ps, he commanded the brethren to
refresh their bodies well, with sobriety, rendering thanks to Christ
for his gifts.
This is the Last Supper of Saint Ciaran with his brethren in his life,
he himself ministering unto them; for he lived thereafter but few
days. And that supper was most generous, excelling all the suppers
that were made in the monastery of Saint Kiaranus, as is proved thus--
For after a long time, when Saint Columba with his followers had come
to Ireland from the island of Hia, a great feast was prepared for them
in the monastery of Saint Kiaranus in his settlement of Cluain; and
when they had come to the religious house of Saint Kiaranus, they were
received with great joy and love, and were refreshed most bounteously
with that repast; and the fame of that supper went over the whole
settlement and its suburbs, far and wide.
When, in the house of the holy elders, who had a little cell apart in
the monastery of Saint Kiaranus, certain persons said in ignorance
that never in that place had such a feast been made, nor would be in
the future, one, who had been a boy when Saint Kiaranus lived there,
answered: "Ye know not whereat ye wonder: for the feast which Saint
Kiaranus our patron made, of water turned to wine, for his brethren
athirst after harvesting, was far better than this feast. And that ye
may know this, and may believe that it is true, come and perceive the
odour of my finger with which I drew of that wine for the brethren.
For my thumb touched the liquor through the mouth of the cup in which
the wine was drawn; and lo, even yet its odour remains thereupon."
Then they all drew near, and being sated with the pleasant and sweet
odour of that holy elder, they cried aloud saying, "Truly much better
was that feast whose odour remains on a finger most sweet for so long
a time." And they blessed Saint Kiaranus, giving praises to God.
And in those days, in which the brethren of Saint Kiaranus were sowing
their crops, there came merchants with wine of the Gauls to Saint
Kiaranus, and they filled a huge vessel, the _solitana_ of the
brethren, from that wine, which Saint Kiaranus gave to his brethren
with his benediction.
XLIX. THE DEATH OF CIARAN
35. Our most holy patron Kiaranus lived but for one year in his
settlement of Cluain. When he knew that the day of his death was
approaching, he prophesied, deploring the subsequent evils that would
come to pass in his place after him; and he said that
|