[57]The wise Cherubs, according to the beautiful imagery of Dionysius, are "all eyes," but the loving Seraphs are "all wings." Whilst the Seraphs, the figure of intensest Love, "move perpetually towards things divine," ardour and energy being their characteristics, the characteristic of the Cherubs is receptiveness their power of absorbing the rays of the Supernal Light. (Dionysius the Areopagite, "De Caelesti Ierarchia," vi. 2, and vii. 1.)
[58]So Récéjac says of the mystics, they desire to know, only that they may love; and their desire for union with the principle of things in God, Who is the sum of them all, is founded on a feeling which is neither curiosity nor self-interest" ("Fondements de la Connaissance Mystique," p. 50).
59Par. xxxiii. 143.
[60]The Monist, July, 1901, p. 572.
[61]"The Cloud of Unknowing," cap. vi.
[62]Op. cit., cap. vii.
[63]"De Ornatu Spiritalium Nuptiarum," I. ii. cap. v.
[64]See below, Pt. II. Cap. VI.
[65]Plotinus, Ennead vi. 9.
[66]"Theologia Germanica," cap. vii. (trans. Winkworth).
[67]Aug. Conf., bk. vii. cap. x.
[68]A. Schmölders, "Essai sur les Écoles Philosophique chez les Arabes," p. 68.
[69]"De Consideration," bk. ii. cap. ii.
[70]"Summa Theologica," ii. ii. q. clxxx, art. 3. eds. 1 and 3.
[71]Walter Hilton, "The Scale of Perfection," bk. ii. cap. xl.
[72]Ruysbroeck, "De Septem Gradibus Amoris," cap. xiv.
[73]"The Spirit of Prayer" ("Liberal and Mystical Writings of William Law," p, 14). So too St. François de Sales says: "This root is the depth of the spirit, Mens, which others call the Kingdom of God." The same doctrine appears, under various symbols, in all the Christian Mystics.
[74]Cutten, "Psychological Phenomena of Christianity," p. 18. James, "Varieties of Religious Experience," p. 155. For a temperate and balanced discussion, see Pratt: "The Religious Consciousness."
[75]Note to the 12th Edition. During the eighteen years which have elapsed since this chapter was written, much work has been done on the psychology of mysticism. After suffering severely at the hands of the "new psychologists" the contemplative faculty is once more taken seriously; and there is even some disposition to accept or restate the account of it given by the mystics. Thus Bremond ("Prière et Poésie" and "Introduction à la Philosophie de la Prière") insists on the capital distinction between the surface-mind, capable of rational knowledge, and the deeper mind, organ of mystical knowledge, and operative in varying degrees in religion poetic, and Esthetic apprehensions.
[76]An interesting discussion of the term "Synteresis" will be found in Dr. Inge's "Christian Mysticism," Appendix C, pp. 359, 360.
[77]"La Pratique de la Vraye Theologie Mystique," vol. 1. p. 204.
[78]J. A. Stewart, `*The Myths of Plato," pp. 41, 43. Perhaps I may point out that this Transcendental Feeling--the ultimate material alike of prayer and of poetry--has, like the mystic consciousness, a dual perception of Reality: static being and dynamic life. See above, p. 42.
[79]Tauler, Sermon on St. Augustine ("The Inner Way," p. 162).
[80]"Theologia Germanica," cap. vii. Compare "De Imitatione Christi," 1. iii. cap. 38.
[81]Morton Prince, "The Dissociation of a Personality," p. 16.
[82]Martensen, "Jacob Boehme," p. 7.
[83]Testament, cap. iii.
[84]Starbuck, "The Psychology of Religion," p. 388.
[85]See, for instances, Cutten, `The Psychological Phenomena of Christianity," cap. viii.
[86]"Singularity," says Gertrude More, "is a vice which Thou extremely hatest." (`The Spiritual Exercises of the most vertuous and religious Dame Gertrude More," p. 40). All the best and sanest of the mystics are of the same opinion.
[87]See E. Gardner, "St. Catherine of Siena," pp. 12 and 48; and E. von Hügel, "The Mystical Element of Religion," vol. i. p. 135.
[88]"Les Maladies des Sentiments Religieux."
[89]"L'État Mentale des Hysteriques," and "Une Extatique" (Bulletin de l'Institut Psychologique, 1901).
[90]"La Psychologie des Sentiment," 1896.
[91]Op. cit., vol. ii. p. 42.
[92]For examples consult Pierre Janet, op. cit.
[93]Sermon for First Sunday after Easter (Winkworth, p. 302).
[94]"Das Fliessende Licht der Gottheit," pt. ii. cap. xxv.
[95]Vida, cap. xx. sect. 29.
[96]Boyce Gibson ("God with Us," cap. iii.) has drawn a striking parallel between the ferment and "interior uproar" of adolescence and the profound disturbances which mark man's entry into a conscious spiritual life. His remarks are even more applicable to the drastic rearrangement of personality which takes place in the case of the mystic, whose spiritual life is more intense than that of other men.
[97]Delacroix, "Études sur le Mysticisme," p. iii.
[98]Dialogo, cap. lxxxvi.
[99]Quoted by James ("Varieties of Religious Experience," p. 481) from Clissold's "The Prophetic Spirit in Genius and Madness," p. 67.
[100]"Mérejkowsky, "Le Roman do Leonard de Vinci," p. 638.
[101]Vida, cap. xv. 9.
[102]Meister Eckhart, Pred. i. ("Mystische Schriften," p. 18).
[103]"Three Dialogues of the Supersensual Life," p. 14.
[104]Dionysius the Areopagite, "De Divinis Nominibus," vii. 3.
[105]Pred. xxiii. Eckhart obtained this image from St. Thomas Aquinas, "Summa Contra Gentiles," I. iii. cap. lxi. "The intellectual soul is created on the confines of eternity and time."
[106]Vie, t. ii. pp. 120, 223, 229. It might reasonably be objected that Madame Guyon does not rank high among the mystics and her later history includes some unfortunate incidents. This is true. Nevertheless she exhibit such a profusion of mystical phenomena and is so candid in her self-disclosures, that she provides much valuable material for the student.
[107]G. Cunninghame Graham, "Santa Teresa," vol. i. p. 202.
[108]"Letters of William Blake," April 25, 1803.
[109]This insistence on the twofold character of human personality is implicit in the mystics. "It is" says Bremond, "the fundamental dogma of mystical psychology--the distinction between the two selves: Animus, the surface self; Anima, the deep self; Animus, rational knowledge; and Anima, mystical or poetic knowledge . . . the I, who feeds on notions and words, and enchants himself by doing so; the Me, who is united to realities" (Bremond "Prière et Poésie," cap. xii.).
[110]Julian of Norwich, "Revelations of Divine Love," cap, lv.