nor bread to stay their hunger; he mingled his tears with theirs,relieved them, and obtained from the duke a remission of their taxes. His life, compiled from the ancient archivesof Rhuis by a monk of that house, in the eleventh century, is the bestaccount we have of him, though the author confounds him sometimes withSt. , who had succeeded Otho III. d not by grief send them to their graves: he exhorts him resolutely tobreak his bonds at once, not to temporize only wi
l part still remains there inthe church anciently called of the Holy Cross, but since that time ofSt. AND EUBULUS, OF PALESTINE. This passage is quoted by St. for temporal things, so that a man is disposed withpleasure to part with the whole world and life itself.
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