Page:Goldentreatiseof00pete.djvu/136

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so?" To him Christ replied: " Si male locutus sum, testimojiium perhibe de malo: si autem bene, quid me caedis?"[1] " If I have spoken evil, bring testimony of the evil, but if well, why strikest thou me?"

Behold, O my soul, not only the mild answer, but the print of the officer's hand in his tender cheek, his countenance, notwithstanding, quiet and amiable, not a whit moved at the shame of so great an affront, because he inwardly thought so low and humbly of himself, that he had turned the other side without delay, if the rascal had desired it.


A MEDITATION FOR WEDNESDAY.

This day thou shalt consider, how Christ our Lord was offered up to Caiphas the high priest; what torments he endured there all that night; how St. Peter denied him; and last of all, how cruelly he was scourged.

Consider, first of all, how he was led from the house of Annas to the house of Caiphas; it is worth thy pains to follow him thither; for there thou shalt see the mighty sun of justice eclipsed; there thou shalt behold that divine face, upon which, the angels themselves delight to gaze, deformed with the filthy spittings of the Jews; for our Blessed Saviour standing in the midst of them, was conjured by the high

  1. John xviii 23