A vision that Lady Bridget had in Bethlehem, where the Virgin Mary showed to her
the whole manner of her childbearing and how she gave birth to her glorious Son
just as the Virgin herself had promised the same Lady Bridget in Rome fifteen years
before she went to Bethlehem as can be seen in the first chapter of this book.
When I was at the manger of the Lord in Bethlehem, I saw a Virgin, pregnant
and most very beautiful, clothed in a white mantle and a finely woven tunic through
which from without I could clearly discern her virginal flesh. Her womb was full
and much swollen, for she was now ready to give birth. With her there was a very
dignified old man; and with them they had both an ox and an ass. When they had
entered the cave, and after the ox and the ass had been tied to the manger, the old
man went outside and brought to the Virgin a lighted candle and fixed it in the wall
and went outside in order not to be personally present at the birth.
And so the Virgin then took the shoes from her feet, put off the white mantle
that covered her, removed the veil from her head, and laid these things beside her,
remaining in only her tunic, with her most beautiful hair - as if of gold - spread out
upon her shoulder blades. She then drew out two small cloths of linen and two of
wool, very clean and finely woven, which she carried with her to wrap the infant
that was to be born, and two other small linens to cover and bind his head; and she
laid these cloths beside her that she might use them in due time.
And when all these things had thus been prepared, then the Virgin knelt with
great reverence, putting herself at prayer; and she kept her back toward the manger
and her face lifted to heaven toward the east. And so, with raised hands and with
her eyes intent on heaven, she was as if suspended in an ecstasy of contemplation,
inebriated with divine sweetness. And while she was thus in prayer, I saw the One
lying in her womb then move; and then and there, in a moment and the twinkling of
an eye, she gave birth to a Son, from whom there went out such great and ineffable
light and splendor that the sun could not be compared to it. Nor did that candle that
the old man had put in place give light at all because that divine splendor totally
annihilated the material splendor of the candle.
And so sudden and momentary was that manner of giving birth that I was
unable to notice or discern how or in what member she was giving birth. But yet, at
once, I saw that glorious infant lying on the earth, naked and glowing in the
greatest of neatness. His flesh was most clean of all filth and uncleanness. I saw
also the afterbirth, lying wrapped very neatly beside him. And then I heard the
wonderfully sweet and most dulcet songs of the angels. And the Virgin's womb,
which before the birth had been very swollen, at once retracted; and her body then
looked wonderfully beautiful and delicate.
When therefore the Virgin felt that she had now given birth, at once, having
bowed her head and joined her hands, with great dignity and reverence she adored
the boy and said to him: "Welcome, my God, my Lord, and my Son!" And then the
boy, crying and, as it were, trembling from the cold and the hardness of the
pavement where he lay, rolled a little and extended his limbs, seeking to find
refreshment and his Mother's favor. Then his Mother took him in her hands and
pressed him to her breast, and with cheek and breast she warmed him with great joy
and tender maternal compassion.
Then, sitting on the earth, she put her Son in her lap and deftly caught his
umbilical cord with her fingers. At once it was cut off, and from it no liquid or
blood went out. And at once she began to wrap him carefully, first in the linen
cloths and then in the woolen, binding his little body, legs, and arms with a ribbon
that had been sewn into four parts of the outer wollen cloth. And afterward she
wrapped and tied on the boy's head those two small linen cloths that she had
prepared for this purpose.
When these things therefore were accomplished, the old man entered; and
prostrating on the earth, he adored him on bended knee and wept for joy. Not even
at the birth was that Virgin changed in color or by infirmity. Nor was there in her
any such failure of bodily strength as usually happens in other women giving birth,
except that her swollen womb retracted to the prior state in which it had been
before she conceived the boy. Then, however, she arose, holding the boy in her
arms; and together both of them, namely, she and Joseph, put him in the manger,
and on bended knee they continued to adore him with gladness and immense joy.