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Life of St.
Elizabeth of Hungary
from:
The Golden Legend or Lives of
the Saints
Compiled by Jacobus de Voragine, Archbishop of Genoa, 1275 First
Edition Published 1470
Englished by William Caxton, First Edition 1483
VOLUME SIX
From the Temple Classics Edited by F.S. ELLIS First issue of this
Edition, 1900 Reprinted 1922, 1931
This text is in the Public Domain
Of S. Elizabeth.
Elizabeth was daughter of
the noble king of Hungary, and was of noble lineage, but she was
more noble by her faith and religion than by her right noble
lineage. She was right noble by example, she shone by miracle, and
she was fair by grace of holiness, for the author of nature enhanced
her in a manner above nature. When this holy maid was nourished in
delices royal she renounced all childishness, and set herself all in
the service of God. Then it appeared clearly as her tender infancy
enforced in simpless, and began to use good customs from then
forthon, and to despise the plays of the world, and of vanities, and
flee the prosperities of the world, and always to profit in the
honour of God. For when she was yet but five years old she abode so
ententively in the church for to pray, that her fellows or her
chamberers might unnethe bring her thence, and when she met any of
her chamberers or fellows, she would follow them toward the chapel
as it were for to play, for to have cause to enter into the church.
And when she was entered, anon she kneeled down and lay down to the
earth, howbeit that she knew not yet any letters; and she opened oft
the psalter tofore her in the church for to feign that she read,
because she should not be let, and that she should be seen occupied.
And when she was with other maidens for to play, she considered well
the manner of the game for to give always honour to God under
occasion, and in play of rings and other games she set all her hope
in God. And of all that she won and had of any part profit when she
was a young maid, she gave the tenth to poor maidens, and led them
ofttimes with her for to say paternoster or for to salute our Lady.
And like as she grew in age by time so grew she by devotion, for she
choose the blessed Virgin to be her lady and her advocate, and S.
John the Evangelist to be warden of her virginity. And on a time
there were schedules laid on the altar, and in every schedule was
written the name of an apostle, and each of the other maidens took,
at all adventure, such a schedule as happed to her. And she made her
orison, and thrice she took the same that she desired, in which was
written the name of S. Peter, to whom she had so great devotion that
she never warned thing to them that demanded it in his name. And
because that the good adventures of the world should not flatter her
over much, she withdrew every day something of her prosperities, and
when she took in any game any pleasure, anon she left it, and said
she would play no more, but she would say: I leave you the remnant
for God's sake. She went not gladly to karols, but withdrew other
maidens from them. She doubted always to wear jolly clothing, but
she used always to have them honest. She had ordained to say every
day a certain number of orisons and prayers, and if she were
occupied in any manner that she might not perform them, but that she
was constrained of her chamberers to go to her bed, she would there
say them, waking. This holy virgin honoured all the solemn feasts of
the year with so great reverence that she would not suffer her
sleeves to be laced till the solemnity of the mass was accomplished,
and she heard the office of the mass with so great reverence that
when the gospel was read or the sacrament was lifted up, she would
take off the brooches of gold and the adornments of her head, as
circles or chaplets, and lay them down.
And when she had kept in
innocence the degree of virginity, she was constrained to enter into
the degree of marriage, for her father constrained her thereto,
because she should bring forth fruit. And howbeit that she would not
have been married, yet she durst not gainsay the commandment of her
father. Then she avowed in the hands of Master Conrad, which was a
good man and her confessor, and promised that if her husband died
and she overlived him, that she would keep perpetual continence.
Then was she married to the landgrave of Thuringia, like as the
divine purveyance had ordained because she should bring much people
to the love of our Lord, and teach the rude people. And howbeit she
changed her estate, yet she changed not her will in her thought, and
she was of great humility and of great devotion to God, and was
towards herself of great abstinence and of great mercy. She was of
so right ardent desire of prayer that she oft went sooner to the
church than her meiny, to the end that by her prayers secret she
might impetre and get grace of God. She arose oft by night for to
make her prayers, and her husband would pray her that she would lie
and rest her a little. She had ordained that one of her women, which
was more familiar with her than another, that if peradventure she
were overtaken with sleep, that she should take her by the foot, for
to awake her, and on a time she supposed to have taken her lady by
the foot, and took her husband's foot, which suddenly awoke, and
would know wherefore she did so, and then she told to him all the
case, and when he knew it, he let it pass and suffered it peaceably.
And because she would render good sacrifice to God of her prayers,
she wetted oft her body with abundance of tears, and let them flow
out of her eyes gladly without changing of semblance, so that oft
she wept with great sorrow, and she yet enjoyed in God. She was of
so great humility that, for the love of God, she laid in her lap a
man horribly sick, which had his visage stinking like carrion, and
she share off the ordure and filth of his head, and washed it,
whereof her chamberers loathed and laughed her to scorn. And she
would in rogation time follow the procession barefoot and without
linen smock, and at the preaching she would sit among the poor
people. She would not array her with precious stones, as others, on
the day of Purification of our Lady, ne wear rich vesture of gold,
but after the ensample of the Blessed Virgin Mary, she bare her son
in her arms and a lamb and a candle, and offered it up humbly. And
by that she showed that the pomp and bobance of the world should be
eschewed, and that she conformed her unto the Virgin Mary; and when
she came home she gave to some poor women the clothes in which she
went to church. She was of so great humility that by the consenting
of her husband she submitted herself in the obedience of Master
Conrad, a poor man and a small, but he was of noble science and
perfect religion, and she did with joy and reverence that which he
commanded, for to have the merit of obedience, like as God was
obedient unto the death. On a time it happed that she was called for
to go to his preaching, and the marquis of Messence came upon her by
whom she was let, and might not go thither. Wherefore he held him
evil apaid, and would not release her obedience till that she was
despoiled to her smock, with some of her chamberers which were
culpable, and that he had strongly beaten them. She did so great
abstinence, that at the table of her husband, among the divers meats
that were there, she would not eat but bread. She took so great
rigour on herself that she waxed lean. For Master Conrad defended
her that she should not touch the meats of her husband of which she
should not have a whole conscience. And she kept this commandment
with so great diligence, that when others abounded in delices she
ate with her chamberers gross meats. On a time when she had sore
travelled in going, there were brought to her and to her husband
divers meats, and were supposed not well gotten of good and just
labour, wherefore she refused them and took her refection of a hard
brown loaf tempered with water, and for this cause her husband
assigned a pension to her, by which she and her chamberers consented
for to live by, and her husband suffered all in patience, and said
he would gladly do so if he doubted not to anger his meiny. And she,
that was in sovereign glory, desired the estate of sovereign
poverty, to the end that the world should have nothing in her, and
that she should be poor like as Jesu Christ had been. And when she
was alone with her chamberers, she would clothe her with poor
vestments and vile, and set a poor veil upon her head and said: Thus
shall I go when I shall come to the estate of poverty. And though
she did abstinence, yet was she liberal to the poor, so that she
might not suffer that any had misease, but gave to them all largely.
She entended with all her power to the seven works of mercy.
She gave on a time to a poor
woman a right good vesture, and when this poor woman saw that she
had so noble a gift, she had so great joy that she fell down as
dead, and when the blessed Elizabeth saw that, she was sorry that
she had given to her so noble a gift, and doubted that she was the
cause of her death, and prayed for her, and anon she arose all
whole. And she span oft wool with her chamberers and made thereof
cloth, so that of her proper labour that she gave to the church, she
received glorious fruit, and gave good ensample unto others.
On a time when her husband
the landgrave was gone to the court of the emperor, which was then
at Cremona, she assembled in a garner all the wheat of the year, and
administered part to every each that came from all parts, and that
time was great dearth in the country, and oft when she lacked money
she sold off her adornments for to give to the poor people, but for
all that she gave, the garners minished not ne lessed. She did do
make a great house under the castle, where she received and
nourished great multitude of poor people, and visited them every
day, and she left not to visit them for any sickness ne malady that
they had, but she washed and wiped them with her own hands, howbeit
that her chamberers would not suffer it. And yet moreover then she
did do nourish in her house poor women's children so sweetly, that
they all called her mother. She did do make sepultures for poor
people, and went devoutly unto the death of them, and would bury
them with her own hands in the clothes that she had made, and
ofttimes brought the sheet wherein she lay for to wind the dead
bodies therein, and was at the death of them much devoutly.
And among these things the
devotion of her husband was much to be praised, for how well he was
occupied in his other things, nevertheless he was devout in the
service of God, and because he might not himself entend personally
unto his things, he gave full power to his wife in all that should
be to the honour or to the health of their souls.
And the blessed S. Elizabeth
had great desire that her husband should employ his puissance to
defend the faith of God, and advised him, by debonair admonishments,
that he should go visit the holy land and thither he went, and when
he was there, this devout and noble prince, full of faith and of
devotion rendered his spirit unto Almighty God, and so died,
receiving the glorious fruit of his works, and then she received
with devotion the state of widowhood. And when the death of her
husband was published and known through all Thuringia, some of the
vassals of her husband held her for a fool and wastrels of her
goods, and threw her out of her heritage. And because her patience
were more clear and that she had the poverty that she long desired,
she went then by night into the house of a taverner in the place
where the pots lay, and gave great thankings to God. And at the hour
of matins she came into the house of the friars minor, and prayed
them that they would give laud and thankings to God for her
tribulation.
And the day following, she
came with her little children to a place and into the house of one
her enemy, and then was delivered to her a strait place for to dwell
in. And when she saw that she was much grieved of the host and
hostess, then she saluted the walls and said: I should gladly salute
the men, but I find them not. And thus she being constrained by
necessity, she sent her small children here and there for to be
nourished in divers places, and returned herself into the first
place. And as she went, there was a strait way upon stones and a
deep mire under, and full of filth; and as she passed she met an old
woman to whom she had done much good tofore, and this old woman
would give her no way, so that she fell in the deep mire and filth,
and then she arose and scraped her vesture and laughed.
And after this, one, her
aunt, had great pity of her, and sent her wisely to her uncle,
bishop of Bamberg, which received her much honestly, and retained
her in entent to marry her again. And when her chamberers heard
thereof; which had vowed continence with her, they were passing
wrath and wept, and she comforted them and said: I trust in our
Lord, for the love of whom I have vowed continence perdurable, that
he shall keep me in my purpose and shall take away all violence and
shall corrupt all counsel human; and if mine uncle would marry me to
any man I shall withstand it to my power and shall gainsay it with
words. And if I may not so escape I shall cut off my nose so that
every man shall hate me for my loathliness. And then the bishop did
do lead her in a castle against her will, for to abide there till
that some man should demand to have her in marriage. And she
commended to our Lord her chastity, all weeping. And then our Lord
ordained that the bones of her husband should be brought from over
sea, and then the bishop made her to come and go devoutly to meet
the bones of her husband. And then the bones were received of the
bishop with right great honour, and of her with great devotion, and
weepings of tears. And then she said to our Lord: Sire, I render to
thee graces and thankings of this, that I may receive the bones of
my sweet husband, and that thou hast vouchsaufed to comfort me, poor
caitiff. Sire, I loved him much which loved thee, and Lord, for the
love of thee I suffered well his presence. And I sent him unto the
help of the holy land, and I call thee to witness that howbeit that
it were a delectable thing to me to live yet with him, so that he
were poor and I also a poor beggar through the world; but that
against thy will I would not buy him again with a hair, and I would
not return again to temporal life. Lord, I commend me and him into
thy grace. And then she clad her with habit religious and kept
perpetual continence after the death of her husband, and obedience
performed. She took wilful poverty, and her clothing was coarse and
vile. She wore a russet mantle, her gown of another foul colour, the
sleeves of her coat were broken, and amended with pieces of other
colour.
Her father, king of Hungary,
when he heard that his daughter was come to the estate of poverty,
he sent an earl to her for to bring her to her father, and when the
earl saw her sit in such a habit and spinning, he cried for sorrow,
and said there was never king's daughter that ware such a habit ne
seen spinning wool. And when he had done his message and desired to
have brought her to her father, she in no wise would accord to it,
but had liefer to be needy among the poor people than to abound in
great riches with rich people, to the end that she should not be
empeshed, but that her will and mind should be always in our Lord.
And she prayed our Lord that he would give to her grace to despise
all earthly things and take away from her heart the love of her
children, and to be firm and constant against the persecutions. And
when she had accomplished her prayer she heard our Lord saying: Thy
prayer is heard. And said she to her chamberers: Our Lord hath heard
my voice, for I repute all earthly things as dung and filth, and set
no more by mine own children than I do by other men's and my
neighbours, ne I love none other thing but our Lord. Master Conrad
did to her oft things contrary and grievous, and such things as he
saw that she loved, that removed he and took away from her company.
And took from her two maidens, her chamberers, beloved among all
others, and had been nourished with her from her childhood. And this
holy man did this for to break her will, so that she should set all
love in our Lord, and to the end that she should not remember her
first glory. In all these things she was hasty for to obey, and
constant to suffer, that by patience she might possess her soul, and
by obedience to be made fair and ennobled. She said: If I, only for
God's sake, dread so much a man mortal, how much more ought I to
dread and doubt the heavenly judge. Therefore I make obedience to
Master Conrad, a poor man and a beggar, and not to a rich bishop,
because I would put away from me all occasion of temporal comfort.
On a time because she went into a cloister of nuns, which prayed her
diligently for to visit them, without licence of her master, he beat
her so sore therefor that the strokes appeared in her three weeks
after, by which she showed to our Lord that her obedience was more
pleasing than the offering of a thousand hosties. Better is
obedience than sacrifice. She was of so great humility that she
would suffer in no wise that her chamberers should call her lady,
but that they should speak and say to her as to the lowest and least
of them. She washed otherwhile the dishes and the vessel of the
kitchen, and she hid her otherwhile that the chamberers should not
let her, and she would say: If I could find another life more
despised I would have taken it; she chose the best. She had a
special grace to weep abundantly tears, for to see celestial
visions, and for to inflame the hearts of others to the love of God.
On a day of the holy Lent
she was in the church and she beheld ententively the altar like as
she had been in the presence divine, and there she was comforted by
revelation divine. And then she returned to her house and prophesied
of herself that she should see Jesu Christ in heaven: and anon as
she lay down for feebleness in the lap of her chamberer, she began
to look up into heaven, and she was so glad that she began
debonairly to laugh, and when she had been long joyful she was
suddenly turned into weeping, and then she looked up to heavenward
again, and anon she returned into her first joy; and when she closed
her eyes she began to weep, and in this manner she abode till
compline, and had divine visions, and then she was still a while,
and said thus after: Lord, wilt thou be with me, and I with thee, ne
I will not depart from thee. After these things the chamberers
desired her to tell to them why she had so laughed and wept, and she
said: I have seen heaven open and Jesu Christ which inclined him
debonairly to me, and I was glad of the vision and wept for to
depart from it, and he said to me: If thou wilt be with me, I shall
be with thee, and I answered like as ye heard. Her prayer was of so
great ardour that she drew others to good living.
On a time she saw a young
man, and she called him to her, and said to him: Thou livest
dissoIutely, and thou oughtest to serve God, wilt thou that I pray
for thee? He said: I will well and require it of you desirously. And
then she prayed for him, and the young man also prayed for himself,
and anon the young man began to cry: Cease ye, lady, and leave off,
but she prayed always more ententively, and he began to cry: Cease!
lady, cease! for I begin to fail and am all burnt, and he was
esprised with so great heat that he sweat and fled, as he had been
from himself, so that many ran, which despoiled him for his great
heat, and they themselves might unnethe suffer the heat of him. And
when she had accomplished her prayer the young man left his heat,
and came again to himself, and by the grace that was given to him he
entered into the order of the friars minor, and when he had taken
the habit of religion she prayed for him so affectuously that by her
fervent prayers she made him that so burned to be cold, and left his
dissolute life and took upon him a ghostly and spiritual life. And
then this blessed Elizabeth received the habit of religion and put
herself diligently to the works of mercy, for she received for her
dower two hundred marks, whereof she gave a part to poor people, and
of that other part she made a hospital, and therefore she was called
a wasteress and a fool, which all she suffered joyously. And when
she had made this hospital she became herself as an humble chamberer
in the service of the poor people, and she bare her so humbly in
that service, that by night she bare the sick men between her arms
for to let them do their necessities, and brought them again, and
made clean their clothes and sheets that were foul. She brought the
mesels abed, and washed their sores and did all that longed to a
hospitaller. And when she had no poor man she would spin wool which
was sent to her from an abbey, and such as she gat whereof she gave
to the poor people, and when she had been in much poverty she
received five hundred marks of her dowry, which she gave unto the
poor much ordinately. And then she made an ordinance that whosomever
removed his place in prejudice of another when she gave her alms,
should have his hair cut off or shorn. Then came a maid named
Radegonde, which shone by the beauty of her hair, and passed by, not
for to have alms, but for to visit her sister which was sick, and
she commanded anon that her hair should be cut off, and she wept and
gainsaid it. And there was a man which said that she was innocent.
Then S. Elizabeth said: Then at the least, said she, she shall swear
that she shall no more, because of her hair, go to dances ne karols,
ne haunt such vanities. And S. Elizabeth demanded of her if ever she
was disposed or were in purpose to use the way of health, and she
answered that if she had not had that fair hair, she had long since
taken the habit of religion. And she said: I had liefer that thou
shouldest lose thine hair than my son were made emperor. And then
anon the maid took habit of religion with S. Elizabeth, and finished
her life laudably.
When the time approached
that God had ordained, that she which had despised the reign mortal
should have the reign of angels, she lay sick of the fevers and
turned her to the wall, and they that were there heard her put out a
sweet melody; and when one of the chamberers had enquired of her
what it was, she answered and said: A bird came between me and the
wall and sang so sweetly that it provoked me to sing with it. She
was always in her malady glad and jocund, and ne ceased of prayer.
The last day tofore her departing, she said to her chamberers: What
will ye do if the devil come to you? And after a little while she
cried with a high voice: Flee ! flee! flee ! like as she had chased
away the devil, and after, she said: The midnight approacheth in
which Jesu Christ was born; it is now time that God call his friends
to his heavenly weddings. And thus, the year of our Lord twelve
hundred and thirty-one, she gave up her spirit and slept in our
Lord, and though the body lay four days unburied, yet came there no
stench from it, but a sweet odour aromatic came, which refreshed all
them that were there. Then there was heard and seen a multitude of
birds, so many that there hath not been seen the like tofore, over
the church, and began a song of right great melody, like as it had
been the obsequies of her, and their song was: Regnum mundi, which
is sung in the praising of virgins. There was a great cry of poor
people for her and much devotion of people, so that some took a hair
of her head, and some a part of her clothes, which they kept for
great relics. And then her body was put in a monument, which after
was found to redound in oil, and many fair miracles were showed at
her tomb after her death. It was well showed in the dying of S.
Elizabeth of what holiness she was, as well in the modulation of the
bird as in the expulsion of the devil. That bird that was between
her and the wall, and provoked her to sing, is supposed to be her
good angel, which was deputed to her, and brought her tidings that
she should go to the everlasting joy, and in like wise is showed to
cursed men otherwhile their everlasting damnation.
In the parts of Saxony there
was a monk that hight Henry, which was fallen in so great a sickness
that he cried and would suffer no creature to have rest about him in
the house. On a night appeared to him an honourable lady clad in
white, which advised him that he should vow him to S. Elizabeth if
he would have his health, and the next night she appeared to him in
like wise, and then by the counsel of his abbot he made the vow. The
third night she appeared to him again and made the sign of the cross
upon him, and he then received anon full health and was perfectly
whole. And when the abbot and the prior came to him, they were
greatly amarvelled and doubted much the accomplishment of the avow,
and the prior said that, ofttimes under the likeness of good cometh
illusion of the fiend, and counselled him to be confessed of his
avow. And the night following the same person appeared unto him and
said: Thou shalt be always sick till thou hast accomplished and
fulfilled thine avow, and anon his infirmity took him again and
would not leave him. And afterwards, by the licence given of his
abbot, he accomplished his avow and was made all whole.
There was a maid demanded
drink of a servant of her father's, and she gave her drink and said:
The devil mayst thou drink, and she drank, and her seemed that fire
entered into her body. Then began she to cry and her belly to swell
like to a barrel, so that each man saw that she was demoniac, and
she was two years in that estate, and after was brought into the
tomb of S. Elizabeth, and was made perfectly whole and was delivered
of the fiend.
There was one Herman, a man
of the diocese of Cologne, which was holden in prison, and he called
with great devotion S. Elizabeth unto his help, and the night
following she appeared to him and comforted him. And on the morn
sentence was given against him that he should be hanged, and the
judge gave licence to his friends to take him down off the gallows,
and they bare him away all dead and began to pray S. Elizabeth for
hirn, and anon he arose from death to life tofore them all.
A child of four years old
was fallen into a pit and drowned, and a man came for to take water
and espied the dead child, and he was drawn out, and then they vowed
him to S. Elizabeth, and he was anon re-established to his first
life and health.
There was one Frederick, a
mariner, which was conning in swimming, and on a time baigned him in
a water, and he mocked a poor man which S. Elizabeth had enlumined,
and given again to him his sight. And the poor man said: This holy
lady which hath healed me will avenge me on thee, so that thou shalt
never come out of the water but dead, and anon the swimmer lost all
his strength and might not help himself but sank down to the bottom
like a stone, and was drowned, and then was drawn out of the water,
and forthwith some of his friends avowed him to S. Elizabeth and she
gave to him his life again.
There was a man named
Dietrich which was grievously vexed in his knees and in his thighs,
so that he might not go, and he avowed that he should go to the tomb
of S. Elizabeth, and was eight days on going thither, and abode
there a month, and had no remedy, and went again to his house, and
then he saw in his sleep a woman spring water on him, and awoke
withal and was angry, and said to her: Wherefore hast thou awaked me
and cast water on me? And then she said: I have wet thee, and this
wetting shall do to thee profit and ease, and then anon he arose all
whole and gave thankings to God and to S. Elizabeth. Then let us
pray to her that she pray for us, for such things as shall be for
the most profit of our souls. Amen. |