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The Most Ancient Lives of Saint Patrick - Including the Life by Jocelin, Hitherto Unpublished in America, and His Extant Writings by Various
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his armful of pieces of ice, which he brought home to his nurse. Then
his nurse said: "It would be better for you to bring us withered
brambles to warm ourselves with than what you have brought." Thereupon
he said to his nurse:

"Believe thou, because God is powerful thereto, that even the sheets of
ice will burn like faggots." And no sooner were the pieces of ice
placed on the fire, and he had breathed on them, than they burned like
faggots. The names of God and Patrick were magnified through this
miracle.

One time, when Patrick and his sister (_i.e._, Lupait) were herding
sheep, the lambs came suddenly to their dams, as is customary with
them, to drink milk. When Patrick and his sister saw this, they ran
quickly to prevent them. The girl fell, and her head struck against a
stone, so that death was nigh unto her. As soon as Patrick perceived
that his sister was lying down, and that death was nigh unto her, he
wept loudly; and he raised her up immediately, and made the sign of the
cross over the wound, and it healed without any illness.
(Nevertheless, the signs of the "white wound" would appear there.) And
they came home as if no evil had happened to them. Another time,
Patrick was with the sheep, when a wolf took away a sheep from him.
His nurse reproved him greatly therefor. The wolf brought the sheep
whole to the same place on the morrow; and the restoration in this way
was wonderful--viz., the wolf's dislike regarding the habitual food.

When Patrick's nurse, therefore, saw him magnified by God in prodigies
and miracles, she used to love him very much, and would not wish to go
anywhere without him. One time his nurse went to milk the cow. He
went with her to get a drink of new milk. The cow [became mad] in the
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