>Lifting it up, with candles, crosses, and censers preceding, and everything else properly arranged and organized, they carried it to the major monastery of the Blessed Virgin, singing and weeping, and praising God with a sweet-sounding voice in the organ of their hearts; though a certain fellow canon of the same college, in whose parish the same little boy had been tenderly brought up from his mother's womb until his martyrdom, appealed boldly and strongly protested, lest the body should be carried outside his parish by anyone's rash presumption, to the prejudice of his prebend.

>But the aforementioned Dean and Canons, not yielding to this kind of appeal, solemnly celebrating the funeral rites of the triumphant martyr, all things having been duly completed, they committed the earthly remains of the holy body to a very fitting burial next to the tomb of the most holy father Robert, Bishop of the same place.

>Conclusion of the Account

>And so, at the same time, Richard, Earl of Cornwall, brother of King Henry, arrived at the same city for the sake of a pilgrimage to Saint Robert (Grosseteste); in whose presence divine mercy deigned to work various miracles. Afterwards, however, the business for which the lord King had set out to Scotland being completed, he returned to the same city around the Feast of Saint Michael, and with him the Lady Queen and many other bishops and magnates of the kingdom.

>Therefore, the matter being examined, and the truth of the thing concerning the passion of this boy diligently inquired into, it became known to all, clearer than light, that the event had proceeded in the pre-described manner and order.