[392] "The Rod, the Root, and the Flower," "Magna Moralia," xxii.
[393] "The Scale of Perfection," bk. ii. cap. xxxvii.
[394] Dialogo, cap. iv.
[395] "Ignitum cum Deo Soliloquium." cap. xi.
[396] Richard Rolle, "The Mending of Life," cap. i.
[397] Ibid., "The Fire of Love," bk. i. cap, xxiii.
[398] "Buchlein von der ewigen Weisheit," cap. v.
[399] Jundt, "Rulman Merswin," p. 19.
[400] Revelations of Divine Love," cap. lvi.
[401] I offer no opinion upon the question of authorship. Those interested may consult Von Hügel, "The Mystical Element of Religion," vol. i., Appendix. Whoever may be responsible for its present form, the Treatise is clearly founded upon first-hand mystic experience: which is all that our present purpose requires.
[402] "Trattato di Purgatorio," caps. ii. and iii.
[403] Purg. ii., 60.
[404] "Subida del Monte Carmelo I. i. cap. xiv.
[405] "De Imitatione Christi," I. iii. cap. i.
[406] "Theologia Germanica," cap. xiv.
[407] Meister Eckhart, quoted by Wackernagel, "Altdeutsches Lesebuch," p. 891.
[408] "Das Fliessende Licht der Gottheit." pt. vi., cap. 4.
[409] St. John of the Cross, "Subida del Monte Carmelo," bk. i. cap. xiii.
[410] "Theologia Germanica," cap. v.
[411] Ennead vi. 9.
412 "Oh Poverty, high wisdom! to be subject to nothing, and by despising all to possess all created things. . . .
God will not lodge in a narrow heart; and it is as great as thy love. Poverty has so ample a bosom that Deity Itself may lodge therein. . . .
Poverty is naught to have, and nothing to desire: but all things to possess in the spirit of liberty."--Jacopone da Todi. Lauda lix.
[413] "Fioretti," cap. xvi., and "Speculum," cap. cxx.
[414] Ibid., cap. xiii. (Arnold's translation).
[415] Pfeiffer, Tractato x. (Eng. translation., p, 348).
[416] "Sacrum Commercium Beati Francisci cum Domina Paupertate," caps. iv. and v. (Rawnsley's translation).
[417] Op. cit., cap. xxii.
[418] So Ruysbroeck, "Freewill is the king of the soul . . . he should dwell in the chief city of that kingdom: that is to say, the desirous power of the soul" ("De Ornatu Spiritalium Nuptiarum," I. i. cap. xxiv.).
[419] Meister Eckhart. Quoted in Martensen's monograph, p. 107.
[420] Schmölders, "Essai sur les Écoles Philosophiques chez les Arabes," p. 54.
[421] Schmölders, "Essai sur les Écoles Philosophiques chez les Arabes," op. cit., p. 58.
422 Richard Rolle, "The Mending of Life," cap. iii.
[423] "Ignitum cum Deo Soliloquium," cap. i.
[424] "Subida del Monte Carmelo," I. i. cap. iii.
[425] Gerlac Petersen, op. cit., cap. xi.
[426] St. John of the Cross, op. cit., cap. xi.
[427] Richard Rolle, "The Fire of Love," bk. i. cap. xix.
[428] Thomas of Celano, Legenda Prima, cap. vi.
[429] "An Apology for Mrs. Antoinette Bourignan," pp. 269-70.
[430] St. Teresa's mystic states are particularly difficult to classify. From one point of view these struggles might be regarded as the preliminaries of conversion. She was, however, proficient in contemplation when they occurred, and I therefore think that my arrangement is the right one.
[431] Quoted by G. Cunninghame Graham, "Santa Teresa," vol. i. p. 139. For St. Teresa's own account, see Vida, caps. vii-ix.
[432] Sermon on St. Paul ("The Inner Way," p. 113).
[433] Cotter Morison, "Life and Times of St. Bernard," p. 68.
[434] Thomas of Celano, Legenda Prima, cap. xxix.
[435] Ibid., Legenda Secunda, cap. cxxiv.
[436] Anne Macdonell, "St. Douceline," p. 30.
[437] Vida, cap. ix., p. 6.
[438] "In that time and by God's will there died my mother, who was a great hindrance unto me in following the way of God: soon after my husband died likewise, and also all my children. And because I had commenced to follow the Aforesaid Way, and had prayed God that He would rid me of them, I had great consolation of their deaths. (Ste Angèle de Foligno: "Le Livre de l'Expérience des Vrais Fidèles." Ed. M. J. Ferry p. 10.)
[439] "De Imitatione Christi," I. i. caps. iii. and ix.
[440] Tauler, Sermon on St. Paul ("The Inner Way," p. 114).
[441] Tauler, Second Sermon for Easter Day. (This is not included in either of the English collections.)
[442] Augustine Baker, "Holy Wisdom," Treatise ii. Sect. i., cap. 3.
[443] Suso, Leben. cap. xvii.
[444] "The Mirror of Simple Souls," edited by Clare Kirchberger, p. 12.
445 "The war is at an end: in the battle of virtues, in travail of mind, there is no more striving" (Lauda xci.).
[446] "Vita e Dottrina," cap. v.
[447] Walter Hilton "The Scale of Perfection," bk. i. cap. 8, xlii.
[448] Récéjac, "Fondements de la Connaissance Mystique," p. 78. This, however, is to be understood of the initial training of the mystic; not of his final state.
[449] "Subida del Monte Carmelo," I. i. cap. v.
[450] Op. cit., bk. i. cap. xv.
[451] S. Caterina di Genova, "Trattato di Purgatorio," cap. i.
[452] Dialogo, cap. lxxxv.
[453] Leben, cap. iv.
[454] "This truth, of which she was the living example," says Huysmans of St. Lydwine, "has been and will be true for every period. Since the death of Lydwine, there is not a saint who has not confirmed it. Hear them formulate their desires. Always to suffer, and to die! cries St. Teresa; always to suffer, yet not to die, corrects St. Magdalena dei Pazzi; yet more, oh Lord, yet more! exclaims St. Francis Xavier, dying in anguish on the coast of China; I wish to be broken with suffering in order that I may prove my love to God, declares a seventeenth century Carmelite, the Ven. Mary of the Trinity. The desire for suffering is itself an agony, adds a great servant of God of our own day, Mother Mary Du Bourg; and she confided to her daughters in religion that `if they sold pain in the market she would hurry to buy it there.'" (J. K. Huysmans, "Sainte Lydwine de Schiedam," 3rd edition, p. 225). Examples can be multiplied indefinitely from the lives and works of the mystics of all periods.
[455] Tauler, Sermon on St. Paul ("The Inner Way," p. 114).
[456] Thomas of Celano, Legenda Prima, cap. vii.; 3 Soc. cap. iv.
[457] 3 Soc. cap. vii.
[458] "A Short Treatise of Contemplation taken out of the boke of Margery Kempe ancresse of Lynne." London, 1521. Reprinted and ed. by F. Gardner in "The Cell of Self-Knowledge," 1910, p. 49.
[459] The curious are referred to the original authorities. For St. Catherine chapter viii. of the "Vita e Dottrina": for Madame Guyon, Vie, pt. i. ch. x.
[460] "Vita e Dottrina," cap. v.
[461] Testament, cap. ii. (Rix's translation).
[462] Vie, pt. i. cap. x.
[463] Supra, p. 131.
[464] Schmölders, "Essay sur les Écoles Philosophiques chez les Arabes," p. 59.
[465] Supra, p. 177.
[466] Hartmann, "Life and Doctrines of Jacob Boehme," p. 50.
[467] Compare the case of St. Teresa already cited, supra, p. 213.
[468] "Camino de Perfeccion," cap. xvii.
[469] Martensen, "Meister Eckhart," p. 75.
[470] Dialogo, cap. lxxviii.
[471] Jundt, "Rulman Merswin," pp. 10 and 20.
[472] We recognize here the chief symptoms of the "cyclic type" of mentality, with its well-marked alternations of depression and exaltation. This psychological type is found frequently, but not invariably, among the mystics: and its peculiarities must be taken into account when studying their experiences. For a technical description, see W. McDougall: "An Introduction to Abnormal Psychology," caps. xxii and xxviii.
[473] See Ruysbroeck, "De Calculo," cap. vii. The metaphor is an ancient one and occurs in many patristic and mediaeval writers.
[474] "The Epistles of Jacob Boehme," p. 19.
[475] "Theologia Germanica," cap. vii.
[476] Jacob Boehme, "The Way to Christ," pt. i. p. 23 (vol. iv. of the complete English translation of Boehme's works).