Patrick, is
praised of all; and the child also is magnified who was so powerful in
Him, great and worthy of all praise.
CHAPTER V.
_How he produced Fire from Ice._
Though Saint Patrick, in his childish years, sometimes thought as a
child and acted as a child, yet do his illustrious works declare how
precious was he in the eyes of Him who was for us born a child. And on
a certain day, the winter then freezing everything, the boy Patrick,
being engaged in their sports with boys of his own age, gathered many
pieces of ice in his bosom, and bore them home, and cast them down in
the court-yard; but his nurse, seeing this, said to him that it were
better he had collected wood for the hearth than have played with
pieces of ice. And the boy, speaking with the tongue of an aged man,
answered unto her: "It is easy for the Lord, who created all things,
even from these to supply the hearth; and at His nod, so that faith be
not wanting, it is easy for fire to prevail over water; and that thou
mayest know," said he, "how possible are all things to them who
believe, thy faith shall be an eye-witness of that which I say unto
thee." And he heaped together the pieces of ice, like brands for the
fire, and he prayed, and, making the sign of the cross, he breathed on
them, and immediately fire went forth, and, lighting the ice, produced
long streams of flame; yet not only did the hearth give warmth to all
who came near, but it ministered much cause of admiration, for out of
the mouth of the boy Patrick was seen to issue flame instead of breath,
that he might plainly appear to be illuminated within by the infinite
light of the divine grace. Nor does this miracle much fall short of
that ancient miracle which the Scripture records to have been performed
by Nehemias; for when he brought back into the land of Juda the people
of the Hebrews after their long captivity, restored to freedom by
Cyrus, the King of Persia, he commanded the place to be searched out
wherein their fathers had hidden the fire of the sacrifice; in which,
when discovered, the fire was not found, but thick water; the which
Nehemias commanded to be brought, and the sacrifice to be sprinkled
therewith; and immediately a great fire was kindled, and it consumed
the holocaust and burned the hard stones. So was the congealed water
burned up by the power of the same fire which, proceeding from water,
did burn to ashes the sacrifice and the stones of the altar. Ther
|