The complaint or dialogue, betvvixt the soule and the bodie of a damned man Each laying the fault vpon the other. Supposed to be written by S. Bernard from a nightly vision of his, and now published out of an ancient manuscript copie. By William Crashaw.

About this Item

Title
The complaint or dialogue, betvvixt the soule and the bodie of a damned man Each laying the fault vpon the other. Supposed to be written by S. Bernard from a nightly vision of his, and now published out of an ancient manuscript copie. By William Crashaw.
Publication
London :: Printed by G[eorge] E[ld] for Leonard Becket, and are to be sold at his shop in the Temple neere the Church,
1622.
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Subject terms
Body and soul in literature -- Early works to 1800.
Meditations -- Early works to 1800.
Cite this Item
"The complaint or dialogue, betvvixt the soule and the bodie of a damned man Each laying the fault vpon the other. Supposed to be written by S. Bernard from a nightly vision of his, and now published out of an ancient manuscript copie. By William Crashaw." In the digital collection Early English Books Online 2. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/B11418.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed May 5, 2024.

Pages

Page 7

De Iesu Christo Deo & ho∣mine Confessio Ortho∣doxa.

NAte Patri coaequalis, Patri consubstantialis:
Patris splendor & figura, Factor factus creatura.
Carnem nostram induisti, Causam nostram suscepisti:
Sempiternus temporalis, Moriturus immortalis.
Ʋerus homo, verus Deus, Impermixius homo Deus.
Patri compar Deitate, Minor carnis veritate.

Page 9

Hic assumptus est in Deum; Nec consumptus propter Deum:
Non conuersus hic in carnem, Nec minutus propter carnem.
Deus Pater, tantum Dei, Ʋirgo mater sed & Dei.
In tam noua ligaturae, Sic vtra{que} stat natura.
Ʋt conseruet quicquid erat, Facta quiddam, quod non erat.
Noster iste Mediator, Iste noster Cogislator.
Circumcisus, Baptizatus, Crucisixus, tumulatus:
Obdormiuit & descendit, Resurrexit & ascendit.
Sic ad coelos eleuatus, Iudicabit iudicatus.
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