Starting early in 1830, Patrocinio reported mystical visions, many of them with bodily symptoms. On 20 May -
Ascension Day - wounds appeared in her hands and feet, resembling those inflicted by the
crown of thorns. On 8 June, two days after
Corpus Christi day, she fell into an ecstatic state and reported that the voice of Christ spoke to her from a wall hanging. Her wounds were characterised by the large amount of blood that issued from them. When the death of King
Fernando VII in 1833 was followed by the
Carlist war, "the clericals, who favoured
Don Carlos, saw in her a useful instrument. She was made to prophesy the success of the Pretender (Don Carlos) and to furnish proof of the illegitimacy of the young Queen Isabel". had supplied her with "a relic which, when applied to any part of the body, would cause a wound which would then have to kept open as the source of suffering and mortification as offerings to God as penitence for sins... showing no-one their cause, and if questioned she had to say that they had come to her supernaturally". The nun's reputation had attracted alms and donations intended for the Order and its monasteries; this now appeared as motive for fraud. The Capuchin friar had left the kingdom and could not be found to give evidence, and the court regarded this as confirming his guilt. For his part, the advocate for the defense, Juan M. González y Acevedo, argued that the evidence presented "was all lies, except the torment" of his client, whose role was that of "a victim, the more worthy of compassion in that she appeared condemned to a slow and painful death". After the trial, Patrocinio was expelled from her monastery and kept in a private house, before being taken to the House of Penitents of St.
Mary Magdalene. She was then sentenced to banishment from the vicinity of the
Court. She spent two years in a monastery in
Talavera de la Reina. There she started writing the text known as the
Golden Book, originally called
The Month of the Eternal Mary. Patrocinio's exile in Talavera began to affect her health. After petitioning the queen several times by letter, she was allowed to move to the monastery of her Order at
Torrelaguna, near Madrid, where she lived for the next five years. == Return to Madrid ==