ST. SIMON, Infant Martyr
coaxed
him to take his hand. The boy, who was not two years old, did so; but
he began to call and cry for his mother when he found himself being led
from home. Then Tobias gave him a bright coin to look at, and with many
kind caresses silenced his grief, and conducted him securely to his
house. At midnight on Holy Thursday
the work of butchery began. Having gagged his mouth, they held his arms
in the form of a cross, while they pierced his tender body with awls
and bodkins in blasphemous mockery of the sufferings of Jesus Christ.
After an hour's torture the little martyr lifted his eyes to heaven and
gave up his innocent soul. The Jews cast his body into the river; but
their crime was discovered and punished, while the holy relics were
enshrined in St. Peter's Church at Trent, where they have worked many
miracles.
WILLIAM
OF NORWICH is another of these children martyrs. His parents were
simple country folk, but his mother was taught by a vision to expect a
Saint in her son. As a boy be fasted thrice a week and prayed
constantly, and he was only an apprentice twelve years of age, at a
tanner's in Norwich, when he won his crown. A little before Easter,
1137, he was enticed into a Jew's house, and was there gagged, bound,
and crucified in hatred of Christ. Five years passed before the body was
found, when it was buried as a saintly relic in the cathedral
churchyard. A rose-tree planted hard by flowered miraculously in
midwinter, and many sick persons were healed at his shrine.
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