[Rank] St. Elizabeth of Portugal, Queen and Widow;;Semiduplex;;2;;vide C7a [Ant Vespera] @Commune/C7::1 The King shall greatly desire thy beauty, * for He is the Lord thy God.;;112 Mighty in work and word, * to pacify the wrath of the Lord, and to turn the heart of the father unto the son.;;121 As the rainbow giving light in the bright clouds, * and as the flower of roses in the spring of the year.;;126 As the morning star in the midst of a cloud, * and as the moon at the full.;;147 [Ant Matutinum] Thou hast set * the glory of Elizabeth above the heavens.;;8 Come, O My chosen one, * and I will establish My throne in thee.;;18 She hath received a blessing from the Lord, * and mercy from the God of her salvation.;;23 Because of truth, and meekness, and righteousness * shall thy right hand lead thee wonderfully.;;44 He breaketh the bow, * and cutteth the weapons in sunder, and burneth the shields in the fire.;;45 Thy right hand * is full of righteousness and mercy.;;47 Praise and beauty are before Him; * holiness and majesty are in His sanctuary.;;95 The heavens declared His righteousness * and all the people saw His glory.;;96 With righteousness shall He judge * the world, and the people with equity.;;97 [Nocturn 1 Versum] V. Many daughters have gathered riches R. But thou excellest them all. [Nocturn 2 Versum] V. Thy rod and thy staff. R. They comfort me. [Nocturn 3 Versum] V. A fire shall go before Him. R. And burn up His enemies round about. [Responsory1] R. Born daughter of a kingly race, in heaven standeth Isabel victorious, clad in a vesture wrought about with three diverse colours of grace. * For she hath left upon earth unto all them that come after her a noble example of a woman in three states of life. V. As.a virgin, as a wife, and as a widow, she walked undented. R. For she hath left upon earth unto all them that come after her a noble example of a woman in three states of life. [Responsory2] R. She opened her mouth with wisdom, * And in her tongue was the law of kindness. V. For thou hast prevented her with the. blessings of sweetness. R. And in her tongue was the law of kindness. [Responsory3] R. Thou, O Lord, hast given her her heart's desire, * And hast not withholden the request of her lips. V. Thou hast compassed her with thy favour as with a shield. R. And hast not withholden the request of her lips. &Gloria R. And hast not withholden the request of her lips. [Lectio4] Elizabeth, daughter of Peter III., King of Aragon, was born in the year of Christ 1271, and it was an omen of her saintly life; that her father and mother, contrary to the usual custom, caused her to be baptized, not by the name of her mother or grandmother, but by that of her mother's aunt, the holy Lady Elizabeth of Thuringia. As soon as ever she was born, her destiny of being a peacemaker between kings and kingdoms began to appear, for the joy of her birth put an end to the ruinous quarrels of her father and grandfather. As she grew up, her father, delighted with her disposition, was used to foretell that his Isabel would in herself excel all the daughters of the kingly house of Aragon, and that the happiness of his own home and kingdom was all owing to this one damsel, whose heavenly life he venerated for her indifference to bodily finery, her abstinence from pleasures, her many fasts, her instancy in prayer to God, and her activity in doing works of charity. This illustrious maiden was sought in marriage by many princes, and at twelve years of age was wedded with Christian rites to Denis, King of Portugal. [Lectio5] As a wife, she gave herself up as much to the education of her children, as to her own improvement, striving in all ways, next to God, to please her husband. For nearly half the year, she was used to live on bread and water, and once, when she was ill, God changed the water into wine, which the physicians had ordered her to drink, but which she was unwilling to take. Once when she kissed a disgusting ulcer in a poor woman, it was immediately healed. One winter-time when she was giving some money to the poor, and was fain her husband should not see her alms, the coins changed into roses. She gave sight to a maiden who had been born blind, and healed many other persons of grievous sicknesses by the Sign of the Cross. The miracles of this kind, which she worked, were many. She not only built, but richly endowed convents, schools, and churches. She had a wonderful skill in making peace between kings, and toiled unweariedly to lighten all suffering, whether public or private. [Lectio6] King Denis died (on the 6th day of January, 1325,) and Isabel, who in her maidenhood had been a pattern to virgins, and in her married life to wives, now, in her loneliness, was an example to widows. Clad in the raiment of the nuns of St Clare, she faithfully attended at the King's funeral, and soon after went to Compostella, where she offered many precious gifts, of silk, and gold, and silver, and precious stones, for the benefit of his soul. Thence she returned home, and spent in holy and godly uses everything that remained to her that was dear and costly, eager to relieve every kind of suffering. She lived, not for herself, but for God, and to be useful to mankind. She finished the convent for nuns, right worthy of a Queen, which she had founded at Coimbra. She fed the poor, defended widows, protected orphans. A war being lighted up between her son Alphonsus IV., King of Portugal, and her grandson Alphonsus V, King of Castile, she resolved to set out to reconcile them, and went to the famous city of Estremoz, upon the borders of the two kingdoms. On the journey, she caught a violent fever, of which, after a vision of the Virgin Mother of God, she died a saintly death on the 4th day of July, in the year 1336. She became illustrious for miracles after her death, especially for the sweetness of the savour of her body, which hath now remained uncorrupt for well-nigh three hundred years, and she hath always been spoken of as the Holy Queen Isabel. At length, in the year of our salvation 1625, which was that of the Jubilee, Urban VIII., all Christendom gathered together and approving, formally enrolled her name among those of the Saints.