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prayer, without the power of going further, and suggested to me
these comparisons, and taught me how to speak of it, and of what
the soul must do therein. Certainly, I was amazed, and in a
moment understood it all. I have often been thus, as it were,
beside myself, drunk with love, and yet never could understand
how it was. I knew well that it was the work of God, but I never
was able to understand the manner of His working here; for, in
fact, the faculties are almost all completely in union, yet not
so absorbed that they do not act. I have been singularly
delighted in that I have been able to comprehend the matter at
last. Blessed be our Lord, who has thus consoled me!
4. The faculties of the soul now retain only the power of
occupying themselves wholly with God; not one of them ventures to
stir, neither can we move one of them without making great
efforts to distract ourselves—and, indeed, I do not think we can
do it at all at this time. Many words are then uttered in praise
of God—but disorderly, unless it be that our Lord orders them
himself. At least, the understanding is utterly powerless here;
the soul longs to send forth words of praise, but it has no
control over itself,—it is in a state of sweet restlessness.
The flowers are already opening; they are beginning to send forth
their fragrance.
5. The soul in this state would have all men behold and know of
its bliss, to the praise of God, and help it to praise Him.
It would have them to be partakers of its joy; for its joy is
greater than it can bear. It seems to me that it is like the
woman in the Gospel, who would, or used to, call in her
neighbours. [3] The admirable spirit of David, the royal
prophet, must have felt in the same way, so it seems to me, when
he played on the harp, singing the praises of God. I have a very
great devotion to this glorious king; [4] and I wish all had it,
particularly those who are sinners like myself.
6. O my God, what must that soul be when it is in this state?
It wishes it were all tongue, in order that it may praise our
Lord. It utters a thousand holy follies, striving continually to
please Him by whom it is thus possessed. I know one [5] who,
though she was no poet, yet composed, without any preparation,
certain stanzas, full of feeling, most expressive of her pain:
they were not the work of her own understanding; but, in order to
have a greater fruition of that bliss which so sweet a pain
occasioned her, she complained of it in that way to God. She was
willing to be cut in pieces, soul and body, to show the delight
she felt in that pain. To what torments could she be then
exposed, that would not be delicious to endure for her Lord?
She sees clearly that the martyrs did little or nothing, so far
as they were concerned, when they endured their tortures, because
the soul is well aware that its strength is derived from
another source.
7. But what will be its sufferings when it returns to the use of
the senses, to live in the world, and go back to the anxieties
and the fashions thereof? I do not think that I have exaggerated
in any way, but rather have fallen short, in speaking of that
joy, which our Lord, of His good pleasure, gives to the soul in
this its exile. Blessed for ever be Thou, O Lord! and may all
created things praise Thee for ever!
8. O my King, seeing that I am now, while writing this, still
under the power of this heavenly madness, an effect of Thy mercy
and goodness,—and it is a mercy I never deserved,—grant, I
beseech Thee, that all those with whom I may have to converse may
become mad through Thy love, or let me converse with none, or so
order it that I may have nothing to do in the world, or take me
away from it. This Thy servant, O my God, is no longer able to
endure sufferings so great as those are which she must bear when
she sees herself without Thee if she must live, she seeks no
repose in this life,—and do Thou give her none. This my soul
longs to be free—eating is killing it, and sleep is wearisome;
it sees itself wasting the time of this life in comforts, and
that there is no comfort for it now but in Thee; it seems to be
living contrary to nature—for now, it desires to live not in
itself, but in Thee.
9. O my true Lord and my happiness! what a cross hast Thou
prepared for those who attain to this state!—light and most
heavy at the same time: light, because sweet; heavy, because now
and then there is no patience left to endure it—and yet the soul
never wishes to be delivered from it, unless it be that it may
come to Thee. When the soul remembers that it has never served
Thee at all, and that by living on it may do Thee some service,
it longs for a still heavier cross, and never to die before the
end of the world. Its own repose it counts as nothing in
comparison with doing a slight service to Thee. It knows not
what to desire; but it clearly understands that it desires
nothing else but Thee.
10. O my son, [6] so humble is he to whom this writing is
directed, and who has commanded me to write, that he suffers
himself to be thus addressed,—you, my father, only must see
these things, in which I seem to have transgressed all bounds;
for no reason can keep me reasonable when our Lord draws me out
of myself. Since my communion this morning, [7] I do not believe
that I am the person who is speaking; I seem to be dreaming the
things I see, and I wish I might never see any but people ill, as
I am now. I beseech you, my father, let us all be mad, for the
love of Him who for our sakes suffered men to say of Him that He
was mad. [8]
11. You, my father, say that you wish me well. I wish you would
prove it by disposing yourself so that God may bestow this grace
upon you; for I see very few people who have not too much sense
for everything they have to do: and it may be that I have more
than anybody else. Your reverence must not allow it; you are my
father, for you are my confessor, and the person to whom I have
trusted my soul; disperse my delusions by telling the truth; for
truths of this sort are very rarely told.
12. I wish we five, who now love one another in our Lord, had
made some such arrangement as this: as others in these times have
met together in secret [9] to plot wickedness and heresies
against His Majesty, so we might contrive to meet together now
and then, in order to undeceive one another, to tell each other
wherein we might improve ourselves, and be more pleasing unto
God; for there is no one that knows himself as well as he is
known of others who see him, if it be with eyes of love and the
wish to do him good. I say; in secret; for language of this kind
is no longer in use; even preachers go about arranging their
sermons so as to displease no one. [10] They have a good
intention, and their work is good; yet still few amend their
lives. But how is it that they are not many who, in consequence
of these sermons, abstain from public sins? Well, I think it is
because the preachers are highly sensible men. They are not
burning with the great fire of the love of God, as the Apostles
were, casting worldly prudence aside; and so their fire throws
out but little heat. I do not say that their fire ought to burn
like that of the Apostles, but I do wish it were a stronger fire
than I see it is. Do you, my father, know wherein much of this
fire consists? In the hatred of this life, in the desertion of
its honours, in being utterly indifferent whether we lose or gain
anything or everything, provided the truth be told and maintained
for the glory of God; for he who is courageously in earnest for
God, looks upon loss or gain indifferently. I do not say that I
am a person of this kind, but I wish I was.
13. Oh, grand freedom, to regard it as a captivity to be obliged
to live and converse with men according to the laws of the world!
It is the gift of our Lord; there is not a slave who would not
imperil everything that he might escape and return to his
country; and as this is the true road, there is no reason why we
should linger; for we shall never effectually gain a treasure so
great, so long as this life is not ended. May our Lord give us
His grace for that end! You, my father, if it shall seem good to
you, will tear up what I have written, and consider it as a
letter for yourself alone, and forgive me that I have been
very bold.
1. “The third degree, or third water, of the Saint, must begin, I
think, with the prayer of infused recollection, include that of
infused quiet, and end in that of inebriation; because it is not
in our power to draw this water—all we can do is to direct the
stream.” (Francis. de St. Thoma, Medulla Mystica,
tr. iv. ch. xii. p. 208).
2. See St. John of the Cross, Spirit. Canticle, stanza
xvii. vol. ii. p. 98, Engl. trans.
3. St. Luke xv. 9: “Convocat amicas et vicinas.”
4. Foundations, ch. xxix. § 9.
5. The Saint herself (De la Fuente).
6. This was either F. Ybañez or the Inquisitor Soto, if the
expression did not occur in the first Life. F. Dom. Bañes struck
out “son,” and wrote “father” in its place, omitting the words,
“so humble is he” (De la Fuente).
7. See § 3, above.
8. St. John x. 20: “Dæmonium habet et insanit.”
9. The Saint refers to the secret meetings of heretics in
Valladolid, under the direction of a fallen priest, the Doctor
Agostino Cazalla, whose vanity led him to imitate Luther.
Some nuns in Valladolid were imprisoned, Cazalla strangled, and
his body burnt, in 1559 (De la Fuente).
10. Father Bañes wrote here on the margin of the Saint’s MS,
“Legant prædicatores” (De la Fuente).
Chapter XVII.
The Third State of Prayer. The Effects Thereof. The Hindrance
Caused by the Imagination and the Memory.
1. Enough has been said of this manner of prayer, and of what the
soul has to do, or rather, to speak more correctly, of what God
is doing within it; for it is He who now takes upon Himself the
gardener’s work, and who will have the soul take its ease; except
that the will is consenting to the graces, the fruition of which
it has, and that it must resign itself to all that the True
Wisdom would accomplish in it—for which it is certain it has
need of courage; because the joy is so great,
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