<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<!DOCTYPE ThML PUBLIC "-//CCEL/DTD Theological Markup Language//EN" "http://www.ccel.org/dtd/ThML10.dtd">
<?xml-stylesheet type="text/xml"
    href="http://www.ccel.org/ss/thml.html.xsl" ?>
  <?xml-stylesheet type="text/xsl"
    href="http://www.ccel.org/ss/thml.html.xsl" ?>
<ThML>
  <ThML.head>

    <!-- Copyright Christian Classics Ethereal Library -->

    <generalInfo>
      <description>During a rainy summer in Scotland towards the end of the nineteenth century, Alexander Whyte, minister and professor in the Free Church of Scotland, spent his mornings and evenings reading the works of Saint Teresa of Avila, beloved Reformer of the Carmelite Order in the sixteenth century. So moved by the words of the saint, Whyte wrote this short biography of Santa Teresa, along with summaries of her works. He also included selected passages from the writings of Santa Teresa on spirituality and theology, for the purpose of sharing these passages with young men and women that they might grow spiritually and intellectually. In this short tribute, Whyte passes on his adoration of Santa Teresa to the reader, along with the texts that so moved him, to bless those who read this beautiful and thoughtful work.<br /><br />Laura de Jong<br />CCEL Staff Writer</description>
      <pubHistory />
      <comments />
    </generalInfo>

    <printSourceInfo>
      <published>Oliphant Anderson &amp; Ferrier</published>
    </printSourceInfo>

    <electronicEdInfo>
      <publisherID>ccel</publisherID>
      <authorID>whyte</authorID>
      <bookID>teresa</bookID>
      <workID>teresa</workID>
      <bkgID>santa_teresa_an_appreciation_(whyte)</bkgID>
      <version>1.0</version>
      <editorialComments />
      <revisionHistory />
      <status />

      <DC>
        <DC.Title>Santa Teresa, An Appreciation</DC.Title>
        <DC.Creator sub="Author" scheme="short-form">Alexander Whyte</DC.Creator>
        <DC.Creator sub="Author" scheme="file-as">Whyte, Alexander (1836-1921)</DC.Creator>
 
        <DC.Publisher>Grand Rapids, MI: Christian Classics Ethereal Library</DC.Publisher>
        <DC.Subject scheme="LCCN" />
        <DC.Subject scheme="ccel">All;</DC.Subject>
        <DC.Contributor sub="Digitizer" />
        <DC.Date sub="Created">2012-04-29</DC.Date>
        <DC.Type>Text.Monograph</DC.Type>
        <DC.Format scheme="IMT">text/html</DC.Format>
        <DC.Identifier scheme="URL">/ccel/whyte/teresa.html</DC.Identifier>
        <DC.Identifier scheme="ISBN" />
        <DC.Source />
        <DC.Source scheme="URL" />
        <DC.Language scheme="ISO639-3">eng</DC.Language>
        <DC.Rights>Public Domain</DC.Rights>
      </DC>

    </electronicEdInfo>
  


<style type="text/css">
P	{ margin-top:.75em; margin-bottom:.75em }
H1	{ text-align:center; margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:2em }
H2	{ text-align:center; margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:2em }
H3	{ text-align:left; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em }
H4	{ text-align:left; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em }
BODY	{ margin-left:10%; margin-right:10% }
TD	{ vertical-align:top }
.smcap	{ font-variant:small-caps }
</style>

<style type="text/xcss">
<selector element="P">
  <property name="margin-top" value=".75em" />
  <property name="margin-bottom" value=".75em" />
</selector>
<selector element="H1">
  <property name="text-align" value="center" />
  <property name="margin-top" value="2em" />
  <property name="margin-bottom" value="2em" />
</selector>
<selector element="H2">
  <property name="text-align" value="center" />
  <property name="margin-top" value="2em" />
  <property name="margin-bottom" value="2em" />
</selector>
<selector element="H3">
  <property name="text-align" value="left" />
  <property name="margin-top" value="1em" />
  <property name="margin-bottom" value="1em" />
</selector>
<selector element="H4">
  <property name="text-align" value="left" />
  <property name="margin-top" value="1em" />
  <property name="margin-bottom" value="1em" />
</selector>
<selector element="BODY">
  <property name="margin-left" value="10%" />
  <property name="margin-right" value="10%" />
</selector>
<selector element="TD">
  <property name="vertical-align" value="top" />
</selector>
<selector class="smcap">
  <property name="font-variant" value="small-caps" />
</selector>
</style>


</ThML.head>

<ThML.body>

    <div1 title=" " id="i" prev="toc" next="ii">
<p class="Centered" id="i-p1"><i>THEODIDACTA</i></p>
<p class="Centered" id="i-p2"><i>AFFICIENS</i></p>
<p class="Centered" id="i-p3"><i>INFLAMMANS</i></p>
</div1>

    <div1 title="Title Page" id="ii" prev="i" next="iii">
<h1 id="ii-p0.1">Santa Teresa: an Appreciation</h1>
<p class="Centered" id="ii-p1"><i>With some of the best passages of
the Saint’s Writings Selected Adapted and Arranged by<br />
Alexander Whyte<br /></i><span class="smcap" id="ii-p1.3"><i>d.d.</i></span></p>
<p class="Centered" id="ii-p2"><i>Oliphant Anderson &amp;
Ferrier</i><br />
<i>Saint Mary Street</i>, <i>Edinburgh</i>, <i>and</i><br />
21 <i>Paternoster Square</i>, <i>London</i><br />
1900</p>
<p class="Centered" id="ii-p3"><i>Third Edition</i><br />
<i>Completing</i> 6000 <i>copies</i></p>
<p class="Centered" id="ii-p4">Edinburgh: T. and A. <span class="smcap" id="ii-p4.1">Constable</span>, Printers to her Majesty</p>
</div1>

    <div1 title="Appreciation and Introduction" id="iii" prev="ii" next="iv">
<h2 id="iii-p0.1">APPRECIATION AND INTRODUCTION</h2>
<p class="First" id="iii-p1">With a view to the work of my classes this session, I took old
Abraham Woodhead’s two black-letter quartos with me to the
Engadine last July.  And I spent every rainy morning and every
tired evening of that memorable holiday month in the society of
Santa Teresa and her excellent old-English translator.  Till,
ever, as I crossed the Morteratch and the Roseg, and climbed the
hills around Maloggia and Pontresina, a voice would come after me,
saying to me, Why should you not share all this spiritual profit
and intellectual delight with your Sabbath evening congregations,
and with your young men’s and young women’s
classes?  Why should you not introduce Santa Teresa to her
daughters in Edinburgh?  For her daughters they are, so soon
and as long as they live in self-knowledge and in self-denial, in
humility and in meekness, and especially in unceasing prayer for
themselves and for others.  And I am not without
some assurance that in this present lecture I am both hearing and
obeying one of those same locutions that Teresa heard so
frequently, and obeyed with such instancy and fidelity and
fruitfulness.</p>
<p class="Centered" id="iii-p2">* * * * *</p>
<p id="iii-p3">Luther was born in 1483, and he nailed his ninety-five theses to
the door of the University Church of Wittenberg on the 31st October
1517.  Loyola was born in 1491, and Xavier in 1506, and the
Society of Jesus was established in 1534.  Isabella the
Catholic was born in 1451, and our own Protestant Elizabeth in
1533.  The Spanish Inquisition began to sit in 1483, the
Breviary was finally settled in 1568, and the Armada was destroyed
in 1588.  Columbus was born in 1446, and he set out on his
great enterprise in 1492.  Cervantes was born in 1547, and the
First Part of his immortal work was published in 1605.  And it
is to be read in Santa Teresa’s Breviary to this day that
Teresa the Sinner was born on the 29th day of March 1515, at five
o’clock in the morning.  She died in 1582, and in 1622
she was publicly canonised at Rome along with Loyola and Xavier and
two other Spanish saints.</p>
<p id="iii-p4">Teresa was greatly blessed in both her parents.  ‘It helped me much that I never saw my
father or my mother respect anything in any one but
goodness.’  Her father was a great reader of the best
books, and he took great pains that his children should form the
same happy habit and should carefully cultivate the same excellent
taste.  Her mother, while a Christian gentlewoman of the first
social standing, did not share her husband’s love of serious
literature.  She passed far too much of her short lifetime
among the romances of the day, till her daughter has to confess
that she took no little harm from the books that did her mother no
harm but pastime to read.  As for other things, her
father’s house was a perfect model of the very best morals
and the very best manners.  Alonso de Cepeda was a well-born
and a well-bred Spanish gentleman.  He came of an ancient and
an illustrious Castilian stock; and, though not a rich man, his
household enjoyed all the nobility of breeding and all the culture
of mind and all the refinement of taste for which Spain was so
famous in that great age.  All her days, and in all her ups
and downs in life, we continually trace back to Teresa’s
noble birth and noble upbringing no little of her supreme
stateliness of deportment and serenity of manner and chivalry of character.  Teresa was a perfect
Spanish lady, as well as a mother in Israel, and no one who ever
conversed with her could for a moment fail to observe that the
oldest and best blood of Spain mantled in her cheek and shone in
her eye.  A lion encompassed by crosses was one of the
quarters of her father’s coat of arms.  And Teresa took
that up and added out of it a new glory to all her father’s
hereditary honours.  For his daughter was all her days a
lioness palisaded round with crosses, till by means of them she was
transformed into a lamb.  But, all the time, the lioness was
still lurking there.  Teresa’s was one of those
sovereign souls that are born from time to time as if to show us
what our race was created for at first, and for what it is still
destined.  She was a queen among women.  She was in
intellect the complete equal, and in still better things than
intellect far the superior, of Isabella and Elizabeth
themselves.  As she says in an outspoken autobiographic
passage, hers was one of those outstanding and towering souls on
which a thousand eyes and tongues are continually set without any
one understanding them or comprehending them.  Her coming
greatness of soul is foreseen by some of her biographers in the
attempt which she made while yet a child
to escape away into the country of the Moors in search of an early
martyrdom, so that she might see her Saviour all the sooner, and
stand in His presence all the purer.  ‘A woman,’
says Crashaw, ‘for angelical height of speculation: for
masculine courage of performance, more than a woman; who, while yet
a child, outran maturity, and durst plot a martyrdom.</p>
<blockquote id="iii-p4.1">
<p id="iii-p5">Scarce had she learnt to lisp the name<br />
Of martyr, yet she thinks it shame<br />
Life should so long sport with that breath,<br />
Which, spent, can buy so brave a death.</p>
<p id="iii-p6">Scarce had she blood enough to make<br />
A guilty sword blush for her sake;<br />
Yet has she heart dares hope to prove<br />
How much less strong is death than love.</p>
<p id="iii-p7">Be love but there, let poor six years<br />
Be posed with the maturest fears<br />
Man trembles at, we straight shall find<br />
Love knows no nonage, nor the mind.’</p>
</blockquote>
<p id="iii-p8">Teresa’s mother died just when her daughter was at that
dangerous age in which a young girl needs a wise mother most;
‘the age when virtue should begin to grow,’ as she says
herself.  Teresa was an extraordinarily handsome and
attractive young lady, and the knowledge of that, as she tells us,
made her very vain, and puffed up her heart with foolish
imaginations.  She has a powerful
chapter in the opening of her Autobiography on dangerous
companionships in the days of youth.  ‘Oh that all
parents would take warning by me, and would look carefully into
their children’s early friendships!’  She suffered
terribly from bad health all her days, and that severe chastisement
began to fall on her while she was yet a beautiful girl.  It
was a succession of serious illnesses, taken along with her
father’s scrupulous care over her, that brought Teresa back
to the simple piety of her early childhood, and fixed her for life
in an extraordinary devotion to God, and to all the things of
God.  When such a change of heart and character comes to a
young woman among ourselves, she usually seeks out some career of
religion and charity to which she can devote her life.  She is
found labouring among the poor and the sick and the children of the
poor, or she goes abroad to foreign mission work.  In
Teresa’s land and day a Religious House was the understood
and universal refuge for any young woman who was in earnest about
her duty to God and to her own soul.  In those Houses such
young women secluded themselves from all society and gave
themselves up to the care of the poor and the young.  In the
more strict and enclosed of those retreats the inmates never came out of doors at
all, but wholly sequestered themselves up to a secret life of
austerity and prayer.  This was the ideal life led in those
Houses for religious women.  But Teresa soon found out the
tremendous mistake she had made in leaving her father’s
family-fireside for a so-called Religious House.  No sooner
had she entered it than she was plunged headlong into those very
same ‘pestilent amusements,’ the mere approach of which
had made her flee to this supposed asylum.  Though she is
composing her Autobiography under the sharp eyes of her confessors,
and while she is writing with a submissiveness and, indeed, a
servility that is her only weakness, Teresa at the same time is
bold enough and honest enough to tell us her own experiences of
monastic life in language of startling strength and
outspokenness.  ‘A short-cut to hell.  If parents
would take my advice, they would rather marry their daughters to
the very poorest of men, or else keep them at home under their own
eye.  If young women will be wicked at home, their wickedness
will not long be hidden at home; but in monasteries, such as I
speak of, their worst wickedness can be completely covered up from
every human eye.  And all the time the poor 
things are not to blame.  They only walk
in the way that is shown them.  Many of them are to be much
pitied, for they honestly wish to withdraw from the world, only to
find themselves in ten times worse worlds of sensuality and all
other devilry.  O my God! if I might I would fain speak of
some of the occasions of sin from which Thou didst deliver me, and
how I threw myself into them again.  And of the risks I ran of
utterly shipwrecking my character and good name and from which Thou
didst rescue me.  O Lord of my soul! how shall I be able to
magnify Thy grace in those perilous years!  At the very time
that I was offending Thee most, Thou didst prepare me by a most
profound compunction to taste of the sweetness of Thy recoveries
and consolations.  In truth, O my King, Thou didst administer
to me the most spiritual and painful of chastisements: for Thou
didst chastise my sins with great assurances of Thy love and of Thy
great mercy.  It makes me feel beside myself when I call to
mind Thy great grace and my great ingratitude.’</p>
<p id="iii-p9">This leads us up to the conception and commencement of that
great work to which Teresa dedicated the whole of her after
life,—the reformation and extension of the Religious Houses of Spain.  The root-and-branch reformation of
Luther and his German and Swiss colleagues had not laid much hold
on Spain; and the little hold it had laid on her native land had
never reached to Teresa.  Had Luther and Teresa but met: had
Melanchthon and Teresa but met: had the best books of the German
and Swiss Reformation but come into Teresa’s hands: had she
been somewhat less submissive, and somewhat less obedient, and
somewhat less completely the slave of her ecclesiastical superiors;
had she but once entered into that intellectual and spiritual
liberty wherewith Christ makes His people free,—what a
lasting blessing Teresa might have been made to her native
land!  But, as it was, Teresa’s reformation, while it
was the salvation of herself and of multitudes more who came under
it, yet as a monastic experiment and a church movement, it ended in
the strengthening and the perpetuation of that detestable system of
intellectual and spiritual tyranny which has been the death of
Spain from that day to this.  Teresa performed a splendid
service inside the Church to which she belonged: but that service
was wholly confined to the Religious Houses that she founded and
reformed.  Teresa’s was intended to be a kind of
counter-reformation to the reformation
of Luther and Melanchthon and Valdes and Valera.  And such was
the talent and the faith and the energy she brought to bear on the
work she undertook, that, had it been better directed, it might
have been blessed to preserve her beloved native land at the head
of modern Christendom.  But, while that was not to be, it is
the immense talent, and the unceasing toil, and the splendid faith
and self-surrender that Teresa brought to bear on her intramural
reformation; and, all through that, on the working out of her own
salvation,—it is all these things that go to make
Teresa’s long life so memorable and so impressive, not only
in her own age and land and church, but wherever greatness of mind,
and nobleness of heart, and sanctity of life, and stateliness of
character are heard of and are esteemed.</p>
<p id="iii-p10">Teresa’s intellect, her sheer power of mind, is enough of
itself to make her an intensely interesting study to all thinking
men.  No one can open her books without confessing the spell
of her powerful understanding.  Her books, before they were
books, absolutely captivated and completely converted to her
unpopular cause many of her most determined enemies.  Again
and again and again we find her confessors and her censors admitting that both her spiritual
experiences and her reformation work were utterly distasteful and
very stumbling to them till they had read her own written account,
first of her life of prayer and then of her reformation work. 
One after another of such men, and some of them the highest in
learning and rank and godliness, on reading her autobiographic
papers, came over to be her fearless defenders and fast
friends.  There is nothing more delightful in all her
delightful Autobiography, and in the fine ‘censures’
that have been preserved concerning it, than to read of the great
and learned theologians, the responsible church leaders, and even
the secret inquisitors who came under the charm of her character
and the spell of her pen.  ‘She electrifies the
will,’ confessed one of the best judges of good writing in
her day.  And old Bishop Palafox’s tribute to Teresa is
far too beautiful to be withheld.  ‘What I admire in her
is the peace, the sweetness, and the consolation with which in her
writings she draws us toward the best, so that we find ourselves
captured rather than conquered, imprisoned rather than
prisoners.  No one reads the saint’s writings who does
not presently seek God, and no one through her 
writings seeks God who does not remain in
love with the saint.  I have not met with a single spiritual
man who does not become a passionate admirer of Santa Teresa. 
But her writings do not alone impart a rational, interior, and
superior love, but a love at the same time practical, natural, and
sensitive; and my own experience proves it to me that there exists
no one who loves her but would, if the saint were still in this
world, travel far to see and speak with her.’  I wish
much I could add to that Peter of Alcantara’s marvellous
analysis of Teresa’s experiences and character.  Under
thirty-three heads that great saint sums up Teresa’s
character, and gives us a noble, because all unconscious,
revelation of his own.  And though Teresa has been dead for
three hundred years, she speaks to this day in that same way: and
that too in quarters in which we would little expect to hear her
voice.  In that intensely interesting novel of modern Parisian
life, <i>En Route</i>, Teresa takes a chief part in the conversion
and sanctification of the prodigal son whose return to his
father’s house is so powerfully depicted in that story. 
The deeply read and eloquent author of that remarkable book gives
us some of the best estimates and descriptions of Santa Teresa that
I have anywhere met with.  ‘That
cool-headed business woman . . . that admirable psychologist and of
superhuman lucidity . . . that magnificent and over-awing saint . .
. she has verified in her own case the supernatural experiences of
the greatest mystics,—such are her unparalleled experiences
in the supernatural domain. . . .  Teresa goes deeper than any
like writer into the unexplored regions of the soul.  She is
the geographer and hydrographer of the sinful soul.  She has
drawn the map of its poles, marked its latitudes of contemplation
and prayer, and laid out all the interior seas and lands of the
human heart.  Other saints have been among those heights and
depths and deserts before her, but no one has left us so methodical
and so scientific a survey.’  Were it for nothing else,
the chapters on mystical literature in M. Huysmans’
unfinished trilogy would make it a valued possession to every
student of the soul of man under sin and under salvation.  I
await the completion of his Pilgrim’s Progress with great
impatience and with great expectation.</p>
<p id="iii-p11">And then, absolutely possessed as Teresa always is by the most
solemn subjects,—herself, her sin, her Saviour, her original
method of prayer and her unshared experiences in prayer,—she
showers upon us continually gleams and glances
of the sunniest merriment, amid all her sighs and tears.  She
roasts in caustic the gross-minded, and the self-satisfied, and the
self-righteous, as Socrates himself never roasted them
better.  Again, like his, her irony and her raillery and her
satire are sometimes so delicate that it quite eludes you for the
first two or three readings of the exquisite page.  And then,
when you turn the leaf, she is as ostentatiously stupid and
ignorant and dependent on your superior mind as ever Socrates
himself was.  Till I shrewdly suspect that no little of that
‘obedience’ which so intoxicated and fascinated her
inquisitors, and which to this day so exasperates some of her
biographers, was largely economical and ironical.  Her narrow
cell is reported to have often resounded with peals of laughter to
the scandal of some of her sisters.  In support of all that, I
have marked a score of Socratic passages in Woodhead, and Dalton,
and Lewis, and Father Coleridge, and Mrs. Cunninghame Graham. 
They are very delicious passages and very tempting.  But were
they once begun there would be no end to them.  You will
believe Froude, for he is an admitted judge in all matters
connected with the best literature, and he says 
in his <i>Quarterly</i> article on
Teresa’s writings, ‘The best satire of Cervantes is not
more dainty.’</p>
<p id="iii-p12">The great work to which Teresa gave up her whole life, after her
full conversion, was the purification of the existing monastic
system, and the multiplication and extension of Religious Houses of
the strictest, severest, most secluded, most prayerful, and most
saintly life.  She had been told by those she too much
trusted, that the Church of Christ was being torn in pieces in
Germany, and in Switzerland, and in France, and in England by a
great outbreak of heretical error; and, while the Society of Jesus
and the Secret Inquisition were established to cope with all such
heresy, Teresa set herself to counteract it by a widespread
combination of unceasing penance and intercessory prayer.  It
was a zeal without knowledge; but there can be no doubt about the
sincerity, the single-mindedness, and the strength of the
zeal.  For forty as hard-working years as ever any woman spent
in this world, Teresa laboured according to her best light to
preserve the purity and the unity of the Church of Christ. 
And the strength and the sagacity of mind, the tact, the business
talents, the tenacity of will, the patience, the endurance, the
perseverance, the sleepless
watchfulness, and the abounding prayerfulness that she brought to
bear on the reformation and multiplication of her fortresses of
defence and attack in that holy war, all taken together, make up
one of the most remarkable pages in the whole history of the Church
of Christ.  Her difficulties with Rome, with the Inquisition,
with her more immediate superiors, confessors, and censors, and,
most of all, with the ignorance, the stupidity, the laziness, the
malice, and the lies of those monks and nuns whose reformation she
was determined on: her endless journeys: her negotiations with
church-leaders, landowners, and tradesmen in selecting and securing
sites, and in erecting new religious houses: the adventures, the
accidents, the entertainments she met with: and the fine temper,
the good humour, the fascinating character, the winning manners she
everywhere exhibited; and, withal, her incomparable faith in the
Living God, and the exquisite inwardness, unconquerable assurance,
and abounding fruitfulness of her own and unshared method and
secret of prayer,—had Teresa not lived and died in Spain, and
had she not spent her life and done her work under the Roman
obedience, her name would have been a household word 
in Scotland.  As it is, she is not
wholly unknown or unloved.  And as knowledge extends, and
love, and good-will; and as suspicion, and fear, and retaliation,
and party-spirit die out among us, the truth about Teresa and
multitudes more will become established on clearer and deeper and
broader foundations; and we shall be able to hail both her and
multitudes more like her as our brothers and sisters in Christ,
whom hitherto we have hated and despised because we did not know
them, and had been poisoned against them.  I am a conspicuous
case in point myself.  And when I have been conquered by a
little desultory reading and by a little effort after love no man
need despair.  And if you will listen to this lecture with a
good and honest heart: with a heart that delights to hear all this
good report about a fellow-believer: then He who has begun that
good work in you will perfect it by books and by lectures like
this, and far better than this, till you are taken absolutely
captive to that charity which rejoiceth not in iniquity, but
rejoiceth in the truth: and which beareth all things, believeth all
things, hopeth all things, endureth all things.  Follow after
charity, and begin with Santa Teresa.</p>
<blockquote id="iii-p12.1">
<p id="iii-p13">Forbid it, mighty Love, let no fond
hate<br />
Of names or words so far prejudicate;<br />
Souls are not Spaniards too; one friendly flood<br />
Of baptism blends them all into one blood.<br />
What soul soe’er in any language can<br />
Speak heaven like hers, is my soul’s countryman.</p>
</blockquote>
<p id="iii-p14">But the greatest and the best talent that God gives to any man
or woman in this world is the talent of prayer.  And the best
usury that any man or woman brings back to God when He comes to
reckon with them at the end of this world is a life of
prayer.  And those servants best put their Lord’s money
to the exchangers who rise early and sit late, as long as they are
in this world, ever finding out and ever following after better and
better methods of prayer, and ever forming more secret, more
steadfast, and more spiritually fruitful habits of prayer: till
they literally pray without ceasing, and till they continually
strike out into new enterprises in prayer, and new achievements,
and new enrichments.  It was this that first drew me to
Teresa.  It was her singular originality in prayer and her
complete captivity to prayer.  It was the time she spent in
prayer, and the refuge, and the peace, and the sanctification, and
the power for carrying on hard and unrequited work that she all her
life found in prayer.  It was her fidelity and her 
utter surrender of herself to this first and
last of all her religious duties, till it became more a delight,
and, indeed, more an indulgence, than a duty.  With Teresa it
was prayer first, and prayer last, and prayer always.  With
Teresa literally all things were sanctified, and sweetened, and
made fruitful by prayer.  In Teresa’s writings prayer
holds much the same place that it holds in the best men and women
of Holy Scripture.  If I were to say that about some of the
ladies of the Scottish Covenant, you would easily believe me. 
But you must believe me when I tell you that about a Spanish lady,
second to none of them in holiness of life, even if her holy life
is not all cast in our mould.  All who have read the
autobiographic <i>Apologia</i> will remember the fine passage in
which its author tells us that ever since his conversion there have
been two, and only two, absolutely self-luminous beings in the
whole universe of being to him,—God and his own soul. 
Now, I do not remember that Newman even once speaks about Teresa in
any of his books, but I always think of him and her together in
this great respect.  <span class="smcap" id="iii-p14.1">God</span> is to them
both, and to them both He is a rewarder of them that diligently
seek Him.  And it is just here, at the very commencement and
centre of divine things, that we all make such shipwreck and come so short.  The sense of the
reality of divine and unseen things in Teresa’s life of
prayer is simply miraculous in a woman still living among things
seen and temporal.  Her faith is truly the substance of things
hoped for, and the evidence of things not seen.  Our Lord was
as real, as present, as near, as visible, and as affable to this
extraordinary saint as ever He was to Martha, or Mary, or Mary
Magdalene, or the woman of Samaria, or the mother of
Zebedee’s children.  She prepared Him where to lay His
head; she sat at His feet and heard His word.  She chose the
better part, and He acknowledged to herself and to others that she
had done so.  She washed His feet with her tears, and wiped
them with the hair of her head.  She had been forgiven much,
and she loved much.  He said to her, Mary, and she answered
Him, Rabboni.  And He gave her messages to deliver to His
disciples, who had not waited for Him as she had waited.  Till
she was able to say to them all that she had seen the Lord, and
that He had spoken such and such things within her.  And hence
arises what I may call the quite extraordinary purity and
spirituality of her life of prayer.  ‘Defecate’ is
Goodwin’s favourite and constant word for the purest, the
most rapt, the most adoring, and the most
spiritual prayer.  ‘I have known men’—it
must have been himself—‘who came to God for nothing
else but just to come to Him, they so loved Him.  They scorned
to soil Him and themselves with any other errand than just purely
to be alone with Him in His presence.  Friendship is best kept
up, even among men, by frequent visits; and the more free and
defecate those frequent visits are, and the less occasioned by
business, or necessity, or custom they are, the more friendly and
welcome they are.’  Now, I have sometimes wondered what
took Teresa so often, and kept her so long, alone with God. 
Till I remembered Goodwin’s classical passages about
defecated prayer, and understood something of what is involved and
what is to be experienced in pure and immediate communion with
God.  And, then, from all that it surely follows, that no one
is fit for one moment to have an adverse or a hostile mind, or to
pass an adverse or a hostile judgment, on the divine manifestations
that came to Teresa in her unparalleled life of prayer; no one who
is not a man of like prayer himself; no, nor even then.  I
know all the explanations that have been put forward for
Teresa’s ‘locutions’ and revelations; but after
anxiously weighing them all, the
simplest explanation is also the most scientific, as it is the most
scriptural.  If our ascending Lord actually said what He is
reported to have said about the way that He and His Father will
always reward all love to Him, and the keeping of all His
commandments; then, if there is anything true about Teresa at all,
it is this, that from the day of her full conversion she lived with
all her might that very life which has all these transcendent
promises spoken and sealed to it.  By her life of faith and
prayer and personal holiness, Teresa made herself ‘capable of
God,’ as one describes it, and God came to her and filled her
with Himself to her utmost capacity, as He said He would.  At
the same time, much as I trust and honour and love Teresa, and much
good as she has been made of God to me, she was still, at her best,
but an imperfectly sanctified woman, and her rewards and
experiences were correspondingly imperfect.  But if a holy
life before such manifestations were made to her, and a still
holier life after them—if that is any test of the truth and
reality of such transcendent and supernatural matters,—on her
own humble and adoring testimony, and on the now extorted and now
spontaneous testimony of absolutely all who lived near her, 
still more humility, meekness,
lowly-mindedness, heavenly-mindedness and prayerfulness
demonstrably followed those inward and spiritual revelations to her
of her Lord.  In short and in sure, ye shall know them by
their fruits.  Do men gather grapes of thorns, or figs of
thistles?  On the whole, then, I for one am strongly disposed
toward Teresa, even in the much-inculpated matter of her inward
voices and visions.  The wish may very possibly be father to
the thought: but my thought leans to Teresa, even in her most
astounding locutions and revelations; they answer so entirely to my
reading of our Lord and of His words.  I take sides, on the
whole, with those theologians of her day, who began by doubting,
but ended by believing in Teresa and by imitating her.  They
were led to rejoice that any contemporary and fellow-sinner had
attained to such fellowship with God: and I am constrained to take
sides with them.  ‘One day, in prayer, the sweetness was
so great that I could not but contrast it with the place I deserved
in hell.  The sweetness and the light and the peace were so
great that, compared with it, everything in this world is vanity
and lies.  I was filled with a new reverence for God.  I
saw His majesty and His power in a way I cannot 
describe, and the vision kept me in great
tenderness and joy and humility.  I cannot help making much of
that which led me so near to God.  I knew at that great moment
what it is for a soul to be in the very presence of God
Himself.  What must be the condescension of His majesty seeing
that in so short a time He left so great an impression and so great
a blessing on my soul!  O my Lord, consider who she is upon
whom Thou art bestowing such unheard-of blessings!  Dost Thou
forget that my soul has been an abyss of sin?  How is this, O
Lord, how can it be that such great grace has come to the lot of
one who has so ill deserved such things at Thy hands!’ 
He who can read that, and a hundred passages as good as that, and
who shall straightway set himself to sneer and scoff and disparage
and find fault, he is well on the way to the sin against the Holy
Ghost.  At any rate, I would be if I did not revere and love
and imitate such a saint of God.  Given God and His Son and
His Holy Spirit: given sin and salvation and prayer and a holy
life; and, with many drawbacks, Teresa’s was just the life of
self-denial and repentance and prayer and communion with God that
we should all live.  It is not Teresa who is to be bemoaned
and blamed and called bad names.  It is we
who do all that to her who are beside ourselves.  It is we who
need the beam to be taken out of our own eye.  Teresa was a
mystery and an offence; and, again, an encouragement and an example
to the theologians and the inquisitors of her day just as she still
is in our day.  She was a stumbling-stone, or an ensample,
according to the temper and disposition and character of her
contemporaries, and she is the same to-day.</p>
<p id="iii-p15">The pressing question with me is not the truth or the falsehood,
the amount of reality or the amount of imagination in
Teresa’s locutions and visions.  The pressing question
with me is this,—Why it is that I have nothing to show to
myself at all like them.  I think I could die for the truth of
my Lord’s promise that both He and His Father will manifest
Themselves to those who love Him and keep His words; but He never
manifests Himself, to be called manifestation, to me.  I am
driven in sheer desperation to believe such testimonies and
attainments as those of Teresa, if only to support my failing faith
in the words of my Master.  I had rather believe every
syllable of Teresa’s so-staggering locutions and visions than
be left to this, that ever since Paul and John went home to heaven
our Lord’s greatest promises have been so many
idle words.  It is open to any man to scoff and sneer at
Teresa’s extraordinary life of prayer, and at the
manifestations of the Father and the Son that were made to her in
her life of prayer, and some of her biographers and censors among
ourselves have made good use of their opportunity.  But I
cannot any longer sit with them in the seat of the scorner, and I
want you all to rise up and leave that evil seat also.  Lord,
how wilt Thou manifest Thyself in time to come to me?  How
shall I attain to that faith and to that love and to that obedience
which shall secure to me the long-withheld presence and indwelling
of the Father and the Son?</p>
<p id="iii-p16">* * * * *</p>
<p id="iii-p17">Teresa’s <i>Autobiography</i>, properly speaking, is not
an autobiography at all, though it ranks with <i>The
Confessions</i>, and <i>The Commedia</i>, and <i>The Grace
Abounding</i>, and <i>The Reliquiae</i>, as one of the very best of
that great kind of book.  It is not really Teresa’s
<i>Life Written by Herself</i>, though all that stands on its
title-page.  It is only one part of her life: it is only her
life of prayer.  The title of the book, she says in one place,
is not her life at all, but <i>The Mercies of God</i>.  Many
other matters come up incidentally in this delightful book, but the
whole drift and the real burden of
the book is its author’s life of prayer.  Her
attainments and her experiences in prayer so baffled and so put out
all her confessors that, at their wits’ end, they enjoined
her to draw out in writing a complete account of a secret life, the
occasional and partial discovery of which so amazed, and perplexed,
and condemned them.  And thus it is that we come to possess
this unique and incomparable autobiography: this wonderful
revelation of Teresa’s soul in prayer.  It is a book in
which we see a woman of sovereign intellectual ability working out
her own salvation in circumstances so different from our own that
we have the greatest difficulty in believing that it was really
salvation at all she was so working out.  Till, as we read in
humility and in love, we learn to separate-off all that is local,
and secular, and ecclesiastical, and circumstantial, and then we
immensely enjoy and take lasting profit out of all that which is so
truly Catholic and so truly spiritual.  Teresa was an
extraordinary woman in every way: and that comes out on every page
of her Autobiography.  So extraordinary that I confess there
is a great deal that she tells us about herself that I do not at
all understand.  She was Spanish, and we are Scottish. 
She and we are wide as the poles asunder.  Her lot was cast of God in the sixteenth
century, whereas our lot is cast in the nineteenth.  She was a
Roman Catholic mystic, and we are Evangelical Protestants. 
But it is one of the great rewards of studying such a life as
Teresa’s to be able to change places with her so as to
understand her and love her.  She was, without any doubt or
contradiction, a great saint of God.  And a great saint of God
is more worthy of our study and admiration and imitation and love
than any other study or admiration or imitation or love on the face
of the earth.  And the further away such a saint is from us
the better she is for our study and admiration and imitation and
love, if we only have the sense and the grace to see it.</p>
<p id="iii-p18">Cervantes himself might have written Teresa’s <i>Book of
the Foundations</i>.  Certainly he never wrote a better
book.  For myself I have read Teresa’s
<i>Foundations</i> twice at any rate for every once I have read
Cervantes’ masterpiece.  For literature, for humour, for
wit, for nature, for photographic pictures of the time and the
people, her <i>Foundations</i> are a masterpiece also: and then,
Teresa’s pictures are pictures of the best people in
Spain.  And there was no finer people in the whole of
Christendom in that day than the
best of the Spanish people.  God had much people in the Spain
of that day, and he who is not glad to hear that will never have a
place among them.  The Spain of that century was full of
family life of the most polished and refined kind.  And, with
all their declensions and corruptions, the Religious Houses of
Spain enclosed multitudes of the most saintly men and women. 
‘I never read of a hermit,’ said Dr. Johnson to Boswell
in St. Andrews, ‘but in imagination I kiss his feet: I never
read of a monastery, but I could fall on my knees and kiss the
pavement.  I have thought of retiring myself, and have talked
of it to a friend, but I find my vocation is rather in active
life.’  It was such monasteries as Teresa founded and
ruled and wrote the history of that made such a sturdy Protestant
as Dr. Johnson was say such a thing as that.  <i>The Book of
the Foundations</i> is Teresa’s own account, written also
under superior orders, of that great group of religious houses
which she founded and administered for so many years.  And the
literature into which she puts all those years is literature of the
first water.  A thousand times I have been reminded of Don
Quixote and Sancho Panza as I read Teresa’s account 
of her journeys, and of the people, and of
the escapades, and of the entertainments she met with.  Yes,
quite as good as Cervantes! yes, quite as good as
Goldsmith!—I have caught myself exclaiming as I read and
laughed till the tears ran down my cheeks.  This is
literature, this is art without the art, this is literary finish
without the labour: and all laid out to the finest of all uses, to
tell of the work of God, and of all the enterprises, providences,
defeats, successes, recompenses, connected with it.  The
<i>Foundations</i> is a Christian classic even in Woodhead’s
and Dalton’s and David Lewis’s English, what must it
then be to those to whom Teresa’s exquisite Spanish is their
mother-tongue!</p>
<p id="iii-p19">If Vaughan had but read <i>The Foundations</i>, which he is
honest enough to confess he had only glanced at in a French
translation, it would surely have done something to make him
reconsider the indecent and disgraceful attack which he makes on
Teresa.  His chapter on Teresa is a contemptuous and a
malicious caricature.  Vaughan has often been of great service
to me, but if I had gone by that misleading chapter, I would have
lost weeks of most intensely interesting and spiritually profitable
reading.  Vaughan’s extravagant misrepresentation 
of Teresa will henceforth make me hesitate to
receive his other judgments till I have read the books
myself.  I shall not tarry here to controvert Vaughan’s
utterly untruthful chapter on Teresa, I shall content myself with
setting over against it Crashaw’s exquisite <i>Hymn</i> and
<i>Apology</i>, and especially his magnificent <i>Flaming
Heart</i>.</p>
<p id="iii-p20">Teresa’s <i>Way of Perfection</i> is a truly fine book:
full of freshness, suggestiveness, and power.  So much so,
that I question if William Law’s <i>Christian Perfection</i>
would ever have been written, but that Teresa had written on that
same subject before him.  I do not say that Law plagiarised
from Teresa, but some of his very best passages are plainly
inspired by his great predecessor.  You will thank me for the
following eloquent passage from Mrs. Cunninghame Graham, which so
felicitously characterises this great book, and that in language
such as I could not command.  ‘To my thinking Teresa is
at her best in her <i>Way of Perfection</i> with its bursts of
impassioned eloquence; its shrewd and caustic irony; its acute and
penetrating knowledge of human character, the same in the convent
as in the world; above all in its sympathetic and tender instinct
for the needs and difficulties of her daughters.  <i>The Perfection</i> represents the
finished and magnificent fabric of the spiritual life.  Her
words ring with a strange terseness and earnestness as she here
pens her spiritual testament.  She points out the mischievous
foibles, the little meannesses, the spirit of cantankerousness and
strife, which long experience of the cloister had shown her were
the besetting sins of the conventual life.  She places before
them the loftier standard of the Cross.  Her words, direct and
simple, ring out true and clear, producing somewhat the solemn
effect of a Commination Service.’  Strong as that
estimate is, <i>The Perfection</i> deserves every word of it and
more.</p>
<p id="iii-p21">Teresa thought that her <i>Mansions</i> was one of her two best
books, but she was surely far wrong in that.  <i>The
Mansions</i>, sometimes called <i>The Interior Castle</i>, to me at
any rate, is a most shapeless, monotonous, and wearisome
book.  Teresa had a splendid imagination, but her imagination
had not the architectonic and dramatic quality that is necessary
for carrying out such a conception as that is which she has laid in
the ground-plan of this book.  No one who has ever read <i>The
Purgatorio</i> or <i>The Holy War</i> could have patience with the
shapeless and inconsequent <i>Mansions</i>.  There is nothing
that is new 
in the matter of the <i>Mansions</i>; there is nothing
that is not found in a far better shape in some of her other books;
and one is continually wearied out by her utter inability to handle
the imagery which she will not let alone.  At the same time,
the persevering reader will come continually on characteristic
things that are never to be forgotten as he climbs with Teresa from
strength to strength on her way to her Father’s House.</p>
<p id="iii-p22">To my mind Teresa is at her very best, not in her
<i>Mansions</i> which she made so much of, but in her
<i>Letters</i> which she made nothing of.  I think I prefer
her <i>Letters</i> to all her other books.  A great service
was done to this fine field of literature when Teresa’s
letters were collected and published.  What Augustine’s
editor has so well said about Augustine’s letters I would
borrow and would apply to Teresa’s letters.  All her
other works receive fresh light from her letters.  The
subjects of her more elaborate writings are all handled in her
letters in a far easier, a far more natural, and a far more
attractive manner.  It is in her letters that we first see the
size and the strength and the sweep of her mind, and discover the
deserved deference that is paid to her on all hands.  Burdened
churchmen, inquiring students in the spiritual life, perplexed confessors, angry and
remonstrating monks, husbands and wives, matrons and maidens, all
find their way to Mother Teresa.  Great bundles of letters are
delivered at the door of her cell every day, and she works at her
answers to those letters till a bird begins to flutter in the top
of her head, after which her physician will not suffer her to write
more than twelve letters at a downsitting.  And what letters
they are, all sealed with the name of <span class="smcap" id="iii-p22.1">Jesus</span>—she will seal now with no other
seal.  What letters of a strong and sound mind go out under
that seal!  What a business head!  What shrewdness,
sagacity, insight, frankness, boldness, archness, raillery,
downright fun!  And all as full of splendid sense as an egg is
full of meat.  If Andrew Bonar had only read Spanish, and had
edited Teresa’s <i>Letters</i> as he has edited
Rutherford’s, we would have had that treasure in all our
houses.  As it is, Father Coleridge long ago fell on the happy
idea of compiling a <i>Life of Teresa</i> out of her extant
letters, and he has at last carried out his idea, if not in all its
original fulness, yet in a very admirable and praiseworthy
way.  But I would like to know how many of the boasted
literary and religious people of Edinburgh have bought and read 
Father Coleridge’s delightful
book.  A hundred?  Ten?  Five?  I doubt
it.  Or how many have so much as borrowed from the circulating
library Mrs. Cunninghame Graham’s first-rate book?  Of
Teresa’s <i>Letters</i>, that greatest living authority on
Teresa says—‘That long series of epistolary
correspondence, so enchanting in the original.  It is in her
letters that Teresa is at her best.  They reveal all her
shrewdness about business and money matters; her talent for
administration; her intense interest in life, and in all that is
passing around her.  Her letters show Teresa as the Castilian
gentlewoman who not only treats on terms of perfect equality with
people of the highest rank in the kingdom, but is in the greatest
request by them.  Her letters, of which probably only a tithe
remains, show us how marvellously the horizon of her life had
expanded, and how rapidly her fame had grown.  Perhaps no more
finished specimen of epistolary correspondence has ever been penned
than those letters, written in the press of multifarious
occupations, and often late at night when the rest of the convent
was sleeping.’</p>
<p id="iii-p23">Her confessor, who commanded Teresa to throw her <i>Commentary
on the Song of Solomon</i> into the fire, was a sensible man and a
true friend to her reputation, and the nun who
snatched a few leaves out of the fire did Teresa’s fame no
service.  Judging of the whole by the part preserved to us,
there must have been many things scattered up and down the
destroyed book well worthy of her best pen.  The
‘instance of self-esteem’ which Teresa so delightfully
narrates is well worth all the burnt fingers its preservation had
cost the devoted sister: and up and down the charred leaves there
are passages on conduct and character, on obedience and humility
and prayer, that Teresa alone could have written.  All the
same, as a whole, her <i>Commentary on the Song</i> is better in
the fire.</p>
<p id="iii-p24">Her <i>Seven Meditations on the Lord’s Prayer</i> ran no
danger of the censor’s fire.  I have had occasion to
read all the best expositions of the Lord’s Prayer in our
language, and I am bound to say that for originality and striking
suggestiveness Teresa’s <i>Seven Meditations</i> stands
alone.  After I had written that extravagant sentence I went
back and read her little book over again, so sure was I that I must
have overpraised it, and that I would not be believed in what I
have said concerning it.  But after another reading of the
<i>Meditations</i> I am emboldened to let the strong praise stand 
in all its original strength.  I have
passages marked in abundance to prove to demonstration the estimate
I have formed of this beautiful book, but I must forego myself the
pleasure and the pride of quoting them.</p>
<p id="iii-p25">Sixteen Augustinian <i>Exclamations after having
Communicated</i>: sixty-nine <i>Advices to Her Daughters</i>, and a
small collection of love-enflamed <i>Hymns</i>, complete what
remains to us of Teresa’s writings.</p>
<p id="iii-p26">Teresa died of hard work and worry and shameful neglect, almost
to sheer starvation.  But she had meat to eat that all Anne
Bartholomew’s remaining mites could not buy for her dying
mother.  And, strong in the strength of that spiritual meat,
Teresa rose off her deathbed to finish her work.  She
inspected with all her wonted quickness of eye and love of order
the whole of the House into which she had been carried to
die.  She saw everything put into its proper place, and every
one answering to their proper order, after which she attended the
divine offices for the day, and then went back to her bed and
summoned her daughters around her.  ‘My children,’
she said, ‘you must pardon me much; you must pardon me most
of all the bad example I have given you.  Do not imitate
me.  Do not live as I have lived.  I have been the greatest sinner in all the
world.  I have not kept the laws I made for others.  I
beseech you, my daughters, for the love of God, to keep the rules
of your Holy Houses as I have never kept them.  O my
Lord,’ she then turned to Him and said, ‘the hour I
have so much longed for has surely come at last.  The time has
surely come that we shall see one another.  My Lord and
Saviour, it is surely time for me to be taken out of this
banishment and be for ever with Thee.  The sacrifices of God
are a broken spirit, a broken and a contrite heart, O God, Thou
wilt not despise.  Cast me not away from Thy presence, and
take not Thy Holy Spirit away from me.  Create in me a clean
heart, O God.’  ‘A broken and a contrite heart; a
broken and a contrite heart,’ was her continual cry till she
died with these words on her lips, ‘A broken and a contrite
heart Thou wilt not despise.’  And, thus, with the most
penitential of David’s penitential Psalms in her mouth, and
with the holy candle of her Church in her hand, Teresa of Jesus
went forth from her banishment to meet her Bridegroom.</p>
<blockquote id="iii-p26.1">
<p id="iii-p27">O sweet incendiary! shew here thy art<br />
Upon this carcass of a cold hard heart;<br />
Let all thy scatter’d shafts of light
that play<br />
Among the leaves of thy large books of day,<br />
Combined against this breast at once break in<br />
And take away from me myself and sin;<br />
This gracious robbery shall thy bounty be,<br />
And thy best fortune such fair spoils of me.<br />
O thou undaunted daughter of desires!<br />
By all thy dower of lights and fires;<br />
By all the eagle in thee, all the dove;<br />
By all thy lives and deaths of love;<br />
By thy large draughts of intellectual day;<br />
And all thy thirsts of love more large than they;<br />
By all thy brim-filled bowls of fierce desire;<br />
By thy last morning’s draught of liquid fire;<br />
By the full kingdom of that final kiss<br />
That seized thy parting soul, and sealed thee His;<br />
By all the Heavens thou hast in Him,<br />
(Fair sister of the Seraphim!);<br />
By all of Him we have in thee;—<br />
Leave nothing of myself in me.<br />
Let me so read thy life, that I<br />
Unto all life of mine may die.</p>
</blockquote>
</div1>

    <div1 title="Some Selected Passages" id="iv" prev="iii" next="iv.i">
<h2 id="iv-p0.1">SOME SELECTED PASSAGES</h2>
<p id="iv-p1">* <i>The translations in the following pages are mainly those of
Woodhead and Lewis</i>.</p>

      <div2 title="Teresa On Herself" id="iv.i" prev="iv" next="iv.ii">
<h3 id="iv.i-p0.1">TERESA ON HERSELF</h3>
<p class="First" id="iv.i-p1">I had a father and a mother who both feared God.  My father
had his chief delight in the reading of good books, and he did his
best to give his children the same happy taste.  This also
helped me much, that I never saw my father or my mother regard
anything but goodness.  Though possessing very great beauty in
her youth, my mother was never known to set any store by it. 
Her apparel, even in her early married life, was that of a woman no
longer young.  Her life was a life of suffering, her death was
most Christian.  After my mother’s removal, I began to
think too much about my dress and my appearance, and I pursued many
such like things that I was never properly warned against, full of
mischief though they were both to myself and to others.  I too
early learned every evil from an immoral relative.  I was very
fond of this woman’s company.  I gossiped and talked
with her continually.  She assisted me to all the amusements I
loved; and, what was worse, she found some very evil amusements for
me, and in every way communicated to me her own vanities and
mischiefs.  I am amazed to think on the evil that one bad companion can do; nor could I have believed it,
unless I had known it by experience.  The company and the
conversation of this one woman so changed me that scarcely any
trace was left in me of my natural disposition to virtue.  I
became a perfect reflection of her and of another who was as bad as
she was.</p>
<p id="iv.i-p2">For my education and protection my father sent me to the
Augustinian Monastery, in which children like myself were brought
up.  There was a good woman in that religious house, and I
began gradually to love her.  How impressively she used to
speak to me of God!  She was a woman of the greatest good
sense and sanctity.  She told me how she first came to herself
by the mere reading of these words of the Gospel, ‘Many are
called and few chosen.’  This good companionship began
to root out the bad habits I had brought to that house with me; but
my heart had by that time become so hard that I never shed a tear,
no, not though I read the whole Passion through.  When at last
I entered the Religious House of the Incarnation for life, our Lord
at once made me understand how He helps those who do any violence
to themselves in order to serve Him.  No one observed this
violence in me.  They saw nothing in me but the greatest
goodwill.  At that sore step I was filled with a joy so great
that it has never wholly left me to this day.  God converted
the dryness of my soul into the greatest tenderness, immediately on
my taking up that cross.  Everything in religion was now a
real delight to me.  I had more pleasure now in sweeping the
house than I had in all the balls and dances I
had forsaken for His sake.  Whenever I remember those early
days, it makes me ready to take up any cross whatsoever.  For
I know now by a long and a various experience that His Majesty
richly rewards even in this life all the self-denial that we do for
His sake and service.  I know this by many experiences; and if
I were a person who had to advise and guide God’s people, I
would urge them to fear no difficulty whatsoever in the path of
duty: for our God is omnipotent, and He is on our side.  May
He be blessed for ever!  Amen.</p>
<p id="iv.i-p3">O my supreme Good and my true Rest, I know not how to go on when
I call those happy days to mind, and think of all my evil life
since then!  My tears ought to be tears of blood.  My
heart ought to break.  But Thou, Lord, hast borne with me for
almost twenty years, till I have had time to improve.  And all
that it might be better known to me who Thou art and what I
am.  Woe is me, my Maker!  I have no excuse, I have only
blame.  Let Thy mercy, O Lord, rest on me.  Other women
there have been who have done great deeds in Thy service, but I am
good only to talk: all my goodness ends in so many words: that is
all my service of Thee, my God.  Cost me what it may, let me
not go on coming to Thee with idle words and empty hands, seeing
that the reward of every one will be according to his works. 
Depart not from me, and I can do all things.  Depart from me,
and I shall return to whence I was taken, even to hell.</p>
<p id="iv.i-p4">One of the reasons that move me, who am what I am, to write all
this even under obedience, and to give an account
of my wretched life, and of the graces the Lord hath wrought in me
is this,—and would that I were a person of authority, and
then people would perhaps believe what I say.  This then is
what I would say and repeat continually if any one would hear
me.  Let no one ever say: If I fall into sin, I cannot then
pray.  In this the devil turned his most dreadful batteries
against me.  He said to me that it showed very little shame in
me if I could have the face to pray, who had just been so
wicked.  And under that snare of Satan I actually as good as
gave up all prayer for a year and a half.  This was nothing
else but to throw myself straight down into hell.  O my God,
was there ever such madness as mine!  Where could I think to
find either pardon for the past, or power for the time to come, but
from Thee?  What folly to the stumbler to run away from the
light!  Let all those who would give themselves to prayer, and
to a holy life, look well to this.  They should know that when
I was shunning prayer because I was so bad, my badness became more
abandoned than ever it had been before.  Rely on the waiting
and abounding goodness of God, which is infinitely greater than all
the evil you can do.  When we acknowledge our vileness, He
remembers it no more.  I grew weary of sinning before God grew
weary of forgiving my sin.  He is never weary of giving grace,
nor are his compassions to be exhausted.  May He be blessed
for ever, amen: and may all created things praise Him!</p>
<p id="iv.i-p5">I have made a vow—[it is known as ‘the Teresian
vow,’ ‘the seraphic vow,’ ‘the most arduous
of vows,’ ‘a vow yet
unexampled in the Church’], a vow never to offend God in the
very least matter.  I have vowed that I would rather die a
thousand deaths than do anything of that kind, knowing I was doing
it.  I am resolved also, never to leave anything whatsoever
undone that I consider to be still more perfect, and more for the
honour of our Lord.  Cost me what pain it may, I would not
leave such an act undone for all the treasures of the world. 
If I were to do so, I do not think I could have the face to ask
anything of God in prayer: and yet, for all that, I have many
faults and imperfections remaining in me to this day.</p>
</div2>

      <div2 title="On The Godhead" id="iv.ii" prev="iv.i" next="iv.iii">
<h3 id="iv.ii-p0.1">ON THE GODHEAD</h3>
<p class="First" id="iv.ii-p1">On one occasion when I was in prayer I had a vision in which I
saw how all things are seen in God.  I cannot explain what I
saw, but what I saw remains to this day deeply imprinted on my
soul.  It was a great act of grace in God to give me that
vision.  It puts me to unspeakable confusion, shame, and
horror whenever I recall that magnificent sight, and then think of
my sin.  I believe that had the Lord been pleased to send me
that great revelation of Himself earlier in my life, it would have
kept me back from much sin.  The vision was so delicate, so
subtle, and so spiritual, that my hard understanding cannot, at
this distance of time, close with it; but, to make use of an
illustration, it was something like this.  Suppose the Godhead
to be a vast globe of light, a globe larger than the whole world, and that all our actions are seen in that
all-embracing globe.  It was something like that I saw. 
For I saw all my most filthy actions gathered up and reflected back
upon me from that World of light.  I tell you it was a piteous
and a dreadful thing to see.  I knew not where to hide myself,
for that shining light, in which was no darkness at all, held the
whole world within it, and all worlds.  You will see that I
could not flee from its presence.  Oh that they could be made
to see this who commit deeds of darkness!  Oh that they but
saw that there is no place secret from God: but that all they do is
done before Him, and in Him!  Oh the madness of committing sin
in the immediate presence of a Majesty so great, and to whose
holiness all our sin is so hateful.  In this also I saw His
great mercifulness in that He suffers such a sinner as I am still
to live.</p>
</div2>

      <div2 title="On The Soul" id="iv.iii" prev="iv.ii" next="iv.iv">
<h3 id="iv.iii-p0.1">ON THE SOUL</h3>
<p class="First" id="iv.iii-p1">O my God, what unspeakable sufferings our souls have to endure
because they have lost their liberty, and are not their own
masters!  What tortures come on them through that!  I
sometimes wonder how I can live through such agony of soul as I
myself suffer.  God be praised who gives me His own life in my
soul, so that I may escape from so deadly a death!  My soul
has indeed received great strength from His Divine Majesty. 
He has had compassion on my great misery, and has helped me. 
Oh, what a distress it is for my soul to have to return 
to hold commerce with this world after having
had its conversation in heaven!  To have to play a part in the
sad farce of this earthly life!  And yet I am in a strait
betwixt two.  I cannot run away from this world.  I must
remain in it till my discharge comes.  But, meantime, how keen
is my captivity; how wretched in my own soul am I.  And one of
my worst distresses is this, that I am alone in my exile.  All
around me people seem to have found their aim and end in life in
this horrible prison-house, and to have said, Soul, take thine
ease.  But the life of my soul is a life of incessant
trouble.  The cross is always on my shoulder; at the same time
I surely make some progress.  God is the Soul of my
soul.  He engulfs into Himself my soul.  He enlightens
and strengthens my soul.  He attends to my soul night and
day.  He gives my soul more and more grace.  This has not
come about of myself.  No effort of mine brought this
about.  His Majesty does it all.  And He has held me by
the hand, that I might not go back.  For this reason, it seems
to me, the soul in which God works His grace, if it walks in
humility and in fear, it may be led into whatsoever temptation, and
thrown into whatsoever company, and it will only gain new strength
there, and win new victories and spoils there.  Those are
strong souls which are chosen of the Lord to work for the souls of
others.  At the same time, their best strength is not their
own.  All that such souls ever attain to and perform, all
these things only make them more humble, and therefore more strong;
more able to despise the things of this world, and to lay up their 
treasure in those things which God hath prepared for them
that love Him.  May it please His Majesty that the great
munificence with which He has dealt with my soul, miserable sinner
that I am, may have some weight with some of those who read this,
so that they may be strong and courageous to give up everything at
once and most willingly for such a God!</p>
</div2>

      <div2 title="On God In The Soul" id="iv.iv" prev="iv.iii" next="iv.v">
<h3 id="iv.iv-p0.1">ON GOD IN THE SOUL</h3>
<p class="First" id="iv.iv-p1">This has done me a great deal of good, and it has affected me
much and opened my eyes in many ways.  It is an ennobling
thing to think that God is more in the soul of man than He is in
aught else outside of Himself.  They are happy people who have
once got a hold of this glorious truth.  In particular, the
Blessed Augustine testifies that neither in the house, nor in the
church, nor anywhere else, did he find God, till once he had found
Him in himself.  Nor had he need to go up to heaven, but only
down into himself to find God.  Nay, he took God to heaven
with him when at last he went there.</p>
<p id="iv.iv-p2">Now consider what our Master teaches us to say: ‘Our
Father which art in heaven.’  Think you it concerns you
little to know where and what that heaven is, and where your
Heavenly Father is to be sought and found?  I tell you that
for vagrant minds it matters much not only to believe aright about
heaven, but to procure to understand this matter by
experience.  It is one of those things that strongly bind the
understanding and recollect the soul.  You already know that God is in all places: in fine, that where God is
there heaven is, and where His Majesty most reveals Himself there
glory is.  Consider again what Saint Augustine said, that he
sought God in many places, till at last he came to find Him within
himself.  You need not go to heaven to see God, or to regale
yourself with God.  Nor need you speak loud as if He were far
away.  Nor need you cry for wings like a dove so as to fly to
Him.  Settle yourself in solitude, and you will come upon God
in yourself.  And then entreat Him as your Father, and relate
to Him your troubles.  Those who can in this manner shut
themselves up in the little heaven of their own hearts, where He
dwells who made heaven and earth, let them be sure that they walk
in the most excellent way: they lay their pipe right up to the
fountain.  To keep the eyes shut is an excellent practice in
prayer, because it is a summons and an assistance to turn the eyes
of the soul within, where God dwells and waits in Christ to be
gracious.  Account thus, that there is a great and beautiful
palace in your soul; that its structure is all of gold and precious
stones; that your gifts and graces are those shining stones, and
that the greater your virtues are the more those precious stones
sparkle.  And, also, that in this palace the Great King is
your guest.  He sits on the innermost seat of your heart, and
holds it to be His best and bravest throne.  This will seem to
some a silly fiction.  And yet, if you will believe it,
fiction as it is, it will help you much; you especially who are
women.  For we women sorely want such assistance to our 
thoughts.  And, God grant that it be
only women who need such assistance to show them how base is the
use they make of themselves.  There should be some difference
between us, both men and women, and the brute beasts.  The
brute beasts are nowhere said to be temples of God, and they are
nowhere called to account because their god is their belly.  O
great God, I tremble to see that I have written such a page as the
above, being such a wretch as I am.  My daughters, in their
own goodness, will be tempted to think that all this is true of
myself, and that is a terrible thought to me.  On the other
hand, it is true of God and their own souls.  Now let men pass
a thousand censures on me, and on my way of teaching the
truth.  What of that, if only God and His ways be a little
better known and loved!  My sisters, the King is in His palace
all this time.  There are hostile invasions of His borders,
and inroads made into His territories, but He abides all the time
on His throne.  I smile at the weakness and unworthiness of
all those comparisons of palaces, and thrones, and shining stones,
and enemies on the border.  They in no way satisfy me. 
But I am a woman, and I can find out no better words for you
women.  Think and say of my words what you please.  The
thing that I have spoken to you is the truth.</p>
</div2>

      <div2 title="On The Love Of God" id="iv.v" prev="iv.iv" next="iv.vi">
<h3 id="iv.v-p0.1">ON THE LOVE OF GOD</h3>
<p class="First" id="iv.v-p1">The true proficiency of the soul consists not so much in deep
thinking or eloquent speaking or beautiful writing as in much and
warm loving.  Now if you ask me in
what way this much and warm love may be acquired, I
answer,—By resolving to do the will of God, and by watching
to do His will as often as occasion offers.  Those who truly
love God love all good wherever they find it.  They seek all
good to all men.  They encourage all good in all men. 
They commend all good, they always unite themselves with all good,
they always acknowledge and defend all good.  They have no
quarrels.  They bear no envy.  O Lord, give me more and
more of this blessed love.  Grant me grace not to quit this
underworld life till I no longer desire anything, nor am capable of
loving anything, save Thee alone.  Grant that I may use this
word ‘love’ with regard to Thee alone, since there is
no solidity for my love to rest on save in Thee.  The soul has
her own ways of understanding, and of finding in herself, by
certain signs and great conjectures, whether she really loves His
Divine Majesty or no.  Her love is full of high impulses, and
longings to see and to be with and to be like God.  All else
tires and wearies out the soul.  The best of created things
disappoint and torment the soul.  God alone satisfies the
soul, till it is impossible to dissemble or mistake such a
love.  When once I came to see the great beauty of our Lord,
it turned all other comeliness to corruption to me.  My heart
could rest on nothing and on no one but Himself.  When
anything else would enter my heart I had only to turn my eyes for a
moment in upon that Supreme Beauty that was engraven within
me.  So that it is now impossible
that any created thing can so possess my soul as not to be
instantly expelled, and my mind and heart set free by a little
effort to recover the remembrance of the goodness and the beauty of
our Lord.  Good God!  What a difference there is between
the love of the Creator and the love of the creature!  May His
Divine Majesty vouchsafe to let us see and taste and understand
something of this before He takes us out of this prison-house life,
for it will be a magnificent comfort in the hour of death to know
that we are on our way to be judged by Him whom we have loved above
all things.  We are not going to a strange country, since it
is His country whom we love and who loves us.  These things
being so, I have this very day solaced my soul with our Lord, and
have made my moan to Him in this manner.  O my Lord, why
keepest Thou Thy servant in this miserable life so long, where all
is such vexation, and disappointment, and manifold trouble? 
And not only keepest me so long in this banishment, but so hidest
Thyself from me.  Is this worthy of Thee and of Thy great
goodness?  Were I what Thou art, and wert Thou what I am, Thou
wouldest not have to endure it at my hands.  I beseech Thee, O
my Lord, to consider that this is a kind of injury and wrong to
proceed after this manner with one who loves Thee so much. 
This and the like have come into my heart to say: though my bed in
hell better becomes me than so to speak to my Lord.  At the
same time, the love I bear my Lord sometimes so consumes me that I
am beside myself, till I scarce know what I say or
do; and then I find myself making such unbecoming complaints that I
am amazed our Lord endures them at my hands.  Eternal praise
to so good a Lord!</p>
</div2>

      <div2 title="On The Love Of Our Neighbour" id="iv.vi" prev="iv.v" next="iv.vii">
<h3 id="iv.vi-p0.1">ON THE LOVE OF OUR NEIGHBOUR</h3>
<p class="First" id="iv.vi-p1">There are only two duties that our Lord requires of
us,—the love of God, and the love of our neighbour. 
And, in my opinion, the surest sign for discovering our love to God
is our love to our neighbour.  And be assured that the further
you advance in the love of your neighbour, the further you are
advancing in the love of God likewise.  But, oh me, how many
worms lie gnawing at the roots of our love to our neighbour! 
Self-love, self-esteem, fault-finding, envy, anger, impatience,
scorn.  I assure you I write this with great grief, seeing
myself to be so miserable a sinner against all my neighbours. 
Our Lord, my sisters, expects works.  Therefore when you see
any one sick, compassionate her as if she were yourself.  Pity
her.  Fast that she may eat.  Wake that she may
sleep.  Again, when you hear any one commended and praised,
rejoice in it as much as if you were commended and praised
yourself.  Which, indeed, should be easy, because where
humility truly is, praise is a torment.  Cover also your
sister’s defects as you would have your own defects and
faults covered and not exposed.  As often as occasion offers,
lift off your neighbour’s burden.  Take it off her heart
and on upon yourself.  Satan himself would not
be Satan any longer if he could once love his neighbour as
himself.</p>
<p id="iv.vi-p2">Endeavour, my daughters, all you can, to be affable to
all.  Demean yourselves so that all who have to do with you
may love your conversation, so as to desire after your way of
life.  Let no one be affrighted or turned away from the life
of virtue and religion by your gloom and morosity.  This
concerns religious women very much.  The more holy they are,
the more affable and sociable should they study to be.  Never
hold aloof from others because their conversation is not altogether
to your taste.  Love them, and they will love you, and then
they will converse with you, and will become like you, and better
than you.  Let not your soul coop itself up in a corner. 
For, instead of attaining to greater sanctity in a proud, and
disdainful, and impatient seclusion, the devil will keep you
company there, and will do your sequestered soul much
mischief.  Bury evil affections in good works.  Wherefore
be accessible and affable to all, and all in love.  Love is an
endless enchantment, and spell, and fascination.</p>
</div2>

      <div2 title="On Our Sinfulness" id="iv.vii" prev="iv.vi" next="iv.viii">
<h3 id="iv.vii-p0.1">ON OUR SINFULNESS</h3>
<p class="First" id="iv.vii-p1">This is a very fit place for thinking on our wounds, and
bruises, and putrifying sores: the blindness of our minds, the
depravity and the bondage of our wills, the forgetfulness of our
memories, the slipperiness of our tongues, the levity and frivolity
of our hearts, with all their extravagances, presumptions,
neglects.  In fine, let there be no spiritual wound within us,
great or small, old or new, which we do not
daily discover and lay open to our Sovereign Physician, beseeching
of Him a remedy.  This day it is very proper to call to mind
the five fountains of our Lord’s wounds, which are still
open, and will remain open till the last day for the cure of all
the sores of our souls.  And since out of His wounds we
receive our spiritual health, let us mollify our wounds with the
ointment of mortification and humility and meekness: in all things
always employing ourselves for the benefit of our neighbour. 
Since, though we cannot have our Lord visibly and in presence
beside us, we have our neighbour, who for the ends of love and
loving service is as good as our Lord Himself.</p>
</div2>

      <div2 title="On The World" id="iv.viii" prev="iv.vii" next="iv.ix">
<h3 id="iv.viii-p0.1">ON THE WORLD</h3>
<p class="First" id="iv.viii-p1">I saw that rich and great as she was, she was still a woman, and
as much liable to all manner of passion and all womanly weakness as
I was myself.  I saw as I lived in her house that rank is of
little worth, and the higher it is, the greater the trouble and the
anxiety it brings with it.  Great people must be careful of
their dignity.  It will not suffer them to live at ease. 
They must eat at fixed hours and by rule, for everything must be
according to their state, and not according to their
constitutions.  And they have frequently to take food more
fitted for their state than for their liking.  So it was that
I came to hate the wish to be a great lady.  God deliver me
from this artificial and evil life!  Then, as to servants,
though this lady has very good servants, how slight 
is the trust she is able to put in
them.  One must not be conversed with more than the rest,
otherwise he is envied and hated of all the rest.  This of
itself is a slavery; and it is another of the lies of the world to
call such people masters and mistresses, who, in reality, are
nothing but slaves in a thousand ways.  I really see nothing
good in the world and its ways but this, that it will not tolerate
the smallest fault in those who are not its own.  For by
detracting, and fault-finding, and evil-reporting on the good, the
world greatly helps to perfect them.  He who will not die to
the world shall die by it.  O wretched world!  Bless God,
my daughters, that He has chosen and enabled you to turn your backs
for ever on a thing so base.  The world is to be known by this
also, that it esteems a man not by what he is, but by what he
possesses: by what is in his purse: and, that failing, the honour
and esteem of the world instantly fail also.  O our Lord;
Supreme Power, Supreme Goodness, Supreme Truth; Thy perfections are
without beginning and without end.  They are infinite and
incomprehensible.  They are a bottomless ocean of
beauty.  O my God, that I had the eloquence of an
angel’s speech to set forth Thy goodness and Thy truth, and
to win all men over to Thee!</p>
</div2>

      <div2 title="On Evil-Speaking" id="iv.ix" prev="iv.viii" next="iv.x">
<h3 id="iv.ix-p0.1">ON EVIL-SPEAKING</h3>
<p class="First" id="iv.ix-p1">After my vow of perfection I spake not ill of any creature, how
little soever it might be.  I scrupulously avoided all
approaches to detraction.  I had this rule ever present with
me, that I was not to wish, nor assent
to, nor say such things of any person whatsoever, that I would not
have them say of me.  And as time went on, I succeeded in
persuading those who were about me to adopt the same habit, till it
came to be understood that where I was absent persons were
safe.  So they were also with all those whom I so
instructed.  Still, for all that, I have a sufficiently strict
account to give to God for the bad example I am to all about me in
some other respects.  May it please His Majesty to forgive me,
for I have been the cause of much evil.  For one thing, the
devil sometimes fills me with such a harsh and cruel temper: such a
spirit of anger and hostility at some people, that I could eat them
up and annihilate them.  At the same time, concerning things
said of myself in detraction, and they are many, and are very
prejudicial to me, I find myself much improved.  These things
make little impression upon me.  I am under them as a deaf man
that hears not, and as a man in whose mouth there is no
retaliation.  Nay, I almost always see that my greatest
detractors have only too good reason for what they say.  In
this way my soul actually gains peace and strength under
detraction, till it becomes a great favour done me, and a great
advantage.  Upon betaking myself to prayer, I find in my heart
neither repugnance at my detractors nor enmity.  For,
although, when I first hear the detraction, it causes me a little
disconcert, yet not any long-lasting disquiet or alteration. 
Nay, sometimes when I see people take pity on me because of my
detractors, I laugh at them, so little do all my detractors now
hurt me.</p>
</div2>

      <div2 title="On Self-Excusing" id="iv.x" prev="iv.ix" next="iv.xi">
<h3 id="iv.x-p0.1">ON SELF-EXCUSING</h3>
<p class="First" id="iv.x-p1">That which I am now to persuade you to, namely, the not excusing
of yourselves, causes a great confusion in me.  For it is a
very perfect quality and of great merit; and I ought far better to
practise what I tell you concerning this excellent virtue.  I
confess myself to be but little improved in this noble duty. 
For it is a mark of the deepest and truest humility to see
ourselves condemned without cause, and to be silent under it. 
It is a very noble imitation of our Lord.  Were I truly
humble, I would desire disesteem, even though having in the matter
in hand given no real offence.  Here no bodily strength is
needed, my daughters, nor any one’s assistance, but
God’s.  How well is this written, and how ill is it
practised by the writer!  Indeed, I never could make trial of
this grace in any matter of consequence, because I never heard of
any one speaking ill of me, but I immediately saw how far short he
came of the full truth.  For, if he was wrong or exaggerated
in his particulars, I had offended God much more in other matters
that my detractor knew nothing about.  And, methought, God
favoured me much in not proclaiming my secret sins to all
men.  And, thus, I am very glad that my detractor should ever
report a trifling lie about me, rather than the terrible truth.</p>
<p id="iv.x-p2">O my Lord, when I remember in how many ways Thou didst suffer
detraction and misrepresentation, who in no way deserved it, I know
not where my senses are when I am in such a haste to defend and 
excuse myself.  Is it possible that I
should desire any one to speak any good of me, or to think it, when
so many ill things were thought and spoken of Thee!  What is
this, O Lord; what do we imagine to get by pleasing worms, or being
praised by them?  What about being blamed by all men, if only
we stand at last blameless before Thee!</p>
</div2>

      <div2 title="On Praise, Precedency, And Points Of Honour" id="iv.xi" prev="iv.x" next="iv.xii">
<h3 id="iv.xi-p0.1">ON PRAISE, PRECEDENCY, AND POINTS OF HONOUR</h3>
<p class="First" id="iv.xi-p1">Observe carefully the stirrings of your heart in matters of
superiority.  Pray to be delivered from such thoughts as
these: I am older.  I deserve better.  I have laboured
more.  I have more talent.  Such thoughts are the plague
and poison of the heart.  Believe me, if there remain in you
any allowed hankerings after the praises of men, though you may
have spent many years in prayer, or rather in idle forms of prayer,
you have made no progress, and never will, till your heart is
crucified to the approval and the praise of men.  If you feel
in yourself any point of honour, any pride, any desire of eminence
or pre-eminence, you must free yourself from that abominable
bondage, and for that chain there is no hammer and file like
humility and prayer.  Among the rest of my great imperfections
this was one.  I had very little knowledge of my Breviary, or
of that which was to be sung in the choir, and all the while I saw
that some other novices could instruct me.  But I was too
proud to ask any questions.  I was afraid that my great
ignorance should be discovered.  Shortly afterwards a good
example was set before me, and then, when God had once opened my eyes to
my sinful pride, I was content to ask information and the help even
of little children.  And yet,—and this surprised me, I
lost no credit or honour thereby.  Nay, it seemed to me that
my Lord after that gave me better skill and a better memory. 
I could sing but very ill, and I was troubled at this, not because
I failed in my worship of God, but because so many heard me, and
thus I was disturbed on the mere point of honour and praise. 
I told them that I could not do what others did, and what was
expected of me.  At first I had some difficulty in this, but
it soon became both natural and pleasant to me to tell the
truth.  By these nothings,—and they are really nothings,
and I am sufficiently nothing when such things could put me to so
much pain,—and by little and little His Divine Majesty
vouchsafed to supply me with strength.  I was never good at
the choir, but I tried to do my part for it in folding up the
mantles of the singers; and, methought, in that I was serving the
angels of God who so well praised Him.  I did that also by
stealth, such was my pride, and my pride was hurt when they
discovered what I did.  O my Lord, who that ever reads this
can fail to despise and abhor me?  I beseech Thy Divine
Majesty that I may soon be able to leave all such vanities as the
praise and blame of men, and seek Thy praise only!  And then
add this, which is worth knowing.  The devil will not dare to
tempt one to pride or precedency who is truly humble because, being
very crafty, he fears defeat.  If you are truly humble, you
will only grow in that grace by
every temptation to pride or praise.  For, immediately on the
temptation, you will reflect on your whole past life and present
character, and on the stupendous humility of Jesus Christ. 
And by these considerations your tempted soul will come off so
victorious, that the enemy will think twice before he comes back,
for fear of a broken head.</p>
</div2>

      <div2 title="On Humility" id="iv.xii" prev="iv.xi" next="iv.xiii">
<h3 id="iv.xii-p0.1">ON HUMILITY</h3>
<p class="First" id="iv.xii-p1">Keep yourselves, my daughters, from that false humility which
the devil suggests concerning the greatness of your sins.  For
hereby he is wont to disquiet our souls after sundry sorts, and to
draw us off Holy Communion, and also from prayer.  It is
sometimes a great and a true humility to esteem ourselves as bad as
may be, but at other times it is a false and a spurious
humility.  I know it, for I have experienced it.  True
humility, however great, does not disquiet nor disorder the
soul.  It comes with great peace, and great serenity, and
great delight.  Though we should see our utter wickedness, and
how truly we deserve to be in hell, and think that both God and man
must despise and abhor us; yet, if this be a true humility, it
comes with a certain sweetness and satisfaction attending it. 
This humility does not stifle nor crush the soul.  It rather
dilates the soul, and disposes the soul for the better service of
God.  While that other sorrow troubles all, and confounds all,
and destroys all.  It is the devil’s humility when he
gets us to distrust God.  When you find yourselves thus, lay
aside all thinking on your own misery, and meditate on the infinite mercy of
God, and on the inexhaustible merit and grace of Jesus Christ.</p>
<p id="iv.xii-p2">I was once considering what the reason was why our Lord loved
humility in us so much, when I suddenly remembered that He is
essentially the Supreme Truth, and that humility is just our
walking in the truth.  For it is a very great truth that we
have no good in us, but only misery and nothingness, and he who
does not understand this walks in lies: but he who understands this
the best is the most pleasing to the Supreme Truth.  May God
grant us this favour, sisters, never to be without the humbling
knowledge of ourselves.</p>
<p id="iv.xii-p3">O Sovereign Virtues!  O Ladies of all the creatures! 
O Empresses of the whole world!  Whoever hath you may go forth
and fight boldly with all hell at once.  Let your soldiers not
fear, for victory is already theirs.  They only fear to
displease God.  They constantly beseech Him to maintain all
the virtues in them.  It is true these virtues have this
property, to hide themselves from him who possesses them, so that
he never sees them in himself, nor thinks that he can ever possess
a single one of them.  Other men see all the virtues in him,
but he so values them that he still pursues them, and seeks them as
something never to be attained by such as he is.  And Humility
is one of them, and is Queen and Empress and Sovereign over them
all.  In fine, one act of true humility in the sight of God is
of more worth than all the knowledge, sacred and profane, in the
whole world.</p>
</div2>

      <div2 title="On Sorrow For Sin" id="iv.xiii" prev="iv.xii" next="iv.xiv">
<h3 id="iv.xiii-p0.1">ON SORROW FOR SIN</h3>
<p class="First" id="iv.xiii-p1">It is indeed a very great misery to live on in this evil world
where our enemies are ever at our gate, and where we can neither
eat nor sleep in peace, but are compelled to have our armour on
night and day.  There is no rest here, nor happiness, nor will
be till we are with the Everlastingly Blessed.  As I write I
am seized with terror, lest I should never escape this sinful
life.  Pray for me, my daughters, that Christ may ever live in
me: for, otherwise, what security can there be for such as I am,
who have been so wicked.  You may sometimes have thought, my
daughters, that those to whom the Lord particularly communicates
Himself, will be henceforth secure of enjoying Him for ever, and
that they will have no need to fear or bewail their former
sins.  But this is a great mistake.  Sorrow for sin
increases in proportion as more and more grace is received from
God.  And I, for my part, believe, that this bitter sorrow
will never leave us till we come where neither sin nor anything
else will ever disquiet us.  True, both past sin, and present
sinfulness, affect us more at one time than at another; and,
likewise, in a different manner.  I know one who often wishes
for death, that she may be freed from the torment of her sinful
heart.  No one’s sins can equal hers, because there can
be no one who has obtained such favours of her God.  Her fear
is not so much of hell, as that she should so grieve God’s
Holy Spirit, that He will be wearied out, and will forsake her, and
leave her in her sins.  This fear and pain is not at all eased by believing that her past sins have all
been forgiven and forgotten of God.  Nay, her fear and pain
but increase by seeing such mercy extended toward a woman who
deserves nothing but hell.</p>
</div2>

      <div2 title="On Learning And Intellect" id="iv.xiv" prev="iv.xiii" next="iv.xv">
<h3 id="iv.xiv-p0.1">ON LEARNING AND INTELLECT</h3>
<p class="First" id="iv.xiv-p1">I always had a great respect and affection for intellectual and
learned men.  It is my experience that all who intend to be
true Christians will do well to treat with men of mind and books
about their souls.  The more learning our preachers and
pastors have the better.  For if they have not much experience
themselves, yet they know the Scriptures and the recorded
experiences of the saints better than we do.  The devil is
exceedingly afraid of learning, especially where it is accompanied
with humility and virtue.  For my own part, I bless God
continually, and we women, and all such as are not ourselves
intellectual or learned, are always to give God infinite thanks
that there are some men in the world who take such great pains to
attain to that knowledge which we need but do not possess. 
And it delights me to see men taking the immense trouble they do
take to bring me so much profit, and that without any trouble to
me.  I have only to sit still and hear them.  I have only
to come and ask them a question.  Let us pray for our
teachers, for what would we do without them.  I beseech the
Lord to bless our teachers, that they may be more and more a
blessing to us.</p>
<p id="iv.xiv-p2">When I spoke of humility, it must not be
understood as if I spoke against aspiring after the highest things
that mind and heart and life can attain to.  For though I have
no ability for the wisdom and the knowledge of God myself, and am
so miserable that God did me a great favour in teaching me the very
lowliest truths: yet, in my judgment, learning and knowledge are
very great possessions, and a great assistance in the life of
prayer, if only they are always accompanied with humility.  I
have of late seen some very learned men become in addition very
spiritual and prayerful men.  And that makes me pray that all
our men of mind and learning may soon become spiritual men and men
of much prayer.</p>
<p id="iv.xiv-p3">Let no one be admitted into this House unless she is a woman of
a sound understanding.  For if she is without mind she will
neither know herself, nor understand her teachers.  For the
most part they that are defective in mind ever think that they
understand things better than their teachers.  And ignorance
and self-conceit is a disease that is incurable; and besides, it
usually carries great malice along with it.  Many speak much
and understand little.  Others, again, speak little and not
very elegantly, and yet they have a sound understanding. 
There is such a thing as a holy simplicity that knows little of
anything but of how to treat with God.  At the same time
commend me to holy people of good heads.  From silly devotees,
may God deliver us!  While all that is true, in the very act
of prayer itself there is little necessity for learning, for the
mind then, because of its nearness to the light, is itself
immediately illuminated.  I
myself, who am what I am, even I am a different person in
prayer.  It has often happened to me, who scarcely understand
a word of what I read in Latin, when in deep prayer, to understand
the Latin Psalms as if they were Spanish.  At the same time,
even for prayer, let those who have to teach and preach take full
advantage of their learning, that they may help poor people of
little learning, of whom I am one.  Ministering with all
learning and all intellectual ability to souls is a great thing,
when it is done unto God.  I have many experiences in prayer
that I do not understand, and cannot explain or defend.  Our
Lord has not been pleased to give me the full intellectual
understanding of all His dealings with me.  That is the
truth.  Though you, my father, may think that I have a quick
understanding, it is in reality not so.  Sometimes my advisers
used to be amazed at my ignorance how God carried on His work
within me.  It was there, but the way of it was a great deep
to me.  I could neither wade out unto God, nor down into
myself.  Though, as I have said, I loved to converse with men
of mind as well as of heart.  At the same time, my
difficulties but increased my devotion, and the greater my
difficulty the greater the increase of my devotion.  Praise
His Name.</p>
</div2>

      <div2 title="On Prayer" id="iv.xv" prev="iv.xiv" next="toc">
<h3 id="iv.xv-p0.1">ON PRAYER</h3>
<p id="iv.xv-p1">(1) <i>The Price of Prayer</i>.—O Thou Lord of my soul,
and my Eternal Good, why is it that when a soul resolves to follow
Thee, and to do her best to forsake all for
Thee,—why is it that Thou dost not instantly perfect Thy love
and Thy peace within that soul?  But I have spoken unadvisedly
and foolishly, for it is we who are at fault in prayer, and never
Thee.  We are so long and so slow in giving up our hearts to
Thee.  And then Thou wilt not permit our enjoyment of Thee
without our paying well for so precious a possession.  There
is nothing in all the world wherewith to buy the shedding abroad of
Thy love in our heart, but our heart’s love.  If,
however, we did what we could, not clinging with our hearts to
anything whatsoever in this world, but having our treasure and our
conversation in heaven, then this blessedness would soon be ours,
as all Thy saints testify.  God never withholds Himself from
him who pays this price and who perseveres in seeking Him.  He
will, little by little, and now and then, strengthen and restore
that soul, till at last it is victorious.  If he who enters on
this road only does violence enough to himself, with the help of
God, he will not only go to heaven himself, but he will not go
alone: he will take others with him.  God will give him, as to
a good leader, those who will go after him.  Only, let not any
man of prayer ever expect to enjoy his whole reward here.  He
must remain a man of faith and prayer to the end.  Let him
resolve, then, that whatever his aridity and sense of indevotion
may be, he will never let himself sink utterly under his
cross.  And the day will come when he will receive all his
petitions in one great answer, and all his wages in one great
reward.  For he serves a good Master, who stands over him
watching him.  And let him never give
over because of evil thoughts, even if they are sprung upon him in
the middle of his prayer, for the devil so vexed the holy Jerome
even in the wilderness.  But all these toils of soul have
their sure reward, and their just recompense set out for
them.  And, I can assure you, as one who knows what she is
saying, that one single drop of water out of God’s living
well will both sustain you and reward you for another day and
another night of your life of life-long prayer.</p>
<p id="iv.xv-p2">(2) <i>Sin spoils Prayer</i>.—Now I saw that there would
be no answer to me till I had entire purity of conscience, and no
longer regarded any iniquity whatsoever in my heart.  I saw
that there were some secret affections still left in me, which,
though they were not very bad perhaps in themselves, yet in a life
of prayer such as I was attempting those remanent affections
spoiled all.</p>
<p id="iv.xv-p3">(3) <i>Eighteen Years of Misery in Prayer</i>.—It is not
without very good reason that I have dwelt so long on this part of
my life.  It will give no one any pleasure to see any one so
base as I was.  And I wish all who read this to have me in
abhorrence.  I failed in all obedience, because I was not
leaning on my strong pillar of prayer.  I passed nearly twenty
years of my life on this stormy sea, constantly tossed with tempest
and never coming to harbour.  It was the most painful life
that can be imagined, because I had no sweetness in God, and
certainly no sweetness in sin.  I was often very angry with
myself on account of the many tears I shed for my faults, when I could not but see how little
improvement all my tears made in me.  All my tears did not
hold me back from sin when the opportunity returned.  Till I
came to look on my tears as little short of a delusion: and yet
they were not.  It was the goodness of the Lord to give me
such compunction even when it was not as yet accompanied with
complete reformation.  But the whole root of my evil lay in my
not thoroughly avoiding all occasions of sin, and in my confessors,
who helped me at that time so little.  If they had only told
me what a dangerous road it was I was travelling in, and that I was
bound to break off all occasions of sin, I do believe, without any
doubt, that the matter would have been remedied at once. 
Nevertheless, I can trace distinctly the mercy of God to me in that
all the time I had still the courage to pray.  I say courage,
because I know nothing in the whole world that requires greater
courage than plotting treason against the King, knowing that He
knows it, and yet continuing to frequent His presence in
prayer.  I spent more than eighteen years in that miserable
attempt to reconcile God and my life of sin.  The reason that
I tell and repeat all this so often is that all who read what I
write may understand how great is that grace God works in the soul
when He gives it a disposition to pray on, even when it has not yet
left off all sin.  If that soul perseveres, in spite of sin,
and temptation, and many relapses, our Lord will bring that soul at
last—I am certain of it—to the harbour of salvation, to
which He is surely bringing myself.  I will say what I know by
experience,—let him never cease from prayer, who has once
begun to pray, be his life ever so bad.  For prayer is the
only way to amend his life, and without prayer it will never be
mended.  Let him not be tempted of the devil, as I was, to
give up prayer on account of his unworthiness.  Let him rather
believe that if he will only still repent and pray, our Lord will
still hear and answer.  For myself, very often I was more
occupied with the wish to see the end of the hour.  I used
actually to watch the sand-glass.  And the sadness I sometimes
felt on entering my oratory was so great, that it required all my
courage to force myself in.  In the end our Lord came to my
help: and, then, when I had done this violence to myself, I found
far greater peace and joy than when I prayed with regale and
rapture.  If our Lord then bore so long with me in all my
wickedness, why should any one despair, however wicked he may
be?  Let him have been ever so wicked up till now, he will not
remain in his wickedness so many years as I did after receiving so
many graces from our Lord.  And this more I will
say,—prayer was the true door by which our Lord distributed
out all His grace so liberally to me.  Prayer and trust. 
I used indeed to pray for help: but I see now that I committed all
the time the fatal mistake of not putting my whole trust in His
Majesty.  I should have utterly and thoroughly distrusted and
detested and suspected myself.  I sought for help.  I
sometimes took great pains to get it.  But I did not
understand of how little use all that is unless we 
root utterly all confidence out of ourselves,
and place it at once, and for ever, and absolutely in God. 
Those were eighteen miserable years.</p>
<p id="iv.xv-p4">(4) <i>Aridity in Prayer</i>.—Let no one weary or lose
heart in prayer because of aridity.  For the Hearer of prayer
comes in all such cases very late.  But at last He
comes.  And though He confessedly comes late, He
correspondingly makes up to the soul for all His delays, and
rewards her on the spot for all her toil, and dryness, and
discouragement of many years.  I have great pity on those who
give way and lose all this through not being taught to persevere in
prayer.  It is a bad beginning, and very prejudicial to
proficiency in prayer, to use it for the gust and consolation that
a man receives at the time.  I know by my own experience, that
he who determines to pray, not much heeding either immediate
comfort or dejection, he has got into one of the best secrets of
prayer.  I am troubled to hear that grave men, and men of
learning and understanding, complain that God does not give them
sensible devotion.  It proceeds from ignorance of the true
life of prayer, and from not carrying the cross into prayer as into
all the rest of the spiritual life.  He who begins to pray
should be well told that he begins to plant a fine garden in very
bad soil; a soil full of the most noxious and ineradicable
weeds.  And that after good herbs and plants and flowers have
been sown, then he has to weed and water and fence and watch that
garden night and day and all his life.  Till the Lord of the
garden is able to come and recreate and regale Himself where once
there was nothing but weeds, and stones, and noxious vermin. 
Prayer, howsoever perfect in itself it may be, must always be
directed in upon the performance of good works.  We must not
content ourselves with the gift of prayer, or with liberty and
consolation and gust in prayer.  We must come out from prayer
the most rapturous and sweet only to do harder and ever harder
works for God and our neighbour.  Otherwise the prayer is not
good, and the gusts are not from God.  The growth and maturity
and fruitfulness of the soul do not stand in liberty in prayer, but
in love.  And this love is got not by speaking much but by
doing and suffering much.  For my part, and I have been long
at it, I desire no other gift of prayer but that which ends in
every day making me a better and better woman.  By its fruits
your prayer will be known to yourselves and others.</p>
<p id="iv.xv-p5">At other times I find myself so arid that I am not able to form
any distinct idea of God, nor can I put my soul into an attitude of
prayer, though I am in the place of prayer, and though I feel that
I know something of God.  This mind of mine at such times is
like a born fool or some idiot creature that nothing can bind
down.  I cannot command myself.  I cannot properly say
one <i>Credo</i>.  At such times I laugh bitterly at myself,
and see clearly my own natural misery.  I come then to see the
exceeding favour of the Lord in that He ever holds this insane fool
fast in prayer and holiness.  What would those who love and
honour me think if they saw their friend in this dotage and
distraction?  I reflect at such times on the great hurt our
original sin has done us.  For it is from our first fall that all this
has come to us that we so wander from God, and are so often utterly
incapable of God.  But it is not so much Adam’s sin as
my own that works in me all this alienation and inability and
aridity.  Methinks I love God; but my actions, and the endless
imperfections I see in myself, cause me great fear, and deep and
inconsolable distress.</p>
<p id="iv.xv-p6">(5) <i>Prayer after Sin</i>.—Never let any one leave off
prayer on any pretence: great sins committed, or any other pretence
whatsoever.  For by leaving off prayer the soul will be
finally lost, while every return to prayer is new life and new
strength, as I am continually telling you.  I tell you again
that the leaving off of prayer was the most devilish and the most
deadly temptation I ever met with.</p>
<p id="iv.xv-p7">(6) <i>Meditation in Prayer</i>.—He who prays should often
stop to think with whom he speaks: who he himself is who speaks:
who Jesus Christ is through whom he speaks: what that country is to
which he aspires: how he may best please Him who dwells there: and
what he is to do so that his character and disposition may suit
with God’s disposition and character.  Mental prayer, as
I am wont to call it, is the constant meditation of such things as
these.  And mental prayer ought to be endeavoured after by
all, though they have no virtues, because it is the beginning of
them, and therefore the one interest of all men is at once to begin
such prayer.  But it will be exercised with no little
difficulty unless the steady acquisition of the virtues accompanies
it.  In prayer it is far best to be alone; as, for our example
and instruction, our Lord always was when He prayed.  For we
cannot talk both to God and man at the same moment.  And, if
we feel too much alone, and must have company, no company is
comparable to Christ’s company.  Let us picture and
represent Christ to ourselves and to His Father as always at our
side.  Those who pray with proper preparation: that is, with
much meditation on the whole life and death of our Lord: on their
own death: on the last day, or such like, our Lord will bring all
such to the port of light.  Meditate much on the Sacred
Humanity of our Lord: what He was on earth: what He said: what He
did, and what He suffered.  Because this life of ours is long
and uphill, which to pass well through needs the constant presence
with us of our great Exemplar, Jesus Christ.</p>
<p id="iv.xv-p8">(7) <i>The Presence of God in Prayer</i>.—In prayer there
would sometimes come upon me such a sense of the Presence of God
that I seemed to be all engulfed in God.  I think the learned
call this mystical experience; at any rate, it so suspends the
ordinary operations of the soul that she seems to be wholly taken
out of herself.  This tenderness, this sweetness, this regale
is nothing else but the Presence of God in the praying soul. 
At the same time, I believe that we can greatly help toward the
obtaining of God’s Presence.  We obtain it by
considering much our own baseness, the neglect and the ingratitude 
we show toward the Son of God, how much He
has done for us, His passion and terrible suffering, His whole life
so full of affliction, by delighting ourselves in His word and in
His works, and such things as these.  And if in these
reflections the soul be seized with the Presence of God, then the
whole soul is regaled as I have described.  The heart is
filled with relenting.  Tears also abound.  In this way
does the Divine Majesty repay us even here for any little care we
take to serve Him and to be with Him.  The life of prayer is
just love to God and the custom of being ever with Him.</p>
<p id="iv.xv-p9">(8) <i>Supernatural Prayer</i>.—In supernatural prayer God
places the soul in His immediate Presence, and in an instant
bestows Himself upon the soul in a way she could never of herself
attain to.  He manifests something of His greatness to the
soul at such times: something of His beauty, something of His
special and particular grace.  And the soul enjoys God without
dialectically understanding just how she so enjoys Him.  She
burns with love without knowing what she has done to deserve or to
prepare herself for such a rapture.  It is the gift of God,
and He gives His gifts to whomsoever and whensoever He will. 
This, my daughters, is perfect contemplation: this is supernatural
prayer.  Now this is the difference between natural and
supernatural prayer: between mental and transcendental
prayer.  In ordinary prayer we more or less understand what we
say and do.  We think of Him to whom we speak; we think about
ourselves and about our Surety and Mediator.  
In all this, by God’s help, we can do
something, so to speak, of ourselves.  But in pure
supernatural and transcendental prayer, we do nothing at all. 
His Divine Majesty it is who does it all.  He works in us at
such elect seasons what far transcends and overtops all the powers
and resources even of the renewed nature.  At the same time,
as a far-off means of attaining to supernatural prayer, it is
necessary to put upon ourselves the acquiring of the great virtues,
and especially, humility: we must give up and resign ourselves
wholly and entirely unto God.  Whoever will not attempt to do
this, with all the grace of God, that man will never come within
sight of the highest prayer.  Let him, in absolutely
everything, seat himself in the lowest place.  Let him account
himself utterly and hopelessly unworthy of everything he possesses,
both in nature and in grace.  Let him shun advancement. 
Let him apply himself to daily mortification, not of the body so
much as of the mind and the heart, and let him be more than content
with the least thing that God allows him, for this is true
humility.  In short, let His Majesty lead us in any way He
pleases, and the chances are that He will soon lead us by these
ways to a life of prayer and communion it had not entered into our
hearts to conceive possible to such sinners as we are.  Let no
man be too much cast down, because he has not yet attained to
supernatural prayer.  God leads His people in the way that He
chooses out as best for Him and for them.  And he who stands
low in his own eyes, may all the time stand high in God’s
eyes.  Supernatural prayer is not necessary to salvation: 
nor doth God require it of us.  They
shall not fail of salvation who practise themselves in the solid
virtues.  No, they may have more merit in His eyes than their
more favoured neighbours, because their obedience, and their faith,
and their love have cost them more.  Their Lord deals with
them as with strong and valiant men, appointing them travail and
trouble here, that they may fight for Him the good fight of faith,
and only come in for the prize at the end.  And, after all,
what greater mark of a high election can there be than to taste
much of the cross?  Whom the Lord loveth, in that measure He
lays on them His cross.  And the heaviest of all our crosses
is a life of sanctification and service without sensible
consolation.</p>
<p id="iv.xv-p10">(9) <i>Over-familiarity in Prayer</i>.—He was a man of a
powerful understanding.  I thought on his great gifts, and the
possibilities there were in him of doing great service if he were
once entirely devoted to God.  He asked me to recommend him
much to God, and I did not need to be asked.  I went away to
the place to which I used to retreat in cases like this.  And
once there, I put myself into a state of entire recollection, and
began to treat with our Lord in a way, when I think of it, of too
great familiarity.  But it was love that spake, and every one
allows love great familiarity, and no one so much as our
Lord.  My soul overlooked the distance between herself and her
Lord.  She forgot herself, as she so often does, and began to
talk impertinences and to take too great freedoms.  I
entreated our Lord with many tears.  I judged my friend to be already a good man, but I must
have him much better, and I said so too freely, I fear. 
‘O Lord,’ I remember I said,’ Thou must not deny
me this favour that I ask.  This is a man for us to make a
friend of.’  And far more than that.  And He did
it.  Yes, He did it.  O His immense bounty and
goodness!  He regards not the words but the affection with
which the words are uttered.  That must be so, when He endures
with such an impertinent and over-familiar and irreverent wretch as
I am; endures and answers.  May He be blessed to all
eternity!</p>
<p id="iv.xv-p11">(10) <i>The Best Result of Prayer</i>.—To Father
Gratian.  To-day I received three letters from your Reverence
by the way of the head-post.  The whole matter is in a
nut-shell.  That prayer is the most acceptable which leaves
the best results.  Results, I mean, in actions.  That is
true prayer.  Not certain gusts of softness and feeling, and
nothing more.  For myself, I wish no other prayer but that
which improves me in virtue.  I would fain live more nearly as
I pray.  I count that to be a good prayer which leaves me more
humble, even if it is still with great temptations, tribulations,
and aridities.  For it must never be thought that because a
man has much suffering, therefore he cannot have prayed
acceptably.  His suffering is as incense set forth before
God.  Tell my daughters that they must work and suffer as well
as pray, and that it is the best prayer that has with it the most
work and the most suffering.</p>
<p id="iv.xv-p12">(11) <i>A Bishop taught to Pray</i>.—To
Don Alonzo Velasquez, Bishop of Osma.  Your Reverence enjoined
me the other day to recommend you to God.  I have done so: not
regarding my own inconsiderableness, but your requisition and your
rights.  And I promise myself from your goodness that you will
take in good part what I feel compelled to say to you, and will
accept that which proceeds only from my obedience to you. 
Recognising, then, and representing to our Lord, the great favours
He has done you in having bestowed upon you humility, charity, zeal
for souls, and a strong desire to vindicate the Divine honour, I
still besought the Lord for an increase in you of all these same
virtues and perfections in order that you may prove as accomplished
in all these things as the dignity of your office requires. 
Till it was discovered to me that you still wanted that which is
the foundation of every virtue, and without which the whole
superstructure dissolves, and falls in ruins.  You want
prayer.  You want believing, persevering, courageous
prayer.  And the want of that prayer causes all that drought
and disunion from which you say your soul suffers.  That which
was shown me as the way your lordship is henceforth to pray is
this.  You are to recollect and accuse yourself of all your
sins since your last time of like prayer.  You are to divest
yourself of everything as if you were that moment to die.  You
are to begin by reciting to yourself and to God the Fifty-first
Psalm.  And after that you must say this.  ‘I come,
O Lord, Bishop as I am, to Thy children’s school of prayer
and obedience.  I come to Thee not to teach, but
to learn.  I will speak to Thee, who am but dust and
ashes.’  And all the time set before the eyes of your
soul Jesus Christ crucified, and ruminate on Him in some such way
as this.  Fix your eyes on that stupendous humility of His
whereby He so annihilated Himself.  Look on His head crowned
with thorns.  Fix your eyes on His nailed hands, His feet, and
His side.  Meditate on and interrogate every one of His wounds
for you.  It behoves you also to go to prayer with a most
entire resignation and submission and pliantness to go that way in
religion and in life that God points out to you.  Sometimes He
will teach you by turning His back on you: and, anon, by lifting up
the light of His countenance upon you.  Sometimes by shutting
you out of His presence, and sometimes by bringing you into His
banqueting-house.  And you are to receive it all with the same
equability of mind, knowing that He always acts for the best. 
Otherwise you will go to teach God in your prayers, which is not
the proper scope and intent of prayer at all.  And when you
say that you are dust and ashes, you must observe and exhibit the
proper quality of such.  In our Lord’s prayer in the
garden, He requested that the bitterness and the terrible trial He
felt in overcoming His human nature might be taken away.  He
did not ask that His pains might be taken away, but only the
disgust wherewith He suffered them.  And when it was answered
Him that it was not expedient but that He should drink that cup, He
had to master that weakness and pusillanimity of the flesh, as must
all other men.  One cannot be a great
scholar, or even a finished courtier, without great pains and
expense; and to be a scholar in the Church, and a minister, and a
master in the science of Heaven, cannot be done without long time
at school and much hard work.  And herewith I desist from
saying more to your lordship, whose pardon I beg for all this
presumption.  Which, however full it may be of defects and
indiscretions, is not wanting in that zeal I owe to your service as
one of the most wandering and gone astray of your lordship’s
flock.  Our Lord preserve your lordship, and enrich you with
the manifold increase of His grace.  I am, your
lordship’s unworthy servant and subject, Teresa of Jesus.</p>
<p id="iv.xv-p13">(12) <i>The proper Readers of what the Saint has
Written</i>,—And now I return most humbly to beseech your
Reverence, that, if you mean to impart to any one these things that
you have made me write concerning prayer, let them be imparted to
spiritual persons, and to persons of real insight only.  For,
indeed, I have written for persons of exceptional experience and
exceptional prudence only.  What I have written, I fear, very
few are capable of.  But what am I, to speak thus about any
but myself?  Farewell.—I am,</p>
<p id="iv.xv-p14"><span class="smcap" id="iv.xv-p14.1">Teresa the Sinner</span>.</p>
</div2>
</div1>
  </ThML.body>
</ThML>
