Cuthbert was present at Bede’s deathbed, and this is how he describes his death.
For nearly a fortnight before the Feast of our Lord’s Resurrection he was troubled by weakness and breathed with great difficulty, although he suffered little pain. Thenceforward until Ascension Day he remained cheerful and happy, giving thanks to God each hour day and night. He gave daily lessons to us his students, and spent the rest of the day in singing the psalms so far as his strength allowed. He passed the whole night in joyful prayer and thanksgiving to God, except when slumber overcame him; but directly he awoke, he continued to meditate on spiritual themes, and never failed to thank God with hands outstretched. I can truthfully affirm that I have never seen or heard of anyone who gave thanks so unceasingly to the living God as he.
O truly blessed man! He used to repeat the saying of the holy Apostle Paul, ‘It is a fearful thing to fall into the hands of the living God’, and many other sayings from holy scripture, and in this manner he used to arouse our souls by the consideration of our last hour. Being well-versed in our native songs, he described to us the dread departure of the soul from the body by a verse in our own tongue, which translated means: ‘Before setting forth on that inevitable journey, none is wiser than the man who considers – before his soul departs hence – what good or evil he has done, and what judgement his soul will receive after its passing’.
Today the Church of England celebrates the Venerable Bede, Monk at Jarrow, Scholar, Historian, 735
— The Anglican Church in St Petersburg (@anglicanspb) May 25, 2024
Detail of Benedictine window (Moira Forsyth, 1963) in the Bauchon Chapel of @Nrw_Cathedral, a former Benedictine priory (1096-1538). Photo: Lawrence OP, CC BY-NC-ND 2.0/flickr pic.twitter.com/0fB9hsfxRF