_Of the Sick whom he healed, and the Dead whom he raised; and of his
Disciples who recorded his Acts._
Therefore under this most sanctified rule of life did he shine in so
many and so great miracles that he appeared second to no other saint.
For the blind and the lame, the deaf and the dumb, the palsied, the
lunatic, the leprous, the epileptic, all who labored under any disease,
did he in the name of the Holy Trinity restore unto the power of their
limbs and unto entire health; and in these good deeds was he daily
practised. Thirty and three dead men, some of whom had many years been
buried, did this great reviver raise from the dead, as above we have
more fully recorded. And of all those things which so wondrously he
did in the world, sixty and six books are said to have been written,
whereof the greater part perished by fire in the reigns of Gurmundus
and of Turgesius. But four books of his virtues and his miracles yet
remain, written partly in the Hibernian, partly in the Latin language;
and which at different times four of his disciples composed--namely,
his successor, the blessed Benignus; the Bishop Saint Mel; the Bishop
Saint Lumanus, who was his nephew; and his grand-nephew Saint
Patricius, who after the decease of his uncle returned into Britain,
and died in the church of Glascon. Likewise did Saint Evinus collect
into one volume the acts of Saint Patrick, the which is written partly
in the Hibernian and partly in the Latin tongue. From all which,
whatsoever we could meet most worthy of belief, have we deemed right to
transmit in this our work unto after-times.
CHAPTER CLXXXVII.
_The Angelic Voice showeth unto Saint Patrick of his Death and of the
Place of his Burial._
And Patrick, the beloved of the Lord, being full of days and of good
works, and now faithfully finishing the time of his appointed ministry,
saw, as well by the divine revelation as by the dissolution of his
earthly tabernacle, that the evening of his life was drawing near. And
being then nigh unto Ulydia, he hastened his journey toward the
metropolitan seat, Ardmachia; for earnestly he desired to lay in that
place the remains of his sanctified body, and in the sight of his sons
whom he had brought forth unto Christ to be consigned unto the common
mother. But the event changed the purpose of the holy man; that all
might know, according to the testimony of the Scriptures, that the way
of man is not in his own power, but th
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