When
the holy
archbishop entered
the church, the monks stopped
vespers which they had begun
and ran to him, glorifying God
that they saw their father,
whom they had heard was dead,
alive and safe. They hastened,
by bolting the doors of the
church, to protect their shepherd
from the slaughter. But the
champion, turning
to them, ordered the church
doors to be thrown open, saying,
"It is not meet to make
a fortress of the house of prayer,
the church of Christ: though
it be not shut up it is able
to protect its own; and we shall
triumph over the enemy rather
in suffering than in fighting,
for we came to suffer, not to
resist." And straightway
the four knights entered the
house of prayer and reconciliation
with swords sacrilegiously drawn,
causing horror to the beholders
by their very looks and the
clanging of their arms.
[Becket and
the knights then argued for
a short while, and then one
of the knights struck Becket
with his sword]
Then
he received a second blow on
the head but still stood firm.
At the third blow he fell on
his knees and elbows, offering
himself a living victim, and
saying in a low voice, "For
the Name of Jesus and the protection
of the Church I am ready to
embrace death."
Then the third knight inflicted
a terrible wound as he lay,
by which the sword was broken
against the pavement, and the
crown which was large was separated
from the head... The fourth
knight prevented any from interfering
so that the others might freely
perpetrate the murder. As to
the fifth, no knight but that
clerk who had entered with the
knights, that a fifth blow might
not be wanting to the martyr
who was in other things like
to Christ, he put
his foot on the neck of the
holy priest and precious martyr,
and, horrible to say, scattered
his brains and blood over the
pavement, calling
out to the others, "Let
us away, knights; he will rise
no more."
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