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The Little Flowers of Saint Francis of Assisi by Brother Ugolino
CHAPTER LV HOW ST FRANCIS APPEARED, AFTER HIS DEATH, TO BROTHER JOHN OF ALVERNIA, WHILE HE WAS IN PRAYER
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St Francis once appeared on Mount Alvernia to Brother John of Alvernia,
a man of great sanctity, while he was in prayer, and spoke with him for
a long space of time; and before he departed he said to him: "Ask of me
what thou wilt." Then Brother John made answer: "Father, I pray thee,
tell me that which I have long desired to know, - what thou wast doing,
and where thou wast, when the seraph appeared to thee." And St Francis
replied: "I was praying in that place whereon the chapel of Count Simon
da Battifolle now stands, and I asked two favours of my Lord Jesus
Christ. The first was that he would grant to me in my lifetime to feel,
as far as might be possible, both in my soul and body, all that he had
suffered in his most bitter Passion. The second favour which I asked
was, that I might feel in my heart that exceeding love which enkindled
his, and moved him to endure so great a Passion for us sinners. And
then God put it into my heart that it was granted to me to feel both,
as far as is possible for a mere creature; and this promise was well
fulfilled to me by the impression of the stigmata." Then Brother John
asked him whether those sacred words spoken to him by the seraph had
been truly related by the brother who affirmed that he had heard them
from the mouth of St Francis, in the presence of eight friars. And St
Francis made answer, that they were even so as that brother had said.
Then Brother John, emboldened to ask by the saint's liberality in
granting his requests, said thus: "O Father, I beseech thee most
earnestly that thou wilt suffer to see and kiss thy glorious, sacred
stigmata; not that I have any doubt upon the matter, but because such
has always been my most earnest desire." And St Francis graciously
showing them to him, Brother John plainly saw and touched and kissed
them. Lastly he said to him: "Father, grant me, if it be the will of
God, to feel in some small measure the consolation which thou didst
experience when thou didst behold our dear Lord come down to thee to
give thee the stigmata of his most holy Passion." Then St Francis
replied: "Dost thou see these nails?" "Yes, Father," said Brother John.
"Touch once more," said St Francis, "this nail which is in my hand."
Then Brother John, with great fear and reverence, touched that nail,
and as he touched it there issued forth from it a perfume, with as it
were a little cloud of incense, which, entering the nostrils of Brother
John, filled both his soul and body with such overpowering sweetness
that he was immediately rapt in God: and in that ecstasy he remained
insensible from that hour, which was the hour of Tierce, until Vespers.
And of that vision and familiar converse with St Francis, Brother John
never spoke to any save to his confessor till the day of his death; but
on his deathbed he revealed it to several of the brethren.
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