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lifted up a ſtrong plate of braſs, and found a fair and worthy body, whole and unconſumed, as the ſame is here lively counterfeited, with all the Ornaments and Attires;, in his hand he held a parchment book, Called I., the which next unto the Bible, is our greateſt treaſure, which ought to be delivered to the cenſure of the world. At the end of this book ſtandeth this following Elogium:
Granum pectori Jeſu inſitum.
C. Roſ. C. ex nobili atq́ ſplendida Germaniæ R. C. familia oriundus, vir ſui ſeculi divinis revelationibus ſubtilißimis imaginationibus, indefeßis laboribus ad cœleſtia, atq́ humana myſeria; arcanavè admiſſus poſtquam ſuam (quam Arabico, & Africano itineribus Collegerat) pluſquam regiam, atq́ imperatoriam Gazam ſuo ſeculo nondum convenientem, poſteritati eruendam cuſto diviſſet & jam ſuarum Atrium, ut & nominis, fides acconjunctißimos herides inſtituiſſet, mundum minutum omnibus motibus magno illi reſpondentem fabricaſſet hocq́ tandem preteritarum, præſentium, & futurarum, rerum compendio extracto, centena-
rio