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<h2> II. DRACO THE GREAT (Translation of the Relics of St. Orberosia) </h2>
<p>The direct posterity of Brian the Good was extinguished about the year 900
in the person of Collic of the Short Nose. A cousin of that prince, Bosco
the Magnanimous, succeeded him, and took care, in order to assure himself
of the throne, to put to death all his relations. There issued from him a
long line of powerful kings.</p>
<p>One of them, Draco the Great, attained great renown as a man of war. He
was defeated more frequently than the others. It is by this constancy in
defeat that great captains are recognized. In twenty years he burned down
more than a hundred thousand hamlets, market towns, unwalled towns,
villages, walled towns, cities, and universities. He set fire impartially
to his enemies' territory and to his own domains. And he used to explain
his conduct by saying:</p>
<p>"War without fire is like tripe without mustard: it is an insipid thing."</p>
<p>His justice was rigorous. When the peasants whom he made prisoners were
unable to raise the money for their ransoms he had them hanged from a
tree, and if any unhappy woman came to plead for her destitute husband he
dragged her by the hair at his horse's tail. He lived like a soldier
without effeminacy. It is satisfactory to relate that his manner of life
was pure. Not only did he not allow his kingdom to decline from its
hereditary glory, but, even in his reverses he valiantly supported the
honour of the Penguin people.</p>
<p>Draco the Great caused the relics of St. Orberosia to be transferred to
Alca.</p>
<p>The body of the blessed saint had been buried in a grotto on the Coast of
Shadows at the end of a scented heath. The first pilgrims who went to
visit it were the boys and girls from the neighbouring villages. They used
to go there in the evening, by preference in couples, as if their pious
desires naturally sought satisfaction in darkness and solitude. They
worshipped the saint with a fervent and discreet worship whose mystery
they seemed jealously to guard, for they did not like to publish too
openly the experiences they felt. But they were heard to murmur one to
another words of love, delight, and rapture with which they mingled the
name of Orberosia. Some would sigh that there they forgot the world;
others would say that they came out of the grotto in peace and calm; the
young girls among them used to recall to each other the joy with which
they had been filled in it.</p>
<p>Such were the marvels that the virgin of Alca performed in the morning of
her glorious eternity; they had the sweetness and indefiniteness of the
dawn. Soon the mystery of the grotto spread like a perfume throughout the
land; it was a ground of joy and edification for pious souls, and corrupt
men endeavoured, though in vain, by falsehood and calumny, to divert the
faithful from the springs of grace that flowed from the saint's tomb. The
Church took measures so that these graces should not remain reserved for a
few children, but should be diffused throughout all Penguin Christianity.
Monks took up their quarters in the grotto, they built a monastery, a
chapel, and a hostelry on the coast, and pilgrims began to flock thither.</p>
<p>As if strengthened by a longer sojourn in heaven, the blessed Orberosia
now performed still greater miracles for those who came to lay their
offerings on her tomb. She gave hopes to women who had been hitherto
barren, she sent dreams to reassure jealous old men concerning the
fidelity of the young wives whom they had suspected without cause, and she
protected the country from plagues, murrains, famines, tempests, and
dragons of Cappadocia.</p>
<p>But during the troubles that desolated the kingdom in the time of King
Collic and his successors, the tomb of St. Orberosia was plundered of its
wealth, the monastery burned down, and the monks dispersed. The road that
had been so long trodden by devout pilgrims was overgrown with furze and
heather, and the blue thistles of the sands. For a hundred years the
miraculous tomb had been visited by none save vipers, weasels, and bats,
when, one day the saint appeared to a peasant of the neighbourhood,
Momordic by name.</p>
<p>"I am the virgin Orberosia," said she to him; "I have chosen thee to
restore my sanctuary. Warn the inhabitants of the country that if they
allow my memory to be blotted out, and leave my tomb without honour and
wealth, a new dragon will come and devastate Penguinia."</p>
<p>Learned churchmen held an inquiry concerning this apparition, and
pronounced it genuine, and not diabolical but truly heavenly, and in later
years it was remarked that in France, in like circumstances, St. Foy and
St. Catherine had acted in the same way and made use of similar language.</p>
<p>The monastery was restored and pilgrims flocked to it anew. The virgin
Orberosia worked greater and greater miracles. She cured divers hurtful
maladies, particularly club-foot, dropsy, paralysis, and St. Guy's
disease. The monks who kept the tomb were enjoying an enviable opulence,
when the saint, appearing to King Draco the Great, ordered him to
recognise her as the heavenly patron of the kingdom and to transfer her
precious remains to the cathedral of Alca.</p>
<p>In consequence, the odoriferous relics of that virgin were carried with
great pomp to the metropolitan church and placed in the middle of the
choir in a shrine made of gold and enamel and ornamented with precious
stones.</p>
<p>The chapter kept a record of the miracles wrought by the blessed
Orberosia.</p>
<p>Draco the Great, who had never ceased to defend and exalt the Christian
faith, died fulfilled with the most pious sentiments and bequeathed his
great possessions to the Church.</p>
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