Saint Bernards vision. Or, A briefe discourse (dialogue-wise) betweene the soule and the body of a damned man newly deceased : laying open the faults of each other: With a speech of the divels in hell. To the tune of, Fortune my foe.

Date:
[1640?]
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Also known as

Noctis sub silentio tempore brumali. English.
Briefe discourse (dialogue-wise) betweene the soule and the body of a damned man newly deceased.
Visio Sancti Bernardi.
Visio Fulberti.
Debate of the body and the soul.

Publication/Creation

Printed at London : For I. Wright, dwelling in Gilt-spur street, [1640?]

Physical description

1 sheet (1 unnumbered page).

References note

STC (2nd ed.) 1910

Notes

Not in fact by St. Bernard; an English verse translation of the anonymous medieval Latin poem "Noctis sub silencio tempore brumali", sometimes referred to as "Visio Sancti Bernardi", "Visio Fulberti", or "Debate of the body and the soul".
Verse -- "As I lay slumbring in my bed one night,".
Publication date conjectured by STC.
In two parts; woodcuts at head of each part.
Reproductions of the original in the British Library.

Reproduction note

Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Mich. : UMI, 1999- (Early English books online) Digital version of: (Early English books, 1641-1700 ; 2123:376/377) s1999 miun s

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