NB: alliteration between Christe and cordibus
in the first line, between celsa and caritas in the second,
between in-funde and fervidos in the third, and between fletus
and vocibus. Manuel pratique de latin médiéval by Dag Norberg
(Paris, 1980)
O Christ, the heavenly love which redeems, be
present in our hearts; fill our voices, we pray, with fervent tears. Most holy
Jesus, to you we faithfully pour forth prayers; forgive, O Christ, we beseech
you, the evil deeds we have done. By the sign of the holy Cross, by sacred
body, we ask, defend us all as sons in very circumstance.
Walpole: This is the hymn for Lauds on Fridays at
ferial seasons. This hymn is alphabetic. Notice that the C-stanza is duplicated
and that the alphabetic sequence does not go beyond T ; The Latin alphabet
contained 23 letters and the redoubling of particular lines is common in these
acrostic hymns. The revised version does not entirely preserve the acrostic
pattern.
1. The hymn is addressed to Christ
; gloria and spes are vocatives. The thought in this line
seems to be that of Christ as the subject of the
praises sung by the heavenly choirs.
2. Lucifer morning star, not sun, as is usually the case.
3. Noctem ‘of night’ not ‘of the night just past’.
4. Here begins the spiritual
application of the hymn.
5. ‘the night of the world’
the darkness of sin.
6. ‘preserve from any close
of day’
7. The three theological
virtues.
8. Radicet ‘take root’
1. Plasmator ‘creator’ ‘maker’.
2. ‘the race of the creeping
thing and of the beast’
3. Contrasts the great bulk
of beasts with their subservience to men.
4. Dictu ‘at the bidding’
5. This hymn rather unkindly
views these creatures as unclean.
6. Gratiarum ‘of grace’ as often plural for singular.
7. ‘Free from the power of strife’.
O God, the fashioner of man, who alone orders all
things, you command the earth to bring forth creeping things and wild beasts.
By word of your command the huge animals have life that you might subdue and
give them to man to serve him according to their order. Drive from your
servants whatever is unclean, which either seduces our habits or inserts itself
in our actions, grant the rewards of gladness, give the gift of grace, loosen
the chains of strife, strengthen the bonds of peace.
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