[Rank] S. Brunonis Confessoris;;Duplex;;3;;vide C5 [RankNewcal] S. Brunonis Confessoris;;Duplex optional;;2;;vide C5 [Rule] vide C5; 9 lectiones [Oratio] May we be aided by the intercession of St. Bruno, thy Confessor, we beseech thee, O Lord; that we, who have grievously offended thy Majesty by sin, may, by his merits and prayers, obtain forgiveness for our offenses. $Per Dominum [Lectio4] Bruno, the Founder of the Charterhouse Monks, was born at Cologne, (about the year of our Lord 1030.) From his earliest years he was a very grave child, turning away from childish things, and that so manifestly, that by the grace of God the tokens of holiness already pointed him out as a Father of monks, and a restorer of the life of hermits. His parents, who were eminent for rank and goodness, sent him to Paris, where he studied so well in Philosophy and Theology, that he took the degree of Doctor in both faculties; and a short while after, for his famous graces, he was made a Canon of Rheims. [Lectio5] After some years, he, and six comrades, forsook the world and betook themselves to Hew, the holy Bishop of Grenoble, who, when he learned the reason of their coming, and believing them to have been figured by seven stars which he had seen that night in a dream falling at his feet, gave them a grant of land in some very wild mountains in his Dioecese, which are called the Chartreuses. Thither Bruno and his companions, together with Hew, withdrew themselves, (in the year 1084,) and led for some years the life of hermits. Pope Urban II., who had formerly been his disciple (at Rheims,) commanded him to come to Rome, (in 1089,) and amid the afflictions which then scourged the Church, held him for some time as his counsellor. But at last Bruno, who had refused the Archbishopric of Reggio, got his leave to go away. [Lectio6] In his love of the wilderness, he betook himself to a certain desert place in the Diocese of Squillaci, in the uttermost coasts of Calabria, (whither he went in 1090.) He was praying there one day in a cave, when the hounds of Roger, Sovereign Earl of Sicily and Calabria, who was out a-hunting, came and bayed at the door of it. Thus was he found by this Prince, who was moved by his holiness, and began to cherish him and his comrades, and treat them very kindly. The Earl's goodness was rewarded, for when he was one time laying siege to Capua, and one Sergius, who was first groom of his bedchamber, had made a plot to betray him, Bruno, who was still living in the desert above mentioned, appeared to him in a dream, and delivered him from the danger which was hanging over him. At length Bruno, full of graces and good works, and famous for godliness not less than for learning, fell asleep in the Lord, (upon the 6th day of October, in the year 1101,) and was buried in the monastery of St. Stephen, founded by the same Earl Roger, where he is still held in great honour. [Lectio94] Bruno, the founder of the Carthusian Order, was born at Cologne. From his boyhood he excelled in the soberness of his ways and his desire for solitude parents sent him to Paris, and there he made such progress in the study of philosophy and theology that he earned the degree of doctor and master in both faculties. Not long after, because of outstanding virtues he was anointed a Canon of the church of Reims. Having founded the Carthusian Order and having led a hermit's life in this Order for some years, he was summoned to Rome by Urban II, who had been his disciple. In those calamitous times, the Pope made use of Bruno's counsel and learning for several years. Finally the man of God, who had refused the archbishopric of Reims, was allowed to depart. He again sought a place of solitude, and there, full of virtues and merits, he fell asleep in the Lord. &teDeum