BOOK I. 30-34
30.—To the Same
Blessed Christ, eternal Light of men, Hope of all, give good to them who are in need of it, and keep away evil.
31.—To the Most Holy Mother of God
O Queen, holding in thy arms thy almighty Child, the Son of God, before Whom the angels tremble, and making Him merciful in mind to men, guard Him and keep therewith the whole world safe from trouble.
32.—To the Archangel Michael
Here is kept the divine help for wretched men, afflicted in mind or body. For vexing trouble at once is put to flight, Michael, by thy name, thy image, or thy house.
33.—NILUS SCHOLASTICUS
On an Image of the Archangel
How daring it is to picture the incorporeal I But yet the image leads us up to spiritual recollection of celestial beings.
34.—AGATHIAS SCHOLASTICUS
On another on the Island of Plate
Greatly daring was the wax that formed the image of the invisible Prince of the Angels, incorporeal in the essence of his form. But yet it is not without grace; for a man looking at the image directs his mind to a higher contemplation. No