Get the #1 Bible app for transformative study, preaching, and teaching.
Sign in or register for a free account to set your preferred Bible and rate books.
3 1 In lectulo meo, per noctes,
quæsivi quem diligit anima mea:
quæsivi illum, et non inveni.
2 Surgam, et circuibo civitatem:
per vicos et plateas
quæram quem diligit anima mea:
quæsivi illum, et non inveni.
3 Invenerunt me vigiles qui custodiunt civitatem:
Num quem diligit anima mea vidistis?
4 Paululum cum pertransissem eos,
inveni quem diligit anima mea:
tenui eum, nec dimittam,
donec introducam illum in domum matris meæ,
et in cubiculum genitricis meæ.
5 SPONSUS. Adjuro vos, filiæ Jerusalem,
per capreas cervosque camporum,
ne suscitetis, neque evigilare faciatis dilectam,
donec ipsa velit.
6 CHORUS. Quæ est ista quæ ascendit per desertum
sicut virgula fumi ex aromatibus myrrhæ,
et thuris, et universi pulveris pigmentarii?
7 En lectulum Salomonis sexaginta fortes ambiunt
ex fortissimis Israël,
8 omnes tenentes gladios, et ad bella doctissimi:
uniuscujusque ensis super femur suum
propter timores nocturnos.
9 Ferculum fecit sibi rex Salomon
de lignis Libani;
10 columnas ejus fecit argenteas,
reclinatorium aureum, ascensum purpureum;
media caritate constravit,
propter filias Jerusalem.
11 Egredimini et videte, filiæ Sion,
regem Salomonem in diademate quo coronavit illum mater sua
in die desponsationis illius,
et in die lætitiæ cordis ejus.
|
About Clementine VulgateCommissioned by Pope Damasus I and prepared c. A.D. 383-405, Jerome's Vulgate rapidly became the standard version of the Bible in the West and remained so for centuries. The Clementine Vulgate is the official edition of the Latin Vulgate, corrected and standardized following the Council of Trent and originally promulgated in 1592 by Pope Clement VIII. This Logos edition of the Clementine Vulgate is based on the Editio Typica of 1598. |
| Support Info | vulgataclem |
Loading…