accompany it, and
its vindication as something which gives the self a genuine knowledge of
transcendental Reality--with its accompanying demonstration of the soberness
and sanity of the greatest contemplative saints--is the last of the beneficent
changes which have transformed our study of the mystics. In this country it is
identified with the work of two Benedictine scholars; Abbot Chapman of Downside
and Dom Cuthbert Butler, whose "Western Mysticism" is a masterly exhibition of
the religious and psychological normality of the Christian contemplative life,
as developed by its noblest representatives.
Since this book was written, our knowledge of the
mystics has been much extended by the appearance of critical texts of many
writings which had only been known to us in garbled versions; or in
translations made with an eye to edification rather than accuracy. Thus the
publication of the authentic revelations of Angela of Foligno--one of the most
interesting discoveries of recent years--has disclosed the unsuspected
splendour of her mystical experience. The critical texts of St. Teresa and St.
John of the Cross which are now available amend previous versions in many
important respects. We have reliable editions of Tauler and Ruysbroeck; of "The
Cloud of Unknowing," and of Walter Hilton's works. The renewed interest in
seventeenth-century mysticism, due in part to the Abbé Bremond's great
work, has resulted in the publication of many of its documents. So too the
literary, social and historical links between the mystics, the influence of
environment, the great part played by forgotten spiritual movements and
inarticulate saints, are beginning to be better understood. Advantage has been
taken of these facts in preparing the present edition. All quotations from the
mystics have been revised by comparison with the best available texts. The
increased size of the historical appendix and bibliography is some indication
of the mass of fresh material which is now at the disposal of students;
material which must be examined with truth-loving patience, with sympathy, and
above all with humility, by those who desire to make valid additions to our
knowledge of the conditions under which the human spirit has communion with
God.
Easter 1930 E. U.
Preface to the First Edition