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 16
THE INCENTIVE.
1. WHere our treasure is, there is
our harta 1.1. IESVS is a trea∣sure,
wherin our hopes, our riches,
and al we haue, are lodged & laid vp
in store. Where then shal we better
place the hart, then in the hart, the
Reliquary of the diuinity it-self, at
IESVS feet, the most sure Altar of
the miserable, in his hands, the
richest Magazin of al graces?
2. Loe here a hart burning al with
loue, how many and what flames it
sends forth like a furnace. Happy &
thrice happy he, who, but for Hea∣uen,
hath no loue, no hart at al!
3. Goe to then, al you pious and
sincere harts, come and consecrate
your selues to the honour and loue
of IESVS. For to whom better?
since what we pay to him we allow
descriptionPage 17
our selues; and what we take from
him we quite forgoe and loose for
euer.