[732] "Human Personality and its Survival of Bodily Death," vol. ii. p. 260.
[733] Vide infra, p. 365.
[734] An interesting modern case is reported in the Lancet, 18 March, 1911.
[735] Relaccion, viii. 8.
[736] St. Thomas proves ecstasies to be inevitable on just this psychological ground. "The higher our mind is raised to the contemplation of spiritual things," he says, "the more it is abstracted from sensible things. But the final term to which contemplation can possibly arrive is the divine substance. Therefore the mind that sees the divine substance must be totally divorced from the bodily senses, either by death or by some rapture" ("Sultana contra Gentiles," I. iii. cap. xlvii., Rickaby's translation).
[737] "Sur la Psychologie du Mysticisme" (Revue Philosophique, February, 1902).
[738] Malaval, "La Pratique de la Vraye Théologie Mystique," vol. i. p. 89.
[739] Pierre Janet ("The Major Symptoms of Hysteria," p. 316) says that a lowering of the mental level in an invariable symptom or "stigma" of hysteria.
[740] "Holy Wisdom," Treatise iii. SS iv. cap. iii.
[741] Von Hügel, "The Mystical Element of Religion," vol. i. p. 206.
[742] This power of detecting and hearing the call of duty, though she was deaf to everything else, is evidently related to the peculiarity noticed by Ribot; who says that an ecstatic hears no sounds, save, in some cases, the voice of one specific person, which is always able to penetrate the trance. ("Les Maladies de la Volonté," p. 125.)
[743] Vita e Dottrina, cap. v.
[744] Vida, cap. xx. SS 29.
[745] A. Maury, "Le Sommeil et les Rèves," p. 235.
[746] "Revelations of Divine Love," cap. iii.
[747] Vide supra, p. 181.
[748] D. A. Mougel, "Denys le Chartreux," p. 32.
[749] E. Gardner, "St. Catherine of Siena," p. 50.
[750] Dialogo, cap. lxxix.
[751] In the case of Dante, for instance, we do not know whether his absorption in the Eternal light did or did not entail the condition of trance.
[752] 2 Cor. xii. 1-6.
[753] Vida, cap. xx. SSSS 1 and 3.
[754] Compare Dante, Letter to Can Grande, sect. 28, where he adduces this fact of "the ravishing of sinners for their correction," in support of his claim that the "Divine Comedy" is the fruit of experience, and that he had indeed "navigated the great Sea of Being" of which he writes.
[755] Richard Rolle, "The Fire of Love," bk. ii. cap. vii.
[756] Dante, loc. cit.
[757] Eckhart, "On the Steps of the Soul" (Pfeiffer, p. 153).
[758] Compare Par. xxxiii. 85 (vide supra, p. 135).
[759] Jundt, "Rulman Merswin," p. 27. Note that this was a "good ecstasy," involving healthful effects for life.
[760] Jundt, "Les Amis de Dieu," p. 39. Given also by Rufus Jones, "Studies in Mystical Religion," p. 271.
[761] "Benjamin Major."
[762] St. John of the Cross, "En una Noche Escura."
[763] Ribot, "Psychologie de l'Attention," cap. iii.
[764] B. P. Blood. See William James, "A Pluralistic Mystic," in the Hibbert Journal, July, 1910.
765 Vida, cap. xx. SS 24.
[766] Leben, cap. vl.
[767] Ennead vi. 9
[768] Op. cit., loc. cit.
[769] Ruysbroeck, "De Calculo," cap. xii.
[770] "The activity of the mind is lulled to rest: rapt in God, It can no longer find itself. . . . Being so deeply engulphed in that ocean, now it can find no place to issue therefrom. Of itself it cannot think, nor can it say what it is like: because transformed, it hath another vesture. All its perceptions have gone forth to gaze upon the Good, and contemplate that Beauty which has no likeness" (Lauda xci.).
771 "The doors are flung wide: conjoined to God, it possesses all that is in Him. It feels that which it felt not: sees that which it knew not, possesses that which it believed not, tastes, though it savours not. Because it is wholly lost to itself, it possesses that height of Unmeasured Perfection. Because it has not retained in itself the mixture of any other thing, it has received in abundance that Imageless Good" (op. cit.).
[772] Relaccion viii. 8 and 10.
[773] Vida, cap. xx. SS 3.
[774] St. Teresa, op. cit., loc. cit., SSSS 7 and 9.
[775] Supra, p. 186.
[776] Dialogo, cap. lxxix.
[777] Vida, cap, xx. SS 23. At the same time in the present state of our knowledge and in view of numerous attested cases of levitation, it is impossible to dogmatise on this subject. The supernaturalist view is given in its extreme form by Farges, "Mystical Phenomena," pp. 536 seq.
[778] Teresa, loc. cit.
[779] St. Teresa, "El Castillo Interior," Moradas Sextas, cap. iv.
[780] Op. cit., loc. cit.
[781] St. Teresa, op. cit., cap. vi.
[782] "De Quatuor Gradibus Violentae Charitatis" (paraphrase).