CHAP. VII. How it was indicated by a light from heaven where the bodies of the nuns should be buried in the monastery of Berecingum.
[675 A.D.?]
IN this monastery many miracles were wrought, accounts of which have been committed to writing by those who were acquainted
with them, that their memory might be preserved, and succeeding generations edified, and these are in the possession of many
persons; some of them we also have taken pains to include in our History of the Church. At the time of the pestilence, already
often mentioned, which ravaged all the country far and wide, it had also seized on that part of this monastery
where the men abode, and they were daily hurried away to the Lord. The careful mother of the community began often to inquire
of the sisters, when they were gathered together, in what part of the monastery they desired to be buried and a cemetery to
be made, when the same affliction should fall upon that part of the monastery in which the handmaids of the Lord dwelt together
apart from the men, and they should. be snatched away out of this world by the same destruction as the rest. Receiving no
certain answer from the sisters, though she often questioned them, she and all of them received a most certain answer from
the Divine Providence. For one night, after matins had been sung, and those handmaids of Christ had gone out of their chapel
to the tombs of the brothers who had departed this life before them, and were singing the customary songs of praise to the
Lord, on a sudden a light from heaven, like a great sheet, came down upon them all, and struck them with such amazement, that,
in consternation, they even left off singing their hymn. But that, resplendent light, in comparison wherewith the sun at
noon-day might seem dark, soon after, rising from that place, removed to the south side of the monastery, that is, to the
westward of the chapel, and having continued there some time, and rested upon those parts, in the sight of them all withdrew
itself again to heaven, leaving no doubt in the minds of all, but that the same light, which was to lead or to receive the
souls of
those handmaids of Christ into Heaven, also showed the place in which their bodies were to rest and await the day of the
resurrection. The radiance of this light was so great, that one of the older brethren, who at the same time was in their chapel
with another younger than himself, related in the morning, that the rays of light which came in at the crannies of the doors
and windows, seemed to exceed the utmost brightness of daylight.