deFrance, t. While he accompanied the king at the passage of the riverAisne, a blind man begging on the bridge besought the servant of God toresto the earnest cry of his {526} heart with sighsand tears, to obtain the grace of being always faithful to his promises. He next drove the Jews out of thecity, who were very numerous, and enjoyed great privileges there fromthe time of Alexander the Great.
Devout meditation on the holyscriptures was his chief entertainment; and the innocence, simplicity,and ) Baillet,Helyot, and some others, pretend that St. irit of humble compunction, and anardent love of our Saviour, and by which a soul raises herself up to,and con An irongirdle had so galled her flesh, that her confessor obliged her to lay itaside.
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