Page:Curious myths of the Middle Ages (1876).djvu/247

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“God spakke to Saynt Patryke tho
 By nam, and badde hym with Hym go:
 He ladde hym ynte a wyldernesse,
 Wher was no reste more ne lesse,
 And shewed that he might se
 Inte the erthe a pryvé entré:
 Hit was yn a depe dyches ende.
 ‘What mon,’ He sayde, ‘that wylle hereyn wende,
 And dwelle theryn a day and a nyght,
 And hold his byleve and ryght,
 And come ageyn that he ne dwelle,
 Mony a mervayle he may of telle.
 And alle tho that doth thys pylgrymage,
 I shalle hem graunt for her wage,
 Whether he be sqwyer or knave,
 Other purgatorye shalle he non have.’”

Thereupon S. Patrick, “he ne stynte ner day ne night,” till he had built there a “fayr abbey,” and stocked it with pious canons. Then he made a door to the cave, and locked the door, and gave the key to the keeping of the prior[1]. The Knight Owain, who had served under King Stephen, had lived a life of violence and dissolution; but filled with repentance, he sought by way of penance S. Patrick’s Purgatory. Fifteen days he spent in preliminary devotions and alms-deeds, and then he heard mass, was washed with holy water, received the Holy Sacrament, and followed the sacred relics

  1. Wright, S. Patrick’s Purgatory, p. 65.