Bede's Ecclesiastical History of England


CHAP. XI. How Sebbi, king of the same province, ended his life in a monastery. [694 A.D.]


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Beda Venerabilis, Ecclesiastical History Of England, EN

CHAP. XI. How Sebbi, king of the same province, ended his life in a monastery. [694 A.D.]
AT that time, as the same little book informs us, Sebbi a very devout man, of whom mention
has been made above, governed the kingdom of the East Saxons. His mind was set on religious
acts, frequent prayer and pious fruits of almsgiving; he esteemed a private and monastic life better
than all the wealth and honours of his kingdom, and he would have long before left his kingdom
and adopted that life, had not his wife firmly refused to be divorced from him; for which reason
many were of opinion and often said that a man of such a disposition ought rather to have been
made a bishop than a king. When he had spent thirty years as a king and a soldier of the heavenly
kingdom, he fell into great bodily infirmity, of which he afterwards died, and he admonished his
wife, that they should then at least together devote themselves to the service of God, since they
could no longer together enjoy, or rather serve, the world. Having with much difficulty obtained
this of her, he went to Waldhere, bishop of London, who had succeeded Earconwald,and with his
blessing received the religious habit, which he had long desired. He also carried to him a considerable
sum of money, to be given to the poor, reserving nothing to himself, but rather coveting to remain
poor in spirit for the sake of the kingdom of Heaven.
When the aforesaid sickness increased, and he perceived the day of his death to be drawing
near, being a man of a royal disposition, he began to apprehend lest, when in great pain, at the
approach of death, he might commit anything unworthy of his character, either by word or gesture.
Wherefore, calling to him the aforesaid bishop of London, in which city he then was, he entreated
him that none might be present at his death, besides the bishop himself, and two of his own
attendants. The bishop having promised that he would most willingly grant his request, not long
after the man of God composed himself to sleep, and saw a consoling vision, which took from him
all anxiety concerning the aforesaid uneasiness; and, moreover, showed him on what day he was
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The Venerable Bede
Bede's Ecclesiastical History of England


to end his life. For, as he afterwards related, he saw three men in shining garments come to him;
one of whom sat down by his bed, whilst his companions who had come with him stood and inquired
about the state of the sick man they had come to visit, and he said that the king’s soul should quit
his body without any pain, and with a great splendour of light; and told him that he should die the
third day after. Both these things came to pass, as he had learnt from the vision; for on the third
day after, at the ninth hour, he suddenly fell, as it were, into a light slumber, and without any sense
of pain he gave up the ghost.
A stone coffin had been prepared for his burial, but when they came to lay him in it, they found
his body a span longer than the coffin. Hereupon they chipped away as much of the stone as they
could, and made the coffin about two inches longer; but not even so would it contain the body.
Wherefore because of this difficulty of entombing him, they had thoughts either to get another
coffin, or else to shorten the body, by bending it at the knees, if they could, so that the coffin might
contain it. But Heaven interposed and a miracle prevented the execution of either of those designs;
for on a sudden, in the presence of the bishop and Sighard, who was the son of that same king and
monk, and who reigned after him jointly with his brother Suefred, and of no small number of men,
that coffin was found to fit the length of the body, insomuch that a pillow might even be put in at
the head; and at the feet the coffin was four inches longer than the body. He was buried in the
church of the blessed teacher of the Gentiles,by whose doctrine he had learned to hope for heavenly
things.

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