et martyr, et autres au martyrologe,
veille de Saint Chrysogone, martyr et autres
depuis environ dix heures et demie du soir jusques
environ minuit et demie,
[342] See Starbuck, "The Psychology of Religion," cap. xxix.
[343] Op. cit., cap. xii.
[344] J. B. Pratt, "The Religious Consciousness," cap. xiii. The whole chapter deserve careful study.
[345] Journal of George Fox, cap. i.
[346] Aug. Conf., bk. vii. cap. xvii. We can surely trace the influence of such an experience in St. Paul's classic description of the "endopsychic conflict": Rom. vii. 14-25.
[347] Plotinus, Ennead vi. 9.
[348] "It is certain," says De Sanctis,
"that when we attempt to probe deeper in our study of sudden converts, we
discover that the
[349] Op. cit., p. 171.
[350] "Journal Spirituel de Lucie-Christine," p. 11.
[351] Thomas of Celano, Legenda Prima, cap. 1.
[352] Thomas of Celano, Legenda Secunda, cap. v. Compare P. Sabatier. "Vie de S. François d'Assise," cap. ii., where the authorities are fully set out.
[353] Thomas of Celano, Legenda Secunda, cap. vi.
[354] "Vita e Dottrina di Santa Caterina da Genova," cap ii.
[355] Von Hügel, "The Mystical Element of Religion," vol. ii p. 29.
[356] It is clear from the heading of cap. x. (pt. i.) of her Autobiography that Madame Guyon's editors were conscious, if she was not, of some of the close coincidences between her experiences and those of St. Catherine of Genoa. The parallel between their early years is so exact and descends to such minute details that I am inclined to think that the knowledge of this resemblance, and the gratification with which she would naturally regard it, has governed or modified her memories of this past. Hence a curious and hitherto unnoticed case of "unconscious spiritual plagiarism."
[357] For a thoroughly hostile account see Leuba: `The Psychology of Religious Mysticism," cap. iv.
[358] Vie, pt. i. cap. iv.
[359] Op. cit., pt. i. cap. vi.
[360] "Madame Guyon," p. 36.
[361]Vie, pt. i. cap. viii.
[362] Op. cit., loc. cit.
[363] One of the best English accounts of this movement and the great personalities concerned in it is in Rufus Jones, "Studies in Mystical Religion," cap. xiii.
[364] A. Jundt, "Rulman Merswin," p. 19. M. Jundt has condensed his account which I here translate, from Merswin's autobiographical story of his conversion, published in Breiträge zu den theologischen Wissenschaften, v. (Jena, 1854). Our whole knowledge of Merswin's existence depends on the group of documents which includes this confession, the "Book of Two Men," the "Vision of Nine Rocks," and his other reputed works. The authenticity of these documents has been much questioned, and they have doubtless suffered severely from the editorial energy of his followers. Some critics even regard them as pious fictions, useless as evidence of the incidents of Merswin's life. With this view, upheld by Karl Reider ("Der Gottesfreund von Oberland," 1905), I cannot agree. A possible solution of the many difficulties is that of M. Jundt, who believes that we have in Merswin and the mysterious "Friend of God of the Oberland," who pervades his spiritual career, a remarkable case of dissociated personality. Merswin's peculiar psychic make up, as described in his autobiography, supports this view: the adoption of which I shall assume in future references to his life. It is incredible that the vivid account of his conversion which I quote should be merely "tendency-literature," without basis in fact. Compare Jundt's monograph, and also Rufus Jones, op. cit. pp. 245-253, where the whole problem is discussed.
[365] Jundt, op. cit., loc. cit.
[366] "Leben und Schriften" (Diepenbrock), cap. i. Suso's autobiography is written in the third person. He refers to himself throughout under the title of "Servitor of the Eternal Wisdom."
[367] Op. cit., loc. cit.
[368] Leben, cap. iii.
[369] Bremond, "Histoire Littérario du Sentiment Religieux en France." vol. iv. pp. 359 seq.
[370] "Summa contra Gentiles," I. iii. cap. lxii.
[371] The complete test of the Memorial is printed, among other places, in Faugère's edition of the "Pensées, Fragments et Lettres de Blaise Pascal," 2nd ed., Paris, 1897. Tome i. p. 269; and is reproduced in facsimile by Bremond loc. cit. Bremond holds that the Memorial is the record of two distinct experiences: a "mystical experience in the proper meaning of the word," and an "affective meditation arising from it." This view does not seem incompatible with my original description, which I therefore retain. (Note to 12th ed.)
[372] Brother Lawrence, "The Practice of the Presence of God," p. 9.
[373] "The Way of Initiation," p. 134.
[374] "Letters of William Blake," p. 62.
[375] "The Psychology of Religion," p. 120.
[376] James, "Varieties of Religion Experience," p. 253. This phenomenon receives brilliant literary expression in John Masefield's poem "The Everlasting Mercy" (1911).
[377] Whitman, "The Prayer of Colombus."
[378] "The Story of My Heart," pp. 8, 9, 45, 181.
[379] Bucke, "Cosmic Consciousness, a Study in the Evolution of the Human Mind." Philadelphia. 1905.
[380] "Fire of Love," bk. i. cap. xii.
[381] Ibid., bk. i. cap. xv.
[382] Ibid., cap. xiv.
[383] Hilton and the author of "The Cloud of Unknowing" both refer to "sensible heat" as a well-known but dubious concomitant of spiritual experience. Compare the confession of a modern convert, "I was siezed and possessed by an interior flame, for which nothing had prepared me; waves of fire succeeding one another for more than two hours." ("Madeleine Sémer, Convertie et Mystique," 1874-1921, p. 71.)
[384] "Fire of Love," bk. i. Prologue.
[385] Ibid., bk. i. cap. xv.
[386] Ibid., bk. ii. cap. xii.
[387] Supra, p. 35.
[388] Ibid., p. 128.
[389] St. Mechthild of Hackborn, "Liber Specialis Gratiae," I. ii. cap. i
[390] "The Fire of Love," bk. i. cap. i.
[391] Dionysius the Areopagite, "De Divinis Nominibus," iv. 13.