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Desiderius is a Latin given name, related to desiderium - which can be translated as "ardent desire" or "the longed-for".
Desiderium peccatorum peribit.
O Baldewine magnum es mihi desiderium!
The Rosarius Philosophorum, also known by its incipit Desiderabile desiderium (the desired desire).
Pope Pascal II granted this legitimacy with his Bull Desiderium quod (around 1100).
But the gnawing of grief till it becomes a physical pain, the fever fits of sorrow, the aching desiderium, bring back in many guises the old questions.
A connection between the two is assumed since they both set the same unusual text (Domine salvum fac regem desiderium cordis ejus), and their settings contain apparently deliberate similarities.
One drawing, known as Desiderium and based on the figure of “amorous Desyre” in Spenser’s Faerie Queene, is a particularly lovely evocation of the irresistible Maria looking sideways.
Vere Jerusalem est ilia civitas, Guius pax iugis et summa iucunditas, Ubi non praevenit rem desiderium, Nee desiderio minus est premium.'
NON INUTILE DESIDERIUM OBLATIONE.
During the 5th century AD, with the Christianisation of ancient pagan names, it has become associated with the name Desiderius, related to Latin desiderium - which can be translated as "ardent desire" or "the longed-for".
Nor is nature to be confounded with created substance, or with matter as it exists in space and time; it is pure non-being, the mere otherness ('alteritas') of God — his shadow, desire, want, or 'desiderium sui', as it is called by mystical writers.