St. Francis of Assisi - A Detailed
Biography
St Francis of Assisi, founder of the Franciscan Order, was
born at Assisi in Umbria, in 1181 or 1182 the exact year is uncertain; he died there
on 3 October, 1226.
This information is taken from the online article on Saint
Francis of Assisi by Catholic
Encyclopedia online. It is an excellent rendition of the
life of the poor little one.

 |
The
Early Years
Francis' father, Pietro Bernardone, was a wealthy Assisian cloth merchant. Of his mother,
Pica, little is known, but she is said to have belonged to a noble family of Provence.
Francis was one of several children. The legend that he was born in a stable dates from
the fifteenth century only, and appears to have originated in the desire of certain
writers to make his life resemble that of Christ. At baptism the saint received the name
of Giovanni, which his father afterwards altered to Francesco, through fondness it would
seem for France, whither business had led him at the time of his son's birth. In any case,
since the child was renamed in infancy, the change can hardly have had anything to do with
his aptitude for learning French, as some have thought. Francis received some elementary instruction from the priests of St
George's at Assisi, though he learned more perhaps in the school of the Troubadours, who
were just then making for refinement in Italy. However this may be, he was not very
studious, and his literary education remained incomplete. Although associated with his
father in trade, he showed little liking for a merchant's career, and his parents seemed
to have indulged his every whim.
Thomas of Celano, his first biographer, speaks in very severe
terms of Francis's youth. |
Certain it is that the saint's early life gave
no presage of the golden years that were to come. No one loved pleasure more than Francis;
he had a ready wit, sang merrily, delighted in fine clothes and showy display. Handsome,
gay, gallant, and courteous, he soon became the prime favourite among the young nobles of
Assisi, the foremost in every feat of arms, the leader of the civil revels, the very king
of frolic. But even at this time Francis showed an instinctive sympathy with the poor, and
though he spent money lavishly, it still flowed in such channels as to attest a princely
magnanimity of spirit.
Perugia and Spoleto
When about twenty, Francis went out with the townsmen to fight the Perugians in one of the
petty skirmishes so frequent at that time between the rival cities. The Assisians were
defeated on this occasion, and Francis, being among those taken prisoners, was held
captive for more than a year in Perugia. A low fever which he there contracted appears to
have turned his thoughts to the things of eternity; at least the emptiness of the life he
had been leading came to him during that long illness. With returning health, however,
Francis's eagerness after glory reawakened and his fancy wandered in search of victories;
at length he resolved to embrace a military career, and circumstances seemed to favour his
aspirations. A knight of Assisi was about to join 'the gentle count', Walter of Brienne,
who was then in arms in the Neapolitan States against the emperor, and Francis arranged to
accompany him.
His biographers tell us that the night before Francis set
forth he had a strange dream, in which he saw a vast hall hung with armour all marked with
the Cross. "These", said a voice, "are for you and your soldiers."
"I know I shall be a great prince", exclaimed Francis exultingly, as he started
for Apulia. But a second illness arrested his course at Spoleto. There, we are told,
Francis had another dream in which the same voice bade him turn back to Assisi. He did so
at once. This was in 1205.
Turning Point: Conversion
Although Francis still joined at times in the noisy revels of his former comrades, his
changed demeanour plainly showed that his heart was no longer with them; a yearning for
the life of the spirit had already possessed it. His companions twitted Francis on his
absent-mindedness and asked if he were minded to be married. "Yes", he replied,
"I am about to take a wife of surpassing fairness." She was no other than Lady
Poverty whom Dante and Giotto have wedded to his name, and whom even now he had begun to
love. After a short period of uncertainty he began to seek in prayer and solitude the
answer to his call; he had already given up his gay attire and wasteful ways. One day,
while crossing the Umbrian plain on horseback, Francis unexpectedly drew near a poor
leper. The sudden appearance of this repulsive object filled him with disgust and he
instinctively retreated, but presently controlling his natural aversion he dismounted,
embraced the unfortunate man, and gave him all the money he had.
About the same time Francis made a pilgrimage to Rome. Pained
at the miserly offerings he saw at the tomb of St Peter, he emptied his purse thereon.
Then, as if to put his fastidious nature to the test, he exchanged clothes with a tattered
mendicant and stood for the rest of the day fasting among the horde of beggars at the door
of the basilica.
At San Damiano
Not long after his return to Assisi, whilst Francis was praying before an ancient crucifix
in the forsaken wayside chapel of San Damiano below the town, he heard a voice saying:
"Go, Francis, and repair my house, which as you see is falling into ruin."
Taking this behest literally, as referring to the ruinous church wherein he knelt, Francis
went to his father's shop, impulsively bundled together a load of coloured drapery,
and mounting his horse hastened to Foligno, then a mart of some importance, and there sold
both horse and stuff to procure the money needful for the restoration of San
Damiano. When, however, the poor priest who officiated there refused to receive the gold
thus gotten, Francis flung it from him disdainfully.
The elder Bernardone was incensed beyond measure at his
son's conduct, and Francis, to avert his father's wrath, hid himself in a cave near San
Damiano for a whole month. When he emerged from this place of concealment and returned to
the town, emaciated with hunger and squalid with dirt, Francis was followed by a hooting
rabble, pelted with mud and stones, and otherwise mocked as a madman. Finally, he was
dragged home by his father, beaten, bound, and locked in a dark closet.
"Our Father in heaven"
Freed by his mother during Bernardone's absence, Francis returned at once to San Damiano,
where he found a shelter with the officiating priest, but he was soon cited before the
city consuls by his father. The latter, not content with having recovered the scattered
gold from San Damiano, sought also to force his son to forego his inheritance. This
Francis was only too eager to do; he declared, however, that since he had entered the
service of God he was no longer under civil jurisdiction. Having therefore been taken
before the bishop, Francis stripped himself of the very clothes he wore, and gave them to
his father, saying: "Hitherto I have called you my father on earth; henceforth I
desire to say only 'Our Father who art in Heaven.'" Then and there, as Dante sings,
were solemnised Francis's nuptials with his beloved spouse, the Lady Poverty, under which
name, in the mystical language afterwards so familiar to him, he comprehended the total
surrender of all worldly goods, honours, and privileges.
The Life of the Gospel and Early Companions
And now Francis wandered forth into the hills behind Assisi, improvising hymns of praise
as he went. "I am the herald of the great King", he declared in answer to some
robbers, who thereupon despoiled him of all he had and threw him scornfully in a snow
drift. Naked and half frozen, Francis crawled to a neighbouring monastery and there worked
for a time as a scullion.
At Gubbio, whither he went next, Francis obtained from a
friend the cloak, girdle, and staff of a pilgrim as an alms. Returning to Assisi, he
traversed the city begging stones for the restoration of San Damiano. These he carried to
the old chapel, set in place himself, and so at length rebuilt it. In the same way Francis
afterwards restored two other deserted chapels, St Peter's, some distance from the city,
and St Mary of the Angels, in the plain below it, at a spot called the Portiuncula.
Meantime he redoubled his zeal in works of charity, more
especially in nursing the lepers. On a certain morning in 1208, probably 24 February,
Francis was hearing Mass in the chapel of St Mary of the Angels, near which he had then
built himself a hut; the Gospel of the day told how the disciples of Christ were to
possess neither gold nor silver, nor scrip for their journey, nor two coats, nor shoes,
nor a staff, and that they were to exhort sinners to repentance and announce the Kingdom
of God. Francis took these words as if spoken directly to himself, and so soon as Mass was
over threw away the poor fragment left him of the world's goods,his shoes, cloak, pilgrim
staff, and empty wallet. At last he had found his vocation. Having obtained a coarse
woolen tunic of "beast colour", the dress then worn by the poorest Umbrian
peasants, and tied it round him with a knotted rope, Francis went forth at once exhorting
the people of the country-side to penance, brotherly love, and peace.
The Assisians had already ceased to scoff at Francis; they
now paused in wonderment; his example even drew others to him. Bernard of Quintavalle, a
magnate of the town, was the first to join Francis and he was soon followed by Peter of
Cattaneo, a well-known canon of the cathedral. In true spirit of religious enthusiasm,
Francis repaired to the church of St Nicholas and sought to learn God's will in their
regard by thrice opening at random the book of the Gospels on the altar. Each time it
opened at passages where Christ told His disciples to leave all things and follow Him.
"This shall be our rule of life", exclaimed Francis, and led his companions to
the public square, where they forthwith gave away all their belongings to the poor.
After this they procured rough habits like that of Francis,
and built themselves small huts near his at the Porziuncola. A few days later Giles,
afterwards the great ecstatic and sayer of "good words", became the third
follower of Francis. The little band divided and went about, two and two, making such an
impression by their words and behaviour that before long several other disciples grouped
themselves round Francis eager to share his poverty, among them being Sabatinus, vir bonus
et justus, Moricus, who had belonged to the Crucigeri, John of Capella, who afterwards
fell away, Philip "the Long", and four others of whom we know only the names.
The Approval of the Church
When the number of his companions had increased to eleven, Francis found it expedient to
draw up a written rule for them. This first rule,as it is called, of the Friars Minor has
not come down to us in its original form, but it appears to have been very short and
simple, a mere adaptation of the Gospel precepts already selected by Francis for the
guidance of his first companions, and which he desired to practice in all their
perfection.
When this rule was ready the Penitents of Assisi, as Francis
and his followers styled themselves, set out for Rome to seek the approval of the Holy
See, although as yet no such approbation was obligatory. There are differing accounts of
Francis's reception by Innocent III. It seems, however, that Guido, Bishop of Assisi, who
was then in Rome, commended Francis to Cardinal John of St Paul, and that at the instance
of the latter, the pope recalled the saint whose first overtures he had, as it appears,
somewhat rudely rejected. Moreover, in site of the sinister predictions of others in the
Sacred College, who regarded the mode of life proposed by Francis as unsafe and
impracticable, Innocent, moved it is said by a dream in which he beheld the Poor Man of
Assisi upholding the tottering Lateran, gave a verbal sanction to the rule submitted by
Francis and granted the saint and his companions leave to preach repentance everywhere.
Before leaving Rome they all received the ecclesiastical tonsure, Francis himself being
ordained deacon later on.
After their return to Assisi, the Friars Minor, for thus
Francis had names his brethren either after the minores, or lower classes, as some
think, or as others believe, with reference to the Gospel (Matthew 25:40-45), and as a
perpetual reminder of their humility found shelter in a deserted hut at Rivo Torto
in the plain below the city, but were forced to abandon this poor abode by a rough peasant
who drove in his ass upon them. About 1211 they obtained a permanent foothold near Assisi,
through the generosity of the Benedictines of Monte Subasio, who gave them the little
chapel of St Mary of the Angels or the Portiuncula. Adjoining this humble sanctuary,
already dear to Francis, the first Franciscan convent was formed by the erection of a few
small huts or cells of wattle, straw, and mud, and enclosed by a hedge. From this
settlement, which became the cradle of the Franciscan Order (Caput et Mater Ordinis) and
the central spot in the life of St Francis, the Friars Minor went forth two by two
exhorting the people of the surrounding country. Like children "careless of the
day", they wandered from place to place singing in their joy, and calling themselves
the Lord's minstrels.
The wide world was their cloister; sleeping in haylofts,
grottos, or church porches, they toiled with the labourers in the fields, and when none
gave them work they would beg. In a short while Francis and his companions gained an
immense influence, and men of different grades of life and way of thought flocked to the
order. Among the new recruits made about this time By Francis were the famous Three
Companions, who afterwards wrote his life, namely: Angelus Tancredi, a noble cavalier;
Leo, the saint's secretary and confessor; and Rufinus, a cousin of St Clare; besides
Juniper, "the renowned jester of the Lord".
St Clare of Assisi and the Poor Clares
During the Lent of 1212, a new joy, great as it was unexpected, came to Francis. Clare, a
young heiress of Assisi, moved by the saint's preaching at the church of St George, sought
him out, and begged to be allowed to embrace the new manner of life he had founded. By his
advice, Clare, who was then but eighteen, secretly left her father's house on the night
following Palm Sunday, and with two companions went to the Porziuncola, where the friars
met her in procession, carrying lighted torches.
Then Francis, having cut off her hair, clothed her in
the habit and thus received her to a life of poverty, penance, and seclusion. Clare
stayed provisionally with some Benedictine nuns near Assisi, until Francis could provide a
suitable retreat for her, and for St Agnes, her sister, and the other pious maidens who
had joined her. He eventually established them at San Damiano, in a dwelling
adjoining the chapel he had rebuilt with his own hands, which was now given to the saint
by the Benedictines as domicile for his spiritual daughters, and which thus became the
first monastery of the Second Franciscan Order of Poor Ladies, now known as Poor Clares.
Snippets
In the autumn of the same year (1212) Francis's burning desire for the conversion of the
Saracens led him to embark for Syria, but having been shipwrecked on the coast of
Slavonia, he had to return to Ancona. The following spring he devoted himself to
evangelizing Central Italy. About this time (1213) Francis received from Count Orlando of
Chiusi the mountain of La Verna, an isolated peak among the Tuscan Apennines, rising some
4000 feet above the valley of the Casentino, as a retreat, "especially favourable for
contemplation", to which he might retire from time to time for prayer and rest. For
Francis never altogether separated the contemplative from the active life, as the several
hermitages associated with his memory, and the quaint regulations he wrote for those
living in them bear witness. At one time, indeed, a strong desire to give himself wholly
to a life of contemplation seems to have possessed the saint. During the next year (1214)
Francis set out for Morocco, in another attempt to reach the infidels and, if needs be, to
shed his blood for the Gospel, but while yet in Spain was overtaken by so severe an
illness that he was compelled to turn back to Italy once more.
Authentic details are unfortunately lacking of Francis's journey to Spain and sojourn
there. It probably took place in the winter of 1214-1215. After his return to Umbria he
received several noble and learned men into his order, including his future biographer
Thomas of Celano. The next eighteen months comprise, perhaps, the most obscure period of
the saint's life.
That he took part in the Lateran Council of 1215 may well be,
but it is not certain; we know from Eccleston, however, that Francis was present at the
death of Innocent II, which took place at Perugia, in July 1216. Shortly afterwards, i.e.
very early in the pontificate of Honorius III, is placed the concession of the famous
Portiuncula Indulgence. It is related that once, while Francis was praying at the
Portiuncula, Christ appeared to him and offered him whatever favour he might desire.The
salvation of souls was ever the burden of Francis's prayers,and wishing moreover, to make
his beloved Portiuncula a sanctuary where many might be saved, he begged a plenary
Indulgence for all who, having confessed their sins, should visit the little chapel. Our
Lord acceded to this request on condition that the pope should ratify the Indulgence.
Francis thereupon set out for Perugia, with Brother Masseo,
to find Honorius III. The latter, notwithstanding some opposition from the Curia at such
an unheard-of favour, granted the Indulgence, restricting it, however, to one day yearly.
He subsequently fixed 2 August in perpetuity, as the day for gaining this Portiuncula
Indulgence, commonly known in Italy as il perdono d'Assisi. Such is the traditional
account. The fact that there is no record of this Indulgence in either the papal or
diocesan archives and no allusion to it in the earliest biographies of Francis or other
contemporary documents has led some writers to reject the whole story.
The First International Meeting
The first general chapter of the Friars Minor was held in May, 1217, at Portiuncula, the
order being divided into provinces, and an apportionment made of the Christian world into
so many Franciscan missions. Tuscany, Lombardy, Provence, Spain, and Germany were assigned
to five of Francis's principal followers; for himself the saint reserved France, and he
actually set out for that kingdom, but on arriving at Florence, was dissuaded from going
further by Cardinal Ugolino, who had been made protector of the order in 1216.
He therefore sent in his stead Brother Pacificus, who in the
world had been renowned as a poet, together with Brother Agnellus, who later on
established the Friars Minor in England. Although success came indeed to Francis and his
friars, with it came also opposition, and it was with a view to allaying any prejudices
the Curia might have imbibed against their methods that Francis, at the instance of
Cardinal Ugolino, went to Rome and preached before the pope and cardinals in the Lateran.
This visit to the Eternal City, which took place 1217-18, was apparently the occasion of
Francis's memorable meeting with St Dominic. The year 1218 Francis devoted to missionary
tours in Italy, which were a continual triumph for him. He usually preached out of doors,
in the market-places, from church steps, from the walls of castle court- yards.
Allured by the magic spell of his presence, admiring crowds,
unused for the rest to anything like popular preaching in the vernacular, followed Francis
from place to place hanging on his lips; church bells rang at his approach; processions of
clergy and people advanced to meet him with music and singing; they brought the sick to
him to bless and heal, and kissed the very ground on which he trod, and even sought to cut
away pieces of his tunic. The extraordinary enthusiasm with which the saint was everywhere
welcomed was equalled only by the immediate and visible result of his preaching. His
exhortations of the people, for sermons they can hardly be called, short, homely,
affectionate, and pathetic, touched even the hardest and most frivolous, and Francis
became in sooth a very conqueror of souls.
Thus it happened, on one occasion, while the saint was
preaching at Camara, a small village near Assisi, that the whole congregation were so
moved by his "words of spirit and life" that they presented themselves to him in
a body and begged to be admitted into his order. It was to accede, so far as might be, to
like requests that Francis devised his Third Order, as it is now called, of the Brothers
and Sisters of Penance, which he intended as a sort of middle state between the world and
the cloister for those who could not leave their home or desert their wonted avocations in
order to enter either the First Order of Friars Minor or the Second Order of Poor Ladies.
That Francis prescribed particular duties for these
tertiaries is beyond question. They were not to carry arms, or take oaths, or engage in
lawsuits, etc. It is also said that he drew up a formal rule for them, but it is clear
that the rule, confirmed by Nicholas IV in 1289, does not, at least in the form in which
it has come down to us, represent the original rule of the Brothers and Sisters of
Penance. In any event, it is customary to assign 1221 as the year of the foundation of
this third order, but the date is not certain.
Page 3 of the life of St Francis of Assisi. This information is taken from the online
article on the saint by Catholic Encyclopedia online. It is an excellent rendition of the
life of the poor little one.
Of the Missions and Other Important Matters
At the second general chapter (May, 1219) Francis, bent on realizing his project of
evangelising the infidels, assigned a separate mission to each of his foremost disciples,
himself selecting the seat of war between the crusaders and the Saracens. With eleven
companions, including Brother Illuminato and Peter of Cattaneo, Francis set sail from
Ancona on 21 June, for Saint-Jean d'Acre, and he was present at the siege and taking of
Damietta.
After preaching there to the assembled Christian forces,
Francis fearlessly passed over to the infidel camp, where he was taken prisoner and led
before the sultan. According to the testimony of Jacques de Vitry, who was with the
crusaders at Damietta, the sultan received Francis with courtesy, but beyond obtaining a
promise from this ruler of more indulgent treatment for the Christian captives, the
saint's preaching seems to have effected little. Before returning to Europe, the saint is
believed to have visited Palestine and there obtained for the friars the foothold they
still retain as guardians of the holy places. What is certain is that Francis was
compelled to hasten back to Italy because of various troubles that had arisen there during
his absence. News had reached him in the East that Matthew of Narni and Gregory of Naples,
the two vicars-general whom he had left in charge of the order, had summoned a chapter
which, among other innovations, sought to impose new fasts upon the friars, more severe
than the rule required.
Moreover, Cardinal Ugolino had conferred on the Poor Ladies a written rule which was
practically that of the Benedictine nuns, and Brother Philip, whom Francis had charged
with their interests, had accepted it.
To make matters worse, John of Capella, one of the saint's
first companions, had assembled a large number of lepers, both men and women, with a view
to forming them into a new religious order, and had set out for Rome to seek approval for
the rule he had drawn up for these unfortunates. Finally a rumour had been spread abroad
that Francis was dead, so that when the saint returned to Italy with brother Elias
he appeared to have arrived at Venice in July, 1220 a general feeling of unrest
prevailed among the friars. Apart from these difficulties, the order was then passing
through a period of transition. It had become evident that the simple, familiar, and
unceremonious ways which had marked the Franciscan movement at its beginning were
gradually disappearing, and that the heroic poverty practiced by Francis and his
companions at the outset became less easy as the friars with amazing rapidity increased in
number. And this Francis could not help seeing on his return. Cardinal Ugolino had already
undertaken the task "of reconciling inspirations so unstudied and so free with an
order of things they had outgrown." This remarkable man, who afterwards ascended the
papal throne as Gregory IX, was deeply attached to Francis, whom he venerated as a saint
and also, some writers tell us, managed as an enthusiast. That Cardinal Ugolino had no
small share in bringing Francis's lofty ideals "within range and compass" seems
beyond dispute, and it is not difficult to recognize his hand in the important changes
made in the organization of the order in the so-called Chapter of Mats. At this famous
assembly, held at Porziuncola at Whitsuntide, 1220 or 1221 (there is seemingly much room
for doubt as to the exact date and number of the early chapters), about 5000 friars are
said to have been present, besides some 500 applicants for admission to the order. Huts of
wattle and mud afforded shelter for this multitude. Francis had purposely made no
provision for them, but the charity of the neighbouring towns supplied them with food,
while knights and nobles waited upon them gladly.
It was on this occasion that Francis, harassed no doubt and
disheartened at the tendency betrayed by a large number of the friars to relax the rigours
of the rule, according to the promptings of human prudence, and feeling, perhaps unfitted
for a place which now called largely for organizing abilities, relinquished his position
as general of the order in favour of Peter of Cattaneo. But the latter died in less than a
year, being succeeded as vicar-general by the unhappy Brother Elias who continued in
that office until the death of Francis.
The saint, meanwhile, during the few years that remained in
him, sought to impress on the friars by the silent teaching of personal example of what
sort he would fain have them to be. Already, while passing through Bologna on his return
from the East, Francis had refused to enter the convent there because he had heard it
called the "House of the Friars" and because a studium had been instituted
there. He moreover bade all the friars, even those who were ill, quit it at once, and it
was only some time after, when Cardinal Ugolino had publicly declared the house to be his
own property, that Francis suffered his brethren to re-enter it. Yet strong and definite
as the saint's convictions were, and determinedly as his line was taken, he was never a
slave to a theory in regard to the observances of poverty or anything else; about him
indeed, there was nothing narrow or fanatical.
As for his attitude towards study, Francis desiderated for
his friars only such theological knowledge as was conformable to the mission of the order,
which was before all else a mission of example. Hence he regarded the accumulation of
books as being at variance with the poverty his friars professed, and he resisted the
eager desire for mere book-learning, so prevalent in his time, in so far as it struck at
the roots of that simplicity which entered so largely into the essence of his life and
ideal and threatened to stifle the spirit of prayer, which he accounted preferable to all
the rest.
Rule of 1221 and 1223
In 1221, so some writers tell us, Francis drew up a new rule for the Friars Minor. Others
regard this so-called Rule of 1221 not as a new rule, but as the first one which Innocent
had orally approved; not, indeed, its original form, which we do not possess, but with
such additions and modifications as it has suffered during the course of twelve years.
However this may be, the composition called by some the Rule of 1221 is very unlike any
conventional rule ever made.
It was too lengthy and unprecise to become a formal rule, and two years later Francis
retired to Fonte Colombo, a hermitage near Rieti, and rewrote the rule in more compendious
form. This revised draft he entrusted to Brother Elias, who not long after declared he had
lost it through negligence.
Francis thereupon returned to the solitude of Fonte Colombo,
and recast the rule on the same lines as before, its twenty-three chapters being reduced
to twelve and some of its precepts being modified in certain details at the instance of
Cardinal Ugolino. In this form the rule was solemnly approved by Honorius III, 29
November, 1223 (Litt. "Solet annuere"). This Second Rule, as it is usually
called or Regula Bullata of the Friars Minor, is the one ever since professed throughout
the First Order of St Francis. It is based on the three vows of obedience, poverty, and
chastity, special stress however being laid on poverty, which Francis sought to make the
special characteristic of his order, and which became the sign to be contradicted. This
vow of absolute poverty in the first and second orders and the reconciliation of the
religious with the secular state in the Third Order of Penance are the chief novelties
introduced by Francis in monastic regulation.
The First Christmas Crib
It was during Christmastide of this year (1223) that the saint conceived the idea of
celebrating the Nativity "in a new manner", by reproducing in a church at
Greccio the praesepio of Bethlehem, and he has thus come to be regarded as having
inaugurated the population devotion of the Crib. Christmas appears indeed to have been the
favourite feast of Francis, and he wished to persuade the emperor to make a special law
that men should then provide well for the birds and the beasts, as well as for the poor,
so that all might have occasion to rejoice in the Lord.
St Francis receives the Stigmata
Early in August, 1224, Francis retired with three companions to "that rugged rock
'twixt Tiber and Arno", as Dante called La Verna, there to keep a forty days fast in
preparation for Michaelmas.
During this retreat the sufferings of Christ became more than
ever the burden of his meditations; into few souls, perhaps, had the full meaning of
the Passion so deeply entered. It was on or about the feast of the Exaltation of the Cross
(14 September) while praying on the mountainside, that he beheld the marvellous vision of
the seraph, as a sequel of which there appeared on his body the visible marks of the five
wounds of the Crucified which, says an early writer, had long since been impressed upon
his heart. Brother Leo, who was with St. Francis when he received the stigmata, has left
us in his note to the saint's autograph blessing, preserved at Assisi, a clear and simple
account of the miracle, which for the rest is better attested than many another historical
fact.
The saint's right side is described as bearing on open wound
which looked as if made by a lance, while through his hands and feet were black nails of
flesh, the points of which were bent backward. After the reception of the stigmata,
Francis suffered increasing pains throughout his frail body, already broken by continual
mortification. For, condescending as the saint always was to the weaknesses of others, he
was ever so unsparing towards himself that at the last he felt constrained to ask pardon
of "Brother Ass", as he called his body, for having treated it so harshly. Worn
out, moreover, as Francis now was by eighteen years of unremitting toil, his strength gave
way completely, and at times his eyesight so far failed him that he was almost wholly
blind. During an access of anguish, Francis paid a last visit to St Clare at St. Damian's,
and it was in a little hut of reeds, made for him in the garden there, that the saint
composed that 'Canticle of the Sun', in which his poetic genius expands itself so
gloriously.
This was in September, 1225. Not long afterwards Francis, at
the urgent instance of Brother Elias, underwent an unsuccessful operation for the eyes, at
Rieti. He seems to have passed the winter 1225-26 at Siena, whither he had been taken for
further medical treatment.
The Testament of St Francis
In April, 1226, during an interval of improvement, Francis was moved to Cortona, and it is
believed to have been while resting at the hermitage of the Celle there, that the saint
dictated his testament, which he describes as a "reminder, a warning, and an
exhortation". In this touching document Francis, writing from the fullness of his
heart, urges anew with the simple eloquence, the few, but clearly defined, principles that
were to guide his followers, implicit obedience to superiors as holding the place of God,
literal observance of the rule "without gloss", especially as regards poverty,
and the duty of manual labor, being solemnly enjoined on all the friars.
"Welcome, Sister Death"
Meanwhile alarming dropsical symptoms had developed, and it was in a dying condition that
Francis set out for Assisi. A roundabout route was taken by the little caravan that
escorted him, for it was feared to follow the direct road lest the saucy Perugians should
attempt to carry Francis off by force so that he might die in their city, which would thus
enter into possession of his coveted relics. It was therefore under a strong guard that
Francis, in July, 1226, was finally borne in safety to the bishop's palace in his native
city amid the enthusiastic rejoicings of the entire populace.
In the early autumn Francis, feeling the hand of death upon
him, was carried to his beloved Porziuncola, that he might breathe his last sigh where his
vocation had been revealed to him and whence his order had struggled into sight. On the
way thither he asked to be set down, and with painful effort he invoked a beautiful
blessing on Assisi, which, however, his eyes could no longer discern. The saint's last
days were passed at the Portiuncula in a tiny hut, near the chapel, that served as an
infirmary. The arrival there about this time of the Lady Jacoba of Settesoli, who had come
with her two sons and a great retinue to bid Francis farewell, caused some consternation,
since women were forbidden to enter the friary. But Francis in his tender gratitude to
this Roman noblewoman, made an exception in her favour, and 'Brother Jacoba', as Francis
had named her on account of her fortitude, remained to the last. On the eve of his death,
the saint, in imitation of his Divine Master, had bread brought to him and broken. This he
distributed among those present, blessing Bernard of Quintaville, his first companion,
Elias, his vicar, and all the others in order. "I have done my part," he said
next, "may Christ teach you to do yours." Then wishing to give a last token of
detachment and to show he no longer had anything in common with the world, Francis removed
his poor habit and lay down on the bare ground, covered with a borrowed cloth, rejoicing
that he was able to keep faith with his Lady Poverty to the end.
After a while he asked to have read to him the Passion
according to St John, and then in faltering tones he himself intoned Psalm 142. At the
concluding verse, "Bring my soul out of prison", Francis was led away from earth
by 'Sister Death', in whose praise he had shortly before added a new strophe to his
'Canticle of the Sun'. It was Saturday evening, 3 October, 1226, Francis being then in the
forty-fifth year of his age, and the twentieth from his perfect conversion to Christ.
END
| Top of Page |
|