that were present knew of the death 
  
  of the holy man, so likewise they which were absent, by the token 
  
  which he foretold them, had intelligence of the same thing.  
  
  Buried he was in the oratory of St. John Baptist which himself 
  
  built, when he overthrew the altar of Apollo; who also in that 
  
  cave in which he first dwelled, even to this very time, worketh 
  
  miracles, if the faith of them that pray requireth the same.  
  
CHAPTER THIRTY-EIGHT:  HOW A MAD WOMAN WAS CURED IN HIS CAVE.  
 For the thing which I mean now to rehearse fell out lately.  A certain 
  
  woman falling mad, lost the use of reason so far, that she walked up 
  
  and down, day and night, in mountains and valleys, in woods and fields, 
  
  and rested only in that place where extreme weariness enforced her to 
  
  stay.  Upon a day it so fell out, that albeit she wandered at random, 
  
  yet she missed not the right way: for she came to the cave of the 
  
  blessed man Bennet: and not knowing anything, in she went, and reposed 
  
  herself there that night, and rising up in the morning, she departed as 
  
  sound in sense and well in her wits, as though she had never been 
  
  distracted in her whole life, and so continued always after, even to 
  
  her dying day.  
 PETER: What is the reason that in the patronage of martyrs we often 
  
  times find, that they do not afford so great benefit by their bodies, 
  
  as they do by other of their relics: and do there work greater 
  
  miracles, where themselves be not present?  
 GREGORY: Where the holy martyrs lie in their bodies, there is no 
  
  doubt, Peter, but that they are able to work many miracles, yea and 
  
  also do work infinite, to such as seek them with a pure mind.  But 
  
  for as much as simple people might have some doubt whether they be 
  
  present, and do in those places hear their prayers where their 
  
  bodies be not, necessary it is that they should in those places 
  
  shew greater miracles, where weak souls may most doubt of their 
  
  presence.  
 But he whose mind is fixed in God, hath so much the greater merit 
  
  of his faith in that he both knoweth that they rest not there in 
  
  body, and yet be there present to hear our prayers.  And therefore 
  
  our Saviour himself, to increase the faith of his disciples, said: 
  
  "If I do not depart, the Comforter will not come unto you," [John 
  
  16:7]: for, seeing certain it is that the comforting Spirit doth 
  
  always proceed from the Father and the Son, why doth the Son say 
  
  that he will depart that the Comforter may come, who never is 
  
  absent from the Son?  But because the disciples, beholding our Lord 
  
  in flesh, did always desire to see him with their corporal eyes, 
  
  very well did he say unto them: "Unless I do go away, the Comforter 
  
  will not come:" as though he had plainly told them: If I do not 
  
  withdraw my body, I cannot let you understand what the love of the 
  
  spirit is: and except you give over [cease] to love my carnal presence, 
  
  never will you learn to affect me with true spiritual love.  
 PETER: That you say pleaseth me very well.  
 GREGORY: Let us now for a while give over our discourse, to the end 
  
  that if we mean to prosecute the miracles of other Saints, we may 
  
  through silence be the more able to perform it.  
 The end of the Second Book  
  The St. Pachomius Orthodox Library,  
 Have mercy, O Lord, on Thy servants the translator P.W., the editor Edmund, 
  
  and the scribes Boris, Deborah, Demetrios, Edward, Gerald, Jeff, Larry, 
  
  Mary, Matthew, Paul, Robert, Steven, Susan, Timothy, and Walter.  
 
               THE END, AND TO GOD BE THE GLORY!  
 
 
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 Paul Halsall  Mar 1996  
  halsall@murray.fordham.edu  
 
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