power is from God the Father, and not from any other,
the sentence is perfected and fulfilled. And
moreover, in as much as thou hast cursed don Sancho
thy son, because of the dishonour and rebellion and
despite which he hath done thee, know thou for a surety
that the Highest hath heard thy curse;—that
all who spring from him shall sink lower and lower,
with all their lordship, in such wise that some of
them may wish the earth to open and swallow them up:
and this shall last until the fourth generation from
don Sancho thy son, when thy male heirs shall fail,
and none shall remain to inherit this lordship; and
the people shall be in grief and trouble, not knowing
what counsel to follow. And all this dole shall
be for thy sins and others, especially for the sin
which thy son and those of the realm have committed
in rising against thee. But the Highest shall
send them salvation from the East,—a right
noble king, and a good and a perfect one, and one
endued with justice, and with all the great and noble
things becoming a king. And he shall be fatherly
to the people, in such wise that the living, and those
even whose bones lie in the grave, shall bless God
for his coming and for his goodness. And he shall
be aided by the High God, as he shall well merit;
so his people shall forget their past sufferings,
how great ones soever may befall them before that
joyful day. Moreover, know thou for a surety,
that by reason of thy continual prayers to the Glorious
Mother of God, from seventeen years of age until now,
she hath obtained from the Highest, that in thirty
days hence thy soul depart from the world and enter
purgatory, which is good hope; and in time, when the
Highest shall see fit, it shall enter into glory everlasting!’
“And these words being said, the angel vanished:
and the king was long afraid. Then he arose quickly,
and opened the door of his cabinet, and he found in
the room his four chaplains, who never forsook him;
and he had great comfort with them in his sufferings,
and in reckoning his hours with them: and he
made them bring ink and paper, and he made them write
down all which the angel had told him. And during
the thirty days he confessed and communicated every
third day; and except on Sundays, during the whole
thirty days, he ate only three mouthfuls of bread in
the week, and drank water only, and that no more than
once a day. And he confirmed his last testament,
and promoted his servants. And at the end of
the thirty days, his soul departed according to the
angel’s warning, which he knew through the intercession
of Our Lady the Virgin St. Mary.”
Ortiz thinks it necessary to enter into a formal and
lengthened refutation of the angel’s visit,
and to prove, from the style, the anachronisms, and
other circumstances, that it must be a forgery.