The devout hart or Royal throne of the pacifical Salomon. Composed by F. St. Luzuic S.I. Translated out of Latin into English. Enlarged with incentiue by F. St. Binet of the same S. and now enriched with hymnes by a new hand
About this Item
Title
The devout hart or Royal throne of the pacifical Salomon. Composed by F. St. Luzuic S.I. Translated out of Latin into English. Enlarged with incentiue by F. St. Binet of the same S. and now enriched with hymnes by a new hand
Author
Luzvic, Stephanus, 1567-1640.
Publication
[Rouen] :: Printed by Iohn Cousturier,
1634.
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Subject terms
Meditations -- Early works to 1800.
Link to this Item
http://name.umdl.umich.edu/A06534.0001.001
Cite this Item
"The devout hart or Royal throne of the pacifical Salomon. Composed by F. St. Luzuic S.I. Translated out of Latin into English. Enlarged with incentiue by F. St. Binet of the same S. and now enriched with hymnes by a new hand." In the digital collection Early English Books Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A06534.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 18, 2024.
Pages
descriptionPage 161
THE INCENTIVE.
1. IF IESVS, be in thy hart, thou
needst not feare, the vnlucky
accidents of man's life, for he of very
thornes makes sweetest roses.
2. The most sweet odour of the
white & ruddy rose, which IESVS
is, recreates and refreshes men and
Angels, kils the rauenous fowles.
Hence when the hart with IESVS
is beset and closed in with roses,
sinne and the deuil get them far
enough; for they cannot abide the
smel of them.
3. Wilt thou be a soft couch, whe∣rein
litle IESVS may like to repose
and rest in? let the Hart be crown'd
with the roses of vertues with the
snowy flower, of innocence, with
the purple of patience, and breath
the frangrancy of true deuotion.