

Hymns of the Eastern Church, by J.M. Neale, [1884], at sacred-texts.com
Theoctistus of the Studium.
+ circ. A.D. 890.
He is said to have been the friend of S. Joseph; but is only known-to us by the "Suppliant Canon to Jesus," to be found at the end of the Paracletice. The following is a Cento formed from it.
Ἰησοῦ γλυκύτατε.
Jesu, Name all names above,
   Jesu, best and dearest,
 Jesu, Fount of perfect love,
   Holiest, tenderest, nearest;
 Jesu, source of grace completest,
 Jesu purest, Jesu sweetest,
   Jesu, Well of power Divine,
   Make me, keep me, seal me Thine!
Jesu, open me the gate
   That of old he enter’d,
 Who, in that most lost estate,
   Wholly on Thee ventur’d;
 Thou, Whose Wounds are ever pleading,
 And Thy Passion interceding,
   From my misery let me rise
   To a Home in Paradise!
Thou didst call the Prodigal:
   Thou didst pardon Mary:
 Thou Whose words can never fall,
   Love can never vary:
 Lord, to heal my lost condition,
 Give—for Thou canst give—contrition;
   Thou canst pardon all mine ill
   If Thou wilt: O say, "I will!"
Woe, that I have turned aside
   After fleshly pleasure!
 Woe, that I have never tried
   For the Heavenly Treasure!
 Treasure, safe in Home supernal;
 Incorruptible, eternal!
   Treasure no less price hath won
   Than the Passion of The Son!
Jesu, crown’d with Thorns for me,
   Scourged for my transgression,
 Witnessing, through agony,
   That Thy good confession!
 Jesu, clad in purple raiment,
 For my evils making payment;
   Let not all Thy woe and pain,
   Let not Calvary, be in vain!
When I reach Death's bitter sea
   And its waves roll higher,
 Help the more forsaking me
   As the storm draws nigher:
 Jesu, leave me not to languish,
 Helpless, hopeless, full of anguish!
   Tell me,—"Verily I say,
   Thou shalt be with Me to-day!"