[843]Der Sinn und Wert des Lebens," p. 140.
[844] Compare Dante's sense of a transmuted personality when he first breathed the air of Paradise:--
"S' io era sol di me quel che creasti
novellamente, Amor che il ciel governi
tu il sai, che cot tuo lume mi levasti" (Par. i. 73).
"If I were only that of me which thou didst new create, oh Love who rulest heaven, thou knowest who with thy light didst lift me up."
[845] "Revelations of Divine Love," cap. v.
[846] Par. I. 70.
[847] Delacroix. "Études sur le Mysticism," p. 197.
[848] Eucken, "Der Sinn und Wert des Lebens," p. 12.
[849] Ibid., p. 96.
[850] Delacroix, op. cit., p. 114 (vide supra, p. 273).
[851] "Theologia Germanica," cap. xli.
[852] Par. xxx. 115-130 and xxxi. 1-12.
[853] Compare, p. 128.
[854] Op. cit., ix. But it is difficult to see why we need stigmatize as "half-savage" man's primordial instinct for his destiny.
[855] Divine Liturgy of the Orthodox Eastern Church. Prayers before Communion.
[856] Athanasius, De Incarn. Verbi, i. 108.
[857] Aug. Conf., bk. vii. cap. x.
[858] Pred. lvii.
[859] Pred. xcix. ("Mystische Schriften," p. 122).
[860] Ruysbroeck, "De Ornatu Spiritalium Nuptiarum," I. iii. cap. iii.
[861] Aug. Conf., bk. x. cap. xxviii.
[862] Cf. Coventry Patmore, "The Rod, the Root, and the Flower," "Magna Moralia," xxii.
[863] Par. xxx. 64.
[864] "De Septem Gradibus Amoris," cap. xiv.
[865] "The Threefold Life of Man," cap. vi. 88.
[866] "De Quatuor Gradibus Violentae Charitatis" (Migne, Patrologia Latina cxcvi.)
[867] Dialogo, cap. lxxviii.
[868] Ruysbroeck. "Samuel," cap. xi. (English translation: "The Book of Truth.")
[869] Ibid., "De Calculo," cap. ix.
[870] St. Thomas Aquinas, "Summa Contra Gentiles," bk. iii. cap. lxii.
[871] Suso, "Buchlein von der Wahrheit," cap. iv.
[872] "Theologia Germanica," cap. x.
[873] Ruysbroeck, "Speculum Aeternae e Salutis," cap. vii.
[874] "Regnum Deum Amantium," cap xxii.
[875] Jalalu `d Din, "The Festival of Spring" (Hastie's translation p. 10).
[876] "The Mirror of Simple Souls," Div. iv. cap. i.
[877] "The Epistle of Prayer." Printed from Pepwell's edition in "The Cell of Self-knowledge," edited by Edmund Gardner, p. 88.
[878] Gerlac Petersen, "Ignitum cum Deo Soliloqium," cap. xv.
[879] Compare Pt. i. Cap. vi. It seems needless to repeat here the examples there given.
[880] Hilton, "The Treatise written to a Devout Man," cap. viii.
[881] Cf. Ormond, "Foundations of Knowledge," p. 442. "When we love any being, we desire either the unification of its life with our own or our own unification with its life. Love in its innermost motive is a unifying principle."
[882] "Summa Contra Gentiles," bk. ii. cap. xxi.
[883] "De Quatuor Gradibus Violentae Charitatis" (Migne, Patrologia Latina cxcvi. col. 1216 D).
[884] "El Castillo Interior," Moradas Sétimas, cap. iv.
[885] "Les Torrents," pt. i. cap. ix.
[886] Thomas of Celano, Legenda Secunda, cap. xii.
[887] Supra, Pt. I. Cap. II.
[888] Ruysbroeck, "De Calculo," cap. ix.
[889] Op. cit., cap viii. and ix. (condensed).
[890] Vide supra p. 35.
[891] Par. xxxiii. 91. "I believe that I beheld the universal form of this knot: because in saying this I feel my joy increased."
[892] "De Septem Gradibus Amoris," Cap. xiv.
[893] Ibid., loc. cit.
[894] Ruysbroeck "Do Ornatu Spiritalium Nuptiarum,"" I. ii cap. lxv.
[895] Par. xxxiii. 137.
[896] "The Mirror of Simple Souls." p. 161.
[897] "De Imitatione Christi," I. iii. cap. v.
[898] Contestatio Fr. Thomae Caffarina, Processus, col. 1258 (E. Gardner, "St. Catherine of Siena," p. 48).
[899] Par. xxvii. 4.
[900] Ibid., xx. 13.
[901] Ibid., x. 76, 118.
[902] Ibid., xxviii. 100.
[903] Ibid., xxxiii. 124-26.
[904] Coventry Patmore, "The Rod, the Root, and the Flower," "Aurea Dicta."
[905] Richard Rolle, "The Fire of Love," bk. ii. cap. vii.
[906] Op. cit., bk. i. cap. xi.
[907] "Speculum Perfectionis," cap, c. (Steele's translation).
[908] "Speculum," cap. cxiii.
[909] Ibid., cap. c.
[910] Ibid., cap. xciii., also Thomas of Celano, Vita Secunda, cap. xc.
[911] Cf. G. Cunninghame Graham, "Santa Teresa," vol. i. pp. 180, 300, 304.
[912] "Dost thou wish that I should show
All God's Being thou mayst know?
Peace is not found of those who do not with Him go."
(Vita e Dottrina, cap. xviii.)
Here, in spite of the many revisions to which the Vita has been subjected, I cannot but see an authentic report of St. Catherine's inner mind; highly characteristic of the personality which "came joyous and rosy-faced" from its ecstatic encounters with Love. The very unexpectedness of its conclusion, so unlike the expressions supposed to be proper to the saints, is a guarantee of its authenticity. On the text of the "Vita" see Von Hügel, "The Mystical Element of Religion," vol. i., Appendix.
[913] Coventry Patmore, "The Rod, the Root, and the Flower," "Magna Moralia," xv.