From The Little Flower Prayer Book: A Carmelite Manual of Prayer (Chicago, IL: Carmelite Press, 1926), here are prayers composed by St. Thérèse herself. The clients of this great Patroness ought to avail themselves of those prayerful words that welled up from her pure heart all ablaze with with divine charity and which she offered as a sacrifice of praise unto her Divine Spouse (cf. Ps. xliv., 2).
** The prayer that the Little Flower composed as she was inspired by the sight of a statue of St. Joan of Arc is especially awesome! A heart so humble and hidden and given over to interior solitude and silence can at the same time be the valiant, fearless warrior who is all jealousy for the glory of God and therefore strives to battle ceaselessly and fiercely for such a great heavenly King. It is the prodigy of grace that can reconcile two apparently contradictory virtues (humility and magnanimity in this case) in a harmony that resembles the apex of a pyramid: not only the mean between two contraries, but also eminently elevated above them. Such is the sacred paradox of the interior life.