Chapter 4 : Love – a third feature of the gratitude we owe the Mother of God
Continuing our translation of the 1845 reprint of Fr François Poiré’s Triple Crown of the Mother of God (1643 French edition).
§ 2. The second sign of love: frequent interactions with her and always remembering her
1 Love does not know the meaning of pause and rest since it remains tirelessly on watch and is always fixed on its object. We should not think that hearts are won over any less powerfully by Heavenly and supernatural love than they are by that which is human and sensual – on the contrary, the more noble its origin, the more ardently it pursues the object of its love. This is why those with a fervent love for the Mother of God are keen to put foolish loves behind them.
2 The first proof they give of this link between love and memory is always to have on themselves some sign that recalls for them the memory of the Mother of Love. The Indian Brahmans or Gymnosophists[1] used to wear three cords around their neck in memory of the three children of Parabrahma whom they said was the most ancient of their gods[2]. We learn from St John Chrysostom[3], St Augustine[4], Clement of Alexandria[5] and several other writers that the ancients used to wear images of their Gods engraved on rings and earrings, while some wore a necklace with an image hanging over their heart. There are learned interpreters who judge this is what the Holy Spirit calls writing on the tables of the heart[6]. The Epicurean philosophers sought always to have the image of their master before their eyes and accordingly made sure that it was engraved on the goblets they used at table and on their other vessels. Does not the Spouse in the Canticles ask his chaste Bride always to wear his portrait on her heart and on her arm so that he is never far from her thoughts[7]? Now if the foolish passion of love can make people wear all manner of things and come up with all sorts of novel ideas, will the love felt by Servants of the Virgin be any less resourceful when it comes to wearing their Lady’s favours? This is why, for example, some wear rings engraved with her image whilst others ensure her image is always kept close to their hearts. Others find pleasure in wearing her colour, or at least a girdle or some other emblem. It seems to me, however, that it is a mistake trying to teach such things since it would be easier to find a fire without heat than love without ideas for expressing itself.
Footnotes
[1] Gymnosophist : one of a sect of ancient Hindu philosophers of ascetic habits (known to the Greeks through the reports of the companions of Alexander), who wore little or no clothing.
[2] Maffeus, lib. I Hist. Indicæ.
[3] Homil. 35 in Gen.
[4] Quæst. CXII in Gen.
[5] Lib. III Pædag., c. 11.
[6] Prov. iii. 3., vii. 3; 2 Cor. iii. 3.
[7] Put me as a seal upon thy heart, as a seal upon thy arm: Cant. viii. 6.
3 Another proof of this loving memory is the importance of conversing with the Queen of Heaven, the pleasure derived from such colloquies and the benefits that come from dedicating as much time to them as possible. Our Blessed Stanislaus seized every occasion he could to open his heart to her and he did this with such incredible tenderness as only ever to call her his good Mother – just like Cardinal Pierre de Luxembourg and several others. Thomas de Cantimpré, suffragan to the Archbishop of Cambrai, was one of the most learned men in his day and here is a story he told in this connection[1].
A rich Jew in Cologne, he said, had a little girl five years old called Rachel. She was strongly drawn to the Christian religion and she loved nothing more than hearing people talk about the MOTHER OF GOD. She would take anything she could find in her house and give it to the poor in her name. Her father had an occasion to visit Louvain and he took his daughter with him. Quite unintentionally, he afforded her in this way the means of receiving instruction from a priest of outstanding virtue called Reinier.She had not yet reached the age of seven when her father, aware from her behaviour that she felt drawn to become a Christian, promised her hand in marriage to a young man of his own faith and formed a plan with him to send her over the Rhine. Little Rachel, however, was awakened in the morning by the Queen of Angels who had come to explain the situation. Rachel went to see the priest who had been giving her instruction and explained the problem she faced. It was a simple matter for her to obtain holy Baptism and she received the name of Catherine in the Church of the Bernardine Cistercians in Louvain. She also received the habit of this Order and would remain with these Daughters consecrated to the service of God.Her father, however, found out what had happened and left no stone unturned in his efforts to obtain her return. He made use of the most powerful men in the city to deal with the Bishop, even writing to Pope Honorius III to ask for her release so that he could have her with him until she had reached the age of twelve. Catherine was firmly opposed to this diabolical plan and actually pleaded her case in person before the bishop of Liège, showing such courage and articulating her reasons so eloquently that those who heard her thought it was the Holy Spirit speaking through her lips, judging that right was most certainly on her side. What is perhaps particularly relevant to the point I am making is that, once judgement was given in her favour, she remained for the rest of her life so grateful to the MOTHER OF GOD for this favour that when the other nuns were occasionally summoned to the parlour for a meeting with their family, she (who had no one in this world to interrupt the course of her devotions in this way), would go instead to prostrate herself before an image of the Virgin, and say to her:“Holy Virgin, I prithee turn not aside a poor orphan girl who cometh to thee as to her Queen, her Mother, her aunt, her sister and her cousin; in short, as an orphan girl who hath no relatives apart from thee.”Whilst uttering these words, gentle tears flowed down her cheeks and, forgetting everything around her, she entered into colloquies with the Virgin beyond the power of words to penetrate. The same Thomas de Cantimpré revealed that he had several conversations with Rachel and learned from her own lips much of what he was later to put down in writing.
Footnotes
[1] Lib. II Apum, c. 14, part. XIV.
© Peter Bloor 2025
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SUB tuum præsidium confugimus, Sancta Dei Genitrix. Nostras deprecationes ne despicias in necessitatibus, sed a periculis cunctis libera nos semper, Virgo gloriosa et benedicta. Amen.
The Virgin of Tenderness. >12th century.
Totus tuus ego sum
Et omnia mea tua sunt;
Tecum semper tutus sum:
Ad Jesum per Mariam.
He that hearkeneth to me, shall not be confounded: and they that work by me, shall not sin. They that explain me shall have life everlasting. Ecclesiasticus (Sirach) xxiv. 30-31.

