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 17, 2024.
Pages
descriptionPage 216
THE INCENTIVE.
1. MY good Archer shoot, Ah
shoot againe! shoot through
this hart of mine, with a million
of shafts, this refractory & rebellious
hart to thy diuine loue: slay and kil
al loue, which is not thine, or is ad∣uersary
to it. O sweet wounds! o
deare to me! o arrowes dipt and
tipt with hony.
2. And thou my hart, reuenge
those iniuries so sweet, so accepta∣ble,
and for thy part also shoot thou
againe into the hart of IESVS with
a thousand shafts, a thousand pious
loues, a thousand bals of fiery loue.
3. The hart is neuer in so good
plight as when it is transfixed with
a thousand points of sharpest loue
and paine; so that the true loue of
IESVS casts but the flames where
with I pyne, I burne with loue.
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