[558] "Studies in Mystical Religion," p. 165. Those who wish to study the "rationalist" argument in an extreme form are directed to Prof. Janet, "L'Automatisme psychologique" and "L'État mentale des hysteriques," and Prof. Leuba, "Introduction to the Psychology of Religious Mysticism."
[559] On the difference in this respect between the "normal" and the "average," see Granger, "The Soul of a Christian," p. 12.
[560] See St. Angèle de Foligno, op. cit., p. 130 (English translation, p. 245).
[561] Poulain, "Les Graces d'Oraison," cap.
xx. Farges, "Mystical Phenomena," and Ribet's elaborate work, "La Mystique
Divine," well represent the "supernaturalist" position. As against the
"rationalistic" theory of stigmatization already described, one feels that this
last-named writer hardly advances his own cause when he insists on attributing
equal validity (a) to the Stigmata as marks of the Divine, (b) to
the imprint of a toad, bat, spider
[562] Vide infra, quotations from Hilton and St. John of the Cross. Also Rolle "The Fire of Love," Prologue. E. Gardner, "St. Catherine of Siena," p. 15. Von Hügel, "The Mystical Element of Religion," vol. i. pp. 178-181.
[563] "Revelations of Divine Love," cap. xliii. I have restored the bold language of the original, which is somewhat toned down in modern versions.
[564] Here as elsewhere the reader will kindly recollect that all spatial language is merely symbolic when used in connection with spiritual states.
[565] For instance when Margaret Ebner, the celebrated "Friend of God," heard a voice telling her that Tauler, who was the object of great veneration in the circle to which she belonged, was the man whom God loved best and that He dwelt in him like melodious music (see Rufus Jones, op. cit., p. 257).
[566] "There are persons to be met with," says St. Teresa, "and I have known them myself, who have so feeble a brain and imagination that they think they see whatever they are thinking about, and this is a very dangerous condition." ("El Castillo Interior," Moradas Cuartas, cap. iii.)
[567] The dream-theory of vision is well and moderately stated by Pratt: "The Religious Consciousness," cap. xviii, pp. 402 seq. But his statement (loc. cit.) that "the visions of the mystics are determined in content by their belief, and are due to the dream imagination working upon the mass of theological material which fills the mind" is far too absolute.
[568]The book of Angela of Foligno, already cited, contains a rich series of examples.
[569] "Sur la psychologie du Mysticisme" (Revue Philosophique, February, 1902).
[570] "Revelations of Divine Love," cap. lxvi.
[571] Vida, cap. xxxi. SSSS 5 and 10.
[572] Thus too in the case of St. Catherine of Siena, the intense spiritual strain of that three years' retreat which I have already described (supra, Pt. II, Cap 1.) showed itself towards the end of the period by a change in the character of her visions. These, which had previously been wholly concerned with intuitions of the good and beautiful, now took on an evil aspect and greatly distressed her (Vita (Acta SS.), i. xi. 1; see E. Gardner, "St. Catherine of Siena," p. 20). We are obliged to agree with Pratt that such visions as these are "pathological phenomena quite on a level with other hallucinations."("The Religious Consciousness," p 405.)
[573] An excellent example of such appropriation of material is related without comment by Huysmans ("Sainte Lyndwine de Schiedam," p. 258): "Lydwine found again in heaven those forms of adoration, those ceremonial practices of the divine office, which she had known here below during her years of health. The Church Militant had been, in fact, initiated by the inspiration of its apostles, its popes, and its saints into the liturgic joys of Paradise." In this same vision, which occurred on Christmas Eve, when the hour of the Nativity was rung from the belfries of heaven, the Divine Child appeared on His Mother's knee: just as the crèche is exhibited in Catholic churches the moment that Christmas has dawned.
[574] Testament, cap. iii.
[575] E. Gardner "St. Catherine of Siena," p. 25.
[576] Delacroix, "Études sur le Mysticisme," p. 114.
[577] Missale Romanum. Praeparatio ad Missam; Die Dominica.
[578] Given in Poulain: "Les Grâces d'Oraison," p. 318.
[579] "El Castillo Interior." Moradas Sextas, cap. iii.
[580] "Subida del Monte Carmelo," I. ii. cap. xxvii.
[581] "Subida del Monte Carmelo," I. ii. cap. xxvii.
[582] Vida. cap. xxv. SSSS 2, 5, 6. See also for a detailed discussion of all forms of auditions St. John of the Cross, op. cit., I. ii. caps. xxviii. to xxxi.
[583] "El Libro de las Fundaciones" is full of instances.
[584] Suso, "Buchlein von der ewigen Weisheit," Prologue.
[585] "Fioretti," "Delle Istimate," 2.; E. Gardner, "St. Catherine of Siena." p. 15; Rolle, "The Fire of Love," bk. i. cap. xvi., and other places.
[586] Leben, cap. vi.
[587] Compare p. 80.
[588] "Les Fondements de la Connaissance Mystique." p. 149.
[589] Here the exception which proves the rule is Blake. But Blake's visions differed in some important respects from those of his fellow-mystics. They seem to have been "corporeal," not "imaginary" in type, and were regarded by him as actual perceptions of that "real and eternal world" in which he held that it was man's privilege to dwell.
[590] "The Scale of Perfection," bk. i. cap. xi.
[591] "Subida del Monte Carmelo," I. ii. cap. xi. The whole chapter should be read in this connection.
[592] "Subida del Monte Carmelo," I. ii. cap. xvi.
[593] El Castillo Interior," Moradas Sextas, cap. iii.
[594] St. Angels de Foligno, "Livre de l'Expérience des Vrais Fidèles," pp. 170 seq. (English translation, p. 24).
[595] "It is not like that presence of God which is frequently felt . . . this is a great grace . . . but it is not vision" (St. Teresa, Vida, cap, xxvii. SS 6).
[596] Op. cit., loc. cit.
[597] St. Teresa, "El Castillo Interior," Moradas Sextas, cap. viii.
[598] Leben, cap. liv.
[599] St. Teresa, Vida, cap. xxvii. SSSS 2-5.
[600] "For oft, when on my couch I lie
In vacant or in pensive mood,
They flash upon that inward eye
Which
is the bliss of solitude:
And then my heart with pleasure fills
And
dances with the daffodils."
Wordsworth, "The Daffodils."
[601] Leben, cap. vii.
[602] Suso, Leben, cap. vi.
[603] Par. xxx. 61-81: "And I saw light in the form of a river blazing with radiance, streaming between banks painted with a marvellous spring. Out of that river issued living sparks and settled on the flowers on every side, like rubies set in gold. Then, as it were inebriated by the perfume, they plunged again into the wondrous flood, and as one entered another issued forth. . . . Then added the Sun of my eyes: The river, the topazes that enter and come forth, the smiling flowers are shadowy foretastes of their reality. Not that these things are themselves imperfect; but on thy side is the defect, in that thy vision cannot rise so high." This passage probably owes something to Mechthild of Magdeburg's concept of Deity as a Flowing Light.
[604] Mechthild of Hackborn, "Liber Specialis Gratiae," I. ii. caps. xvii. and xxxv.
[605] Pratt, "The Religious Consciousness," p. 404.
[606] For instance, the Blessed Angela of Foligno, who gives in her "Revelations" a complete series of such experiences, ranging from an apprehension of Divine Beauty "shining from within and surpassing the splendour of the sun" (op. cit., p. 64, English translation, p. 222) to a concrete vision of two eyes shining in the Host (loc. cit., English translation, p. 230). "I saw Him most plainly with the eyes of the mind," she says, "first living, suffering, bleeding, crucified, and then dead upon the Cross" (p. 326, English translation p. 223). "Another time I beheld the Child Christ in the consecrated Host. He Appeared beautiful and full of majesty, He seemed as a child of twelve years of age (p. 67. English translation, p. 229).
[607] Vida, cap. xxviii. SS 11.
[608] "El Castillo Interior," Moradas Sextas, cap. ix.
[609] "On one of the feasts of St. Paul, while I was at Mass, there stood before me the most sacred Humanity as painters represent Him after the resurrection" (St. Teresa, Vida, cap. xxviii SS 4). So too the form assumed by many of the visions of Angela of Foligno is obviously due to her familiarity with the frescoed churches of Assisi and the Vale of Spoleto. "When I bent my knees upon entering in at the door of the church," she says, "I immediately beheld a picture of St. Francis lying in Christ's bosom. Then said Christ unto me, `Thus closely will I hold thee and so much closer, that bodily eyes can neither perceive nor comprehend it'." (op. cit., p. 53. English translation, p. 165).
[610] Delacroix. "Études sur le Mysticisme." p. 116.
[611] Vida, cap. xxviii. SS 2.
[612] St. Teresa, op. cit., cap. xxviii. SSSS 7, 8. Angela of Foligno says of a similar vision of Christ, "His beauty and adornment were so great . . . and so great was my joy at the sight, that I think I shall never lose it. And so great was my certitude that I cannot doubt it in any point" (St. Angèle de Foligno, op. cit., p. 66. English translation, p. 229).
[613] Leben, cap. xxi.
[614] E. Gardner, "St. Catherine of Siena," p. 25. Vita, i. xii. 1, 2 (Acta S.S., loc. cit.). In the ring which she always saw upon her finger. we seem to have an instance of true corporeal vision; which finds a curiously exact parallel in the life of St. Teresa. "On one occasion when I was holding in my hand the cross of my rosary, He took it from me into His own hand. He returned it, but it was then four large stones incomparably more precious than diamonds. He said to me that for the future that cross would so appear to me always: and so it did. I never saw the wood of which it was made, but only the precious stones. They were seen, however, by no one else" (Vida, cap. xxix. SS 8). This class of experience, says Augustine Baker, particularly gifts of roses, rings, and jewels, is "much to be suspected," except in "souls of a long-continued sanctity" ("Holy Wisdom." Treatise iii. SS iv. cap. iii.).
[615] Vide "Legenda Aurea," Nov. xxv.
[616] Vida, cap. xxix. SSSS 16, 17.
[617] St. Angèle de Foligno op. cit., p. 232 (English translation, p. 186).
[618] P. 66.
[619] Quoted by Prescott, "The Poetic Mind," p. 102.
[620] On this point I must respectfully differ from Mr. E. Gardner. See his "St. Catherine of Siena," p. 354.
[621] Supra, p. 185.
[622] Quoted by M. Wilson, "Life of William Blake," p. 135.
[623] Berger, "William Blake," p. 54.
[624] G. Cunninghame Graham. "Santa Teresa." vol. i, pp. 202.
[625] G. Cunninghame Graham. "Santa Teresa." vol. i, pp. 203-4.
[626] Vie, pt. ii. cap. ii.
[627] Vie, pt. ii. cap. xxi. Those who wish to compare this vivid subjective account of automatic writing with modern attested instances may consult Myers, "Human Personality," and Oliver Lodge, "The Survival of Man."
[628] Works of Jacob Boehme (English translation, vol. i. p. xiv.).
[629] See E. Boutroux, "Le Philosophe Allemand, Jacob Boehme."