The Golden Legend or Lives Of The Saints
Compiled by Jacobus de Voragine,
Archbishop of
Englished by William Caxton,
First Edition 1483
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137// HERE FOLLOWETH THE
EXALTATION OF THE HOLY CROSS
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T |
he exaltation of the Holy Cross is said,
because that on this day the Holy Cross and faith were greatly enhanced. And it
is to be understood that, tofore the passion of our Lord
Jesu Christ, the tree of the cross was a tree of
filth, for the crosses were made of vile trees and of trees without fruit, for
all that was planted on the mount of
Of the which the blessed S. Andrew saith:
O precious Holy Cross, God saw thee. His barrenness was turned into fruit, as
it is said in the Canticles: I shall ascend up into palm tree, et cetera. His
ignobility or unworthiness was turned into sublimity and height.
The cross, that was
torment of thieves, is now borne in front of the emperors,
his darkness is turned into light and clearness; whereof Chrysostom
saith: The cross and the wounds shall be more shining
than the rays of the sun at the judgment. His death is converted into
perdurability of life, whereof it is said in the preface that, from whence that
the death grew, from thence the life resourded, and
the stench is turned into sweetness, Canticorum I.
Emperor
Eraclius’ Defeat of King Cosdroe
of
This exaltation of the Holy Cross is solemnised and hallowed solemnly of the church, for the
faith is in it much enhanced. For the year of our Lord six hundred and fifteen,
our Lord suffered his people much to be tormented by the cruelty of the paynims. And Cosdroe, king of the
Persians, subdued to his empire all the realms of the world; and he came into
Jerusalem and was afeard and adrad of the sepulchre of our Lord, and returned, but he bare with him
the part of the Holy Cross that S. Helena had left there. And then he would be
worshipped of all the people as a god, and did do make a tower of gold and of
silver, wherein precious stones shone, and made therein the images of the sun
and of the moon and of the stars, and made that by subtle conduits water to be
hid, and to come down in manner of rain. And in the last stage he made horses
to draw chariots round about, like as they had moved the tower, and made it to
seem as it had thundered. And thus this cursed man abode in this temple, and
delivered his realm to his son, and did do set the cross of our Lord by him,
and commanded that he should be called god, of all the people. And as it is
read in libro de mitrali
officio: The said Cosdroe, resident in his throne as
a father, set the tree of the cross on his right side instead of the sun, and a
cock on the left side instead of the Holy Ghost, and commanded that he should
be called father.
And then Eraclius the emperor assembled a great host and came for to
fight with the son of Cosdroe by the river of Danube;
and then it pleased to either prince that each of them should fight one against
that other upon the bridge, and he that should vanquish and overcome his
adversary should be prince of the empire without hurting either of both hosts,
and so it was ordained and sworn, and that whosomever
should help his prince should have forthwith his legs and arms cut off and to
be plunged and cast into the river. And then Eraclius
commended him all to God and to the Holy Cross with all the devotion that he
might, and then they fought long. And at the last our Lord gave the victory to Eraclius and subdued to him his empire. The host that was
contrary, and all the people of Cosdroe, obeyed them
to the christian faith, and
received the holy baptism.
And Cosdroe knew not the end of the battle, for he was adored
and worshipped of all the people as a god, so that no man durst say nay to him.
And then Eraclius came to him, and found him sitting
in his siege [throne] of gold, and said to him: For as much as after the manner
thou hast honoured the tree of the cross, if thou
wilt receive baptism and the faith of Jesu Christ, I
shall get it to thee, and yet shalt thou hold thy
crown and realm with little hostages, and I shall let thee have thy life. And
if thou wilt not, I shall slay thee with my sword, and shall smite off thy
head.
And when he would
not accord thereto, he did anon do smite off his head, and commanded that he
should be buried because he had been a king. And he found with him one, his
son, of the age of ten years, whom he did do baptize, and lifted him from the
font, and left to him the realm of his father; and then did do break that
tower, and gave the silver to them of his host, and gave the gold and precious
stones for to repair the churches that the tyrant had destroyed, and took the
Holy Cross and brought it again to Jerusalem.
And as he descended
from the Mount of Olives and would have entered by the gate by which our Saviour went to his passion, on horseback, adorned as a
king, suddenly the stones of the gates descended and joined them together in
the gate like a wall, and all the people was abashed. And then the angel of our
Lord appeared upon the gate, holding the sign of the cross in his hand, and
said: When the king of heaven went to his passion by this gate, he was not
arrayed like a king, ne on horseback, but came humbly
upon an ass, in showing the example of humility, which he left to them that honour him.
And when this was
said, he departed and vanished away. Then the emperor took
off his hosen and shoes himself, in weeping, and despoiled him of all his
clothes in to his shirt, and took the cross of our Lord and bare it much
humbly unto the gate. And anon the hardness of the stones felt the celestial
commandment and removed anon, and opened and gave entry unto them that entered.
Then the sweet odour that was felt that day when the Holy Cross was taken
from the
And thus was the
precious tree of the cross re-established in his place, and the ancient
miracles renewed. For a dead man was raised to life, and four men taken with
the palsy were cured and healed, ten lepers were made clean, and fifteen blind
received their sight again. Devils were put out of men, and much people and
many were delivered of divers sickness and maladies.
Then the emperor did do repair the churches, and gave to them great gifts, and
after returned home to his empire.
An Alternative Narrative of the
Above
And it is said in the Chronicles that this
was done otherwise. For they say that when Cosdroe
had taken many realms, he took
Miracles
of the Cross
The Jew who Smote
the Image of Jesus
At
The
Tortured Crucifix that Bled
In Syria, in
the city of Beirout, there was a Christian man which
had hired an house for a year and he had set the image of the crucifix by his
bed, to which he made daily his prayers, and said his devotions, and at the
year's end he removed and took an other house, and forgat
and left the image behind him. And it happed that a Jew hired that same house,
and on a day he bade another Jew, one of his neighbours,
to dinner, and as they were at meat, it happed to him that was bidden, in
looking on the wall, to espy this image which was fixed to the wall, and began
to grin at it for despite, and against him that bade him, and also threatened
and menaced him because he durst keep in his house the image of Jesus of
Nazareth; and that other Jew sware as much as he
might that he had never seen it, ne knew not that it
was there, and then the Jew feigned as he had been appeased, and after, went
straight to the prince of the Jews and accused that Jew of that which he had
seen in his house. Then the Jews assembled and came to the house of him and saw
the image of Jesu Christ, and they took that Jew and
beat him and did to him many injuries, and cast him out half dead of their
synagogue; and anon they defiled the image with their feet, and renewed in it
all the torments of the passion of our Lord, and when they pierced his side
with the spear, blood and water issued abundantly, insomuch that they filled a
vessel which they set thereunder. And then the Jews
were abashed and bare this blood into their synagogue, and all the sick men and
malades that were guerished
and made whole. And then the Jews told and recounted things by order to the
bishop of the country, and all they with one will received
baptism in the faith of Jesu Christ.
And the bishop put
this blood in ampuls of crystal and of glass for to
be kept, and then he called the Christian man that had left it in the house,
and enquired of him who had so fair an image. And he said that Nicodemus had
made it, and when he died he left it to Gamaliel, and
Gamaliel to Zaccheus, and Zaccheus to James, and James to Simon, and had been thus in
The Jew’s
Vision of Satan’s Court
And S. Gregory recordeth
in the third book of his dialogues that when Andrew, bishop of the city of Fundana, suffered a holy nun to dwell with him, the fiend
the enemy began to imprint in his heart the beauty of her in such wise that he
thought in his bed wicked and cursed things. And on a day a Jew came to
But Gregory passeth the manner of this vision because of shortness, but
we find semblably in the lives of Fathers that as a
man entered in a temple of the idols, he saw the devil sitting and all his meiny about him. And one of these wicked spirits came and
adored him, and he demanded of him: From whence comest
thou? And he said: I have been in such a province, and have moved great wars, and
made many tribulations, and have shed much blood, and am come to tell it to
thee. And Satan said to him: In what time hast thou done this? And he said: In
thirty days. And Satan said: Why hast thou been so long thereabout? and said to them that stood by him: Go ye and beat him all
to-lash him.
Then came the second
and worshipped him, and said: Sire, I have been in the sea, and have moved
great winds and torments, and drowned many ships and slain many men. And Satan
said: How long hast thou been about this? And he said: Twenty-two days. And
Satan said: How! hast thou done no more in this time?
And he commanded that he should be beaten.
And the third came
and said: I have been in a city, and have moved strifes
and debates in a wedding, and have shed much blood, and have slain the husband,
and am come to tell thee. And Satan asked: In what time hast thou done this?
And he said: In ten days. And he said: Hast thou done no more in that time? And commanded them that were about him to beat him also.
Then came the fourth
and said: I have been in the wilderness forty years, and have laboured about a monk, and unnethe
at the last I have thriven, and made him fall in the sin of the flesh. And when
Satan heard that, he arose from his seat and kissed him, and took his crown off
his head and set it on his head, and made him to sit with him, and said: Thou
hast done a great thing, and hast laboured more than
all the others.
And this may be the
manner of the vision that S. Gregory leaveth. When
each had said, one started up in the middle of them all, and said he had moved
Andrew against the nun, and had moved the fourth part of his flesh against her
in temptation, and thereto that yesterday he drew so much his mind on her that,
in the hour of evensong he gave to her in japing a buff, and said plainly, that
she might hear it, that he would sin with her. Then the master commanded him
that he should perform that he had begun, and for to make him to sin he should
have a singular victory and reward among all the others.
And then commanded
he that they should go look who that was that lay in the temple; and they went
and looked, and anon they were ware that he was marked with the sign of the
cross. And they being afeard, cried and said: Verily, this is an empty vessel, alas ! alas! he
is marked. And with this voice all the company of the wicked spirits vanished
away. And then the Jew, all amoved, came to the
bishop and told to him all by order what was happened. And when the bishop
heard this he wept strongly, and made to void all the women out of his house.
And then he baptized the Jew.
The
Nun and the Lettuce
S. Gregory rehearseth
in his dialogues that a nun entered into a garden and saw a lettuce, and
coveted that, and forgat to make the sign of the
cross, and bit it gluttonously, and anon fell down and
was ravished of a devil. And there came to her S. Equicius,
and the devil began to cry and to say: What have I done? I sat upon a lettuce
and she came and bit me. And anon the devil issued out by the commandment of the holy man of God.
The
Cross Replaces the Arms of Serapis
It is read in the History Scholastic that the
paynims had painted on a wall the arms of Serapis, and Theodosius did do put them out, and made to be
painted in the same place the sign of the cross. And when the paynims and priests of the idols saw that, anon they did
them to be baptized, saying that it was given them to understand of their
elders that, those arms should endure till that such a sign were made there in
which were life. And they have a letter of which they use that they call holy,
and had a form that they said it exposed, and signified life perdurable.
The iconography of the Holy
Cross is available at the Christian iconography
website.
For other saints,
see the index
to this Golden Legend website.
Scanned
by Robert Blackmon. bob_blackmon@mindspring.com.
This text was taken
from the Internet Medieval
Source Book. The Sourcebook is a collection of public domain and
copy-permitted texts related to medieval and Byzantine history.
Permission is
granted for electronic copying, distribution in print form for educational
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E-text © Paul Halsall, September 2000
halsall@fordham.edu
Reformatted with
paragraphs, rubrics, italics, and explanatory insertions by Richard Stracke