02287nam 2200421 n 450 99638591250331620200824120737.0(CKB)1000000000600770(EEBO)2248569942(UnM)99841765e(UnM)99841765(EXLCZ)99100000000060077019910413d1633 uy |engurbn||||a|bb|A three-fold mirrour of man's vanitie and miserie. The first vvritten by that learned and religious father, Iohn Trithemius monke of the holy order of S. Benet, and abbot of Spanhem. The two others by Catholicke authors vnknowen: Faithfully Englished by the R. Father Antonie Batt, monke of the holy order aforesaid, of the congregation of England[electronic resource]Printed at Douay By Laurence Kellam, at the signe of the holy Lambe1633[8], 364 [i.e. 354], [2] pIn three parts.Part 2 has a separate title page, reading: A godly short treatise, intituled, The golden mirrour of a sinne-full soule.Part 3 (in verse) has caption title, reading: Cartaine pious and pathetical verse, shewing (like the two former treatises) the manifold dangers and miseries of man's life, and the sondrie calamities that ensue at the end thereof.Pages 153-62 lacking in number only.Identified as STC 24285b on UMI microfilm.Imperfect: pages 275-82 lacking.Reproduction of the original in the Folger Shakespeare Library.eebo-0055Christian lifeEarly works to 1800Christian lifeTrithemius Johannes1462-1516.879002Batt Antonie1009835Cu-RivESCu-RivESCStRLINWaOLNBOOK996385912503316A three-fold mirrour of man's vanitie and miserie. The first vvritten by that learned and religious father, Iohn Trithemius monke of the holy order of S. Benet, and abbot of Spanhem. The two others by Catholicke authors vnknowen: Faithfully Englished by the R. Father Antonie Batt, monke of the holy order aforesaid, of the congregation of England2398666UNISA