CHAPTER VII
HOW ST FRANCIS PASSED THE TIME OF LENT IN AN ISLAND, ON THE LAKE OF
PERUGIA, WHERE HE FASTED FORTY DAYS AND FORTY NIGHTS, EATING NO MORE THAN HALF OF ONE LOAF
The true servant of Christ, St Francis, was in certain things like unto
a second Christ given to the world for the salvation of souls. Wherefore God the Father
willed that in many points he should be conformed to his Son, Jesus Christ, as we have
already explained in the calling of his twelve companions, as also in the mystery of the
holy stigmata, and in a fast of forty days which he made in the manner following:
St Francis, one day of the Carnival, was near the Lake of Perugia, in
the house of one of his devout children, with whom he had spent the night, when he was
inspired by God to go and pass the time of Lent in an island on the lake. Wherefore St
Francis begged his friend, for the love of God, to convey him in his boat to an island
uninhabited by man: the which he should do during the night of Ash-Wednesday, so that none
might know where he was; and the friend, because of the great devotion he bore to St
Francis, agreed to his request, and conveyed him to the said island, St Francis taking
with him naught but two small loaves. When they had reached the island, his friend left
him and returned home; the saint earnestly entreating him to reveal to no one where he
was, and not to come and fetch him before Holy Thursday; to which he consented. St Francis
being left alone, and there being no dwelling in the island in which he could take
shelter, entered into a thick part of the wood all overgrown with brambles and other
creeping plants, and forming as it were a kind of hut, there he began to pray and enter
into the contemplation of divine things. And there he passed the whole of Lent without
drinking or eating save half of one of the small loaves he had taken with him, as we
learned from his friend who, going to fetch him on Holy Thursday, found one of the loaves
untouched and the other only half consumed. It is believed that St Francis ate this half
out of reverence for our Blessed Lord, who fasted forty days and forty nights without
taking any material food; for by eating this bit of bread he put aside the temptation to
vainglory, and yet fasted forty days and forty nights in imitation of the Saviour. In
later times God worked many miracles, through the merits of the saint, on the spot where
St Francis had fasted so wonderfully, on which account people began to build houses and
dwell there, and little by little a town rose up, with a convent called the Convent of the
Isle; and to this day the inhabitants of that town hold in great respect and great
devotion the spot in which St Francis passed the time of Lent.
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