Original Douay Rheims Bible (1582 & 1610)

THE THRENES,

that is to say,

THE LAMENTATIONS OF IEREMIE THE PROPHET



It is probable that the Lamentations were written before his other prophecies. THESE Lamentations, in Greeke called Threni, and by the Hebrew Rabbins intituled Cinoth, were written by Ieremie before the greatest part of his other prophecies (as semeth most probable to S. Ierom) and were first songue at the death of 2. Paral. 35. v. 25. Iosias king of Iuda. Againe when king Sedecias with manie others were taken captiues, manie also slaine, and the Temple and citie of Ierusalem destroyed. But most especially he prophecieth the Iewes miserable estate, and iust cause of Lamentation after Christs coming, and their reiecting him. And therfore his Church singeth the same in the Aniuersarie, or Commemoration of his Passion and Death; and most piously inuiteth al sinners, both Iewes and Gentiles, to returne vnto Christ our Redemer, saying: Ierusalem, IERVSALEM conuertere ad Dominum Deum tuum. In this litle booke the diligent reader wil easily obserue manie doleful pathetical Doleful speaches are commonly vttered without connexion of sentences. speaches, powred out from a pensiue hart, as in great calamities it commonly happeneth, with litle connexion of sentences; but otherwise foure whole chapters are very artificially compiled in verse; not by number of times, with measure of long and short syllables, as the Grekes and Latines vse, but after the These Lamentations are artificially composed. Hebrew maner, obseruing number of syllables, and beginning euerie verse, with a distinct letter, from the first to the last in order, with some smal varietie, of the Hebrew Alphabet. Doubtles with great And besides the historical sense contene hidden mysteries. mysteries, as S. Ierom iudgeth, and therfore explicateth the significations, and certaine connexions, of the two and twentie Hebrew letters: as we haue noted vpon the 118. Psalme: but aboue the capacitie of our vnderstanding. In the last chapter the Prophet omitting the obseruation of Initial letters, in twentie two verses prayeth lamentably; as the whole people shal pray in captiuitie.