[783] Vide supra, pp. 187 seq., the cases of Suso and Pascal.
[784] Pt. ii. cap. i.
[785] "Psychology of Religion," p. 24.
[786] An example of this occurred in the later life of Ste. Jeanne Françoise de Chantal. See "The Nuns of Port Royal," by M. E. Lowndes, p. 284. Much valuable material bearing on the trials of the Dark Night as they appear in the experience of ordinary contemplatives will be found in the letters of direction of De Caussade. See his "L'Abandon à la Providence Divine," vol. ii.
[787] Vide supra, p. 228.
[788] Vie, pt. I. cap. xx.
[789] Op. cit., cap. xxi.
[790] "Journal Spirituel," p. 233.
[791] Vie, cap. xxiii.
[792] "Les Torrents," pt. i. cap. vii. SS 2.
[793] Leben, cap. xxii.
[794] "Holy Wisdom," Treatise iii. SS iv. cap. v.
[795] "Buchlein von der ewigen Weisheit," cap. ii.
[796] "Journal Spirituel," p. 368.
[797] From the "Mesnevi." Quoted in the Appendix to `The Flowers or Rose Garden of Sadi."
[798] Meister Eckhart, Pred. lvii. So too St. Gertrude in one of her symbolic visions saw a thick hedge erected between herself and Christ.
[799] "Noche Escura del Alma,"' I. ii. cap. vi.
[800] Vie, pt. i. cap. xxiii.
[801] De Caussade, "L'Abandon à la Providence Divine." vol. ii., p. 269.
[802] Madame Guyon, "Les Torrents," pt. i. cap, vii.
[803] "Noche Escura del Alma," loc. cit.
[804] Instructive examples in De Caussade, op. cit., vol. ii., pp. 1-82.
[805] Ruysbroeck, "De Ornatu Spiritalium Nuptiarum," I. ii. cap. xxviii.
[806] St. Angèle de Foligno, op. cit., p. 197 (English translation, p. 15).
[807] J. E. Gardner, "St. Catherine of Siena," p. 20.
[808] Vida, cap. xxx. SSSS 12 and 14.
[809] Op. cit., loc. cit.
[810] "Das Fliessende Licht der Gottheit," pt. ii. cap. 25.
[811] L. vi. cap. xiii.
[812] "El Castillo Interior," Moradas Sextas, cap. xi.
[813] St. Teresa, op. cit., loc. cit. Compare the Vida, cap. xx. SSSS 11 to 14.
[814] Sermon for the 4th Sunday in Lent (Winkworth's translation, p. 280).
[815] Op. cit., loc. cit.
[816] "Vita e Dottrina," cap. xiv.
[817] "Christian Regeneration" (The Liberal and Mystical Writings of William Law, pp. 158-60).
[818] Vide supra, p. 392.
[819] Dialogo, cap. lxiii.
[820] St. John of the Cross, "Noche Escura del Alma," I. ii cap. v.
[821] I.e., the pure essence of the soul, purged of selfhood and illusion.
[822] Sermon on St. Matthew ("The Inner Way." pp. 204, 205).
[823] "Les Torrents" pt. i. cap, viii.
[824] "The Scale of Perfection," bk. ii. cap. xxxv.
[825] Jundt, "Rulman Merswin" p. 22.
[826] "Noche Escura del Alma," I. ii, cap. xxiv.
[827] Vide supra, p. 290.
[828] Leben, cap. xx.
[829] These expressions, the Upper and Lower School of the Holy Spirit, as applied to the first and second mystic life, were common to the whole group of "Friends of God," and appear frequently in their works. Vide supra, p. 441, Rulman Merswin's "Vision of Nine Rocks," where the man who has "gazed upon his Origin" is said to have been in the Upper School of the Holy Spirit; i.e., to have been united to God.
[830] Leben, cap. xxi.
[831] Job vii. 1 (Vulgate).
[832] During the years of purgation Suso had constantly worn a sharp cross, the points of which pierced his flesh.
[833]Leben, cap. xxii.
[834]Leben, cap. xxiii.
[835] Ibid., cap. xxv.
[836] "Buchlein von der ewigen Weisheit," cap. ii.
[837] Leben, cap. xlvii. So Ruysbroeck, "The gold Ring of our Covenant is greater than Heaven or Earth" ("De Contemplatione"). Compare Vaughan the Silurist ("The World").
"I saw Eternity the other night,
Like a great Ring of pure and endless light,
All calm as it was bright;
. . . .
One whispered thus:
`This Ring the Bridegroom did for none provide
But for His Bride.'"
[838] "Buchlein von der ewigen Weisheit," cap. ii.
[839] Cap. xl.
[840] Op. cit., loc. cit.
[841] "Nay, it is essential to this blessed being, to hold ourselves within the Will Divine; that therewith our own wills be themselves made one."
[842] Loc. cit.