Saint Anselm

                 Archbishop of Canterbury, Doctor of the Church born at Aosta a Burgundian town
                     on the confines of Lombardy, died 21 April, 1109. His father, Gundulf, was a
                     Lombard who had become a citizen of Aosta, and his mother, Ermenberga,
                     came of an old Burgundian family. Like many other saints, Anselm learnt the first
                     lessons of piety from his mother, and at a very early age he was fired with the
                     love of learning. In after life he still cherished the memories of childhood, and his
                     biographer, Eadmer, has preserved some incidents which he had learnt from the
                     saint's own lips. The child had heard his mother speak of God, Who dwelt on
                     high ruling all things. Living in the mountains, he thought that Heaven must be on
                     their lofty summits. "And while he often revolved these matters in his mind, it
                     chanced that one night he saw in a vision that he must go up to the summit of
                     the mountain and hasten to the court of God, the great King. But before he began
                     to ascend the mountain, he saw in the plain through which he had passed to its
                     foot, women, who were the King's handmaidens, reaping the corn; but they were
                     doing this very negligently and slothfully. Then, grieving for their sloth, and
                     rebuking them, he bethought him that he would accuse them before their Lord
                     and King. Thereafter, having climbed the mountain he entered the royal court.
                     There he found the King with only his cupbearer. For it seemed that, as it was
                     now Autumn, the King had sent his household to gather the harvest. As the boy
                     entered he was called by the Master, and drawing nigh he sat at his feet. Then
                     with cheery kindliness he was asked who and whence he was and what he was
                     seeking. To these questions he made answer as well as he knew. Then at the
                     Master's command some moist white bread was brought him by the cupbearer
                     and he feasted thereon in his presence, wherefore when morning came and he
                     brought to mind the things he had seen, as a simpler and innocent child he
                     believed that he had truly been fed in heaven with the bread of the Lord, and this
                     he publicly affirmed in the presence of others ". (Eadmer, Life of St. Anselm, I, i.)
                     Eadmer adds that the boy was beloved by all and made rapid progress in
                     learning. Before he was fifteen he sought admission to a monastery. But the
                     abbot, fearing the father's displeasure, refused him. The boy then made a strange
                     prayer. He asked for an illness, thinking this would move the monks to yield to
                     his-wishes. The illness came but his admission to the monastery was still denied
                     him. None the less he determined to gain his end at some future date. But ere
                     long he was drawn away by the pleasures of youth and lost his first ardour and
                     his love of learning. His love for his mother in some measure restrained him. But
                     on her death it seemed that his anchor was lost, and he was at the mercy of the
                     waves.

                     At this time his father treated him with great harshness; so much so that he
                     resolved to leave his home. Taking a single companion, he set out on foot to
                     cross Mont Cenis. At one time he was fainting with hunger and was fain to
                     refresh his strength with snow, when the servant found that some bread was still
                     left in the baggage, and Anselm regained strength and continued the journey.
                     After passing nearly three years in Burgundy and France, he came into
                     Normandy and tarried for a while at Avranches before finding his home at the
                     Abbey of Bec, then made illustrious by Lanfranc's learning. Anselm profited so
                     well by the lessons of this master that he became his most familiar disciple and
                     shared in the work of teaching. After spending some time in this labour, he began
                     to think that his toil would have more merit if he took the monastic habit. But at
                     first he felt some reluctance to enter the Abbey of Bec, where he would be
                     overshadowed by Lanfranc. After a time, however, he saw that it would profit him
                     to remain where he would be surpassed by others. His father was now dead,
                     having ended his days in the monastic habit, and Anselm had some thought of
                     living on his patrimony and relieving the needy. The life of a hermit also presented
                     itself to him as a third alternative. Anxious to act with prudence he first asked the
                     advice of Lanfranc, who referred the matter to the Archbishop of Rouen. This
                     prelate decided in favour of the monastic life, and Anselm became a monk in the
                     Abbey of Bec. This was in 1060. His life as a simple monk lasted for three years,
                     for in 1063 Lanfranc was appointed Abbot of Caen, and Anselm was elected to
                     succeed him as Prior. There is some doubt as to the date of this appointment.
                     But Canon Poree points out that Anselm, writing at the time of his election as
                     Archbishop (1093), says that he had then lived thirty three years in the monastic
                     habit, three years as a monk without preferment, fifteen as prior, and fifteen as
                     abbot (Letters of Anselm, III, vii). This is confirmed by an entry in the chronicle of
                     the Abbey of Bec, which was compiled not later than 1136. Here it is recorded
                     that Anselm died in 1109, in the forty-ninth year of his monastic life and the
                     seventy sixth of his age, having been three years a simple monk; fifteen, prior;
                     fifteen, abbot; and sixteen archbishop (Poree, Histoire de l'abbaye de Bec, III,
                     173). At first his promotion to the office vacated by Lanfranc gave offence to
                     some of the other monks who considered they had a better claim than the young
                     stranger. But Anselm overcame their opposition by gentleness, and ere long had
                     won their affection and obedience. To the duties of prior he added those of
                     teacher. It was likewise during this period that he composed some of his
                     philosophical and theological works, notably, the "Monologium" and the
                     "Proslogium". Besides giving good counsel to the monks under his care, he
                     found time to comfort others by his letters. Remembering his attraction for the
                     solitude of a hermitage we can hardly wonder that he felt oppressed by this busy
                     life and longed to lay aside his office and give himself up to the delights of
                     contemplation. But the Archbishop of Rouen bade him retain his office and
                     prepare for yet greater burdens.

                     This advice was prophetic, for in 1078, on the death of Herluin, founder and first
                     Abbot of Bec Anselm was elected to succeed him. It was with difficulty that the
                     monks overcame his reluctance to accept the office. His biographer, Eadmer,
                     gives us a picture of a strange scene. The Abbot-elect fell prostrate before the
                     brethren and with tears besought them not to lay this burden on him, while they
                     prostrated themselves and earnestly begged him to accept the office. His
                     election at once brought Anselm into relations with England, where the Norman
                     abbey had several possessions. In the first year of his office, he visited
                     Canterbury where he was welcomed by Lanfranc. "The converse of Lanfranc and
                     Anselm", says Professor Freeman, "sets before us a remarkable and memorable
                     pair. The lawyer, the secular scholar, met the divine and the philosopher; the
                     ecclesiastical statesman stood face to face with the saint. The wisdom,
                     conscientious no doubt but still hard and worldly, which could guide churches
                     and kingdoms in troublous times was met by the boundless love which took in all
                     God's creatures of whatever race or species" (History of the Norman Conquest,
                     IV, 442). It is interesting to note that one of the matters discussed on this
                     occasion related to a Saxon archbishop, Elphage (AElfheah), who had been put
                     to death by the Danes for refusing to pay a ransom which would impoverish his
                     people. Lanfranc doubted his claim to the honours of a martyr since he did not
                     die for the Faith. But Anselm solved the difficulty by saying that he who died for
                     this lesser reason would much more be ready to die for the Faith. Moreover,
                     Christ is truth and justice and he who dies for truth and justice dies for Christ. It
                     was on this occasion that Anselm first met Eadmer, then a young monk of
                     Canterbury. At the same time the saint, who in his childhood was loved by all
                     who knew him, and who, as Prior of Bec, had won the affection of those who
                     resisted his authority, was already gaining the hearts of Englishmen. His fame
                     had spread far and wide, and many of the great men of the age prized his
                     friendship and sought his counsel. Among these was William the Conqueror, who
                     desired that Anselm might come to give him consolation on his death-bed.

                     When Lanfranc died, William Rufus kept the See of Canterbury vacant for four
                     years, seized its revenues, and kept the Church in England in a state of anarchy.
                     To many the Abbot of Bec seemed to be the man best fitted for the
                     archbishopric. The general desire was so evident that Anselm felt a reluctance to
                     visit England lest it should appear that he was seeking the office. At length,
                     however, he yielded to the entreaty of Hugh, Earl of Chester and came to
                     England in 1092. Arriving in Canterbury on the eve of the Nativity of the Blessed
                     Virgin, he was hailed by the people as their future archbishop; but he hastened
                     away and would in no wise consent to remain for the festival. At a private
                     interview with the King, who received him kindly, he spoke freely on the evils by
                     which the land was made desolate. Anselm's own affairs kept him in England for
                     some months, but when he wished to return to Bec the King objected.
                     Meanwhile the people made no secret of their desires. With the King's
                     permission prayers were offered in all the churches that God would move the
                     King to deliver the Church of Canterbury by the appointment of a pastor, and at
                     the request of the bishops Anselm drew up the form of prayer. The King fell ill
                     early in the new year (1093), and on his sick-bed he was moved to repentance.
                     The prelates and barons urged on him the necessity of electing an archbishop.
                     Yielding to the manifest desire of all he named Anselm, and all joyfully concurred
                     in the election. Anselm, however, firmly refused the honour, whereupon another
                     scene took place still more strange than that which occurred when he was
                     elected abbot. He was dragged by force to the King's bedside, and a pastoral
                     staff was thrust into his closed hand; he was borne thence to the altar where the
                     "Te Deum" was sung. There is no reason to suspect the sincerity of this
                     resistance. Naturally drawn to contemplation, Anselm could have little liking for
                     such an office even in a period of peace; still less could he desire it in those
                     stormy days. He knew full well what awaited him. The King's repentance passed
                     away with his sickness and Anselm soon saw signs of trouble. His first offence
                     was his refusal to consent to the alienation of Church lands which the King had
                     granted to his followers. Another difficulty arose from the King's need of money.
                     Although his see was impoverished by the royal rapacity, the Archbishop was
                     expected to make his majesty a free gift; and when he offered five hundred marks
                     they were scornfully refused as insufficient. As if these trials were not enough
                     Anselm had to bear the reproaches of some of the monks of Bec who were loath
                     to lose him; in his letters he is at pains to show that he did not desire the office.
                     He finally was consecrated Archbishop of Canterbury 4 December, 1093. It now
                     remained for him to go to Rome to obtain the pallium. But here was a fresh
                     occasion of trouble. The Antipope Clement was disputing the authority of Urban
                     II, who had been recognized by France and Normandy. It does not appear that
                     the English King was a partisan of the Antipope, but he wished to strengthen his
                     own position by asserting his right to decide between the rival claimants. Hence,
                     when Anselm asked leave to go to the Pope, the King said that no one in
                     England should acknowledge either Pope till he, the King, had decided the
                     matter. The Archbishop insisted on going to Pope Urban, whose authority he had
                     already acknowledged, and, as he had told the King, this was one of the
                     conditions on which alone he would accept the archbishopric. This grave
                     question was referred to a council of the realm held at Rockingham in March,
                     1095. Here Anselm boldly asserted the authority of Urban. His speech is a
                     memorable testimony to the doctrine of papal supremacy. It is significant that not
                     one of the bishops could call it in question (Eadmer, Historia Novorum, lib. I).
                     Regarding Anselm's belief on this point we may cite the frank words of Dean
                     Hook: "Anselm was simply a papist -- He believed that St. Peter was the Prince
                     of the Apostles -- that as such he was the source of all ecclesiastical authority
                     and power; that the pope was his successor; and that consequently, to the pope
                     was due, from the bishops and metropolitans as well as from the rest of
                     mankind, the obedience which a spiritual suzerain has the right to expect from
                     his vassals" [Lives of the Archbishops of Canterbury (London, 18(i0-75), II, 183].

                     William now sent envoys to Rome to get the pallium. They found Urban in
                     possession and recognized him. Walter, Bishop of Albano, came back with them
                     as legate bearing the pallium. The King publicly acknowledged the authority of
                     Urban, and at first endeavoured to get Anselm deposed by the legate. Eventually
                     a reconciliation was occasioned by the royal difficulties in Wales and in the
                     north. The King and the Archbishop met in peace. Anselm would not take the
                     pallium from the King's hand; but in a solemn service at Canterbury on 10 June,
                     1095 it was laid on the altar by the legate, whence Anselm took it. Fresh trouble
                     arose in 1097. On returning from his ineffectual Welsh campaign William brought
                     a charge against the Archbishop in regard to the contingent he had furnished and
                     required him to meet this charge in the King's court. Anselm declined and asked
                     leave to go to Rome. This was refused, but after a meeting at Winchester
                     Anselm was told to be ready to sail in ten days. On parting with the King, the
                     Archbishop gave him his blessing, which William received with bowed head. At
                     St. Omer's Anselm confirmed a multitude of persons. Christmas was spent at
                     Cluny, and the rest of the winter at Lyons. In the spring he resumed his journey
                     and crossed Mont Cenis with two companions all travelling as simple monks. At
                     the monasteries on their way they were frequently asked for news of Anselm. On
                     his arrival in Rome he was treated with great honour by the Pope. His case was
                     considered and laid before the council, but nothing could be done beyond
                     sending a letter of remonstrance to William. During his stay in Italy Anselm
                     enjoyed the hospitality of the Abbot of Telese, and passed the summer in a
                     mountain village belonging to this monastery. Here he finished his work, "Cur
                     Deus Homo", which he had begun in England. In October, 1098, Urban held a
                     council at Bari to deal with the difficulties raised by the Greeks in regard to the
                     procession of the Holy Ghost. Here Anselm was called by the Pope to a place of
                     honour and bidden to take the chief part in the discussion. His arguments were
                     afterwards committed to writing in his treatise on this subject. His own case was
                     also brought before this council, which would have excommunicated William but
                     for Anselm's intercession. Both he and his companions now desired to return to
                     Lyons, but were bidden to await the action of another council to be held in the
                     Lateran at Easter. Here Anselm heard the canons passed against Investitures,
                     and the decree of excommunication against the offenders. This incident had a
                     deep influence on his career in England.

                     While still staying in the neighbourhood of Lyons, Anselm heard of the tragic
                     death of William. Soon messages from the new king and chief men of the land
                     summoned him to England. Landing at Dover, he hastened to King Henry at
                     Salisbury. He was kindly received, but the question of Investitures was at once
                     raised in an acute form. Henry required the Archbishop himself to receive a fresh
                     investiture. Anselm alleged the decrees of the recent Roman council and
                     declared that he had no choice in the matter. The difficulty was postponed, as
                     the King decided to send to Rome to ask for a special exemption. Meanwhile,
                     Anselm was able to render the King two signal services. He helped to remove the
                     obstacle in the way of his marriage with Edith, the heiress of the Saxon kings.
                     The daughter of St. Margaret had sought shelter in a convent, where she had
                     worn the veil, but had taken no vows. It was thought by some that this was a bar
                     to marriage, but Anselm had the case considered in a council at Lambeth where
                     the royal maiden's liberty was fully established, and the Archbishop himself gave
                     his blessing to the marriage. Moreover, when Robert landed at Portsmouth and
                     many of the Norman nobles were wavering in their allegiance, it was Anselm who
                     turned the tide in favour of Henry. In the meantime Pope Paschal had refused the
                     King's request for an exemption from the Lateran decrees, yet Henry persisted in
                     his resolution to compel Anselm to accept investiture at his hands. The revolt of
                     Robert de Bellesme put off the threatened rupture. To gain time the King sent
                     another embassy to Rome. On its return, Anselm once more required to receive
                     investiture. The Pope's letter was not made public, but it was reported to be of
                     the same tenor as his previous reply. The envoys now gave out that the Pope had
                     orally consented to the King's request, but could not say so in writing for fear of
                     offending other sovereigns. Friends of Anselm who had been at Rome, disputed
                     this assertion. In this crisis it was agreed to send to Rome again; meanwhile the
                     King would continue to invest bishops and abbots, but Anselm should not be
                     required to consecrate them.

                     During this interval Anselm held a council at Westminster. Here stringent canons
                     were passed against the evils of the age. In spite of the compromise about
                     investiture, Anselm was required to consecrate bishops invested by the King, but
                     he firmly refused, and it soon became evident that his firmness was taking effect.
                     Bishops gave back the staff they had received at the royal hands, or refused to
                     be consecrated by another in defiance of Anselm. When the Pope's answer
                     arrived, repudiating the story of the envoys, the King asked Anselm to go to
                     Rome himself. Though he could not support the royal request he was willing to
                     lay the facts before the Pope. With this understanding he once more betook
                     himself to Rome. The request was again refused, but Henry was not
                     excommunicated. Understanding that Henry did not wish to receive him in
                     England, Anselm interrupted his homeward journey at Lyons. In this city he
                     received a letter from the Pope informing him of the excommunication of the
                     counsellors who had advised the King to insist on investitures, but not decreeing
                     anything about the King. Anselm resumed his journey, and on the way he heard
                     of the illness of Henry's sister, Adela of Blois. He turned aside to visit her and on
                     her recovery informed her that he was returning to England to excommunicate
                     her brother. She at once exerted herself to bring about a meeting between
                     Anselm and Henry, in July, 1105. But though a reconciliation was effected, and
                     Anselm was urged to return to England, the claim to invest was not relinquished,
                     and recourse had again to be made to Rome. A papal letter authorizing Anselm
                     to absolve from censures incurred by breaking the laws against investitures
                     healed past offences but made no provision for the future. At length, in a council
                     held in London in 1107, the question found a solution. The King relinquished the
                     claim to invest bishops and abbots, while the Church allowed the prelates to do
                     homage for their temporal possessions. Lingard and other writers consider this a
                     triumph for the King, saying that he had the substance and abandoned a mere
                     form. But it was for no mere form that this long war had been waged. The rite
                     used in the investiture was the symbol of a real power claimed by the English
                     kings, and now at last abandoned. The victory rested with the Archbishop, and
                     as Schwane says (Kirchenlexicon, s. v.) it prepared the way for the later solution
                     of the same controversy in Germany. Anselm was allowed to end his days in
                     peace. In the two years that remained he continued his pastoral labours and
                     composed the last of his writings. Eadmer, the faithful chronicler of these
                     contentions, gives a pleasing picture of his peaceful death. The dream of his
                     childhood was come true; he was to climb the mountain and taste the bread of
                     Heaven.

                     His active work as a pastor and stalwart champion of the Church makes Anselm
                     one of the chief figures in religious history. The sweet influence of his spiritual
                     teaching was felt far and wide, and its fruits were seen in many lands. His stand
                     for the freedom of the Church in a crisis of medieval history had far-reaching
                     effects long after his own time. As a writer and a thinker he may claim yet higher
                     rank, and his influence on the course of philosophy and Catholic theology was
                     even deeper and more enduring If he stands on the one hand with Gregory VII;
                     and Innocent III, and Thomas Becket, on the other he may claim a place beside
                     Athanasius, Augustine, and Thomas Aquinas. His merits in the field of theology
                     have received official recognition; he has been declared a Doctor of the Church by
                     Clement XI, 1720, and in the office read on his feast day (21 April) it is said that
                     his works are a pattern for all theologians. Yet it may be doubted whether his
                     position is generally appreciated by students of divinity. In some degree his work
                     has been hidden by the fabric reared on his foundations. His books were not
                     adopted, like those of Peter Lombard and St. Thomas, as the usual text of
                     commentators and lecturers in theology, nor was he constantly cited as an
                     authority, like St. Augustine. This was natural enough, since in the next century
                     new methods came in with the rise of the Arabic and Aristotelean philosophy; the
                     "Books of Sentences" were in some ways more fit for regular theological reading;
                     Anselm was yet too near to have the venerable authority of the early Fathers. For
                     these reasons it may be said that his writings were not properly appreciated till
                     time had brought in other changes in the schools, and men were led to study the
                     history of theology. But though his works are not cast in the systematic form of
                     the " Summa " of St. Thomas, they cover the whole field of Catholic doctrine.
                     There are few pages of our theology that have not been illustrated by the labours
                     of Anselm. His treatise on the procession of the Holy Spirit has helped to guide
                     scholastic speculations on the Trinity, his "Cur Deus Homo" throws a flood of
                     light on the theology of the Atonement, and one of his works anticipates much of
                     the later controversies on Free Will and Predestination. In the seventeenth
                     century, a Spanish Benedictine, Cardinal d'Aguirre made the writings of Anselm
                     the groundwork of a course of theology, " S. Anselmi Theologia " (Salamanca,
                     1678-81). Unfortunately the work never got beyond the first three folio volumes,
                     containing the commentaries on the " Monologium ". In recent years Dom
                     Anselm Öcsényi, O.S.B. has accomplished the task on a more modest scale in
                     a little Latin volume on the theology of St. Anselm, "De Theologia S. Anselmi"
                     (Brünn, 1884).

                     Besides being one of the fathers of scholastic theology, Anselm fills an important
                     place in the history of philosophic speculation. Coming in the first phase of the
                     controversy on Universals, he had to meet the extreme Nominalism of Roscelin;
                     partly from this fact, partly from his native Platonism his Realism took what may
                     be considered a somewhat extreme form. It was too soon to find the golden
                     mean of moderate Realism, accepted by later philosophers. His position was a
                     stage in the process and it is significant that one of his biographers, John of
                     Salisbury, was among the first to find the true solution.

                     Anselm's chief achievement in philosophy was the ontological argument for the
                     existence of God put forth in his "Proslogium". Starting from the notion that God
                     is "that than which nothing greater can be thought", he argues that what exists in
                     reality is greater than that which is only in the mind; wherefore, since "God is
                     that than which nothing greater can be thought", He exists in reality. The validity
                     of the argument was disputed at the outset by a monk named Gaunilo, who
                     wrote a criticism on it to which Anselm replied. Eadmer tells a curious story
                     about St. Anselm's anxiety while he was trying to work out this argument. He
                     could think of nothing else for days together. And when at last he saw it clearly,
                     he was filled with joy, and made haste to commit it to writing. The waxen tablets
                     were given in charge to one of the monks but when they were wanted they were
                     missing. Anselm managed to recall the argument, it was written on fresh tablets
                     and given into safer keeping. But when it was wanted it was found that the wax
                     was broken to Pieces. Anselm with some difficulty put the fragments together
                     and had the whole copied on parchment for greater security. The story sounds
                     like an allegory of the fate which awaited this famous argument, which was lost
                     and found again, pulled to pieces and restored in the course of controversy.
                     Rejected by St. Thomas and his followers, it was revived in another form by
                     Descartes. After being assailed by Kant, it was defended by Hegel, for whom it
                     had a peculiar fascination - he recurs to it in many parts of his writings. In one
                     place he says that it is generally used by later philosophers, "yet always along
                     with the other proofs, although it alone is the true one" (German Works, XII, 547).
                     Assailants of this argument should remember that all minds are not cast in one
                     mould, and it is easy to understand how some can feel the force of arguments
                     that are not felt by others. But if this proof were indeed, as some consider it, an
                     absurd fallacy, how could it appeal to such minds as those of Anselm,
                     Descartes, and Hegel? It may be well to add that the argument was not rejected
                     by all the great Schoolmen. It was accepted by Alexander of Hales (Summa, Pt.
                     I, Q. iii, memb. 1, 2), and supported by Scotus. (In I, Dist. ii, Q. ii.) In modern
                     times it is accepted by Mohler, who quotes Hegel's defence with approval.

                     It is not often that a Catholic saint wins the admiration of German philosophers
                     and English historians. But Anselm has this singular distinction Hegel's
                     appreciation of his mental powers may be matched by Freeman's warm words of
                     praise for the great Archbishop of Canterbury. "Stranger as he was, he has won
                     his place among the noblest worthies of our island. It was something to be the
                     model of all ecclesiastical perfection; it was something to be the creator of the
                     theology of Christendom - but it was something higher still to be the very
                     embodiment of righteousness and mercy, to be handed down in the annals of
                     humanity as the man who saved the hunted hare and stood up for the holiness of
                     AElfheah" (History of the Norman Conquest, IV, 444).

                     Collections of the works of St. Anselm were issued soon after the invention of
                     printing. Ocsenyi mentions nine earlier than the sixteenth century. The first
                     attempt at a critical edition was that of Th. Raynaud, S.J. (Lyons, 1630), which
                     rejects many spurious works, e. g. the Commentaries on St. Paul. The best
                     editions are those of Dom Gerberon, O.S.B. (Paris, 1675, 1721; Venice 1744,
                     Migne, 1845). Most of the more important works have also been issued
                     separately - thus the " Monologium" is included in Hurter's " Opuscula SS.
                     Patrum " and published with the " Proslogium " by Haas (Tubingen). There are
                     numerous separate editions of the "Cur Deus Homo" and of Anselm's "Prayers
                     and Meditations"; these last were done into English by Archbishop Laud (1638),
                     and there are French and German versions of the "meditationes" and the
                     "Monologium". "Cur Deus Homo" has also been translated into English and
                     German - see also the translations by Deane (Chicago, 1903). For Anselm's
                     views on education, see ABBEY OF BEC.

                     BIBLIOGRAPHY

                     The chief sources for Anselm's life are his own letters and the two biotraphical
                     works of his friend, disciple, and secretary, Eadmer, monk of Canterbury, and
                     Bishop-elect of St. Andrews. Eadmers's Historia Nonorum may be called the
                     "Life and Times of St. Anselm"; his Vita S. Anselmi gives the inner life of the
                     saint. Also, there is a brief account of the miracles of St. Anselm which is also
                     ascribed to Eadmer, but its authorship is doubtful. Other early writers on Anselm,
                     such as John of Salisbury, add some new details, but their account of the Saint
                     is largely drawn from Eadmer.

                                                                                                    W. H. Kent

                     Transcribed by Tomas Hancil and Joseph P. Thomas

                                        The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume I
                                    Copyright © 1907 by Robert Appleton Company
                                    Online Edition Copyright © 1999 by Kevin Knight
                                  Nihil Obstat, March 1, 1907. Remy Lafort, S.T.D., Censor
                                 Imprimatur. +John Cardinal Farley, Archbishop of New York

The Catholic Encyclopedia:  NewAdvent.org