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  • Title: Revelations of Divine Love Recorded by Julian, Anchoress at Norwich
  • Author: Julian
  • Illustrator: Phoebe Anna Traquair
  • Translator: Grace Warrack
  • Release Date: September 2, 2016 [EBook #52958]
  • Language: English
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  • REVELATIONS
  • of DIVINE LOVE
  • Recorded by JULIAN,
  • Anchoress at _NORWICH_
  • ANNO DOMINI 1373
  • _In lumine tuo videbimus lumen_
  • A version from the MS.
  • in the BRITISH MUSEUM
  • edited by
  • GRACE WARRACK
  • Methuen & Company
  • 36 Essex Street Strand
  • London
  • 1901
  • DOMINI, REFUGIUM FACTUS ES NOBIS, A GENERATIONE IN GENERATIONEM.
  • RESPICE IN SERVOS TUOS, ET IN OPERA TUA: ET DIRIGE FILIOS EORUM.
  • ET SIT SPLENDOR DOMINI DEI NOSTRI SUPER NOS, ET OPERA MANUUM
  • NOSTRARUM DIRIGE SUPER NOS: ET OPUS MANUUM NOSTRARUM DIRIGE.
  • "Truth seeth God, and Wisdom beholdeth God, and of these two cometh the
  • third: that is a holy, marvelling delight in God; which is Love."
  • CONTENTS
  • PAGE
  • I.
  • NOTES ON MANUSCRIPTS AND EDITIONS OF THIS BOOK. xi
  • II.
  • NOTE AS TO TWO JULIANS. xv
  • III.
  • INTRODUCTION:--
  • Part I. The Lady Julian. xvii
  • Part II. The Manner of the Book. xxxiii
  • Part III. The Theme of the Book. lv
  • IV.
  • "REVELATIONS OF DIVINE LOVE":--
  • (_editorial account_)
  • i.
  • A List of Contents, called "A Particular of the
  • Chapters". 1
  • ii.-iii.
  • Autobiographical. 3
  • iv.-ix.
  • _The First Revelation_: The Trinity is shewn,
  • through the Suffering of Christ, as Goodness,
  • or Love all-working. 8
  • x.
  • _The Second Revelation_: Man's Sight of God's
  • Love is but partial because of sin's darkness. 21
  • xi.
  • _The Third Revelation_: All Being is Being of
  • God and is good: Sin is no Being. 26
  • xii.
  • _The Fourth Revelation_: The stain of sin through
  • lacking of human love is cleared away by the
  • Death of Christ in His Love. 29
  • xiii.
  • _The Fifth Revelation_: By Love's Sacrifice,
  • in Christ, the evil suffered, for Love's
  • Increase, to rise, is overcome for ever. 30
  • xiv.
  • _The Sixth Revelation_: The travail of Man
  • against evil on earth is a glory accepted
  • by Love in Heaven. 33
  • xv.
  • _The Seventh Revelation:_ It is of God's Will,
  • for our learning, that on earth we change between
  • joy of light and pain of darkness. 34
  • xvi.-xxi.
  • _The Eighth Revelation:_ Of the oneness
  • of God and Man in the Passion of Christ, through
  • Compassion of the Creature with Christ and of
  • Christ with the Creature. All compassion in men
  • is Christ in men. 36
  • xxii.-xxiii.
  • _The Ninth Revelation_: Of the worshipful entering
  • of Man's soul into the Joy of Love Divine in the
  • Passion. 46
  • xxiv.
  • _The Tenth Revelation_: Of the thankful entering
  • of the soul into the Peace of _the Endless Love_
  • opened up for Man in the time of the Passion. 51
  • xxv.
  • _The Eleventh Revelation:_ Of Christ's Raising,
  • Fulfilling Love to the souls of men, as beheld
  • in the love between Him and His Mother. 52
  • xxvi.
  • _The Twelfth Revelation:_ All that the soul
  • lives by and loves is God, through Christ. 54
  • xxvii.-xl.
  • _The Thirteenth Revelation:_ Man's finite love
  • was suffered by Infinite Love to fail, that
  • falling thus through sin into pain and death
  • of darkness, the creature therein might more
  • deeply know his need and more highly know, in
  • its succouring strength, the Creator's Love,
  • as the Saviour's; that so being raised, and for
  • ever held clinging to that through the grace of
  • the Holy Ghost, he might rise to fuller and
  • higher and endless oneness with God. 55
  • xli.-xliii.
  • _The Fourteenth Revelation:_ Beginning on
  • earth, Prayer makes the soul one with God. 84
  • xliv.-lxiii.
  • Regarding these Revelations and the Christian
  • Life of Love's travail on earth against sin. 93
  • lxiv.-lxv.
  • _The Fifteenth Revelation_ (Closing): Of
  • Love's Fulfilment in Heaven. 159
  • lxvi.
  • Autobiographical: The fall through frailty of
  • nature, by self-regarding, into doubt of the
  • Shewing of Love; the rescue by mercy; the
  • assaying of faith and the overcoming by grace. 164
  • lxvii.-lxviii.
  • _The Sixteenth Revelation_ (Confirming): The
  • Indwelling of God In the Soul, now and for ever.
  • "_Thou shalt not be overcome._" 167
  • lxix.
  • Autobiographical: The second assaying of faith,
  • through the horror of spiritual darkness; the
  • overcoming by virtue of the Passion of Christ,
  • with help from the Common Belief of the
  • Christian Fellowship. 170
  • lxx.-lxxxv.
  • The Life of Faith is kept by Charity,
  • led on by Hope 172
  • lxxvi.
  • The Meaning of the Whole. Of learning more on
  • earth and In Heaven of the One thing taught
  • in the Revelation: _the Endless Love_; in
  • Which Life is everlasting. 201
  • V.
  • POSTSCRIPT
  • BY AN EARLY TRANSCRIBER OF THE MANUSCRIPT. 204
  • VI.
  • GLOSSARY. 205
  • _The Title-page is from a design by Phoebe Anna Traquair._
  • NOTES ON MANUSCRIPTS AND EDITIONS
  • This English book exists in two Manuscripts: No. 30 of the Bibliothèque
  • Nationale, Paris (_Bibliotheca Bigotiana_, 388), and No. 2499 _Sloane_,
  • in the British Museum.
  • The Paris Manuscript is of the Sixteenth Century, the Sloane is in a
  • Seventeenth Century handwriting; the English of the Fourteenth Century
  • seems to be on the whole well preserved in both, especially perhaps in
  • the later Manuscript, which must have been copied from one of mixed
  • East Anglian and northern dialects. This manuscript has no title-page,
  • and nothing is known as to its history. Delisle's catalogue of the
  • _Biblioth. Bigot._ (1877) gives no particulars as to the acquisition of
  • No. 388. The two versions may be compared in these sentences:--
  • Chap. II., _Paris_ MS.: "This revelation was made to a Symple creature
  • unlettyrde leving in deadly flesh the yer of our Lord a thousande and
  • thre hundered and lxxiii the xiii Daie of May."
  • _Sloane_: "These Revelations were shewed to a simple creature that
  • cowde no letter the yeere of our Lord 1373 the xiij day of may."
  • Chap. LI., _Paris_ MS.: "The colour of his face was feyer brown whygt
  • with full semely countenaunce. his eyen were blakke most feyer and
  • semely shewyng full of lovely pytte and within hym an heyward long
  • and brode all full of endlesse hevynlynes. And the lovely lokyng that
  • he lokyd on his servant contynually. And namely in his fallyng ÷ me
  • thought it myght melt oure hartys for love. and brek them on twoo for
  • Joy."
  • _Sloane_: "The color of his face was faire browne, with ful semely
  • features, his eyen were blak most faire and semely shewand ful of
  • lovely pety and within him an heyward long and brode all full of endles
  • hevyns, and the lovely lokeing that he loked upon his servant continuly
  • and namely in his fallyng me thowte it myte molten our herts for love &
  • bresten hem on to for joy."
  • The Sloane MS. does not mention the writer of the book, but the copyist
  • of the Paris version has, after the _Deo Gratias_ with which it ends,
  • added or transcribed these words: _Explicit liber Revelationem Julyane
  • anatorite_ [sic] _Norwyche cujus anime propicietur Deus_.
  • Blomefield, in his _History of Norfolk_ (iv. p. 81), speaks of "an
  • old vellum Manuscript, 36 pages of which contained an account of
  • the visions, etc.," of the Lady Julian, anchoress at St. Julian's,
  • Norwich, and quotes the title written by a contemporary: "Here es a
  • Vision shewed by the godenes of God to a devoute Woman: and her name
  • is Julian, that is recluse at Noryche, and yett is on life, Anno
  • Domini mccccxlii. In the whilke Vision er fulle many comfortabyll
  • words, and greatly styrrande to alle they that desyres to be Crystes
  • Looverse"--greatly stirring to all that desire to be lovers of Christ.
  • This Manuscript, possibly containing the writing of Julian herself,
  • was in the possession of the Rev. Francis Peck (1692-1743). The
  • original MSS. of that antiquarian writer went to Sir Thomas Cave, and
  • ultimately to the British Museum, but his general library was sold in
  • 1758 to Mr T. Payne (of Payne & Foss), bookseller, Strand, and this old
  • Manuscript of the "Revelations," which has been sought for in vain in
  • the catalogues of public collections, may perhaps have been bought and
  • sold by him.[1] It may be extant in some private library.
  • Tersteegen, who, in his _Auserlesene Beschreibungen Heiliger Seelen_,
  • gives a long extract from Julian's book (vol. iii. p. 252, 3rd ed.
  • 1784), mentions in his preface that he had seen "in the Library of the
  • late Poiret" an old Manuscript of these Revelations. Pierre Poiret,
  • author of several works on mystical theology, died in 1719 near Leyden,
  • but the Manuscript has not found its way to the University there.
  • Poiret himself refers thus to Julian and her book in his _Catalogus
  • Auctorum Mysticorum_, giving to her name the asterisk denoting
  • greatness: "_Julianae Matris Anachoretae, Revelationes de Amore Dei.
  • Anglice. Theodidactae, profundae, ecstaticae._" (_Theologiae Pacificae
  • itemque Mysticae_, p. 336. Amsterdam, 1702.)
  • The earliest printed edition of Julian's book was prepared by the
  • Benedictine Serenus de Cressy, and published in 1670 by permission of
  • his ecclesiastical Superior, the Abbot of Lambspring, under the title
  • of _Sixteen Revelations of Divine Love_. It agrees with the Manuscript
  • now in Paris, but the readings that differ from the Sloane Manuscript
  • are very few and are quite unimportant. This version of de Cressy's
  • is in Seventeenth Century English with some archaic words, which are
  • explained on the side margins; it was re-printed in 1843. A modernised
  • version taken from the Sloane MS. was published, with a preface, by
  • Henry Collins in 1877 (T. Richardson & Sons).
  • These three, the only printed editions, are now all of great rarity.
  • For the following version, the editor having transcribed the Sloane
  • MS., divided its continuous lines into paragraphs, supplied to many
  • words capital letters, and while following as far as possible the
  • significance of the commas and occasional full stops of the original,
  • endeavoured to make the meaning clearer by a more varied punctuation.
  • As the book is designed for general use, modern spelling has been
  • adopted, and most words entirely obsolete in speech have been rendered
  • in modern English, though a few that seemed of special significance
  • or charm have been retained. Archaic forms of construction have
  • been almost invariably left as they are, without regard to modern
  • grammatical usage. Occasionally a word has been underlined for the sake
  • of clearness or as a help in preserving the measure of the original
  • language, which in a modern version must lose a little in rhythm, by
  • altered pronunciation and by the dropping of the termination "en" from
  • verbs in the infinitive. Here and there a clause has been put within
  • parentheses. The very few changes made in words that might have any
  • bearing on theological or philosophical questions, any historical or
  • personal significance in the presentment of Julian's view, are noted on
  • the margin and in the Glossary. Where prepositions are used in a sense
  • now obscure they have generally been left as they are (_e.g., of_ for
  • _by_ or _with_), or have been added to rather than altered (_e.g., for_
  • is rendered by the archaic but intelligible _for that_, rather than
  • by _because_, and _of_ is amplified by words in square brackets, as
  • [_by virtue_] _of_, [_out_] _of_ rather than changed into _through_ or
  • _from_). The editor has desired to follow the rule of never omitting
  • a word from the Manuscript, and of enclosing within square brackets
  • the very few words added. It may be seen that these words do not alter
  • the sense of the passage, but are interpolated with a view to bringing
  • it out more clearly, in insignificant references (_e.g._ "in this
  • [Shewing]"), and once or twice in a passage of special obscurity (see
  • chap. xlv).
  • [1] v. Nichol's _Literary Anecdotes_, vol. iii. p. 653.
  • NOTE AS TO THE LADY JULIAN, ANCHORESS AT ST JULIAN'S, AND THE LADY
  • JULIAN LAMPET, ANCHORESS AT CARROW
  • In _Carrow Abbey_, by Walter Rye (privately printed, 1889), is given a
  • list of Wills, in which the name of the Lady Julian Lampet frequently
  • occurs as a legatee between the years 1427 (Will of Sir John Erpingham)
  • and 1478 (Will of William Hallys). Comparing the Will of Hallys with
  • that of Margaret Purdance, which was made in 1471 but not proved till
  • 1483, and from which the name of Lady Julian Lampet as a legatee is
  • stroked out, no doubt because of her death, we find evidence that this
  • anchoress died between 1478 and 1483. As even the earlier of these
  • dates was a hundred and thirty-six years after the birth of the writer
  • of the "Revelations," who in May 1373 was over thirty years of age,
  • the identity of the "Lady Julian, recluse at Norwich," with the Lady
  • Julian Lampet, though it has naturally been suggested, is surely an
  • impossibility. There were anchorages in the churchyards both of St
  • Julian's, Conisford (which belonged to the nuns of Carrow in the sense
  • of its revenues having been made over to them by King Stephen for the
  • support of that Priory or "Abbey"), and of St Mary's, the Convent
  • Church of the nuns. See the Will of Robert Pert--proved 1445--which
  • left "to the anchoress of Carhowe 1s., to ditto at St Julian's 1s.,"
  • and that of the Lady Isobel Morley, who in 1466 left bequests to "Dame
  • Julian, anchoress at Carrow, and Dame Agnes, anchoress at St Julian's
  • in Cunisford"--no doubt the same Dame Agnes that is mentioned by
  • Blomefield as being at St Julian's in 1472. This Agnes may have been
  • the immediate successor of Julian the writer of the "Revelations," who
  • is spoken of as "yet in life"--as if in great age--in 1442, when she
  • would be a hundred years old.
  • Perhaps the almost invariable use of the surname of the Carrow
  • Dame Julian (who was, no doubt, of the family of Sir Ralph
  • Lampet--frequently mentioned by Blomefield and in the _Paston Letters_)
  • may go to establish proof that there had been before her and in her
  • earlier years of recluse life another anchoress Julian, who most likely
  • had been educated at Carrow, but who lived as an anchoress at St
  • Julian's, and was known simply as Dame or "the Lady" Julian.
  • * * * * *
  • From Blomefield's _History of Norfolk_, vol. iv. p. 524: "Carhoe or
  • Carrow stands on a hill by the side of the river, about a furlong from
  • Conisford or Southgates, and was always in the liberty of the City
  • [of Norwich].... Here was an ancient Hospital or Nunnery, dedicated
  • to Saint Mary and Saint John, to which King Stephen having given
  • lands and meadows without the South-gate, Seyna and Lescelina, two of
  • the sisters, in 1146 began the foundations of a new monastery called
  • Kairo, Carrow, Car-hou, and sometimes Car-Dieu, which was dedicated to
  • the Virgin Mary and Saint John, and consisted of a prioress and nine
  • (afterwards twelve) Benedictine black nuns.... Their church was founded
  • by King Stephen and was dedicated to the Blessed Virgin, and had a
  • chapel of St John Baptist joined to its south side, and another of St
  • Catherine to its north; there was also an anchorage by it, and in 1428
  • Lady Julian Lampet was anchoress there." ... "This nunnery for many
  • years had been a school or place of education for the young ladies of
  • the chief families of the diocese, who boarded with and were educated
  • by the nuns."
  • From Dr Jessopp's _Visitations of the Diocese of Norwich_, 1492-1532,
  • Introduction, p. xliv.: "The priory of Carrow had always enjoyed a good
  • reputation, and the house had for long been a favourite retreat for the
  • daughters of the Norwich citizens who desired to give themselves to a
  • life of religious retirement."
  • INTRODUCTION
  • PART I
  • THE LADY JULIAN
  • _Beati pauperes spiritu: quoniam ipsorum est regnum coelorum_
  • _S. Matth. v._ 3
  • Very little is known of the outer life of the woman that nearly five
  • hundred years ago left us this book.
  • It is in connection with the old Church of St Julian in the parish of
  • Conisford, outlying Norwich, that Julian is mentioned in Blomefield's
  • _History of Norfolk_ (vol. iv. p. 81): "In the east part of the
  • churchyard stood an anchorage in which an ankeress or recluse dwelt
  • till the Dissolution, when the house was demolished, though the
  • foundations may still be seen (1768). In 1393 Lady Julian, the ankeress
  • here was a strict recluse, and had two servants to attend her in her
  • old age. This woman was in these days esteemed one of the greatest
  • holiness. In 1472 Dame Agnes was recluse here; in 1481, Dame Elizabeth
  • Scott; in 1510, Lady Elizabeth; in 1524, Dame Agnes Edrygge."
  • The little Church of St Julian (in use at this day) still keeps from
  • Norman times its dark round tower of flint rubble, and still there
  • are traces about its foundation of the anchorage built against its
  • south-eastern wall. "This Church was founded," says the History of
  • the County, "before the Conquest, and was given to the nuns of Carhoe
  • (Carrow) by King Stephen, their founder; it hath a round tower and
  • but one bell; the north porch and nave are tiled, and the chancel is
  • thatched. There was an image of St Julian in a niche of the wall of
  • the Church, in the Churchyard." Citing the record of a burial in "the
  • churchyard of St Julian, the King and Confessor," Blomefield observes:
  • "which shews that it was not dedicated to St Julian, the Bishop, nor St
  • Julian, the Virgin."
  • The only knowledge that we have directly from Julian as to any part
  • of her history is given in her account of the time and manner in
  • which the Revelation came, and of her condition before and during and
  • after this special experience. She tells how on the 13th day of May,
  • 1373,[1] the Revelation of Love was shewed to her, "a simple creature,
  • unlettered," who had before this time made certain special prayers from
  • out of her longing after more love to God and her trouble over the
  • sight of man's sin and sorrow. She had come now, she mentions, to the
  • age of thirty, for which she had in one of these prayers, desired to
  • receive a greater consecration,--thinking, perhaps, of the year when
  • the Carpenter's workshop was left by the Lord for wider ministry,--she
  • was "thirty years old and an half." This would make her birth-date
  • about the end of 1342, and the old Manuscript says that she "was yet in
  • life" in 1442. Julian relates that the Fifteen consecutive "Shewings"
  • lasted from about four o'clock till after nine of that same morning,
  • that they were followed by only one other Shewing (given on the night
  • of the next day), but that through later years the teaching of these
  • Sixteen Shewings had been renewed and explained and enlarged by the
  • more ordinary enlightenment and influences of "the same Spirit that
  • shewed them." In this connection she speaks, in different chapters, of
  • "fifteen years after and more," and of twenty years after, "save three
  • months"; thus her book cannot have been finished before 1393.
  • Of the circumstances in which the Revelations came, and of all matters
  • connected with them, Julian gives a careful account, suggestive of
  • great calmness and power of observation and reflection at the time,
  • as well as of discriminating judgment and certitude afterwards. She
  • describes the preliminary seven days' sickness, the cessation of all
  • its pain during the earlier visions, in which she had spiritual
  • sight of the Passion of Christ, and indeed during all the five hours'
  • "special Shewing"; the return of her physical pain and mental distress
  • and "dryness" of feeling when the vision closed; her falling into
  • doubt as to whether she had not simply been delirious, her terrifying
  • dream on the Friday night,--noting carefully that "this horrible
  • Shewing" came in her sleep, "and so did none other"--none of the
  • Sixteen Revelations of Love came thus. Then she tells how she was
  • helped to overcome the dream-temptation to despair, and how on the
  • following night another Revelation, conclusion and confirmation of
  • all, was granted to strengthen her faith. Again her faith was assayed
  • by a similar dream-appearance of fiends that seemed as it were to be
  • mocking at all religion, and again she was delivered, overcoming by
  • setting her eyes on the Cross and fastening her heart on God, and
  • comforting her soul with speech of Christ's Passion (as she would have
  • comforted another in like distress) and rehearsing the Faith of all
  • the Church. It may be noted here that Julian when telling how she was
  • given grace to awaken from the former of these troubled dreams, says,
  • "anon all vanished away and I was brought to great rest and peace,
  • without sickness of body or dread of conscience," and that nothing in
  • the book gives any ground for supposing that she had less than ordinary
  • health during the long and peaceful life wherein God "lengthened her
  • patience." Rather it would seem that one so wholesome in mind, so
  • happy in spirit, so wisely moderate, no doubt, in self-guidance, must
  • have kept that general health that _she_ could not despise who speaks
  • of God having "no disdain" to serve the body, for love of the soul, of
  • how we are "soul and body clad in the Goodness of God," of how "God
  • hath made waters plenteous in earth to our service and to our bodily
  • ease,"[2] and of how Christ waiteth to minister to us His gifts of
  • grace "unto the time that we be waxen and grown, our soul with our body
  • and our body with our soul, either of them taking help of other, till
  • we be brought unto stature, as nature worketh."[3]
  • Julian mentions neither her name not her state in life; she is "the
  • soul," the "poor" or "simple" soul that the Revelation was shewed
  • to--"a simple creature," in herself, a mere "wretch," frail and of no
  • account.
  • Of her parentage and early home we know nothing: but perhaps her own
  • exquisite picture of Motherhood--of its natural (its "kind") love and
  • wisdom and knowledge--is taken partly from memory, with that of the
  • kindly nurse, and the child, which by nature loveth the Mother and
  • each of the other children, and of the training by Mother and Teacher
  • until the child is brought up to "the Father's bliss" (lxi.-lxiii.).
  • The title "Lady," "Dame" or "Madame" was commonly accorded to
  • anchoresses, nuns, and others that had had education in a Convent.[4]
  • Julian, no doubt, was of gentle birth, and she would probably be sent
  • to the Convent of Carrow for her education. There she would receive
  • from the Benedictine nuns the usual instruction in reading, writing,
  • Latin, French, and fine needlework, and especially in that Common
  • Christian Belief to which she was always in her faithful heart and
  • steadfast will so loyal,--"the Common Teaching of Holy Church in which
  • I was afore informed and grounded, and with all my will having in use
  • and understanding" (xlvi.).
  • It is most likely that Julian received at Carrow the consecration
  • of a Benedictine nun; for it was usual, though not necessary, for
  • anchoresses to belong to one or other of the Religious Orders.
  • The more or less solitary life of the anchorite or hermit, the
  • anchoress or recluse, had at this time, as earlier, many followers in
  • the country parts and large towns of England. Few of the "reclusoria"
  • or women's anchorholds were in the open country or forest-lands
  • like those that we come upon in Medieval romances, but many churches
  • of the villages and towns had attached to them a timber or stone
  • "cell"--a little house of two or three rooms inhabited by a recluse who
  • never left it, and one servant, or two, for errands and protection.
  • Occasionally a little group of recluses lived together like those three
  • young sisters of the Thirteenth Century for whom the _Ancren Riwle_,
  • a Rule or Counsel for "Ancres," was at their own request composed.
  • The recluse's chamber seems to have generally had three windows: one
  • looking into the adjoining Church, so that she could take part in the
  • Services there; another communicating with one of those rooms under
  • the keeping of her "maidens," in which occasionally a guest might be
  • entertained; and a third--the "parlour" window--opening to the outside,
  • to which all might come that desired to speak with her. According to
  • the _Ancren Riwle_ the covering-screen for this audience-window was
  • a curtain of double cloth, black with a cross of white through which
  • the sunshine would penetrate--sign of the Dayspring from on high.
  • This screen could of course be drawn back when the recluse 'held a
  • parliament' with any that came to her.[5]
  • Before Julian passed from the sunny lawns and meadows of Carrow, along
  • the road by the river and up the lane to the left by the gardens and
  • orchards of the Coniston of that day, to the little Churchyard house
  • that would hide so much from her eyes of outward beauty, and yet leave
  • so much in its changeful perpetual quietude around her (great skies
  • overhead like the ample heavenly garments of her vision "blue as azure
  • most deep and fair"; little Speedwell's blue by the crannied wall of
  • the Churchyard--_Veronika_, true Image, like the Saint's "Holy Vernacle
  • at Rome") her vow[6] might be: "I offering yield myself to the divine
  • Goodness[7] for service, in the order of anchorites: and I promise to
  • continue in the service of God after the rule of that order, by divine
  • grace and the counsel of the Church: and to shew canonical obedience to
  • my ghostly fathers."
  • The only reference that Julian makes to the life dedicated more
  • especially to Contemplation is where she is speaking, as if from
  • experience, of the temptation to despair because of falling oftentimes
  • into the same sins, "especially into sloth and losing of time. For
  • that is the beginning of sin, as to my sight,--and especially to the
  • creatures that have given themselves to serve our Lord with inward
  • beholding of His blessed Goodness."[8]
  • "_One thing have I desired of the Lord, that will I seek after: that I
  • may dwell in the house of the Lord all the days of my life, to behold
  • the beauty of the Lord, and to enquire in His temple_"--His Sanctuary
  • of the Church or of the soul. _That_ was her calling. She had heard the
  • Voice that comes to the soul in Spring-time and calls to the Garden of
  • lilies, and calls to the Garden of Olive-trees (where all the spices
  • offered are in one Cup of Heavenly Wine): _"Surge, propera amica mea:
  • jam enim Hyems transiit, imber ambiit et recessit. Surge, propera amica
  • mea, speciosa mea, et veni." "Arise: let us go hence."[9] "For this is
  • the natural yearnings of the soul by the touching of the Holy Ghost:
  • God of Thy Goodness, give me Thyself, for Thou art enough to me; ...
  • and if I ask anything that is less, ever me wanteth; but only in Thee I
  • have all"_ (v.).
  • "A soul that only fasteneth itself on to God with very trust, either
  • by seeking or in beholding, it is the most worship that it may do to
  • Him, as to my sight" (x.). "To enquire" and "to behold"--no doubt it
  • was for these that Julian sought time and quiet. For she had urgent
  • questionings and "stirrings" in her mind over "the great hurt that is
  • come by sin to the creature"--"afore this time often I wondered why by
  • the great foreseeing wisdom of God the beginning of sin was not letted"
  • ("mourning and sorrow I made over it without reason and discretion");
  • and also she was filled with desire for God: "the longing that I had to
  • Him afore" (xxvii.).
  • Moreover, this life to which Julian gave herself was to be a life of
  • "meek continuant prayers" "for enabling" of herself in her weakness,
  • and for help to others in all their needs. For thought and worship
  • could only be held together by active prayer: the pitiful beholding
  • of evil and pain and the joyful beholding of Goodness and Love would
  • be at war, as it were, with each other, unless they were set at peace
  • for the time by the prayer of intercession. And _that_ is the call of
  • the loving soul, strong in its infant feebleness to wake the answering
  • Revelation of Love to faith that "all shall be well," and that "all is
  • well" and that when all are come up above and the whole is known, all
  • shall be seen to be well, and to have been well through the time of
  • tribulation and travail.
  • "At some time in the day or night," says the _Ancren Riwle_,
  • which Julian perhaps may have read, though as to such prayers her
  • compassionate heart was its own director--"At some time in the day
  • or night think upon and call to mind all who are sick and sorrowful,
  • who suffer affliction and poverty, the pain which prisoners endure who
  • lie heavily fettered with iron; think especially of the Christians who
  • are amongst the heathen, some in prison, some in so great thralldom
  • as is an ox or an ass; compassionate those who are under strong
  • temptations; take thought of all men's sorrows, and sigh to our Lord
  • that He may take care of them and have compassion and look upon them
  • with a gracious eye; and if you have leisure, repeat this Psalm, _I
  • have lifted up mine eyes. Paternoster. Return, O Lord, how long, and
  • be intreated in favour of Thy servants: Let us pray._ 'Stretch forth,
  • O Lord, to thy servants and to thy handmaids the right hand of thy
  • heavenly aid, that they may seek thee with all their heart, and obtain
  • what they worthily ask through Jesus Christ our Lord.'" Julian tells
  • how in her thinking of sin and its hurt there passed before her sight
  • all that Christ bore for us, "and His dying; and all the pains and
  • passions of all His creatures, ghostly and bodily; _and the beholding
  • of this_--with all pains that ever were or ever shall be" (xxvii).
  • From sin, except as a general conception, Julian's natural instinct
  • was to turn her eyes; but with this Christly compassion in her heart
  • in looking on the sorrows of the world she could not but take account
  • of its sin. As she came to be convinced that "though we be highly
  • lifted up into contemplation, it is needful for us to see our own
  • sin,"--albeit we should not accuse ourselves "overdone much" or "be
  • heavy or sorrowful indiscreetly"--so when sins of others were brought
  • before her she would seek with compassion to take the sinner's part of
  • contrition and prayer. "The beholding of other man's sins, it maketh
  • as it were a thick mist afore the eyes of the soul, and we cannot,
  • for the time, see the fairness of God, but if we can behold them with
  • contrition with him, with compassion on him, and with holy desire to
  • God for him" (lxxvi.).
  • And notwithstanding all the stir and eager revival of the Fourteenth
  • Century in religion, politics, literature and general life, there
  • was much both of sin and of sorrow then to exercise the pitiful
  • soul--troubles enough in Norwich itself, of oppression and riot and
  • desolating pestilence--troubles enough in Europe, West and East,--wars
  • and enslaving and many cruelties in distant lands, and harried Armenian
  • Christians coming to the Court of Edward to plead for succour in
  • their long-enduring patience. There was trouble wherever one looked;
  • but to prayer, and to that compassion which is in itself a prayer,
  • the answer came. Indeed the compassion was its own first immediate
  • answer: for "then I saw that each kind compassion that man hath on his
  • _even-Cristen_ (his fellow-Christians) with charity, _it is Christ in
  • him_." This is the comfort that both comforts in waiting and calls to
  • deeds of help. And such "charity" of social service was not beyond the
  • scope of the life "enclosed,"--whether it might be by deed or, as more
  • often, by speech.[10]
  • It is in her seeking for truth and her beholding of Love that we best
  • know Julian. Of the opening of the Revelation she says: "In all this
  • I was greatly stirred in charity to mine even-Christians, that they
  • might see and know the same that I saw: for I would it were comfort to
  • them," and again and again throughout the book she declares that the
  • "special Shewing" is given not for her in special, but for all--for all
  • are meant to be one in comfort as all are one in need. "Because of the
  • Shewing I am not good, but if I love God the better: and in as much as
  • ye love God the better it is more to you than to me.... For we are all
  • one in comfort. For truly it was not shewed me that God loved me better
  • than the least soul that is in grace; for I am certain that there be
  • many that never had any Shewing nor sight but of the common teaching of
  • Holy Church that love God better than I. For if I look singularly to
  • myself I am right nought; but in general [manner of regarding] I am, I
  • hope, in oneness of charity with all mine even-Christians. For in this
  • oneness standeth the life of all mankind that shall be saved, and that
  • which I say of me, I say in the person of all mine even-Christians: for
  • I am taught in the Spiritual Shewing of our Lord God that He meaneth
  • it so. And therefore I pray you for God's sake, and counsel you for
  • your own profit that ye leave the beholding of a worthless creature [a
  • "wretch"] it was shewed to and mightily, wisely and meekly behold God
  • that of His special goodness would shew it generally, in comfort of us
  • all" (ix.).
  • Thus Julian turns our eyes from looking _on_ her to looking _with_ her
  • on the Revelation of Divine Love.
  • Yet surely in her we have also "a shewing"--a shewing of the same.
  • She tells us little of her own story, and little is told us of her
  • by any one else, but all through her recording of the Revelation the
  • simple creature to whom it was made unconsciously shews herself, so
  • that soon we come to know her with a pleasure that surely she would
  • not think too "special" in its regard. (For she herself in speaking
  • of Love makes note that the general does not exclude the special).
  • Perhaps we are helped in this friendly acquaintanceship by those
  • endearingly characteristic little formulas of speech disavowing any
  • claim to dogmatic authority in the statements of her views of truth:
  • those modest parentheses "as to my sight," "as to mine understanding."
  • "Wisdom and truth and love," the dower that she saw in the Gracious
  • soul, were surely in the soul of this meek woman; but enclosing
  • these gifts of nature and grace are qualities special to Julian:
  • depth of passion, with quietness, order, and moderation; loyalty in
  • faith, with clearest candour--"I believe ... but this was not shewed
  • me"--(xxxiii., lxxvii., lxxx.) pitifulness and sympathy, with hope and
  • a blithe serenity; sound good sense with a little sparkle upon it--as
  • of delicate humour (that crowning virtue of saints); and beneath all,
  • above all, an exquisite tenderness that turns her speech to music. "_I
  • will lay thy Stones with fair Colours._"
  • "Thou hast the dews of thy youth." Hundreds of years have gone since
  • that early morning in May when Julian thought she was dying and was
  • "partly troubled" for she felt she was yet in youth and would gladly
  • have served God more on earth with the gift of her days--hundreds
  • of years since the time that her heart would fain have been told by
  • special Shewing that "a certain creature I loved should continue in
  • good living"--but still we have "mind" of her as "a gentle neighbour
  • and of our knowing." For those that love in simplicity are always
  • young; and those that have had with the larger Vision of Love the gift
  • of love's passionate speech, to God or man, in word or form or deed, as
  • treasure held--live yet on the earth, untouched by time, though their
  • light is shining elsewhere for other sight.
  • "From that time that the Revelation was shewed I desired oftentimes to
  • learn what was our Lord's meaning. And fifteen years afterwards and
  • more, I was answered in ghostly understanding, saying thus: _Wouldst
  • thou learn thy Lord's meaning in this thing? Learn it well: Love was
  • His meaning. Who shewed it thee? Love. What shewed He thee? Love.
  • Wherefore shewed it He? For Love. Hold thee therein and thou shalt
  • learn and know more in the same. But thou shalt never know nor learn
  • other thing without end._"
  • And if we, with no special shewing, might ask and, in trust of
  • "spiritual understanding," might answer more--asking _to whom_, and
  • _for whom_ was the Revelation shewed, we might answer: _To one that
  • loved_; for all that would learn in love.
  • "_Ecco chi crescerà li nostri amori_"[11]
  • "Here is one who shall increase our love."
  • Blessed are they that mourn: for they shall be comforted.
  • Blessed are the meek: for they shall inherit the earth.
  • Blessed are the pure in heart: for they shall see God.
  • [1] This must have been a Friday--sacred Day of the Passion of
  • Christ--for Easter Sunday of 1373 was on the 17th of April (O.S.). So
  • when the Revelation finally closed and Julian was left to "keep it in
  • the Faith"--the Common Christian Faith--it was Sunday morning, and
  • the words and voices she would hear through her window opening into
  • the Church would be from the early worship of "the Blessed Common"
  • assembled there.
  • [2] See the _Ancren Riwle_, Part viii. _Of Domestic Matters_, for
  • counsels to anchoresses as to judicious care of the body: diet,
  • washing, needful rest, avoidance of idleness and gloom, reading, sewing
  • for Church and Poor, making and mending and washing of clothes by the
  • anchoress or her servant. "Ye may be well content with your clothes, be
  • they white, be they black; only see that they be plain, and warm, and
  • well made--skins well tanned; and have as many as you need.... Let your
  • shoes be thick and warm."
  • [3] _cf._ Robert Browning, _Rabbi Ben Ezra_, xii.
  • [4] S. de Cressy was probably the originator of the designation "Mother
  • Juliana." The old name was _Julian_. The Virgin-Martyr of the Legend
  • entitled "The Life of St Juliana" (Early English Text Society) is
  • called in the Manuscripts, Iulane, Juliene, and Juliane and Julian.
  • So also _Lady Julian Berners_ is a name in the history of Fifteenth
  • Century books.
  • [5] "So he kneeled at her window and anon the recluse opened it, and
  • asked Sir Percival what he would. 'Madam,' said he, 'I am a knight of
  • King Arthur's Court and my name is Sir Percival de Galis.' So when the
  • recluse heard his name, she had passing great joy of him, for greatly
  • she loved him before all other knights of the world; and so of right
  • she ought to do, for she was his aunt."--Malory's _Morte d'Arthur_,
  • xiv. i.
  • [6] _Manuale ad usum insignis ecclesie Sarisburiensis_ (ed. of 1555),
  • fo. lxix. _Servitium includendorum._
  • [7] "_pietatis_."
  • [8] The sins that Julian mentions, "despair or doubtful dread," "sloth
  • and losing of time," "unskilful [unpractical, unreasoning] heaviness
  • and vain sorrow," seem to be all akin to that dreaded sin, besetting
  • particularly the Contemplative life, _Accidia_. See _Ancren Riwle_ p.
  • 287. "_Accidies salue is gestlich gledshipe._ The remedy for indolence
  • is spiritual joy, and the consolation of joyful hope from reading and
  • from holy meditation, or when spoken by the mouth of man. Often, dear
  • sisters, ye ought to pray less, that ye may read more. Reading is
  • good prayer. Reading teacheth how, and for what ye ought to pray. In
  • reading, when the heart feels delight, devotion ariseth, and that is
  • worth many prayers. Everything, however, may be overdone. Moderation is
  • always best."--(Pub. by the Camden Society).
  • [9] Canticles ii. 10. St John xiv. 31.
  • [10] See the chapter "How an Anchoress shall behave herself to them
  • that come to her," in "The Scale of Perfection," by Walter Hilton (died
  • 1396), edition of 1659, p. 106. "Since it is so that thou oughtest not
  • to goe out of thy house to seek occasion how thou mightest profit thy
  • Neighbour by deeds of Charity, because thou art enclosed; ... therefore
  • who so will speake with thee ... be thou soon ready with a good will to
  • aske what his will is ... for thou knowest not what he is, nor why he
  • cometh, nor what need he hath of thee, or thou of him, till thou hast
  • tryed. And though thou be at prayer, or at thy devotions, that thou
  • thinkest loth to break off, for that thou thinkest that thou oughtest
  • not leave God for to speake with any one, I think not so in this case,
  • for if thou be wise, thou shalt not leave God, but thou shalt find him,
  • and have him, and see him in thy Neighbour as well as in prayer, onely
  • in another manner. If thou canst love thy Neighbour well, to speake
  • with thy Neighbour with discretion shall be no hindrance to thee....
  • If he come to tell thee his disease [distress] or trouble, and to be
  • comforted by thy speech, heare him gladly, and suffer him to say what
  • he will for ease of his own heart; And when he hath done, comfort him
  • if thou canst, gladly, gently, and charitably, and soon break off. And
  • then, after that, if he will fall into idle tales, or vanities of the
  • World, or of other men's actions, answer him but little, and feed not
  • his speech, and he will soon be weary, and quickly take his leave," etc.
  • [11] Dante, _Paradiso_, v. 105.
  • PART II
  • THE MANNER OF THE BOOK
  • As an hert desirith to the wellis of watris:
  • so thou God, my soule desirith to thee....
  • The Lord sent his merci in the day:
  • and his song in the nyght.
  • Ps. '_Quemadmodum_'; from the _Prymer_.
  • Without any special study of the literature of Mysticism for purposes
  • of comparison, in reading Julian's book one is struck by a few
  • characteristics wherein it differs from many other Mystical writings
  • as well as by qualities that belong to most or all of that general
  • designation.
  • The silence of this book both as to preliminary ascetic exercises and
  • as to ultimate visions of the Absolute, might be attributed to Julian's
  • being wholly concerned with giving, for comfort to all, that special
  • sight of truth that came to her as the answer to her own need. She sets
  • out not to teach methods of any kind for the gradual drawing near of
  • man to God, but to record and shew forth a Revelation, granted once, of
  • God's actual nearness to the soul, and for this Revelation she herself
  • had been prepared by the "stirring" of her conscience, her love and
  • her understanding, in a word of her _faith_, even as she was in short
  • time to be left "neither sign nor token," but only the Revelation to
  • hold "in faith." Moreover, the means that in general she looks to for
  • realising God's nearness, in whatever measure or manner the revelation
  • of it may come to any soul, is the immediate one of faith as a gift
  • of nature and a grace from the Holy Ghost: faith leading by prayer,
  • and effort of obedience, and teachableness of spirit, into actual
  • experience of oneness with God. The natural and common heritage of
  • love and faith is a theme that is dear to Julian: in her view, longing
  • toward God is grounded in the love to Him that is native to the human
  • heart, and this longing (painful through sin) as it is stirred by the
  • Holy Spirit, who comes with Christ, is, in each naturally developed
  • Christian, spontaneous and increasing;--"for the nearer we be to our
  • bliss, the more we long after it" (xlvi., lxxii., lxxxi.). "This is
  • the kinde [the natural] yernings of the soule by the touching of the
  • Holy Ghost: _God of Thy goodness give me Thyself: for Thou art enow
  • to me, and I may nothing ask that is less that may be full worshippe
  • to Thee_." God is the first as well as the last: the soul begins as
  • well as ends with God: begins by Nature, begins again by Mercy, and
  • ends--yet "without end"--by Grace. Certainly on the way--the way of
  • these three, by falling, by succour, by upraising--to the more perfect
  • knowing of God that is the soul's Fulfilment in Heaven, there is a less
  • immediate knowledge to be gained through experience: "_And if I aske
  • anything that is lesse, ever me wantith_," for "It needyth us to have
  • knoweing of the littlehede of creatures and to nowtyn all thing that
  • is made, for to love and have God that is onmade." But this knowing
  • of the littleness of creatures comes to Julian first of all in a sight
  • of _the Goodness of God_; "For [to] a soule that seith the Maker of
  • all, all that is made semith full litil." By the further beholding,
  • indeed, of God as Maker and Preserver, that which has been rightly
  • "noughted" as of no account, is seen to be also truly of much account.
  • For that which was seen by the soul as so little that it seemed to be
  • about to fall to nothing for littleness, is seen by the understanding
  • to have "three properties":--God made it, God loveth it, God keepeth
  • it. Thus it is known as "great and large, fair and good"; "it lasteth,
  • and ever shall, for God loveth it."--Yet again the soul breaks away
  • to its own, with the natural flight of a bird from its Autumn nest at
  • the call of an unseen Spring to the far-off land that is nearer still
  • than its nest, because it is in its heart. "But what is to _me_ sothly
  • [in verity] the Maker, the Keper and the Lover,--I cannot tell, for
  • till I am Substantially oned [deeply united] to Him, I may never have
  • full rest ne very blisse; that is to sey, that I be so festined to
  • Him, that there is right nowte that is made betwix my God and me" (v.,
  • viii.). This "fastening" is all that in Julian's book represents that
  • needful process wherein the truth of asceticism has a part. It is not
  • essentially a process of detaching the thought from created things of
  • time--still less one of detaching the heart from created beings of
  • eternity--but a process of more and more allowing and presenting the
  • man to be fastened closely to God by means of the original longing
  • of the soul, the influence of the Holy Ghost, and the discipline of
  • life with its natural tribulations, which by their purifying serve to
  • strengthen the affections that remaining pass through them. "_But only
  • in Thee I have all._" On the way this discovery of the soul at peace
  • must needs be sometimes a word for exclusion, in parting and pressing
  • onward from things that are made: in the end it is the welcome,
  • all-inclusive. And Julian, notwithstanding her enclosure as a recluse,
  • is one of those that, happy in nature and not too much hindered by
  • conditions of life, possess for large use _by the way_ the mystical
  • peace of fulfilled possession through virtue of freedom from bondage
  • to self. For it is by means of the tyranny of the "self," regarding
  • chiefly itself in its claims and enjoyments, that creature things can
  • be intruded between the soul and God; and always, in some way, the meek
  • inherit the earth. "All things are yours; and ye are Christ's."
  • The life of a recluse demanded, no doubt, as other lives do, a daily
  • self-denial as well as an initiatory self-devotion, and from Julian's
  • silence as to "bodily exercises" it cannot of course be assumed that
  • she did not give them, even beyond the incumbent rule of the Church,
  • though not in excess of her usual moderation, some part in her
  • Christian striving for mastery over self. Nor could this silence in
  • itself be taken as a proof that ascetic practices had not in her view a
  • preparatory function such as has by many of the Mystics been assigned
  • to them during a process of self-training in the earlier stages of
  • the soul's ascent to aptitude for mystical vision. It is, however, to
  • be noted that neither in regard to herself nor others do we hear from
  • Julian anything about an undertaking of this kind. To her the "special
  • Shewing" came as a gift, unearned, and unexpected: it came in an
  • abundant answer to a prayer for other things needed by every soul.[1]
  • Julian's desires for herself were for three "wounds" to be made more
  • deep in her life: contrition (in sight of sin), compassion (in sight
  • of sorrow) and longing after God: she prayed and sought diligently for
  • these graces, comprehensive as she felt they were of the Christian life
  • and meant for all; and with them she sought to have for herself, in
  • particular regard to her own difficulties, a sight of such truth as it
  • might "behove" her to know for the glory of God and the comfort of men.
  • According to Julian the "special Shewing" is a gift of comfort for all,
  • sent by God in a time to some soul that is chosen in order that it may
  • have, and so may minister, the comfort needed by itself and by others
  • (ix.). In her experience this Revelation, soon closed, is renewed by
  • influence and enlightenment in the more ordinary grace of its giver,
  • the Holy Ghost. But a still fuller sight of God shall be given, she
  • rejoices to think, in Heaven, to _all_ that shall reach that Fulfilment
  • of blessed life--the only mount of the soul set forth in this book.
  • Thither, by the high-road of Christ, all souls may go, making the steep
  • ascent through "longing and desire,"--longing that embodies itself in
  • desire towards God, that is, in Prayer.
  • Nothing is said by Julian as to successive stages of Prayer, though
  • she speaks of different _kinds_ of prayer as the natural action of the
  • soul under different experiences or in different states of feeling
  • or "dryness." Prayer is _asking_ ("beseeching"), with submission
  • and acquiescence; or _beholding_, with the _self_ forgotten, yet
  • offered-up; it is a thanking and a praising in the heart that sometimes
  • breaks forth into voice; or a silent joy in the sight of God as
  • all-sufficient. And in all these ways "Prayer oneth the soul to God."
  • To Julian's understanding the only Shewing of God that could ever be,
  • the highest and lowest, the first and the last, was the Vision of Him
  • as Love. "Hold thee therin and thou shalt witten and knowen more in the
  • same. But thou shalt never knowen ne witten other thing without end.
  • Thus was I lerid that Love was our Lord's menyng" (lxxxvi.). Alien to
  • the "simple creature" was that desert region where some of the lovers
  • of God have endeavoured to find Him,--desiring an extreme penetration
  • of thought (human thought, after all, since for men there is none
  • beyond it) or an utmost reach of worship (worship from fire and ice) in
  • proclaiming the Absolute One not only as All that _is_, but as All that
  • is _not_. Julian's desire was truly for God in Himself, through Christ
  • by the Holy Spirit of Love: for God in "His homeliest home," the soul,
  • for God in His City. Therefore she follows only the upward way of the
  • light attempered by grace, not turning back to the _Via Negativa_, that
  • downward road that starting from a conception of the Infinite "as the
  • antithesis of the finite,"[2] rather than as including and transcending
  • the finite, leads man to deny to his words of God all qualities known
  • or had by human, finite beings. Julian keeps on the way that is natural
  • to her spirit and to all her habits of thought as these may have been
  • directed by reading and conversation: it does not take her towards
  • that Divine Darkness of which some seers have brought report. Hers was
  • not one of those souls that would, and must, go silent and alone and
  • strenuous through strange places: "homely and courteous" she ever found
  • Almighty God in Jesus Christ our Lord.
  • Julian's mystical sight was not a negation of human modes of thought:
  • neither was it a torture to human powers of speech nor a death-sentence
  • to human activities of feeling. "He hath no despite of that which He
  • hath made" (vi.). This seer of the littleness of all that is made saw
  • the Divine as containing, not as engulfing, all things that truly are,
  • so that in some way "all things that are made" because of His love last
  • ever. Certainly she passes sometimes beyond the language of earth,
  • seeing a love and a Goodness "more than tongue can tell," but she is
  • never inarticulate in any painful, struggling way--when words are
  • not to be found that can tell all the truth revealed, she leaves her
  • Lord's "meaning" to be taken directly from Him by the understanding of
  • each desirous soul. So is it with the Shewing of God as the Goodness
  • of everything that is good: "It is I--it is I" (xxvi.). Certainly
  • Julian looks both downward and upward, sees Love in the lowest depth,
  • far below sin, below even Mercy; sees Love as the highest that can
  • be, rising higher and higher far above sight, in skies that as yet
  • she is not called to enter: "abysses" there are, below and above,
  • like Angela di Foligno's "double abyss"; but here is no desert region
  • like that where Angela seems as "an eagle descending"[3] from heights
  • of unbreathable air, baffled and blinded in its assault on the Sun,
  • proclaiming the Light Unspeakable in anguished, hoarse, inarticulate
  • cries; here is a mountain-path between the abysses and the sound as of
  • a chorus from pilgrims singing:
  • "Praise to the Holiest in the height
  • And in the depth be praise";--
  • 'ALL IS WELL: ALL IS WELL: ALL SHALL BE WELL.'
  • Moreover, Julian while guided by Reason is _led_ by the "Mind" of her
  • soul--pioneer of the path through the wood of darkness though Reason
  • is ready to disentangle the lower hindrances of the way; and where
  • her instructed soul "finds rest," those things that are hid from the
  • wisdom and prudence of Reason only are to its simplicity of obedience
  • revealed. Even as her Way is Christ-Jesus, and her walk by "longing
  • and desire" is of faith and effort, so the End and the Rest that she
  • seeks is the _fulness_ of God, in measure as the soul can enter upon
  • His fulness here and in that heavenly "oneing" with Him which shall
  • be by grace the "fulfilling" and "overpassing" of "Mankind." "The
  • Mid-Person willed to be Ground and Head of this fair End," "out of
  • Whom we ben al cum, in Whom we be all inclosid, into Whom we shall all
  • wyndyn, in Him fynding our full Hevyn in everlestand joye" (liii.).[4]
  • The soul that participates in God cannot be lost in God, the soul
  • that wends into oneness with God finds there at last its Self. Words
  • of the Spirit-nature fail to describe to man, as he is, this fulness
  • of personal life, and Julian falls back in one effort, daring in its
  • infantine concreteness of language, on acts of all the five senses to
  • symbolise the perfection of spiritual life that is in oneness with God
  • (xliii.).
  • It may be noted that in these "Revelations" there is absolutely no
  • regarding of Christ as the "Bridegroom" of the individual soul: once
  • or twice Julian in passing uses the symbol of "the Spouse," "the Fair
  • Maiden," "His loved Wife," but this she applies only to the Church. In
  • her usual speech Christ when unnamed is our "Good" or our "Courteous"
  • Lord, or sometimes simply "God," and when she seeks to express
  • pictorially His union with men and His work for men, then the soul is
  • the Child and Christ is the Mother. In this symbolic language the love
  • of the Christian soul is the love of the Child to its Mother and to
  • each of the other children.
  • Julian's Mystical views seem in parts to be cognate with those of
  • earlier and later systems based on Plato's philosophy, and especially
  • perhaps on his doctrine of Love as reaching through the beauties of
  • created things higher and higher to union with the Absolute Beauty
  • above, Which is God--schemes of thought developed before her and in
  • her time by Plotinus, Clement, Augustine, Dionysius "the Areopagite,"
  • John the Scot, Eckhart, the Victorines,[5] Ruysbroeck, and others.
  • One does not know what her reading may have been, or with what people
  • she may have conversed. Possibly the learned Austin Friars that were
  • settled close to St Julian's in Conisford may have lent her books by
  • some of these writers, or she may have been influenced through talks
  • with a Confessor, or with some of the Flemish weavers of Norwich,
  • with whom Mystical views were not uncommon. Yet the Mysticism of the
  • "Revelations" is peculiarly of the English type. Less exuberant in
  • language than Richard Rolle, the Hermit of Hampole, Julian resembles
  • him a little in her blending of practical sense with devotional
  • fervour; but the writer to whom she seems, at any rate in some of
  • her phrases, most akin is Walter Hilton, her contemporary.[6] Hilton,
  • however, is very rich in quotations from the Bible, while Julian's
  • only direct quotations from any book--beyond her reference to the
  • legend of St Dionysius--are one that belongs to Christ: "I thirst"
  • (xvii.), and two that belong to the soul: "Lord, save me: I perish!"
  • "Nothing shal depart me from the charite of Criste" (xv.). (And indeed
  • these three are a fit embodiment of the Christian Faith as seen in
  • her "Revelations.") But Julian, while perhaps more speculative than
  • either of these typical English Mystics, is thoroughly a woman. Lacking
  • their literary method of procedure, she has a high and tender beauty
  • of thought and a delicate bloom of expression that are her own rare
  • gifts--the beauty of the hills against skies in summer evenings, of an
  • orchard in mornings of April. Again and again she stirs in the reader
  • a kind of surprised gladness of the simple perfection wherewith she
  • utters, by few and adequate words, a thought that in its quietness
  • convinces of truth, or an emotion deep in life. Of a little child
  • it has been said: "He thought great thoughts simply," and Julian's
  • deepness of insight and simplicity of speech are like the Child's.[7]
  • "For ere that He made us He loved us, and when we were made we loved
  • Him" (liii.). "I love thee, and thou lovest me, and our love shall
  • not be disparted in two" (lxxxii.). "_Thou art my Heaven._" "I had
  • liefer have been in that pain till Doomsday than have come to Heaven
  • otherwise than by Him." "Human is the vehemence," says a writer on
  • Julian's "Revelations," of that reiterated exclusion of all other
  • paths to joy. 'Me liked,' she says, 'none other heaven.' Once again
  • she touches the same octave, condensing in a single phrase which has
  • seldom been transcended in its brief expression of the possession that
  • leaves the infinity of love's desire still unsatiated: '_I saw Him
  • and sought Him, I had Him, and I wanted Him._' Fletcher's tenderness,
  • Ford's passion lose colour placed side by side with the utterances
  • of this worn recluse whose hands are empty of every treasure."[8]
  • Sometimes with her subject her language assumes a majestic solemnity:
  • "The pillars of Heaven shall tremble and quake" (lxxv.); sometimes it
  • seems to march to its goal in an ascent of triumphal measure as with
  • beating of drums: "The body was in the grave till Easter-morrow and
  • from that time He lay nevermore. For then was rightfully ended" ...
  • (close of Chap. li.). Generally, perhaps, the style in its movement
  • recalls the rippling yet even flow of a brook, cheerfully, sweetly
  • monotonous: "If any such lover be in earth which is continually kept
  • from falling, I know it not: for it was not shewed me. But this was
  • shewed: that in falling and in rising we are ever preciously kept in
  • one love" (lxxxii.). But now and again the listener seems to be caught
  • up to Heaven with song, as in that time when her "marvelling" joy in
  • beholding love "breaks out with voice":--"Behold and see! the precious
  • plenty of His dearworthy blood descended down into Hell, and braste her
  • bands, and delivered all that were there that belonged to the Court of
  • Heaven. The precious plenty of His dearworthy blood overfloweth all
  • Earth and is ready to wash all creatures of sin which be of goodwill,
  • _have_ been and _shall_ be. The precious plenty of His dearworthy blood
  • ascended up into Heaven to the blessed body of our Lord Jesus Christ,
  • and there is in Him, bleeding and praying for us to the Father, and is
  • and shall be as long as it needeth; and ever shall be as long as it
  • needeth; and evermore it floweth in all Heavens, enjoying the salvation
  • of all mankind that _are_ there, and _shall_ be--fulfilling the Number
  • that faileth" (xii.).
  • The Early English Mystics make good reading,--even as to the mere
  • manner of their writings we might say, if it were possible to separate
  • the style from the freshness of feeling and the pointedness of thought
  • that inform it; and though we do not, of course, have from Julian,--a
  • woman writing of the _Revelations of Love_,--the delightfully
  • trenchant, easy address of Hilton in his counsels as to how to scale
  • the _Ladder of Perfection_--counsels both wise and witty--yet Julian,
  • too, with all her sweetness, is full of this every day vigour and
  • common sense. And sometimes she puts things in a naïve, engaging way
  • of her own, grave and yet light--as if with a little understanding
  • smile to those to whom she is speaking:--"Then ween we, who _be_ not
  • all wise"; "That the outward part should draw the inward to assent _was
  • not shewed to me_, but that the inward draweth the outward by grace and
  • both shall be oned in bliss without end by the virtue of Christ, _this_
  • was shewed" (lxi., xix.).
  • Rolle, Hilton, and more especially the _Ancren Riwle_, give examples
  • of that custom of allegorical interpretation of Sacred Scriptures that
  • has fascinated many mystical authors, but one can scarcely suppose
  • that this method would ever have been a favourite one with Julian
  • even if she had been in the way of dealing with literary parallels
  • and references. For though she uses "examples," or illustrations
  • (sometimes calling them "shewings," or "bodily examples") and also
  • metaphorically figurative speech, she does not shew any interest in
  • elaborate, arbitrary symbolism. At any rate she is too directly simple,
  • it seems, and too much in the centre of realities, to be a writer that
  • (without constraint of following the lines of others) would take as
  • foundation for an argument or an exposition outward resemblances or
  • verbal connections, fit perhaps to illustrate or enforce the truth
  • in question, but lacking in relation to it that inward vital oneness
  • whereby certain things that to man seem below him may become symbolic
  • to him of others that he beholds as within or above him.
  • Exposition by analysis has been reckoned to be characteristic of the
  • Schoolmen rather than of the Mystics,[9] though surely a mystical sight
  • may be served by an analytical process, and to see God in a part before
  • or while He is seen in the whole is effected not without analysis of
  • the subtlest kind. So we find analysis in Julian's sight (Rev. iii.):
  • "_I saw God in a point_"; and in her conclusions from this: "_By
  • which sight I saw that He is in all things_"; and in her immediate
  • raising, from this conclusion, of the question: "_What is sin?_" and
  • throughout her treatment of the problem in the scheme of her book.
  • Even for the merely formal task of distinguishing by number, Julian,
  • we see, will set briskly forward (though we may not feel much inclined
  • to follow) and often she begins her careful dissections with: "In this
  • I see"--four, five, or six things, as the case may be. Her speech of
  • spiritual Revelations is, however, helped out less by numbers than by
  • living and homely things of sight: the mother and the children and the
  • nurse; lords and servants, kings and their subjects (with echoes of
  • the language of Court and chivalry); the deep sea-ground, waters for
  • our service; clothing, in its warmth, grace and colour; the light that
  • stands in the night, the hazel-nut, the scales of herrings.[10]
  • As one grows familiar with the "Revelations" one finds oneself in the
  • midst of a great scheme: a network of ideas that cross and re-cross
  • each other in a way not very clear at first, perhaps, but not really in
  • confusion. All through this treatise from its beginning, the Revelation
  • as a whole is in the mind of Julian; interpolation by another writer is
  • out of the question: the book is all of a piece, both as the expression
  • of one person, in mind and character, and as the setting forth of
  • a theological system. From the first we find Julian holding her
  • diverse threads of nature and mercy and grace for the fabric of love
  • she is weaving, and all through she guides them in and out, with no
  • hesitation, till at last the whole design lies fair before her, shewing
  • the _Goodness of God_.
  • With regard to this scheme it may be noted that apart from her merely
  • intellectual pleasure in arithmetical methods of statement, Julian
  • shews throughout a mystical sense of numerical correspondences. Life,
  • both as being and action, is, to her sight, in its perfection full of
  • _trinities_; while there are _doubles_,--incident to its imperfection,
  • as we may put it, perhaps, though the book itself does not mark this
  • distinction in so many words--there are doubles wherein two things are
  • partially opposed and require for their reconciling a third that will
  • complete them into trinity. First, as the Centre of all, there is the
  • BLESSED TRINITY: All-Might, All-Wisdom, All-Love: one Goodness: FATHER
  • and SON and HOLY GHOST: one Truth. To the First, Second, and Third
  • Persons correspond the verbs MAY, for all-powerful freedom to do; CAN,
  • for all-skilful ability to do; WILL, for all-loving will to do. So also
  • "the Father _willeth_, the Son _worketh_, the Holy Ghost _confirmeth_."
  • Another nomenclature of the Holy Trinity is, Might, Wisdom, Goodness:
  • one Love; but that of Might, Wisdom, Love (employed by Abelard,
  • Aquinas, and the Schoolmen generally) is the usual one, while _Truth,
  • Wisdom, Love,_ is employed in reference to that Image of God wherein
  • Man is made: for man has not _created might_: his might is all in the
  • uncreated might of God. Man in his essential Nature is "made-trinity,"
  • "like to the unmade Blessed Trinity"--a human trinity of truth, wisdom,
  • love; and these respectively _see, behold, and delight in_ the Divine
  • Trinity of Truth, Wisdom, Love.
  • Man possesses _Reason,_ which _knows, Mind,_ or a feeling wisdom, which
  • _wits,_ and _Love,_ which _loves_. The making of Man by the Son of
  • God as Eternal Christ, is the work of _Nature_; the falling of Man is
  • "suffered" (allowed), and afterwards healed, by _Mercy_; the raising
  • of Man to a higher than his first state is the work of _Grace_. "In
  • Nature we have our Being; in Mercy we have our Increasing; in Grace
  • we have our Fulfilling." The work of grace by means of our natural
  • Reason enlightened by the Holy Ghost to see our sins, is _Contrition_;
  • by means of our naturally-feeling Mind, touched by the Holy Ghost
  • to behold the pain of the world, is _Compassion_; by means of our
  • nature-and grace-inspired Love, which loves our Maker and Saviour
  • (still by the separation of sin partially, painfully, hid from our
  • sight) is greater _Longing toward God_. This longing must become an
  • active "desire": for the chief work that we can do as fellow-workers
  • with God in achieving full oneness with Him is _Prayer_; of which there
  • are three things to understand: its _Ground_ is God by whose Goodness
  • it springeth in us; its _use_ is "to turn our will to the will of our
  • Lord"; its _end_ is "that we should be made one with and like to our
  • Lord in all things." And lastly we have for this life, both by nature
  • and grace, the comprehensive virtue of _Faith_, "in which all our
  • virtues come to us" and which has in its own nature three elements:
  • _understanding, belief,_ and _trust_. With Faith, which belongs perhaps
  • chiefly to Reason,--Faith is "nought else but a right understanding,
  • with true belief and sure trust, of our Being: that we are in God, and
  • God in us, Whom we see not," "A light by nature coming from our endless
  • Day, that is our Father, God" (liv., lxxxiii.)--is also _Hope_, which
  • belongs to our feeling Mind (our Remembrance) and to the work of Mercy
  • in this our fallen state: "Hope that we shall come to our Substance
  • (our high and heavenly nature) again." Moreover, "Charity keepeth us
  • in Hope and Hope leadeth us in Charity; and in the end all shall be
  • _Charity_" (lxxxv.).
  • With these trinities and groups of threes are others, belonging to God
  • and man, mentioned successively in the closing chapters of the book:
  • three manners of God's Beholding (or Regard of Countenance): that of
  • the Passion, that of Compassion, and that of Bliss; three kinds of
  • longing God has: to teach us, to have us, to fulfil us; three things
  • that man needs in this life from God: Love, Longing, and Pity--"pity in
  • love," to keep him now, and "longing in the same love" to draw him to
  • heaven; three things by which man standeth in this life and by which
  • God is worshipped: "use of man's reason natural; common teaching of
  • Holy Church; inward gracious working of the Holy Ghost";--and last of
  • all, "three properties of God, in which the strength and effect of all
  • the Revelation standeth," "_Life, Love and Light_."
  • Again, Julian speaks of things that are _double_, and this double state
  • seems to be one of imperfection, though she does not explicitly say
  • so. Man's nature, she says, was created "double": "_Substance_" or
  • Spirit essential from out of the Spirit Divine, and "_Sensuality_" or
  • spirit related to human senses and making human faculties, intellectual
  • and physical. These two, the Substance and Sense-soul, in their
  • imperfection of union through the frailty of created love (which needs
  • the divine in its might to support it), became partially sundered
  • by the failing of love. "For failing of love on our part, therefore,
  • is all our travail"--from that comes the falling, the dying, and the
  • painful travail between death from sin and life from God--both in the
  • race and the individual. But Christ makes the double into trinity:
  • for Christ is "the Mean [the medium] that keepeth the Substance and
  • Sense-soul together" in his Eternal, Divine-Human Nature, because of
  • His perfect love; and Christ-Incarnate in His Mercy, by this same
  • perfect love brings these two parts anew and more closely together;
  • and Christ uprisen, indwelling in the soul thus united, will keep them
  • forever together, in oneness growing with oneness to Him. Moreover, Man
  • being double also as "soul and body," needs to be "saved from double
  • death," and this salvation, given, is Jesus-Christ, who joined Himself
  • to us in the Incarnation and "yielded us up from the Cross with His
  • Soul and Body into His Father's hands."
  • In a mere reading of the Book these repeated correspondences may be
  • felt as wearisome, formal, fantastic,--or rather they may seem so when,
  • as here, they are brought together and noted, for Julian herself simply
  • speaks of these different groups as they come in her theme. But when
  • one tries to follow the _thought_ of this book amongst the heights
  • and depths of the things that are seen and temporal and the things
  • unseen and eternal, these likenesses, found in all, seem to afford
  • one guidance and surety of footing, like steps cut out in a steep
  • and difficult path. And as one goes on, and the whole of the meaning
  • takes form, these significations of something all-prevailing give one a
  • partial understanding such as Julian perhaps may have had: the feeling,
  • the "Mind," of a certain half-caught measure in "all things that are,"
  • a proportion, a oneness. We are amongst free nature's mountains, but
  • they do not rise haphazard: they shew a strange, a balanced beauty
  • of line and light and shade, as convincing, if not as clear in its
  • intention as the sunrise-lines and colouring of the euphrasy flower
  • at our feet. We hear as we walk the wandering sound of "the vagrant,
  • casual wind," but there is something in its rise and fall, and rising
  • again, that has kinship with the flow and ebb and onrush of the
  • lingering, punctual waves on the shore. _Sursum Corda._
  • [1] The soon-forgotten petition of Julian's youth for a "bodily
  • sickness" does not seem to have had any connection in her mind with
  • special Revelation: it was desired neither as in any way a sign
  • of invisible things nor as a direct means of beholding them. And
  • probably, as a matter of fact, the sickness that was granted helped
  • her in the way that she had desired, helped her to the sight of the
  • Revelation, not directly, but by drawing her spirit to that utter
  • dependence on and trust in God that is death's first lesson for all,
  • that uttermost self-devotion to God that is life's last exercise.
  • This spiritual state, with all that through years had gone before
  • of feeling and thought and life's experience, made her ready to
  • be shewn with special largeness and clearness God's love: how it
  • filled the empty place of sin and pain and sorrow with its divine
  • fulness. As to the "bodily sight" introducing the Revelation, a
  • sight of "parts of the Passion," which may be compared with "The XV.
  • Oos"--'_Orationes_'--Passion-prayers each beginning with '_O_' (_v.
  • Hora_ of Sarum), it was recognised by Julian herself, even at the
  • time of her seeing it, as being a sight of things "not in substance
  • or nature." In this recognition it was proved to be neither _mental
  • delusion_ nor mere "raving" delirium. But it would, it seems, be
  • natural that in her weakness of body and her exaltation of spirit (so
  • tense that the strength of her self-surrender to death seemed to cast
  • her back upon bodily life in the painless world between the two) some
  • sort of _physical illusion_ should be brought about by her prolonged
  • gaze upon the Face of the Crucifix, and that in her desire to enter
  • into the sufferings of the Passion as fully as those friends of her
  • Lord's that beheld it, Julian thus gazing in the midst of night's
  • shadows and the dim light of dawn should seem to herself to behold
  • the sacred drops, depicted beneath the painted or sculptured Crown of
  • Thorns, flow down "right plenteously." Julian gave thanks for this
  • and all the "bodily sight" as a gift from God. By Him sickness and
  • illusion, as well as things evil, are "suffered" to come, and by Him
  • Revelation is given according to sundry times in diverse manners. Gain
  • of the spirit through failure of the body--and no less by illusions of
  • fever than by trance-state visions their seers speak of, when Death
  • passes the Spirit half through the gates--would indeed be accordant
  • with the truth of the Shewing that came to Julian, how man is raised
  • through shame and death into glory and life, since in the weakness of
  • failing men the strength of Christ is made perfect.
  • [2] See the Bampton Lectures on _Christian Mysticism_. W. R. Inge. (p.
  • 111.)
  • [3] See the Introduction to _Le Livre des Visions et Instructions de la
  • Bienheureuse Angèle de Foligno_, traduit par Ernest Hello. Paris, 1895.
  • [4]
  • "When that which drew from out the boundless deep
  • Turns again home."
  • [5] _v._ pp. 27, 57, 126, 156, 168; _cf._ Dionysius: "_On Divine
  • Names._" Cap. iv. (tr. by Parker). S. Aug. _Conf._: b. i. ch. 2; iii.
  • 7; iv. 10-16; vii. 12-18.
  • [6] See the extract from Hilton given as a note to chapter lvii.
  • [7] _Little Flowers of a Childhood_ (in Mem. J. D. W., Oct. 1894--March
  • 1899). Some of the thoughts of children,--some of the rising thoughts
  • of a very little child who, like Julian, faced the darkness of time
  • (steadfast as Dürer's pilgrim Knight, gentle as Chaucer's,) and
  • beheld on his journey the shining of the Eternal City,--might be set
  • beside words of the Mystics as shewing, perhaps, through their very
  • simplicity, the oneness of truth that there is to see, and the oneness
  • of souls that see it. Here are convictions that the Cause of love,
  • felt within, "must be Jesus' Good Spirit"; comfort in discovering of
  • death's unreality (for if only the body, not the spirit, dies, "Oh,
  • then it is only _pretending-dying_!"); a flash of discernment, perhaps,
  • as to the passing away of lifeless evil since although, to the child,
  • indeed "it is a pity that some one did not come and kill the devil;
  • and then he would be dead," yet he has his own eschatology: "Well,
  • when _we_ are all dead, the devil will be dead too." More significant
  • is a sudden overawed realisation of the great universe (setting pause
  • to his own run round in play), one door to a quick perception in the
  • child's devout spirit of analogy binding truths unseen by sense: "Is
  • this world always going round, _now_?" ('Yes.') "It stays still!
  • still!--Jesus is looking down now: we don't see Him."--Here, too, are
  • habitual references to the things that are _meant to be_,--musings
  • over the goodness and knowledge, the braveness and courtesy "meant to
  • be" in a _man_; and here is a grateful, trusting sense of the real
  • 'kindness' of 'wild' creatures and of hurting remedies. Many of those
  • simple utterances, careless yet arresting like a blackbird's song, and
  • personal with the ardent love and clear reason of a child faithfully
  • living and bravely dying, seem to attest a kinship with seers of
  • truth to whom longer trial has offered a sterner strength of complex
  • thinking, for wider service here, but who, although they may have
  • learnt thus '_more_' in the knowledge of love, "shall never know nor
  • learn _other_ thing without end."--"I understood none higher stature in
  • this life than childhood."
  • "It is not growing like a tree
  • In bulk, doth make man better be.
  • * * * * *
  • A lily of a day
  • Is fairer far in May,
  • Although it fall and die that night,
  • It was the plant and flower of Light."
  • For all of the Company of saints have the sight of One Vision, and be
  • it in the steadfast fulfilment of labour, or from out of the merriment
  • of play,--through the strong, bright peace of endurance, or the silent
  • acquiescence of the will, led along valleys of darkness,--or again in
  • some swift rush of prayer into the morning light,--_all_ of the saints,
  • the babe and the ancient, beholding "the Blissful Countenance" say
  • "with one voice": "IT IS WELL." "_Amen. Amen._"
  • [8] "Catholic Mystics of the Middle Ages." _Edinburgh Review_, October
  • 1896.
  • [9] In reference to introspection M. Maeterlinck speaks of Ruysbroeck
  • as "the one analytical mystic." _Ruysbroeck and the Mystics_, p. 19.
  • [10] In ch. vii. de Cressy's "the Seal of her Ring" gives a misreading.
  • PART III
  • THE THEME OF THE BOOK
  • "The phase of thought or feeling which we call Mysticism has its
  • origin in ... that dim consciousness of the _beyond_ which is part of
  • our nature as human beings.... Mysticism arises when we try to bring
  • this higher consciousness into relation with the other contents of our
  • minds. Religious Mysticism may be defined as the attempt to realise
  • the presence of the living God in the soul and in nature, or, more
  • generally, as the attempt to realise in thought and feeling, the
  • immanence of the temporal in the eternal, and of the eternal in the
  • temporal."--W. R. Inge, _Christian Mysticism_. The Bampton Lectures for
  • 1900, p. 4.
  • "What is Paradise? All things that are; for all are goodly and
  • pleasant and therefore may fitly be called a Paradise. It is said
  • also that Paradise is an outer Court of Heaven. Even so this world
  • is an outer court of the eternal, or of Eternity, and especially
  • whatever in time, or any temporal creature manifesteth or remindeth
  • us of God or Eternity; for the creature is a guide and a path to God
  • and Eternity."[1] "God is althing that is gode, as to my sight," says
  • Julian, "and the godenes that althing hath, it is He" (viii.).
  • "_Truth seeth God_," and every man exercising the human gift of
  • Reason may in the sight and in the seeing of truths, attain to some
  • sight of God as Truth. But "_Wisdom beholdeth God_," and although
  • the enlightenment of the Spirit of Wisdom for the discernment of
  • vital truth is a grace that is granted in needful measure to him that
  • seeks to be guided by it, it is perhaps those receivers of grace that
  • are mystics by nature and habit that are the most ready in reaching
  • forward while still on earth to Wisdom's fullest and most immediate
  • beholding of God as All in all. For theirs in the largest (and it
  • may be the highest) efficiency, and in the fullest accordance with
  • man's first gift of "Reason Natural," is the further gift that Julian
  • calls "_Mind_": the gift of a certain spiritual sensitiveness whereby
  • they are quick to take impression of eternal things unseen (seeing
  • them either within or beyond the things of time that are seen) with
  • surrender of self to partake of their life. For in this Beholding of
  • Wisdom, response of the heart in purity and insight of the imagination
  • in faith enhance each other, while the vision of the soul through both
  • takes clearness.
  • The mystic, who sees the wide-ruling oneness of God with all that is
  • good--and thus, as the Mystics say, with all that _is_,--may begin at
  • any point the beholding of Goodness and therein the beholding of God.
  • "He is in the mydde poynt of all thyng, and all He doeth" (xi.). It is
  • in the way of those thus fully endowed for the reaching to truth in its
  • highest wisdom here, while they walk amongst the many manifestations of
  • earth, to take them as delicate partial signs instinct with a single
  • meaning. Here is mystical perception:--
  • "To see a world in a grain of sand,
  • And a heaven in a wild flower;
  • Hold infinity in the palm of your hand,
  • And eternity in an hour";[2]
  • by a blackbird's sudden song overhear, "in woodlands within," a joy
  • out of the heart of the Life of life.[3] Speaking of the spiritual
  • sight Julian relates: "I saw God in a point.--by which sight I saw
  • that He is in all things." To the mystical soul, quiet to listen to
  • "the music of the spheres," all sweet accordant sounds are singing
  • _Holy, Holy, Holy_; to the mystical soul, "full of eyes within"--like
  • those _Creatures of Life_ seen on the plain by the prophet of the Law
  • of life as renewed for Hope, and seen in the heights by the herald
  • of the Evangel of life as fulfilled in Love--all symmetrical sights
  • are as doors that are opened in Heaven. But it is most of all in the
  • music and the symmetry made of adverse life and death by the power of
  • love, as this is seen from highest to lowest, from lowest to highest,
  • that the Revelation of God as Love that is All in all is received. And
  • looking thereon in the highest manifestation, the manifestation of
  • Christ, which is made for all men, the mystics meet other beholders,
  • who are not called "mystics," yet who have not merely in greater or
  • less degree, with them, the common gift of Reason, but, after their
  • different manner and in their own share, the gift of the feeling
  • "Mind." For both from the seeing of Truth and from the beholding of
  • Wisdom comes the "holy wondering delight in God" that is simply delight
  • of love in Love. So they of the East and they of the West sit down
  • together to partake of the Bread and the Wine of the Table of God in
  • His Kingdom.
  • There is no other than one Food of the Divine Life consecrated and
  • made ready and offered to man for his human spirit to feed on;
  • but the Christian mystic finds an offering of that Food, which is
  • the sanctified Life of the Christ of God, not only in its constant
  • presentment to the spirit alone, by the Spirit of God through Christ.
  • To him, as to other Christians, the sight and the offering of the
  • Life in God is given in that memorial, mediate, expectant Sacrament
  • consecrated for the spirit's nurture through those elected Symbols of
  • sense that are the most perfect and sacred symbols because in their
  • earlier, natural use they most immediately minister to the whole human
  • life on earth of the Giver and of the receivers. But along with this
  • chosen Sacrament, and as one with it, there is shewn to the mystic the
  • Life Divine in diverse manners of working: he sees God's Christ from
  • afar, _fore-sees_ the Eucharistic Sacrament of His most sacred Death
  • and Life, _now_ raised in the Bread and the Wine on high,--seeing its
  • promise low in the ground in the earliest, ageless life of the wheat
  • and the vine: seed cast away, bruised corn of wheat, and dying Body,
  • and broken Bread, and daily obedience; a hidden root, crushed fruit of
  • the vine, and Blood poured forth, and uplifted Wine, and joy of Love
  • over Death: one Life.
  • Sometimes there is for the mystics a partaking of these lesser
  • "wayside sacraments," sometimes a turning aside from their symbols;
  • sometimes the old song of life in the lower creation awakens singing,
  • sometimes it scarcely is heard. But always the _spirit_ of nature's
  • signs as interpreted in Man, above all in Christ, lays its claim on
  • the soul; always as sung by the chorus of human spirits that live on
  • the "Righteousness, Peace, and Joy" of the Will of God, the New Song
  • of Life through Death has in it a summons and receives from one and
  • another here, passing through much tribulation, its fuller concord of
  • human achievement, or at least the desirous _Amen_. So whether the
  • mystic dwell much or little with the sights and sounds of sense, those
  • things that are seen and heard by the _soul_ bear to him the command
  • of his home, and the merest doorway glimpses, the echoes most distant,
  • making their proffer of more and more within and beyond, say _Come_.
  • "I give you the end of a golden string:
  • Only wind it into a ball,
  • It will lead you in at Heaven's Gate,
  • Built in Jerusalem wall."[4]
  • (Although this "following on to know," this winding of the truth
  • caught hold of into a "perfect round" of thought and will and life, is
  • probably not more easy for the mystics than for other people.
  • "Amore, amor, tu sei cerchio rotondo!"[5])
  • God is in all; but "our soul may never have rest in things that are
  • beneath itself" (lxvii.). "Well I wot," says Julian, "that heaven and
  • earth and all that is made is great and large, fair and good," yet "all
  • that is made" is seen as a little thing, the size of a hazel nut, held
  • in the palm of her hand, when along with it her spiritual sight beholds
  • the Maker. And though we may find the Maker in all things, we find
  • Him, both as Maker and Restorer, first and best, First and Last, in
  • the soul. There He is _Alpha_, there _Omega_. "It is readier to us to
  • come to the knowing of God than to know our own Soul" (in its fullest
  • powers). "For our soul is so deep-grounded in God and so endlessly
  • treasured, that we may not come to the knowing thereof till we have
  • first knowing of God, which is the Maker, to whom it is oned." And yet,
  • "we may never come to full knowing of God till we know first clearly
  • our own soul" (lvi.). The knowledge begins with God, but it begins
  • with Him in the lowest place of the soul rescued from sin by mercy and
  • entered by grace. "For Himself is nearest and meekest, highest and
  • lowest, and doeth all" (lxxx.). To the soul that looks on Christ a
  • remembrance rises of its own "fair nature" made in His image; yet "our
  • Lord of His mercy sheweth us our sin and our feebleness by the sweet
  • gracious light of Himself" (lxxviii.). Thus in the working of grace
  • the soul comes to the knowledge both of its higher and lower parts.
  • For in finding in itself both a natural response to the working of
  • grace by its love and its longing after God, and a contrariness to the
  • goodness of grace by its often failing and falling, it experiences both
  • the action of the "Godly Will" (which is within it as a part of, and
  • a gift from, its higher nature, "the Substance") and the action of a
  • "beastly will" (from the simple animal nature) which can will no moral
  • good and which, "failing of love," falls into sin: whereby comes pain,
  • with all the "travail" of good and evil in conflict during the course
  • of restoration. But it is only when the Sense-soul (wherein the higher
  • will must overcome the lower) is at last brought up to heaven, enriched
  • by all the profits of tribulation, and is united to the Substance
  • waiting there, "hid with Christ in God," that we come to the perfect
  • knowledge of God. For that knowledge, perfect in kind though always
  • growing, can only begin when, being in our "full powers" and "all fully
  • holy," we come to know clearly our own united perfected Soul. This
  • seems to be Julian's view (lvi., etc.).
  • Julian says elsewhere that we have in us here such a "medley" of good
  • and evil that sometimes we hardly know of others or of ourselves
  • wherein we stand, but that each "holy assent" that we make (by the
  • Godly Will) to the grace and will of God, is a witness that we are of
  • God. A witness to our sonship, it might be said; and perhaps, taking
  • Julian's view for the time, we might think that as the Lost Son "came
  • to himself," so the soul comes to the consciousness of the Godly Will;
  • that as he arose and came to his Father and found Him, or rather was
  • found by his Father, so the soul receives the healing of Christ in
  • Mercy and the leading of the Holy Ghost in Grace; and that as at last,
  • the son not only found his father but found his lost sonship--yet a
  • better sonship than ever he had known before--so the soul comes at last
  • to find, more and more fully, that new sonship which is of its nature,
  • yet is more than its nature. For it finds the nature oneness which by
  • creation it had with the Son of God, enhanced and for ever sustained by
  • grace.
  • Sometimes, truly, the Mystical doctrine leads by tracks that are not
  • easily followed, but it is perhaps only when her views are regarded in
  • single parts, that any harm could be found in Julian's statements--all
  • qualified as they are by her "as to my sight." At first indeed it may
  • startle one to read of her saints that are known in the Church and in
  • Heaven "by their sins," to hear that the wounds left by sin are made
  • "medicines" on earth and turned to "worships" in Heaven; but then
  • we remember the joy that shall be in Heaven over "one sinner that
  • repenteth," the love that loves much because much is forgiven. And yet
  • we remember the little children in _their_ high faith and love and
  • innocent days; and of such is the Kingdom of God. But the Child, with
  • many "fair virtues," albeit imperfect, was likewise Julian's type of
  • the Christian soul: "I understood no higher stature in this life than
  • Childhood."
  • "To know our own soul"--it behoveth us to know our own soul--our
  • high-nature soul, which is enclosed in God, and also our soul on the
  • earth which Christ-Jesus inhabits, which has in it the "medley": "we
  • have in us our Lord Jesus uprisen, we have in us the wretchedness and
  • the mischief of Adam's falling, dying" (lii.). But elsewhere Julian
  • gives this name "our own soul" to the Church, seeing the Church
  • likewise as the dwelling and working-place of Christ (lxii.). She has
  • been speaking of the Divine Wisdom being as it were the Mother of the
  • soul, and now she seems to lead us to the Church as to the Nursery
  • where He tends His children. "For one single person may oftentimes
  • be broken, but the whole Body of Holy Church was never broken, nor
  • ever shall be, without end. And therefore a sure thing it is, a good
  • and a gracious, to will meekly and mightily to be fastened to our
  • Mother, Holy Church, that is Christ Jesus. For the Food of Mercy that
  • is His dearworthy blood and precious water is plenteous to make us
  • fair and clean; the sweet gracious hands of our Mother be ready and
  • diligently about us. For He in all this working useth the office of a
  • kind nurse that hath not else to do but to entend about the salvation
  • of her child" (lxi.). Each soul is indeed the soul of a person and
  • most intimately knows itself in its personal experience, through which
  • indeed alone it can come to knowledge of others. Yet the single soul
  • knows itself _best_ in the souls of all the saints, in the fellowship
  • of the "Blessed Common," where every virtue is found, not in each, at
  • this time, but in _all_--not now in the perfect height nor the fairest
  • flowering, but at growth in that ground where each plant holds some
  • likeness to Christ.
  • With Julian the Christian Faith is not a thing added to the Mystical
  • sight: these are, as again and again she says, seen both as one. It
  • is the _inherent_ Christianity of her system that makes her teaching
  • always, in a large way, practical. For the system came at first to
  • be seen by prayerful searching made out of her practical need of an
  • answer to the problem of sin and sorrow; the Mystical Vision came with
  • "contrition, compassion, and longing after God," those wounds that
  • her contrite, pitiful, longing heart had desired should be made more
  • deep in her life. It is through the work of grace that Julian reaches
  • back to the gift of nature, its ground; and from the depths of this
  • root-ground she rises soon again to the "springing and spreading"
  • grace. So in the First of her Shewings the "higher" truth is seen:
  • "we are all in Him beclosed," but in the Last--the conclusion and
  • confirmation of all--the lower, yet nearer, truth, which _all_ may
  • know: "and He is beclosed in us." And speaking of this dwelling within
  • the soul she speaks of His working us all into Him: "in which working
  • He willeth that we be His helpers, giving to Him all our entending,
  • learning His lores, keeping His laws, desiring that all be done that He
  • doeth; truly trusting In Him" (lvii.).
  • Julian had prayed to feel Christ's dying pains, if it should be God's
  • will, in order that she might feel compassion, and the visionary sight
  • of His pain in the Face of the Crucifix filled her with pain as it grew
  • upon her. "How might any pain be more to me than to see Him that is
  • all my life, all my bliss, and all my joy suffer?" Yet the Shewing of
  • Pain was but the introduction to, and for a time the accompaniment of,
  • the Revelation; the Revelation, itself, as a whole, was of Love--the
  • Goodness or Active Love of God. So the First Shewing, as the Ground of
  • all the rest, was a large view of this Goodness as the Ground of all
  • Being. Although through these earlier Shewings the Saviour's bodily
  • pain is felt by Julian so fully in "mind" that she feels it indeed
  • as if it were bodily anguish she bore, it is in this very experience
  • that the shewing of Joy is made to her spirit. So when in the opening
  • of the Revelation she tells of beholding the Passion of Christ, her
  • first unexpected word is of sudden joy from the inner sight of the
  • Love that God is: the sight of the Trinity:--"And in the same Shewing
  • suddenly the Trinity fulfilled my heart most of joy. (For where JESUS
  • appeareth, the blessed Trinity is understood, as to my sight.)" And
  • even as Julian finds afterwards that the Last Word of the Revelation is
  • the same as the First: "_Thou shalt not be overcome_," so the opening
  • Sight already shews her that which shall be revealed all through, for
  • learning of "more in the same," and uplifts her heart to the fulness
  • of joy that is shewn at the close. For she feels that this shock, as
  • it were, of Revelation--this sudden joy of seeing Love in the midst of
  • earth's evil, beyond and beneath and in the pain that is passing, is
  • the entrance into the joy of the Lord. "Suddenly the Trinity fulfilled
  • my heart with utmost joy.--And so I understood it shall be in heaven
  • without end to all that shall come there" (iv.). So at the close, when
  • the vision was not of the Love Divine in that bending Face beneath the
  • Crown of Thorns, but of the human love that shall spring up to meet
  • the Divine out of the lowness of earth,--the vision of how from this
  • body of death, as from an unsightly, shapeless, and stagnant mass of
  • quagmire, there "sprang a full fair creature, a little Child, fully
  • shapen and formed, agile and lively, whiter than lily; which swiftly
  • glided up into heaven"--the spiritual shewing to the soul is this:
  • "_Suddenly thou shalt be taken from all thy pain ... and thou shalt
  • come up above and thou shalt have me ... and thou shalt be fulfilled
  • of love and of bliss_" (lxiv.). And so in that early experience of
  • Julian's when in her love, abandoned to pity and worship, she would
  • not look up to Heaven from the Cross, it was also the inward sight by
  • the higher part of her soul of the higher part of Christ's life, that
  • Heavenly Love that could only rejoice, that overcame her frailty of
  • flesh unwilling to suffer, and made her choose "only Jesus in weal and
  • in woe." "Thou art my Heaven" (xix.-lv.). "All the Trinity wrought
  • in the Passion of Jesus Christ," though only the Son of the Virgin
  • suffered, and in seeing this, Julian saw "the Bliss of Christ's works,"
  • "the joy that is in the blissful Trinity [by reason] of the Passion of
  • Christ"; "the Father willing all, the Son working all, the Holy Ghost
  • confirming all."
  • This complexity of the Divine-Human life in the Son of God, this union
  • in Christ Jesus of serene untouched blessedness in the heavenly regions
  • of His spirit with His bearing, in the active joy of a "glad giver,"
  • all the sin and sorrow of the world, is revealed as the comfort and
  • confidence of man, whose own deepest experience is love that suffers,
  • whose highest worship therefore must be of Love that is strong to
  • suffer.
  • It was a double joy that was shewn in Christ besides the bliss of the
  • impassible Godhead, which is the bliss of Love without all time and
  • beyond all deeds. For there was joy in the Passion itself: "_If I
  • might suffer more, I would suffer more_," and joy in its fruits: "_If
  • thou art pleased, I am pleased_." Thus, too, we are told of three ways
  • in which our Lord would have us behold His Passion: first, "the hard
  • pains He suffered on earth"; second, "the love that made Him to suffer
  • passeth as far all His pains as Heaven is above earth"; third, "the joy
  • and the bliss that made Him to be well-satisfied in it."--"With a glad
  • countenance He looked unto His wounded Side, rejoicing" (xxii., xxiii.,
  • xxiv.).
  • From the sight of Love that is higher than pain comes the sight of
  • Love that is deeper than sin. Julian had had the mystical shewing that
  • God is all that is good,[6] and is only good, is the life of all that
  • is, and doeth all that is done, and she had reasoned, as others before
  • her had reasoned, that therefore "sin hath no substance" and "sin is
  • no deed." But perhaps it is those that are most concerned with God in
  • creature things, that suffer most shaking from the sight of evil. Those
  • that seek God's Kingdom in this present world, finding "the dark places
  • of the earth" full of the habitations of cruelty, have continually the
  • enemy as with a sword in their bones saying within them: "Where is now
  • thy God?" "I saw," says Julian, "that He is in all things. I beheld and
  • considered, with a soft dread, and thought: _What is sin?_" (xi.). So
  • also it is immediately after the coming of the mystical Shewing made
  • "yet more highly": "_It is I, it is I, it is I that am all_," that the
  • memory of her own experience is brought to her and she sees how in
  • her longings after God, who is all the time so close about us, around
  • us and within,--she had always been hindered from seeing and reaching
  • Him fully by the darkening, disturbing power of sin. "And so I looked
  • generally upon us all, and methought: _If sin had not been, we should
  • have all been clean, and like to our Lord as He made us_" (xxvii.).
  • Thus came again the stirring of that old question over which "afore
  • this time often I wondered," with "mourning and sorrow," "why the
  • beginning of sin was not letted--for then, methought, all should have
  • been well."
  • To this darkness, crying to God, the light came first as by a soft
  • general dawning of comfort for faith. "_Sin is behoveable_ (it behoved
  • that sin should be suffered to rise) _but all shall be well, and all
  • shall be well, and all manner of things shall be well._" Yet Julian,
  • unable to take comfort to her heart over that which was still so dark
  • to her intellect, stands "beholding things general, troublously and
  • mourning," saying thus in her thoughts: "_Ah good Lord, how might all
  • be_ well, for the great hurt that is come by sin to the creature?"
  • (xxix.).
  • The answer to this double question as to sin and pain is the central
  • theme of the Revelation, though much is still hidden and much is but
  • dimly revealed as yet to faith. In brief account, the sight, enough
  • for us now, is this: "Mercy, by love, suffereth us to fail [of love]
  • in measure, and in as much as we fail, in so much we die: for it needs
  • must be that we die in so much as we fail of the sight and feeling of
  • God that is our life.... And grace worketh our dreadful failing into
  • plenteous, endless solace, and grace worketh our shameful falling
  • into high, worshipful rising; and grace worketh our sorrowful dying
  • into holy, blissful life" (xlviii.). "By the assay of this falling we
  • shall have an high marvellous knowing of love in God, without end. For
  • strong and marvellous is that love that may not and will not be broken
  • for trespass. And this is one understanding of our profit. Another
  • is the lowness and meekness that we shall get by the sight of our
  • falling" (lxi.). "And by this meek knowing after this manner, through
  • contrition and grace, we shall be broken from all that is not our Lord.
  • And then shall our blessed Saviour perfectly heal us and one us to Him"
  • (lxxviii.).
  • _Theodidacta, Profunda, Ecstatica_--so Julian has been designated;
  • perhaps she might in fuller truth be called _Theodidacta, Profunda,
  • Evangelica_. She is indeed a mystic, evangelical, practical. With all
  • her fellow-Christians and in the most deeply personal concern she
  • looks with a tender mind on the redeeming work of God by Christ in the
  • "glorious satisfaction" ("_Asseth_"), and in fervent response of love
  • and thankfulness trusts in the blessed Passion of Christ, and in His
  • sure keeping, and in all the restoring, fulfilling work by the Holy
  • Ghost. But after the Mystical manner she seeks "the beyond": that is,
  • while in no way leaving the works of mercy and grace she seeks to go
  • back to the ground or source of them, the Goodness of God,--yes, to God
  • Himself. "I could not have perceived of the part of Mercy but as it
  • were alone in Love." "The Passion was a noble worshipful deed done in a
  • time, but Love was without beginning, is, and shall be without ending."
  • The Mystical Vision is that which in outward nature sees the unseen
  • within the seen, but it is also that which in spiritual things sees
  • behind and beyond the temporal means, the eternal causes and ends
  • (vi.). And it is surely here in the spiritual things, in the heart
  • and centre of human existence, in the stress of sin and suffering,
  • rather than amongst the gentle growing things, and flaming lights,
  • and songs, and blameless creatures of Nature that the Beatific Vision
  • on earth is at its highest. For here are found united the _Evangel_
  • and the _Vision_ and the _Life_ of love. "There the soul is highest,
  • noblest, and worthiest, where it is lowest, meekest, and mildest":
  • it is not in nature's goodness alone that we have our life, "all our
  • life is in three," in nature, in mercy, in grace; "whereof we have
  • meekness, mildness, patience and pity" (lviii., lix.). Man's "spirit,"
  • the higher nature that Julian talks of, may indeed be there in the
  • Heavenly places, as an infant's angel lying in the Father's arms,
  • always beholding His Face in love's silence of waiting; but here in
  • earthly places is the Prodigal Son returning, here too is the Father's
  • embrace, and here is His earliest greeting of the son that was lost and
  • is found. And already here in the Kingdom of Heaven on Earth (where
  • _all_ grow pure in the sonship obedience of Jesus Christ), are those
  • that are kept from the first as little children, taken up in His arms
  • and suffered to sing their Hosannahs, which perfect His praise.
  • The Revelation of Love is all centred in the Passion, and looking on
  • the Passion in time the soul sees, in vision, the Lamb that was slain
  • from the foundation of the world, the mind conceives how before all
  • time the Divine Love took to itself in the Wisdom of God the mode of
  • Manhood, and in time created Man in the same, and how thus God could
  • be and do all that man could be and do, could exercise Love Divine in
  • human Faith and Courage: could "take our flesh" and live on the earth
  • as "the Man, Christ-Jesus," "in all points tempted like as we are,"
  • finding His daily Bread in the will of the Father, drinking with joy
  • of the Wine of life in the evening cup of Death. "Pain is passing,"
  • says Julian, but in passing it leads forth love in man to its deepest
  • living, its fairest height of pureness and strength and fulfilment.
  • Thus it behoved the Captain of man's salvation to have His perfection
  • here through suffering. It is the _Lamb_ in the midst of the Throne,
  • the Almighty Love that was slain, that is Shepherd to the Martyrs,
  • leading them unto living fountains of waters. He that bore the yoke
  • gives rest to the heavy-laden; blessed is He that mourned: for He
  • comforteth with His comfort.
  • So in the Mediæval story,[8] the highest Mystical Vision, the sight of
  • the Holy Grail, comes only to him that is pure from self, and looks on
  • the bleeding wound that sin has left in man, and is compassionate, and
  • gives himself to service and healing.--_Can ye_ drink _of the Cup I
  • drank of?_--Love's Cup that is Death and Life.--
  • Wine of Love's joy I see thy cup
  • Red to the trembling brim
  • With Life outpoured, once lifted up,
  • I drink, remembering Him.--
  • It is the mourners who are comforted: those that bear griefs of their
  • own, or bear griefs of others fully, do not despair, though the mere
  • onlooker may well despair. Thus the compassionate Julian's vision is of
  • _Comfort_--comfort not for herself "in special," but for "the general
  • Man"--for all her fellow-Christians. She who had long time mourned
  • for the hurt that is come by sin to the creature, came to the sight
  • of comfort not by turning her eyes away but by deeper compassion that
  • found through the very wounds the healing of Love on earth, the glory
  • of Love in Heaven. She was "filled with compassion for the Passion of
  • Christ," and thus she saw _His joy_; so afterwards, she tells, "I was
  • fulfilled in part with compassion of all mine even-Christians, for that
  • well, well-beloved people that shall be saved. For God's servants,
  • Holy Church, shall be shaken in sorrow and anguish and tribulation
  • in this world, as men shake a cloth in the wind. And as to this our
  • Lord answered in this manner: A great thing shall I make hereof in
  • Heaven of endless worship and everlasting joys. Yea so far forth as
  • this I saw: that our Lord joyeth of the tribulations of His servants,
  • with ruth and compassion." "For He saith: _I shall wholly break you
  • of your vain affections and of your vicious pride: and after that I
  • shall together gather you, and make you mild and meek, clean and holy,
  • by oneing to me_" (xxviii.). Sin is indeed "the sharpest scourge,"
  • "viler and more painful than hell, without comparison," "an horrible
  • thing to see for the loved soul that would be all fair and shining in
  • the sight of God, as Nature and Grace teacheth." And darkness, which
  • overhangs the soul while here it is "meddling with any part of sin,"
  • "so that we see not clearly the Blissful Countenance of our Lord," is
  • a lasting, life-long "natural penance" from God, the feeling of which
  • indeed does not depart with actual sinning: "for ever the more clearly
  • that the soul seeth this Blissful Countenance by grace of loving, the
  • more it longeth to see it in fulness" (lxxii.). All this is in man's
  • experience, with many other pains--pains which in individual lives have
  • no proportionate relation to sin, though, in general, "sin is cause of
  • pain" and "pain purgeth."--("_For I tell thee, howsoever thou do thou
  • shalt have woe_"), (lxxvii., xxvii.). But the Comfort Revealed shews
  • how sin, which "hath no part of being" and "could not be known but by
  • the pain it is cause of," (sin which in this view may be compared to
  • the nails of the Passion--mere dead matter, though with power to wound
  • unto death for a time the blessed Life), sin, which is failure of human
  • love,--leaves, notwithstanding all its horror, an opening for a fuller
  • influx of Divine love and strength.[9] And as to _darkness_, "seeking
  • is as good as beholding, for the time that God will suffer the soul to
  • be in travail" (x.). And as to tribulation of every kind, "the Passion
  • of our Lord is comfort to us against all this, and so is His blessed
  • will" (xxvii.).
  • The parts may seem to come by chance and to be "amiss," but the whole,
  • and in the whole each part, is ordered. "And when we be all brought
  • up above, then shall we see clearly in God the secret things which be
  • now hid to us. Then shall none of us be stirred to say: _Lord, if it
  • had been thus, then it had been full well_: but we shall all say with
  • _one_ voice: _Lord, blessed mayst Thou be, for it is thus: it is well;
  • and now we see verily that all things are done as it was then ordained
  • before that anything was made_" (xi., lxxxv.). "Moreover He that shall
  • be our bliss when we are there, is our Keeper while we are here"; and
  • the Last Word of the Revelation is the same as the First; "_Thou shalt
  • not be overcome._" "He said not: _Thou shalt not be tempested, thou
  • shalt not be travailed, thou shalt not be distressed_; but He said:
  • _Thou shalt not be overcome._"
  • This is God's comfort. And that here, meanwhile, we should take His
  • comfort is Julian's chief desire and instruction. For Julian, who
  • speaking so much of sin as a strange and troubling sight, yet gives as
  • examples of sin only a slothful mistrusting despondency,--speaks indeed
  • of faith and hope and charity, compassion and meekness, but scarcely
  • _exhorts_ except to the cheerful enduring of tribulation. So she gives
  • counsel as to "rejoicing more in His whole love than sorrowing in our
  • often fallings"; as to "living gladly and merrily for love's sake"
  • in our penance of darkness (lxxii.-lxxxi.). And in general, for all
  • experiences of life, "It is God's will that we take His promises and
  • His comfortings as largely and as mightily as we may take them, and
  • also He willeth that we take our abiding and our troubles as lightly as
  • we may take them, and set them at nought" (lxiv., lxv., xv.).
  • "We are all one in comfort," says Julian, "all the gracious comfort
  • was for all mine even-Christians." Sin separates, pain isolates, but
  • salvation and comfort unite.
  • And lastly, in this mystical vision of the oneness of man with God
  • in Christ, man is seen not only as united in himself in the diverse
  • parts of his nature, and as one with his fellow man, but as joined
  • to that which is below him. How often of one good and another, as of
  • that fair and sacred "service of the Mother"--"nearest, readiest, and
  • surest"--"in the creatures by whom it is done," do we hear Julian's
  • confident word of Sacramental declaration: "_It is Christ_." "For God
  • is all that is good, as to my sight, and God hath made all that is
  • made: and he that loveth generally all his even-Christians for God, he
  • loveth all that is. For in Mankind that shall be saved is comprehended
  • all: that is to say, all that is made and the Maker of all. For in Man
  • is God, and God is in all. And I hope," adds Julian, in words that
  • are fitting to take for her courteous, her tender, "_Good Speed_" ere
  • we pass to her book--altogether like her as they are, even to the
  • careful, conditional "if" (for _nothing,_ not even comfort, behoves
  • to be "overdone much"), "I hope by the grace of God he that beholdeth
  • it thus shall be truly taught and mightily comforted, if he needeth
  • comfort" (ix.).
  • _Deus ubique est, et totus ubique est._ All things are gathered up in
  • Man, and Man is gathered up in Christ; and Christ is gathered up in the
  • Bosom of the Father. So the world of the lower creation makes promise:
  • _All things are yours_; and the Church says over its offering, lifted
  • up: _Ye are Christ's_; and from the stillness the voice of peace is
  • heard: _And Christ is God's_. "All the promises of God in HIM are _Yea_
  • and in HIM _Amen_, unto the glory of God by us." All the promises of
  • God: the blossom that floated to the ground; "the lily of a day" that
  • "fell and died that night"; the "little Child, whiter than lily, that
  • swiftly glided up into Heaven"--all the utterances silenced here--in
  • Him are _Yea_ and in Him _Amen: Yea_ on earth and _Amen_ for ever. "_He
  • turneth the shadow of death into the morning._"
  • _May_ 1901.
  • [1] _Theologia Germanica_, Chap. 1.
  • [2] Blake's Poems.
  • [3] _Memorabilia of Jesus_, by W. Peyton, p. 33.
  • [4] Gilchrist's _Life and Works of William Blake_, vol. ii.
  • [5] _Amor de Caritade_, by Jacopone da Todi (formerly ascribed to S.
  • Francis of Assisi).
  • [6] "_Quid me interrogas de bono? Unus est bonus, Deus._"--S. Matt.
  • xix. 17.
  • [8] _A Key to Wagner's Parsifal_, by H. von Wolzogen, tr. by Ashton
  • Ellis.
  • [9] Goodness is Active Love--love that moves. Drawing back from the
  • finite creature, as a wave from the shore, it "suffers" sin's void
  • to appear. But this lack of itself is allowed for the time, that so
  • returning again in its force, to which evil is nothing, it may cover
  • the desolate nature with deepness and highness and fulness unknown
  • before. (See lvii.).
  • REVELATIONS OF DIVINE LOVE
  • CHAPTER I
  • "A Revelation of Love--in Sixteen Shewings"
  • This is a Revelation of Love that Jesus Christ, our endless bliss, made
  • in Sixteen Shewings, or Revelations particular.
  • Of the which the First is of His precious crowning with thorns;
  • and therewith was comprehended and specified the Trinity, with the
  • Incarnation, and unity betwixt God and man's soul; with many fair
  • shewings of endless wisdom and teachings of love: in which all the
  • Shewings that follow be grounded and oned.[1]
  • The Second is the changing of colour of His fair face in token of His
  • dearworthy[2] Passion.
  • The Third is that our Lord God, Allmighty Wisdom, All-Love, right as
  • verily as He hath made everything that is, all-so verily He doeth and
  • worketh all-thing that is done.
  • The Fourth is the scourging of His tender body, with plenteous shedding
  • of His blood.
  • The Fifth is that the Fiend is overcome by the precious Passion of
  • Christ.
  • The Sixth is the worshipful[3] thanking by our Lord God in which He
  • rewardeth His blessed servants in Heaven.
  • The Seventh is [our] often feeling of weal and woe; (the feeling
  • of weal is gracious touching and lightening, with true assuredness
  • of endless joy; the feeling of woe is temptation by heaviness and
  • irksomeness of our fleshly living;) with ghostly understanding that we
  • are kept all as securely in Love in woe as in weal, by the Goodness of
  • God.
  • The Eighth is of the last pains of Christ, and His cruel dying.
  • The Ninth is of the pleasing which is in the Blissful Trinity by the
  • hard Passion of Christ and His rueful dying: in which joy and pleasing
  • He willeth that we be solaced and mirthed[4] with Him, till when we
  • come to the fulness in Heaven.
  • The Tenth is, our Lord Jesus sheweth in love His blissful heart even
  • cloven in two, rejoicing.
  • The Eleventh is an high ghostly Shewing of His dearworthy Mother.
  • The Twelfth is that our Lord is most worthy Being.
  • The Thirteenth is that our Lord God willeth we have great regard to
  • all the deeds that He hath done: in the great nobleness of the making
  • of all things; and the excellency of man's making, which is above all
  • his works; and the precious Amends[5] that He hath made for man's sin,
  • turning all our blame into endless worship.[6] In which Shewing also
  • our Lord saith: _Behold and see! For by the same Might, Wisdom, and
  • Goodness that I have done all this, by the same Might, Wisdom, and
  • Goodness I shall make well all that is not well; and thou shalt see
  • it._ And in this He willeth that we keep us in the Faith and truth of
  • Holy Church, not desiring to see into His secret things now, save as it
  • belongeth to us in this life.
  • The Fourteenth is that our Lord is the Ground of our Prayer. Herein
  • were seen two properties: the one is rightful prayer, the other is
  • steadfast trust; which He willeth should both be alike large; and thus
  • our prayer pleaseth Him and He of His Goodness fulfilleth it.
  • The Fifteenth is that we shall suddenly be taken from all our pain and
  • from all our woe, and of His Goodness we shall come up above, where we
  • shall have our Lord Jesus for our meed and be fulfilled with joy and
  • bliss in Heaven.
  • The Sixteenth is that the Blissful Trinity, our Maker, in Christ Jesus
  • our Saviour endlessly dwelleth in our soul, worshipfully ruling and
  • protecting all things, us mightily and wisely saving and keeping, for
  • love; and we shall not be overcome of our Enemy.
  • [1] made one, united.
  • [2] precious, honoured.
  • [3] honour-bestowing.
  • [4] made glad.
  • [5] MS. "Asseth" = Satisfaction, making-enough.
  • [6] honour, glory.
  • CHAPTER II
  • "A simple creature unlettered.--Which creature afore desired three
  • gifts of God"
  • These Revelations were shewed to a simple creature unlettered,[1] the
  • year of our Lord 1373, the Thirteenth day of May. Which creature [had]
  • afore desired three gifts of God. The First was mind of His Passion;
  • the Second was bodily sickness in youth, at thirty years of age; the
  • Third was to have of God's gift three wounds.
  • As to the First, methought I had some feeling in the Passion of Christ,
  • but yet I desired more by the grace of God. Methought I would have
  • been that time with Mary Magdalene, and with other that were Christ's
  • lovers, and therefore I desired a bodily sight wherein I might have
  • more knowledge of the bodily pains of our Saviour and of the compassion
  • of our Lady and of all His true lovers that saw, that time, His pains.
  • For I would be one of them and suffer with Him. Other sight nor shewing
  • of God desired I never none, till the soul were disparted from the
  • body. The cause of this petition was that after the shewing I should
  • have the more true mind in the Passion of Christ.
  • The Second came to my mind with contrition; [I] freely desiring that
  • sickness [to be] so hard as to death, that I might in that sickness
  • receive all my rites of Holy Church, myself thinking that I should die,
  • and that all creatures might suppose the same that saw me: for I would
  • have no manner of comfort of earthly life. In this sickness I desired
  • to have all manner of pains bodily and ghostly that I should have if
  • I should die, (with all the dreads and tempests of the fiends) except
  • the outpassing of the soul. And this I meant[2] for [that] I would be
  • purged, by the mercy of God, and afterward live more to the worship of
  • God because of that sickness. And that for the more furthering[3] in my
  • death: for I desired to be soon with my God.
  • These two desires of the Passion and the sickness I desired with a
  • condition, saying thus: _Lord, Thou knowest what I would,--if it be
  • Thy will that I have it--; and if it be not Thy will, good Lord, be not
  • displeased: for I will nought but as Thou wilt._
  • For the Third [petition], by the grace of God and teaching of Holy
  • Church I conceived a mighty desire to receive three wounds in my life:
  • that is to say, the wound of very contrition, the wound of kind[4]
  • compassion, and the wound of steadfast[5] longing toward God.[6] And
  • all this last petition I asked without any condition.
  • These two desires aforesaid passed from my mind, but the third dwelled
  • with me continually.
  • [1] "that cowde no letter" = unskilled in letters.
  • [2] thought of, designed.
  • [3] MS. "speed."
  • [4] _i.e._ natural.
  • [5] MS. "wilful" = earnest, with set will.
  • [6] For these wounds see xvii. p. 40, xxvii. p. 56, xxviii., lxxii. and
  • xxxix.
  • CHAPTER III
  • "I desired to suffer with Him"
  • And when I was thirty years old and a half, God sent me a bodily
  • sickness, in which I lay three days and three nights; and on the fourth
  • night I took all my rites of Holy Church, and weened not to have lived
  • till day. And after this I languored forth[1] two days and two nights,
  • and on the third night I weened oftentimes to have passed;[2] and so
  • weened they that were with me.
  • And being in youth as yet, I thought it great sorrow to die;--but for
  • nothing that was in earth that meliked to live for, nor for no pain
  • that I had fear of: for I trusted in God of His mercy. But it was to
  • have lived that I might have loved God better, and longer time, that I
  • might have the more knowing and loving of God in bliss of Heaven. For
  • methought all the time that I had lived here so little and so short in
  • regard of that endless bliss,--I thought [it was as] nothing. Wherefore
  • I thought: _Good Lord, may my living no longer be to Thy worship!_[3]
  • And I understood by my reason and by my feeling of my pains that I
  • should die; and I assented fully with all the will of my heart to be at
  • God's will.
  • Thus I dured till day, and by then my body was dead from the middle
  • downwards, as to my feeling. Then was I minded to be set upright,
  • backward leaning, with help,--for to have more freedom of my heart to
  • be at God's will, and thinking on God while my life would last.
  • My Curate was sent for to be at my ending, and by that time when he
  • came I had set my eyes, and might[4] not speak. He set the Cross before
  • my face and said: _I have brought thee the Image of thy Maker and
  • Saviour: look thereupon and comfort thee therewith_.
  • Methought I was well [as it was], for my eyes were set uprightward unto
  • Heaven, where I trusted to come by the mercy of God; but nevertheless I
  • assented to set my eyes on the face of the Crucifix, if I might;[5] and
  • so I did. For methought I might longer dure to look even-forth[6] than
  • right up.
  • After this my sight began to fail, and it was all dark about me in
  • the chamber, as if it had been night, save in the Image of the Cross
  • whereon I beheld a common light; and I wist not how. All that was
  • away from[7] the Cross was of horror to me, as if it had been greatly
  • occupied by the fiends.
  • After this the upper[8] part of my body began to die, so far forth
  • that scarcely I had any feeling;--with shortness of breath. And then I
  • weened in sooth to have passed.
  • And in this [moment] suddenly all my pain was taken from me, and I was
  • as whole (and specially in the upper part of my body) as ever I was
  • afore.
  • I marvelled at this sudden change; for methought it was a privy working
  • of God, and not of nature. And yet by the feeling of this ease I
  • trusted never the more to live; nor was the feeling of this ease any
  • full ease unto me: for methought I had liefer have been delivered from
  • this world.
  • Then came suddenly to my mind that I should desire the second wound of
  • our Lord's gracious gift: that my body might be fulfilled with mind
  • and feeling of His blessed Passion. For I would that His pains were
  • my pains, with compassion and afterward longing to God. But in this I
  • desired never bodily sight nor shewing of God, but compassion such as a
  • kind[9] soul might have with our Lord Jesus, that for love would be a
  • mortal man: and therefore I desired to suffer with Him.
  • [1] "I langorid forth" = languished on.
  • [2] I thought often that I was about to die.
  • [3] Or it may be, at in de Cressy's version: _May my living be no
  • longer to Thy worship?_
  • [4] _i.e._ could.
  • [5] _i.e._ could.
  • [6] straight forward.
  • [7] MS. "beside."
  • [8] MS. "over."
  • [9] "kinde," true to its nature that was made after the likeness of
  • the Creating Son of God, the type and the Head of Mankind,--therefore
  • loving, and sympathetic with Him, and compassionate of His earthly
  • sufferings: Who, Himself, for Love's sake, suffered as man.
  • _THE FIRST REVELATION_
  • CHAPTER IV
  • "I saw ... as it were in the time of His Passion.... And in the same
  • Shewing suddenly the Trinity filled my heart with utmost joy"
  • In this [moment] suddenly I saw the red blood trickle down from under
  • the Garland hot and freshly and right plenteously, as it were in the
  • time of His Passion when the Garland of thorns was pressed on His
  • blessed head who was both God and Man, the same that suffered thus for
  • me. I conceived truly and mightily that it was Himself shewed it me,
  • without any mean.[1]
  • And in the same Shewing suddenly the Trinity fulfilled my heart most
  • of joy. And so I understood it shall be in heaven without end to all
  • that shall come there. For the Trinity is God: God is the Trinity; the
  • Trinity is our Maker and Keeper, the Trinity is our everlasting love
  • and everlasting joy and bliss, by our Lord Jesus Christ. And this was
  • shewed in the First [Shewing] and in all: for where Jesus appeareth,
  • the blessed Trinity is understood, as to my sight.
  • And I said: _Benedicite Domine!_ This I said for reverence in my
  • meaning, with mighty voice; and full greatly was astonied for wonder
  • and marvel that I had, that He that is so reverend and dreadful will be
  • so homely with a sinful creature living in wretched flesh.
  • This [Shewing] I took for the time of my temptation,--for methought by
  • the sufferance of God I should be tempted of fiends ere I died. Through
  • this sight of the blessed Passion, with the Godhead that I saw in
  • mine understanding, I knew well that _It_ was strength enough for me,
  • yea, and for all creatures living, against all the fiends of hell and
  • ghostly temptation.
  • In this [Shewing] He brought our blessed Lady to my understanding. I
  • saw her ghostly, in bodily likeness: a simple maid and a meek, young of
  • age and little waxen above a child, in the stature that she was when
  • she conceived. Also God shewed in part the wisdom and the truth of her
  • soul: wherein I understood the reverent beholding in which she beheld
  • her God and Maker, marvelling with great reverence that He would be
  • born of her that was a simple creature of His making. And this wisdom
  • and truth: knowing the greatness of her Maker and the littleness of
  • herself that was made,--caused her to say full meekly to Gabriel: _Lo
  • me, God's handmaid!_ In this sight[2] I understood soothly that she
  • is more than all that God made beneath her in worthiness and grace;
  • for above her is nothing that is made but the blessed [Manhood][3] of
  • Christ, as to my sight.
  • [1] intermediary--thing or person. See vi., xix., xxxv., lv.
  • [2] Either: _In this sight_--Shewing--_of her;_ or _In this her
  • sight_,--insight--beholding (vii., xliv., lxv.). See Rev. xi. ch. xxv.,
  • "For our Lord shewed me nothing in special but our Lady Saint Mary;
  • and her He shewed three times." The first shewing is here (a _sight_
  • referred to in ch. vii. and elsewhere); the second, in ch. xviii.; the
  • third, in ch. xxv.
  • [3] This word is in S. de Cressy's edition.
  • CHAPTER V
  • "God, of Thy Goodness, give me Thyself;--only in Thee I have all"
  • In this same time our Lord shewed me a spiritual[1] sight of His homely
  • loving.
  • I saw that He is to us everything that is good and comfortable for us:
  • He is our clothing that for love wrappeth us, claspeth us, and all
  • encloseth[2] us for tender love, that He may never leave us; being to
  • us all-thing that is good, as to mine understanding.
  • Also in this He shewed me a little thing, the quantity of an hazel-nut,
  • in the palm of my hand; and it was as round as a ball. I looked
  • thereupon with eye of my understanding, and thought: _What may this
  • be?_ And it was answered generally thus: _it is all that is made._
  • I marvelled how it might last, for methought it might suddenly
  • have fallen to naught for little[ness]. And I was answered in my
  • understanding: _It lasteth, and ever shall [last] for that God loveth
  • it._ And so All-thing hath the Being by the love of God.
  • In this Little Thing I saw three properties. The first is that God
  • made it, the second is that God loveth it, the third, that God keepeth
  • it. But what is to me verily the Maker, the Keeper, and the Lover,--I
  • cannot tell; for till I am Substantially oned[3] to Him, I may never
  • have full rest nor very bliss: that is to say, till I be so fastened to
  • Him, that there is right nought that is made betwixt my God and me.
  • It needeth us to have knowing of the littleness of creatures and to
  • hold as nought[4] all-thing that is made, for to love and have God that
  • is unmade. For this is the cause why we be not all in ease of heart
  • and soul: that we seek here rest in those things that are so little,
  • wherein is no rest, and know not our God that is All-mighty, All-wise,
  • All-good. For He is the Very Rest. God willeth to be known, and it
  • pleaseth Him that we rest in Him; for all that is beneath Him sufficeth
  • not us. And this is the cause why that no soul is rested till it is
  • made nought as to all[5] things that are made. When it is willingly
  • made nought, for love, to have Him that is all, then is it able to
  • receive spiritual rest.
  • Also our Lord God shewed that it is full great pleasance to Him that
  • a helpless soul come to Him simply and plainly and homely. For this
  • is the natural yearnings of the soul, by the touching of the Holy
  • Ghost (as by the understanding that I have in this Shewing): _God, of
  • Thy Goodness, give me Thyself: for Thou art enough to me, and I may
  • nothing ask that is less that may be full worship to Thee; and if I ask
  • anything that is less, ever me wanteth,--but only in Thee I have all._
  • And these words are full lovely to the soul, and full near touch they
  • the will of God and His Goodness. For His Goodness comprehendeth all
  • His creatures and all His blessed works, and overpasseth[6] without
  • end. For He is the endlessness, and He hath made us only to Himself,
  • and restored us by His blessed Passion, and keepeth us in His blessed
  • love; and all this of His Goodness.
  • [1] MS. "ghostly," and so, generally, throughout the MS.
  • [2] "Becloseth," and so generally.
  • [3] _i.e._ in essence united.
  • [4] "to nowtyn."
  • [5] "nowtid of." de Cressy: "_naughted_ (emptied)."
  • [6] surpasseth.
  • CHAPTER VI
  • "The Goodness of God is the highest prayer, and it cometh down to the
  • lowest part of our need"
  • This Shewing was made to learn our soul wisely to cleave to the
  • Goodness of God.
  • And in that time the custom of our praying was brought to mind: how we
  • use for lack of understanding and knowing of Love, to take many means
  • [whereby to beseech Him].[1]
  • Then saw I truly that it is more worship to God, and more very delight,
  • that we faithfully[2] pray to Himself of His Goodness and cleave
  • thereunto by His Grace, with true understanding, and steadfast by love,
  • than if we took all the means that heart can think. For if we took all
  • these means, it is too little, and not full worship to God: but in His
  • Goodness is all the whole, and _there_ faileth right nought.
  • For this, as I shall tell, came to my mind in the same time: We pray
  • to God for [the sake of] His holy flesh and His precious blood, His
  • holy Passion, His dearworthy death and wounds: and all the blessed
  • kindness,[3] the endless life that we have of all this, is His
  • Goodness. And we pray Him for [the sake of] His sweet Mother's love
  • that Him bare; and all the help we have of her is of His Goodness. And
  • we pray by His holy Cross that he died on, and all the virtue and the
  • help that we have of the Cross, it is of His Goodness. And on the same
  • wise, all the help that we have of special saints and all the blessed
  • Company of Heaven, the dearworthy love and endless friendship that
  • we have of them, it is of His Goodness. For God of His Goodness hath
  • ordained means to help us, full fair and many: of which the chief and
  • principal mean is the blessed nature that He took of the Maid, with all
  • the means that go afore and come after which belong to our redemption
  • and to endless salvation. Wherefore it pleaseth Him that we seek Him
  • and worship through means, understanding that He is the Goodness of all.
  • For the Goodness of God is the highest prayer, and it cometh down to
  • the lowest part of our need. It quickeneth our soul and bringeth it on
  • life, and maketh it for to waxen in grace and virtue. It is nearest in
  • nature; and readiest in grace: for _it_ is the same grace that the soul
  • seeketh, and ever shall seek till we know verily that He hath us all in
  • Himself enclosed.
  • For He hath no despite of that He hath made, nor hath He any disdain to
  • serve us at the simplest office that to our body belongeth in nature,
  • for love of the soul that He hath made to His own likeness.
  • For as the body is clad in the cloth, and the flesh in the skin, and
  • the bones in the flesh, and the heart in the whole,[4] so are we, soul
  • and body, clad in the Goodness of God, and enclosed. Yea, and more
  • homely: for all these may waste and wear away, but the Goodness of God
  • is ever whole; and more near to us, without any likeness; for truly our
  • Lover desireth that our soul cleave to Him with all its might, and that
  • we be ever-more cleaving to His Goodness. For of all things that heart
  • may think, this pleaseth most God, and soonest speedeth [the soul].
  • For our soul is so specially loved of Him that is highest, that it
  • overpasseth the knowing of all creatures: that is to say, there is no
  • creature that is made that may [fully] know[5] how much and how sweetly
  • and how tenderly our Maker loveth us. And therefore we may with grace
  • and His help stand in spiritual beholding, with everlasting marvel of
  • this high, overpassing, inestimable[6] Love that Almighty God hath
  • to us of His Goodness. And therefore we may ask of our Lover with
  • reverence all that we will.
  • For our natural[7] Will is to have God, and the Good Will of God is to
  • have us; and we may never cease from willing nor from longing till we
  • have Him in fullness of joy: and then may we no more desire.
  • For He willeth that we be occupied in knowing and loving till the time
  • that we shall be fulfilled in Heaven; and therefore was this lesson of
  • Love shewed, with all that followeth, as ye shall see. For the strength
  • and the Ground of all was shewed in the First Sight. For of all things
  • the beholding and the loving of the Maker maketh the soul to seem less
  • in his own sight, and most filleth him with reverent dread and true
  • meekness; with plenty of charity to his even-Christians.[8]
  • [1] MS. "To make many menys." So in _Letter_ 385 of _The Paston
  • Letters_, 1422-1509 A.D.--"Our Soverayn Lord hath wonne the feld, &
  • uppon the Munday next after Palmesunday, he was resseved in York with
  • gret solempnyte & processyons. And the Mair & Comons of the said cite
  • mad ther menys to have grace be [by] Lord Montagu & Lord Barenars,
  • which be for the Kyngs coming in to the said cite, which graunted hem
  • [them] grace." _Letter_ 472 (from Margaret Paston).--"Your ryth wele
  • willers have kounselyd me that I xuld kownsell you to maken other menys
  • than ye have made, to other folks, that wold spede your matyrs better
  • than they have done thatt ye have spoken to therof" (ed. by James
  • Gairdner, vol i.). See ch. iv. p. 8.
  • [2] _i.e._ trustingly.
  • [3] bond as of relationship.
  • [4] "the bouke" = the bulk, the thorax.
  • [5] "witten."
  • [6] or, as in S. de Cressy, "immeasurable." The word, however, looks
  • like "oninestimable" with the "on" blotted or erased.
  • [7] "kindly."
  • [8] "to his even cristen"--fellow-Christians ("even" = equal).
  • _Hamlet_, Act v. Sc. i. "great folk ... more than their even Christian."
  • CHAPTER VII
  • "The Shewing is not other than of faith, nor less nor more"
  • And [it was] to learn us this, as to mine understanding, [that] our
  • Lord God shewed our Lady Saint Mary in the same time: that is to say,
  • the high Wisdom and Truth _she_ had in beholding of her Maker so great,
  • so holy, so mighty, and so good. This greatness and this nobleness of
  • the beholding of God fulfilled her with reverent dread, and withal she
  • saw herself so little and so low, so simple and so poor, in regard
  • of[1] her Lord God, that this reverent dread fulfilled her with
  • meekness. And thus, by this ground [of meekness] she was fulfilled with
  • grace and with all manner of virtues, and overpasseth all creatures.
  • In all the time that He shewed this that I have told now in spiritual
  • sight, I saw the bodily sight lasting of the plenteous bleeding of the
  • Head. The great drops of blood fell down from under the Garland like
  • pellots, seeming as it had come out of the veins; and in the coming
  • out they were brown-red, for the blood was full thick; and in the
  • spreading-abroad they were bright-red; and when they came to the brows,
  • then they vanished; notwithstanding, the bleeding continued till many
  • things were seen and understood. The fairness and the lifelikeness
  • is like nothing but the same; the plenteousness is like to the drops
  • of water that fall off the eaves after a great shower of rain, that
  • fall so thick that no man may number them with bodily wit; and for the
  • roundness, they were like to the scale of herring, in the spreading on
  • the forehead. These three came to my mind in the time: pellots, for
  • roundness, in the coming out of the blood; the scale of herring, in the
  • spreading in the forehead, for roundness; the drops off eaves, for the
  • plenteousness innumerable.
  • This Shewing was quick and life-like, and horrifying and dreadful,
  • sweet and lovely. And of all the sight it was most comfort to me that
  • our God and Lord that is so reverend and dreadful, is so homely and
  • courteous: and this most fulfilled me with comfort and assuredness of
  • soul.
  • And to the understanding of this He shewed this open example:--
  • It is the most worship that a solemn King or a great Lord may do a poor
  • servant if he will be homely with him, and specially if he sheweth
  • it _himself_, of a full true meaning, and with a glad cheer, both
  • privately and in company. Then thinketh this poor creature thus: _And
  • what might this noble Lord do of more worship and joy to me than to
  • shew me that am so simple this marvellous homeliness? Soothly it is
  • more joy and pleasance to me than [if] he gave me great gifts and were
  • himself strange in manner._
  • This bodily example was shewed so highly that man's heart might be
  • ravished and almost forgetting itself for joy of the great homeliness.
  • Thus it fareth with our Lord Jesus and with us. For verily it is the
  • most joy that may be, as to my sight, that He that is highest and
  • mightiest, noblest and worthiest, is lowest and meekest, homeliest and
  • most courteous: and truly and verily this marvellous joy shall be shewn
  • us all when we see Him.
  • And this willeth our Lord that we seek for and trust to, joy and
  • delight in, comforting us and solacing us, as we may with His grace
  • and with His help, unto the time that we see it verily. For the most
  • fulness of joy that we shall have, as to my sight, is the marvellous
  • courtesy and homeliness of our Father, that is our Maker, in our Lord
  • Jesus Christ that is our Brother and our Saviour.
  • But this marvellous homeliness may no man fully see in this time of
  • life, save he have it of special shewing of our Lord, or of great
  • plenty of grace inwardly given of the Holy Ghost. But faith and belief
  • with charity deserveth the meed: and so it is had, by grace; for in
  • faith, with hope and charity, our life is grounded. The Shewing, made
  • to whom that God will, plainly teacheth the same, opened and declared,
  • with many privy points belonging to our Faith which be worshipful to
  • know. And when the Shewing which is given in a time is passed and hid,
  • then the faith keepeth [it] by grace of the Holy Ghost unto our life's
  • end. And thus through the Shewing it is not other than of faith, nor
  • less nor more; as it may be seen in our Lord's teaching in the same
  • matter, by that time that it shall come to the end.
  • [1] _i.e._ seen at the same time as, or in comparison with. See the
  • note to ch. iv. p. 9.
  • CHAPTER VIII
  • "In all this I was greatly stirred in charity to my fellow-Christians
  • that they might see and know the same that I saw"
  • And as long as I saw this sight of the plenteous bleeding of the Head I
  • might never cease from these words: _Benedicite Domine!_
  • In which Shewing I understood six things:--The first is, the tokens of
  • the blessed Passion and the plenteous shedding of His precious blood.
  • The second is, the Maiden that is His dearworthy Mother. The third is,
  • the blissful Godhead that ever was, is, and ever shall be: Almighty,
  • All-Wisdom, All-Love. The fourth is, all-thing that He hath made.--For
  • well I wot that heaven and earth and all that is made is great and
  • large, fair and good; but the cause why it shewed so little to my sight
  • was for that I saw it in the presence of Him that is the Maker of all
  • things: for to a soul that seeth the Maker of all, all that is made
  • seemeth full little.--The fifth is: He that made all things for love,
  • by the same love keepeth them, and shall keep them[1] without end.
  • The sixth is, that God is all that is good, as to my sight, and the
  • goodness that each thing hath, it is He.[2]
  • And all these our Lord shewed me in the first Sight, with time and
  • space to behold it. And the bodily sight stinted,[3] but the spiritual
  • sight dwelled in mine understanding, and I abode with reverent dread,
  • joying in that I saw. And I desired, as I durst, to see more, if it
  • were His will, or else [to see for] longer time the same.
  • In all this I was greatly stirred in charity to mine even-Christians,
  • that they might see and know the same that I saw: for I would it were
  • comfort to them. For all this Sight was shewed [with] general [regard].
  • Then said I to them that were about me: _It is to-day Doomsday with
  • me_. And this I said for that I thought to have died. (For that day
  • that a man dieth, he is judged[4] as shall be without end, as to mine
  • understanding.) This I said for that I would they might love God the
  • better, for to make them to have in mind that this life is short, as
  • they might see in example. For in all this time I weened to have died;
  • and that was marvel to me, and troublous partly: for methought this
  • Vision was shewed for them that should live. And that which I say of
  • me, I say in the person of all mine even-Christians: for I am taught in
  • the Spiritual Shewing of our Lord God that He meaneth so. And therefore
  • I pray you all for God's sake, and counsel you for your own profit,
  • that ye leave the beholding of a poor creature[5] that it was shewed
  • to, and mightily, wisely, and meekly behold God that of His courteous
  • love and endless goodness would shew it generally, in comfort of us
  • all. For it is God's will that ye take it with great joy and pleasance,
  • as if Jesus had shewed it to you all.
  • [1] "it is kept, and shall be."
  • [2] "God is althing that is gode, as to my sight, and the godenes that
  • al thing hath, it is he."
  • [3] _i.e._ ceased.
  • [4] "deemed."
  • [5] "a wretch."
  • CHAPTER IX
  • "If I look singularly to myself, I am right nought"
  • Because of the Shewing I am not good but if I love God the better: and
  • in as much as ye love God the better, it is more to you than to me. I
  • say[1] not this to them that be wise, for they wot it well; but I say
  • it to you that be simple, for ease and comfort: for we are all one
  • in comfort. For truly it was not shewed me that God loved me better
  • than the least soul that is in grace; for I am certain that there be
  • many that never had Shewing nor sight but of the common teaching of
  • Holy Church, that love God better than I. For if I look singularly to
  • myself, I am right nought; but in [the] general [Body] I am, I hope, in
  • oneness of charity with all mine even-Christians.
  • For in this oneness standeth the life of all mankind that shall be
  • saved. For God is all that is good, as to my sight, and God hath made
  • all that is made, and God loveth all that He hath made: and he that
  • loveth generally all his even-Christians for God, he loveth all that
  • is. For in mankind that shall be saved is comprehended all: that is to
  • say, all that is made and the Maker of all. For in man is God, and God
  • is in all. And I hope by the grace of God he that beholdeth it thus
  • shall be truly taught and mightily comforted, if he needeth comfort.
  • I speak of them that shall be saved, for in this time God shewed me
  • none other. But in all things I believe as Holy Church believeth,
  • preacheth, and teacheth. For the Faith of Holy Church, the which I
  • had aforehand understood and, as I hope, by the grace of God earnestly
  • kept in use and custom, stood continually in my sight: [I] willing and
  • meaning never to receive anything that might be contrary thereunto. And
  • with this intent I beheld the Shewing with all my diligence: for in all
  • this blessed Shewing I beheld it as one in God's meaning.[2]
  • All this was shewed by three [ways]: that is to say, by bodily sight,
  • and by word formed in mine understanding, and by spiritual sight. But
  • the spiritual sight I cannot nor may not shew it as openly nor as fully
  • as I would. But I trust in our Lord God Almighty that He shall of His
  • goodness, and for your love, make you to take it more spiritually and
  • more sweetly than I can or may tell it.
  • [1] "sey" = _say_ or _tell_.
  • [2] _i.e._ The teaching of the Faith and the teaching of the special
  • Shewing were both from God and were seen to be at one.
  • _THE SECOND REVELATION_
  • CHAPTER X
  • "God willeth to be seen and to be sought: to be abided and to be
  • trusted"
  • And after this I saw with bodily sight in the face of the crucifix
  • that hung before me, on the which I gazed continually, a part of His
  • Passion: despite, spitting and sullying, and buffetting, and many
  • languoring pains, more than I can tell, and often changing of colour.
  • And one time I saw half the face, beginning at the ear, over-gone with
  • dry blood till it covered to the mid-face. And after that the other
  • half [was] covered on the same wise, the whiles in this [first] part
  • [it vanished] even as it came.
  • This saw I bodily, troublously and darkly; and I desired more bodily
  • sight, to have seen more clearly. And I was answered in my reason: _If
  • God will shew thee more, He shall be thy light: thee needeth none but
  • Him._ For I saw Him sought.[1]
  • For we are now so blind and unwise that we never seek God till He
  • of His goodness shew Himself to us. And when we aught see of Him
  • graciously, then are we stirred by the same grace to seek with great
  • desire to see Him more blissfully.
  • And thus I saw Him, and sought Him; and I had Him, I wanted Him. And
  • this is, and should be, our common working in this [life], as to my
  • sight.
  • One time mine understanding was led down into the sea-ground, and there
  • I saw hills and dales green, seeming as it were moss-be-grown, with
  • wrack and gravel. Then I understood thus: that if a man or woman were
  • under the broad water, if he might have sight of God so as God is with
  • a man continually, he should be safe in body and soul, and take no
  • harm: and overpassing, he should have more solace and comfort than all
  • this world can tell. For He willeth we should believe that we see Him
  • continually though that to us it seemeth but little [of sight]; and in
  • this belief He maketh us evermore to gain grace. For He will be seen
  • and He will be sought: He will be abided and he will be trusted.
  • This Second Shewing was so low and so little and so simple, that my
  • spirits were in great travail in the beholding,--mourning, full of
  • dread, and longing: for I was some time in doubt whether it was a
  • Shewing. And then diverse times our good Lord gave me more sight,
  • whereby I understood truly that it was a Shewing. It was a figure and
  • likeness of our foul deeds' shame that our fair, bright, blessed Lord
  • bare for our sins: it made me to think of the Holy Vernacle[2] at
  • Rome, which He hath portrayed with His own blessed face when He was in
  • His hard Passion, with steadfast will going to His death, and often
  • changing of colour. Of the brownness and blackness, the ruefulness
  • and wastedness of this Image many marvel how it might be, since that
  • He portrayed it with His blessed Face who is the fairness of heaven,
  • flower of earth, and the fruit of the Maiden's womb. Then how might
  • this Image be so darkening in colour[3] and so far from fair?--I desire
  • to tell like as I have understood by the grace of God:--
  • We know in our Faith, and believe by the teaching and preaching of Holy
  • Church, that the blessed Trinity made Mankind to[4] His image and to
  • His likeness. In the same manner-wise we know that when man fell so
  • deep and so wretchedly by sin, there was none other help to restore
  • man but through Him that made man. And He that made man for love, by
  • the same love He would restore man to the same bliss, and overpassing;
  • and like as we were like-made to the Trinity in our first making, our
  • Maker would that we should be like Jesus Christ, Our Saviour, in heaven
  • without end, by the virtue of our again-making.
  • Then atwix these two, He would for love and worship of man make
  • Himself as like to man in this deadly life, in our foulness and our
  • wretchedness, as man might be without guilt. This is that which is
  • meant where it is said afore: it was the image and likeness of our foul
  • black deeds' shame wherein our fair, bright, blessed Lord God was hid.
  • But full certainly I dare say, and we ought to trow it, that so fair a
  • man was never none but He, till what time His fair colour was changed
  • with travail and sorrow and Passion and dying. Of this it is spoken in
  • the Eighth Revelation, where it treateth more of the same likeness. And
  • where it speaketh of the Vernacle of Rome, it meaneth by [reason of]
  • diverse changing of colour and countenance, sometime more comfortably
  • and life-like, sometime more ruefully and death-like, as it may be seen
  • in the Eighth Revelation.
  • And this [dim] vision was a learning, to mine understanding, that the
  • continual seeking of the soul pleaseth God full greatly: for it may
  • do no more than seek, suffer and trust. And this is wrought in the
  • soul that hath it, by the Holy Ghost; and the clearness of finding,
  • _it_ is of His special grace, when it is His will. The seeking, with
  • faith, hope, and charity, pleaseth our Lord, and the finding pleaseth
  • the soul and fulfilleth it with joy. And thus was I learned, to mine
  • understanding, that seeking is as good as beholding, for the time that
  • He will suffer the soul to be in travail. It is God's will that _we
  • seek Him_, to the beholding of Him, for by _that_[5] He shall shew us
  • Himself of His special grace when He will. And how a soul shall have
  • Him in its beholding, He shall teach Himself: and that is most worship
  • to Him and profit to thyself, and [the soul thus] most receiveth of
  • meekness and virtues with the grace and leading of the Holy Ghost. For
  • a soul that only fasteneth it[self] on to God with very trust, either
  • by seeking or in beholding, it is the most worship that it may do to
  • Him, as to my sight.
  • These are two workings that may be seen in this Vision: the one is
  • seeking, the other is beholding. The seeking is common,--that every
  • soul may have with His grace,--and ought to have that discretion and
  • teaching of the Holy Church. It is God's will that we have three
  • things in our seeking:--The first is that we seek earnestly and
  • diligently, without sloth, and, as it may be through His grace, without
  • unreasonable[6] heaviness and vain sorrow. The second is, that we abide
  • Him steadfastly for His love, without murmuring and striving against
  • Him, to our life's end: for it shall last but awhile. The third is that
  • we trust in Him mightily of full assured faith. For it is His will that
  • we know that He shall appear suddenly and blissfully to all that love
  • Him.
  • For His working is privy, and He willeth to be perceived; and His
  • appearing shall be swiftly sudden; and He willeth to be trusted. For He
  • is full gracious[7] and homely: Blessed may He be!
  • [1] In de Cressy's version: "I saw Him and sought Him."
  • [2] The Handkerchief of S. Veronica.
  • [3] "so discolouring."
  • [4] _i.e. according to_.
  • [5] "for be that" = _for by [means of] that_; or possibly the Old
  • English and Scottish 'forbye that' = _besides that_.
  • [6] "onskilful" = without discernment or ability; unpractical. S. de
  • Cressy, "unreasonable."
  • [7] "hend" = at hand; (handy, dexterous;) courteous, gentle, urbane.
  • _THE THIRD REVELATION_
  • CHAPTER XI
  • "All thing that is done, it is well done: for our Lord God doeth all."
  • "Sin is no deed"
  • And after this I saw God in a Point,[1] that is to say, in mine
  • understanding,--by which sight I saw that He is in all things.
  • I beheld and considered, seeing and knowing in sight, with a soft
  • dread, and thought: _What is sin?_
  • For I saw truly that God doeth all-thing, be it never so little. And I
  • saw truly that nothing is done by hap nor by adventure, but all things
  • by the foreseeing wisdom of God: if it be hap or adventure in the sight
  • of man, our blindness and our unforesight is the cause. For the things
  • that are in the foreseeing wisdom of God from without beginning, (which
  • rightfully and worshipfully and continually He leadeth to the best
  • end,) as they come about fall to us suddenly, ourselves unwitting; and
  • thus by our blindness and our unforesight we say: these be haps and
  • adventures. But to our Lord God they be not so.
  • Wherefore me behoveth needs to grant that all-thing that is done, it
  • is well-done: for our Lord God doeth all. For in this time the working
  • of creatures was not shewed, but [the working] of our Lord God in the
  • creature: for He is in the Mid-point of all thing, and all He doeth.
  • And I was certain He doeth no sin.
  • And here I saw verily that sin is no deed: for in all this was not sin
  • shewed. And I would no longer marvel in this, but beheld our Lord, what
  • He would shew.
  • And thus, as much as it might be for the time, the rightfulness of
  • God's working was shewed to the soul.
  • Rightfulness hath two fair properties: it is right and it is full.
  • And so are all the works of our Lord God: thereto needeth neither the
  • working of mercy nor grace: for they be all rightful: wherein faileth
  • nought.
  • But in another time He gave a Shewing for the beholding of sin nakedly,
  • as I shall tell: where He useth working of mercy and grace.
  • And this vision was shewed, to mine understanding, for that our
  • Lord would have the soul turned truly unto the beholding of Him,
  • and generally of all His works. For they are full good; and all His
  • doings are easy and sweet, and to great ease bringing the soul that is
  • turned from the beholding of the blind Deeming of man unto the fair
  • sweet Deeming of our Lord God. For a man beholdeth some deeds well
  • done and some deeds evil, but our Lord beholdeth them not so: for as
  • all that hath being in nature is of Godly making, so is all that is
  • done, in property of God's doing. For it is easy to understand that
  • the best deed is well done: and so well as the best deed is done--the
  • highest--so well is the least deed done; and all thing in its property
  • and in the order that our Lord hath ordained it to from without
  • beginning. For there is no doer but He.
  • I saw full surely that he changeth never His purpose in no manner of
  • thing, nor never shall, without end. For there was no thing unknown to
  • Him in His rightful ordinance from without beginning. And therefore
  • all-thing was set in order ere anything was made, as it should stand
  • without end; and no manner of thing shall fail of that point. For He
  • made all things in fulness of goodness, and therefore the blessed
  • Trinity is ever full pleased in all His works.[2]
  • And all this shewed He full blissfully, signifying thus: _See! I am
  • God: see! I am in all thing: see! I do all thing: see! I lift never
  • mine hands off my works, nor ever shall, without end: see! I lead all
  • thing to the end I ordained it to from without beginning, by the same
  • Might, Wisdom and Love whereby I made it. How should any thing be
  • amiss?_
  • Thus mightily, wisely, and lovingly was the soul examined in this
  • Vision. Then saw I soothly that me behoved, of need, to assent, with
  • great reverence enjoying in God.
  • [1] See below: "He is in the Mid-point," and lxiii. p. 158, "the
  • blessed Point from which nature came: that is, God." See also xxi. p.
  • 45, "Where is now any point of thy pain?" (least part) and xxi. p.
  • 46, "abiding unto the last point"; and lxiv. p. 161, "set the point
  • of our thought." These uses of the word may be compared with the
  • following:--From the _Banquet of Dante Alighieri_, tr. by K. Hillard
  • (Kegan Paul, Trench & Co.), Bk. II. xiv. 12, "_Geometry moves between
  • the print and the circle_"; as Euclid says, "the point is the beginning
  • of Geometry, and according to him, the circle is the most perfect
  • figure, and therefore may be considered its end.... The point by reason
  • of its indivisibility is immeasurable, and the circle by reason of
  • its arc cannot be exactly squared, and therefore cannot be measured
  • with precision." Notes by Miss Hillard: "This is why the Deity is
  • represented by a _point. Paradiso_, xxviii. 16: 'A point beheld I,'
  • 'Heaven and all nature, hangs upon that point,' etc. Bk. IV. 6, quoting
  • Aristotle's _Physics_: '_The circle can be called perfect when it is
  • a true circle._ And this is when it contains a point which is equally
  • distant from every part of its circumference.' In the _Vita Nuova_ Love
  • appearing, says--'I am as the centre of a circle, to which all parts of
  • the circumference bear an equal relation' ('_Amor che muove il sole e
  • l'altre stelle_')." From _Neoplatonism_, by C. Bigg, D.D. (S.P.C.K.),
  • p. 122: "Thus we get a triplet--Soul, Intelligence, and a higher
  • Intelligence. The last is spoken of as One, as a point, as neither good
  • nor evil because above both."
  • [2] On this subject, with the "Two Deemings" and "the Godly Will," see
  • xlv., xxxv., xxxvii., lxxxii.
  • _THE FOURTH REVELATION_
  • CHAPTER XII
  • "The dearworthy blood of our Lord Jesus Christ as verily as it is most
  • precious, so verily it it most plenteous"
  • And after this I saw, beholding, the body plenteously bleeding in
  • seeming of[1] the Scourging, as thus:--The fair skin was broken full
  • deep into the tender flesh with sharp smiting all about the sweet body.
  • So plenteously the hot blood ran out that there was neither seen skin
  • nor wound, but as it were all blood. And when it came where it should
  • have fallen down, then it vanished. Notwithstanding, the bleeding
  • continued awhile: till it might be seen and considered.[2] And this was
  • so plenteous, to my sight, that methought if it had been so in kind[3]
  • and in substance at that time, it should have made the bed all one
  • blood, and have passed over about.
  • And then came to my mind that God hath made waters plenteous in earth
  • to our service and to our bodily ease for tender love that He hath to
  • us, but yet liketh Him better that we take full homely His blessed
  • blood to wash us of sin: for there is no water[4] that is made that
  • He liketh so well to give us. For it is most plenteous as it is most
  • precious: and that by the virtue of His blessed Godhead; and it is
  • [of] our Kind, and all-blissfully belongeth to us by the virtue of His
  • precious love.
  • The dearworthy blood of our Lord Jesus Christ as verily as it is most
  • precious, so verily it is most plenteous. Behold and see! The precious
  • plenty of His dearworthy blood descended down into Hell and burst her
  • bands and delivered all that were there which belonged to the Court of
  • Heaven. The precious plenty of His dearworthy blood overfloweth all
  • Earth, and is ready to wash all creatures of sin, which be of goodwill,
  • have been, and shall be. The precious plenty of His dearworthy blood
  • ascended up into Heaven to the blessed body of our Lord Jesus Christ,
  • and there is in Him, bleeding and praying for us to the Father,--and
  • is, and shall be as long as it needeth;--and ever shall be as long
  • as it needeth. And evermore it floweth in all Heavens enjoying the
  • salvation of all mankind, that are there, and shall be--fulfilling the
  • number[5] that faileth.
  • [1] _i.e._ as it were from.
  • [2] "sene with avisement," so, p. 26.--"I beheld with avisement."
  • [3] _i.e._ Nature, reality.
  • [4] MS. "licor."
  • [5] The appointed number of heavenly citizens.
  • _THE FIFTH REVELATION_
  • CHAPTER XIII
  • "The Enemy is overcome by the blessed Passion and Death of our Lord
  • Jesus Christ"
  • And after this, ere God shewed any words, He suffered me for a
  • convenient time to give heed unto Him and all that I had seen, and all
  • intellect[1] that was therein, as the simplicity of the soul might
  • take it.[2] Then He, without voice and opening of lips, formed in my
  • soul these words: _Herewith is the Fiend overcome_. These words said
  • our Lord, meaning His blessed Passion as He shewed it afore.
  • On this shewed our Lord that the Passion of Him is the overcoming
  • of the Fiend. God shewed that the Fiend hath now the same malice
  • that he had afore the Incarnation. And as sore he travaileth, and
  • as continually he seeth that all souls of salvation escape him,
  • worshipfully, by the virtue of Christ's precious Passion. And that is
  • his sorrow, and full evil is he ashamed: for all that God suffereth
  • him to do turneth [for] us to joy and [for] him to shame and woe. And
  • he hath as much sorrow when God giveth him leave to work, as when he
  • worketh not: and that is for that he may never do as ill as he would:
  • for his might is all taken[3] into God's hand.
  • But in God there may be no wrath, as to my sight: for our good Lord
  • endlessly hath regard to His own worship and to the profit of all that
  • shall be saved. With might and right He withstandeth the Reproved,
  • the which of malice and wickedness busy them to contrive and to do
  • against God's will. Also I saw our Lord scorn his malice and set at
  • nought his unmight; and He willeth that we do so. For this sight I
  • laughed mightily, and that made them to laugh that were about me, and
  • their laughing was a pleasure to me. I thought that I would that all
  • mine even-Christians had seen as I saw, and then would they all laugh
  • with me. But I saw not Christ laugh. For I understood that we may
  • laugh in comforting of ourselves and joying in God for that the devil
  • is overcome. And when I saw Him scorn his malice, it was by leading
  • of mine understanding into our Lord: that is to say, it was an inward
  • shewing of verity, without changing of look.[4] For, as to my sight, it
  • is a worshipful property of God's that [He] is ever the same.
  • And after this I fell into a graveness,[5] and said: _I see three
  • things: I see game, scorn, and earnest. I see [a] game, in that the
  • Fiend is overcome; I see scorn, in that God scorneth him, and he shall
  • be scorned; and I see earnest, in that he is overcome by the blissful
  • Passion and Death of our Lord Jesus Christ that was done in full
  • earnest and with sober travail._
  • When I said, _he is scorned_,--I meant that God scorneth him, that
  • is to say, because He seeth him now as he shall do without end. For
  • in this [word] God shewed that the Fiend is condemned. And this
  • meant I when I said: _he shall be scorned_: [he shall be scorned] at
  • Doomsday, generally of all that shall be saved, to whose consolation
  • he hath great ill-will.[6] For then he shall see that all the woe and
  • tribulation that he hath done to them shall be turned to increase of
  • their joy, without end; and all the pain and tribulation that he would
  • have brought them to shall endlessly go with him to hell.
  • [1] _i.e._ significance, teaching.
  • [2] _i.e._ in so far as the simplicity of my soul was able to
  • understand it.--See xxiv.
  • [3] S. de Cressy has "locked" instead of "taken."
  • [4] "chere" = expression of countenance.
  • [5] "sadhede."
  • [6] "invye."
  • _THE SIXTH REVELATION_
  • CHAPTER XIV
  • "The age of every man shall be acknowledged before him in Heaven, and
  • every man shall be rewarded for his willing service and for his time"
  • After this our good Lord said: _I thank thee for thy travail, and
  • especially for thy youth._
  • And in this [Shewing] mine understanding was lifted up into Heaven
  • where I saw our Lord as a lord in his own house, which hath called
  • all his dear worthy servants and friends to a stately[1] feast. Then
  • I saw the Lord take no place in His own house, but I saw Him royally
  • reign in His house, fulfilling it with joy and mirth, Himself endlessly
  • to gladden and to solace His dearworthy friends, full homely and
  • full courteously, with marvellous melody of endless love, in His own
  • fair blessed Countenance. Which glorious Countenance of the Godhead
  • fulfilleth the Heavens with joy and bliss.[2]
  • God shewed three degrees of bliss that every soul shall have in Heaven
  • that willingly hath served God in any degree in earth. The first is
  • the worshipful thanks of our Lord God that he shall receive when he is
  • delivered of pain. This thanking is so high and so worshipful that the
  • soul thinketh it filleth him though there were no more. For methought
  • that all the pain and travail that might be suffered by all living
  • men might not deserve the worshipful thanks that one man shall have
  • that willingly hath served God. The second is that all the blessed
  • creatures that are in Heaven shall see that worshipful thanking, and
  • He maketh his service known to all that are in Heaven. And here this
  • example was shewed:--A king, if he thank his servants, it is a great
  • worship to them, and if he maketh it known to all the realm, then
  • is the worship greatly increased.--The third is, that as new and as
  • gladdening as it is received in that time, right so shall it last
  • without end.
  • And I saw that homely and sweetly was this shewed, and that the age of
  • every man shall be [made] known in Heaven, and [he] shall be rewarded
  • for his willing service and for his time. And specially the age of them
  • that willingly and freely offer their youth unto God, passingly is
  • rewarded and wonderfully is thanked.
  • For I saw that whene'er what time a man or woman is truly turned to
  • God,--for one day's service and for his endless will he shall have all
  • these three decrees of bliss. And the more the loving soul seeth this
  • courtesy of God, the liefer he[3] is to serve him all the days of his
  • life.
  • [1] MS. "solemne"--ceremonial.
  • [2] See lxxii. and lxxv.
  • [3] Thoughout this MS. _the soul_ is referred to generally with the
  • masculine pronoun; the feminine pronoun is never used, in any of its
  • cases; the neuter sometimes occurs.
  • _THE SEVENTH REVELATION_
  • CHAPTER XV
  • "It is not God's will that we follow the feeling of pains in sorrow and
  • mourning for them"
  • And after this He shewed a sovereign ghostly pleasante in my soul. I
  • was fulfilled with the everlasting sureness, mightily sustained without
  • any painful dread. This feeling was so glad and so ghostly that I was
  • in all peace and in rest, that there was nothing in earth that should
  • have grieved me.
  • This lasted but a while, and I was turned and left to myself in
  • heaviness, and weariness of my life, and irksomeness of myself, that
  • scarcely I could have patience to live. There was no comfort nor none
  • ease to me but faith, hope, and charity; and these I had in truth, but
  • little in feeling.
  • And anon after this our blessed Lord gave me again the comfort and the
  • rest in soul, in satisfying and sureness so blissful and so mighty that
  • no dread, no sorrow, no pain bodily that might be suffered should have
  • distressed me. And then the pain shewed again to my feeling, and then
  • the joy and the pleasing, and now that one, and now that other, divers
  • times--I suppose about twenty times. And in the time of joy I might
  • have said with Saint Paul: _Nothing shall dispart me from the charity
  • of Christ_; and in the pain I might have said with Peter: _Lord, save
  • me: I perish!_
  • This Vision was shewed me, according to mine understanding, [for]
  • that it is speedful to some souls to feel on this wise: sometime to
  • be in comfort, and sometime to fail and to be left to themselves. God
  • willeth that we know that He keepeth us even alike secure in woe and in
  • weal. And for profit of man's soul, a man is sometime left to himself;
  • although sin is not always the cause: for in this time I sinned not
  • wherefore I should be left to myself--for it was so sudden. Also I
  • deserved not to have this blessed feeling. But freely our Lord giveth
  • when He will; and suffereth us [to be] in woe sometime. And both is one
  • love.
  • For it is God's will that we hold us in comfort with all our might: for
  • bliss is lasting without end, and pain is passing and shall be brought
  • to nought for them that shall be saved. And therefore it is not God's
  • will that we follow the feelings of pain in sorrow and mourning for
  • them, but that we suddenly pass over, and hold us in endless enjoyment.
  • _THE EIGHTH REVELATION_
  • CHAPTER XVI
  • "A Part of His Passion"
  • After this Christ shewed a part of His Passion near His dying.
  • I saw His sweet face as it were dry and bloodless with pale dying. And
  • later, more pale, dead, languoring; and then turned more dead unto
  • blue; and then more brown-blue, as the flesh turned more deeply dead.
  • For His Passion shewed to me most specially in His blessed face (and
  • chiefly in His lips): there I saw these four colours, though it were
  • afore fresh, ruddy, and pleasing, to my sight. This was a pitiful
  • change to see, this deep dying. And also the [inward] moisture clotted
  • and dried, to my sight, and the sweet body was brown and black, all
  • turned out of fair, life-like colour of itself, unto dry dying.
  • For that same time that our Lord and blessed Saviour died upon the
  • Rood, it was a dry, hard wind, and wondrous cold, as to my sight, and
  • what time [all] the precious blood was bled out of the sweet body that
  • might pass therefrom, yet there dwelled a moisture in the sweet flesh
  • of Christ, as it was shewed.
  • Bloodlessness and pain dried within; and blowing of wind and cold
  • coming from without met together in the sweet body of Christ. And these
  • four,--twain without, and twain within--dried the flesh of Christ by
  • process of time. And though this pain was bitter and sharp, it was full
  • long lasting, as to my sight, and painfully dried up all the lively
  • spirits of Christ's flesh. Thus I saw the sweet flesh dry in seeming by
  • part after part, with marvellous pains. And as long as any spirit had
  • life in Christ's flesh, so long suffered He pain.
  • This long pining seemed to me as if He had been seven nights dead,
  • dying, at the point of outpassing away, suffering the last pain. And
  • when I said it seemed to me as if He had been seven night dead, it
  • meaneth that the sweet body was so discoloured, so dry, so shrunken,
  • so deathly, and so piteous, as if He had been seven night dead,
  • continually dying. And methought the drying of Christ's flesh was the
  • most pain, and the last, of His Passion.
  • CHAPTER XVII
  • "How might any pain be more to me than to see Him that is all my life,
  • and all my bliss, and all my joy suffer?"
  • And in this dying was brought to my mind the words of Christ: _I
  • thirst_.
  • For I saw in Christ a double thirst: one bodily; another spiritual, the
  • which I shall speak of in the Thirty-first Chapter.
  • For this word was shewed for the bodily thirst: the which I understood
  • was caused by failing of moisture. For the blessed flesh and bones
  • was left all alone without blood and moisture. The blessed body dried
  • alone long time with wringing of the nails and weight of the body. For
  • I understood that for tenderness of the sweet hands and of the sweet
  • feet, by the greatness, hardness, and grievousness of the nails the
  • wounds waxed wide and the body sagged, for weight by long time hanging.
  • And [therewith was] piercing and pressing of the head, and binding
  • of the Crown all baked with dry blood, with the sweet hair clinging,
  • and the dry flesh, to the thorns, and the thorns to the flesh drying;
  • and in the beginning while the flesh was fresh and bleeding, the
  • continual sitting of the thorns made the wounds wide. And furthermore
  • I saw that the sweet skin and the tender flesh, with the hair and
  • the blood, was all raised and loosed about from the bone, with the
  • thorns where-through it were rent in many pieces, as a cloth that were
  • sagging, as if it would hastily have fallen off, for heaviness and
  • looseness, while it had natural moisture. And that was great sorrow and
  • dread to me: for methought I would not for my life have seen it fall.
  • How it was done I saw not; but understood it was with the sharp thorns
  • and the violent and grievous setting on of the Garland of Thorns,
  • unsparingly and without pity. This continued awhile, and soon it began
  • to change, and I beheld and marvelled how it might be. And then I saw
  • it was because it began to dry, and stint a part of the weight, and set
  • about the Garland. And thus it encircled all about, as it were garland
  • upon garland. The Garland of the Thorns was dyed with the blood, and
  • that other garland [of Blood] and the head, all was one colour, as
  • clotted blood when it is dry. The skin of the flesh that shewed (of the
  • face and of the body), was small-rimpled[1] with a tanned colour, like
  • a dry board when it is aged; and the face more brown than the body.
  • I saw four manner of dryings: the first was bloodlessness; the second
  • was pain following after; the third, hanging up in the air, as men hang
  • a cloth to dry; the fourth, that the bodily Kind asked liquid and there
  • was no manner of comfort ministered to Him in all His woe and distress.
  • Ah! hard and grievous was his pain, but much more hard and grievous it
  • was when the moisture failed and began to dry thus, shrivelling.
  • These were the pains that shewed in the blessed head: the first wrought
  • to the dying, while it had moisture; and that other, slow, with
  • shrinking drying, [and] with blowing of the wind from without, that
  • dried and pained Him with cold more than mine heart can think.
  • And other pains--for which pains I saw that all is too little that I
  • can say: for it may not be told.
  • The which Shewing of Christ's pains filled me full of pain. For I wist
  • well He suffered but once, but [this was as if] He would shew it me
  • and fill me with mind as I had afore desired. And in all this time of
  • Christ's pains I felt no pain but for Christ's pains. Then thought-me:
  • _I knew but little what pain it was that I asked_; and, as a wretch,
  • repented me, thinking: _If I had wist what it had been, loth me had
  • been to have prayed it_. For methought it passed bodily death, my pains.
  • I thought: _Is any pain like this?_ And I was answered in my reason:
  • _Hell is another pain: for there is despair. But of all pains that
  • lead to salvation this is the most pain, to see thy Love suffer. How
  • might any pain be more to me than to see Him that is all my life, all
  • my bliss, and all my joy, suffer?_ Here felt I soothfastly[2] that I
  • loved Christ so much above myself that there was no pain that might be
  • suffered like to that sorrow that I had to [see] Him in pain.
  • [1] or _shrivelled_.
  • [2] in sure verity.
  • CHAPTER XVIII
  • "When He was in pain, we were in pain"
  • Here I saw a part of the compassion of our Lady, Saint Mary: for
  • Christ and she were so oned in love that the greatness of her loving
  • was cause of the greatness of her pain. For in this [Shewing] I saw a
  • Substance of Nature's[1] Love, continued by Grace, that creatures have
  • to Him: which Kind Love was most fully shewed in His sweet Mother, and
  • overpassing; for so much as she loved Him more than all other, her
  • pains passed all other. For ever the higher, the mightier, the sweeter
  • that the love be, the more sorrow it is to the lover to see that body
  • in pain that is loved.
  • And all His disciples and all His true lovers suffered pains more than
  • their own bodily dying. For I am sure by mine own feeling that the
  • least of them loved Him so far above himself that it passeth all that I
  • can say.
  • Here saw I a great oneing betwixt Christ and us, to mine understanding:
  • for when He was in pain, we were in pain.
  • And all creatures that ought suffer pain, suffered with Him: that is to
  • say, all creatures that God hath made to our service. The firmament,
  • the earth, failed for sorrow in their Nature in the time of Christ's
  • dying. For it belongeth naturally to their property to know Him for
  • their God, in whom all their virtue standeth: when He failed, then
  • behoved it needs to them, because of kindness [between them], to fail
  • with Him, as much as they might, for sorrow of His pains.
  • And thus they that were His friends suffered pain for love. And,
  • generally, _all_: that is to say, they that knew Him not suffered
  • for failing of all manner of comfort save the mighty, privy keeping
  • of God. I speak of two manner of folk, as they may be understood by
  • two persons: the one was Pilate, the other was Saint Dionyse[2] of
  • France, which was [at] that time a Paynim. For when he saw wondrous
  • and marvellous sorrows and dreads that befell in that time, he said:
  • _Either the world is now at an end, or He that is Maker of Kind
  • suffereth._ Wherefore he did write on an altar: THIS IS THE ALTAR
  • OF UNKNOWN GOD. God that of His goodness maketh the planets and the
  • elements to work of Kind to the blessed man and the cursed, in that
  • time made withdrawing[3] of it from both; wherefore it was that they
  • that knew Him not were in sorrow that time.
  • Thus was our Lord Jesus made-naught for us; and all we stand in this
  • manner made-naught with Him, and shall do till we come to His bliss; as
  • I shall tell after.
  • [1] _i.e._ Natural.
  • [2] Dionysius, "the Areopagite," according to the legend of S. Denis.
  • [3] MS.--"it was withdrawen from bothe."
  • CHAPTER XIX
  • "Thus was I learned to choose Jesus for my Heaven, whom I saw only in
  • pain at that time"
  • In this [time] I would have looked up from the Cross, but I durst not.
  • For I wist well that while I beheld in the Cross I was surely-safe;
  • therefore I would not assent to put my soul in peril: for away from the
  • Cross was no sureness, for frighting of fiends.
  • Then had I a proffer in my reason,[1] as if it had been friendly said
  • to me: _Look up to Heaven to His Father_. And then saw I well, with
  • the faith that I felt, that there was nothing betwixt the Cross and
  • Heaven that might have harmed me. Either me behoved to look up or else
  • to answer. I answered inwardly with all the might of my soul, and said:
  • _Nay; I may not: for Thou art my Heaven._ This I said for that I would
  • not. For I would liever have been in that pain till Doomsday than to
  • come to Heaven otherwise than by Him. For I wist well that He that
  • bound me so sore, He should unbind me when that He would. Thus was I
  • learned to choose Jesus to my Heaven, whom I saw only in pain at that
  • time: meliked no other Heaven than Jesus, which shall be my bliss when
  • I come there.
  • And this hath ever been a comfort to me, that I chose Jesus to my
  • Heaven, by His grace, in all this time of Passion and sorrow; and that
  • hath been a learning to me that I should evermore do so: choose only
  • Jesus to my Heaven in weal and woe.
  • And though I as a wretched creature had repented me (I said afore if I
  • had wist what pain it would be, I had been loth to have prayed), here
  • saw I truly that it was reluctance and frailty of the flesh without
  • assent of the soul: to which God assigneth no blame. Repenting and
  • willing choice be two contraries which I felt both in one at that time.
  • And these be [of our] two parts: the one outward, the other inward. The
  • outward part is our deadly flesh-hood, which is now in pain and woe,
  • and shall be, in this life: whereof I felt much in this time; and that
  • part it was that repented. The inward part is an high, blissful life,
  • which is all in peace and in love: and this was more inwardly felt; and
  • this part is [that] in which mightily, wisely and with steadfast will I
  • chose Jesus to my Heaven.
  • And in this I saw verily that the inward part is master and sovereign
  • to the outward, and doth not charge itself with, nor take heed to, the
  • will of that: but all the intent and will is set to be oned unto our
  • Lord Jesus. That the outward part should draw the inward to assent
  • was not shewed to me; but that the inward draweth the outward by
  • grace, and both shall be oned in bliss without end, by the virtue of
  • Christ,--_this_ was shewed.
  • [1] see xxxv. and lv.
  • CHAPTER XX
  • "For every man's sin that shall be saved He suffered, and every man's
  • sorrow and desolation He saw, and sorrowed for Kinship and Love"
  • And thus I saw our Lord Jesus languoring long time. For the oneing with
  • the Godhead gave strength to the manhood for love to suffer more than
  • all men might suffer: I mean not only more pain than all men might
  • suffer, but also that He suffered more pain than all men of salvation
  • that ever were from the first beginning unto the last day might tell or
  • fully think, having regard to the worthiness of the highest worshipful
  • King and the shameful, despised, painful death. For He that is highest
  • and worthiest was most fully made-nought and most utterly despised.
  • For the highest point that may be seen in the Passion is to think and
  • know what He is that suffered. And in this [Shewing] He brought in part
  • to mind the height and nobleness of the glorious Godhead, and therewith
  • the preciousness and the tenderness of the blessed Body, which be
  • together united; and also the lothness that is in our Kind to suffer
  • pain. For as much as He was most tender and pure, right so He was most
  • strong and mighty to suffer.
  • And for every man's sin that shall be saved He suffered: and every
  • man's sorrow and desolation He saw, and sorrowed for Blindness and
  • love. (For in as much as our Lady sorrowed for His pains, in so much He
  • suffered sorrow for her sorrow;--and more, in as greatly as the sweet
  • manhood of Him was worthier in Kind.) For as long as He was passible
  • He suffered for us and sorrowed _for_ us; and now He is uprisen and no
  • more passible, yet He suffereth _with_ us.
  • And I, beholding all this by His grace, saw that the Love of Him was so
  • strong which He hath to our soul that willingly He chose it with great
  • desire, and mildly He suffered it with well-pleasing.
  • For the soul that beholdeth it thus, when it is touched by grace, it
  • shall verily see that the pains of Christ's Passion pass all pains:
  • [all pains] that is to say, which shall be turned into everlasting,
  • o'erpassing joys by the virtue of Christ's Passion.
  • CHAPTER XXI
  • "We be now with Him in His Pains and His Passion, dying. We shall be
  • with Him in Heaven. Through learning in this little pain that we suffer
  • here, we shall have an high endless knowledge of God which we could
  • never have without that"
  • It is God's will, as to mine understanding, that we have Three[1]
  • Manners of Beholding His blessed Passion. The First is: _the hard Pain
  • that He suffered_,--[beholding it] with contrition and compassion. And
  • that shewed our Lord in this time, and gave me strength and grace to
  • see it.
  • And I looked for the departing with all my might, and thought to have
  • seen the body all dead; but I saw Him not so. And right in the same
  • time that methought, by the seeming, the life might no longer last and
  • the Shewing of the end behoved needs to be,--suddenly (I beholding in
  • the same Cross), He changed [the look of] His blessed Countenance.[2]
  • The changing of His blessed Countenance changed mine, and I was as glad
  • and merry as it was possible. Then brought our Lord merrily to my mind:
  • _Where is now any point of the pain, or of thy grief?_ And I was full
  • merry.
  • I understood that we be now, in our Lord's meaning, in His Cross with
  • Him in His pains and His Passion, dying; and we, willingly abiding
  • in the same Cross with His help and His grace unto the last point,
  • suddenly He shall change His Cheer to us, and we shall be with Him in
  • Heaven. Betwixt that one and that other shall be no time, and then
  • shall all be brought to joy. And thus said He in this Shewing: _Where
  • is now any point of thy pain, or thy grief?_ And we shall be full
  • blessed.
  • And here saw I verily that if He shewed now [to] us His _Blissful_
  • Cheer, there is no pain in earth or in other place that should aggrieve
  • us; but all things should be to us joy and bliss. But because He
  • sheweth to us time of His Passion, as He bare it in _this_ life, and
  • His Cross, therefore we are in distress and travail, with Him, as our
  • frailty asketh. And the cause why He suffereth [it to be so,] is for
  • [that] He will of His goodness make us the higher with Him in His
  • bliss; and for this little pain that we suffer here, we shall have an
  • high endless knowing in God which we could[3] never have without that.
  • And the harder our pains have been with Him in His Cross, the more
  • shall our worship[4] be with Him in His Kingdom.
  • [1] xxii. and xxiii.
  • [2] His "blisful chere," or blessed Cheer; lxxii. and Note.
  • [3] "might."
  • [4] _i.e._ glory.
  • _THE NINTH REVELATION_
  • CHAPTER XXII
  • "The Love that made Him to suffer passeth so far all His Pains as
  • Heaven is above Earth"
  • Then said our good Lord Jesus Christ: _Art thou well pleased that I
  • suffered for thee?_ I said: _Yea, good Lord, I thank Thee; Yea, good
  • Lord, blessed mayst Thou be._ Then said Jesus, our kind Lord: _If thou
  • art pleased, I am pleased: it is a joy, a bliss, an endless satisfying
  • to me that ever suffered I Passion for thee; and if I might suffer
  • more, I would suffer more._
  • In this feeling my understanding was lifted up into Heaven, and there I
  • saw three heavens: of which sight I marvelled greatly. And though I see
  • three heavens--and all in the blessed manhood of Christ--none is more,
  • none is less, none is higher, none is lower, but [they are] even-like
  • in bliss.
  • For the First Heaven, Christ shewed me His Father; in no bodily
  • likeness, but in His property and in His working. That is to say, I saw
  • in Christ that the Father is. The working of the Father is this, that
  • He giveth meed to His Son Jesus Christ. This gift and this meed is so
  • blissful to Jesus that His Father might have given Him no meed that
  • might have pleased Him better. The first heaven, that is the pleasing
  • of the Father, shewed to me as one heaven; and it was full blissful:
  • for He is full pleased with all the deeds that Jesus hath done about
  • our salvation. Wherefore we be not only His by His buying, but also by
  • the courteous gift of His Father we be His bliss, we be His meed, we
  • be His worship, we be His crown. (And this was a singular marvel and a
  • full delectable beholding, that we be His crown!) This that I say is so
  • great bliss to Jesus that He setteth at nought all His travail, and His
  • hard Passion, and His cruel and shameful death.
  • And in these words: _If that I might suffer more, I would suffer
  • more_,--I saw in truth that as often as He _might_ die, so often He
  • _would_, and love should never let Him have rest till He had done it.
  • And I beheld with great diligence for to learn how often He would die
  • if He might. And verily the number passed mine understanding and my
  • wits so far that my reason might not, nor could, comprehend it. And
  • when He had thus oft died, or should, yet He would set it at nought,
  • for love: for all seemeth[1] Him but little in regard of His love.
  • For though the sweet manhood of Christ might suffer but once, the
  • goodness in Him may never cease of proffer: every day He is ready to
  • the same, if it might be. For if He said He would for my love make new
  • Heavens and new Earth, it were but little in comparison;[2] for this
  • might be done every day if He would, without any travail. But to die
  • for my love so often that the number passeth creature's reason, it is
  • the highest proffer that our Lord God might make to man's soul, as to
  • my sight. Then meaneth He thus: _How should it not be that I should not
  • do for thy love all that I might of deeds which grieve me not, sith
  • I would, for thy love, die so often, having no regard[3] to my hard
  • pains?_
  • And here saw I, for the Second[4] Beholding in this blessed Passion
  • _the love that made Him to suffer passeth as far all His pains as
  • Heaven is above Earth._ For the pains was a noble, worshipful deed done
  • in a time by the working of love: but[5] Love was without beginning,
  • is, and shall be without ending. For which love He said full sweetly
  • these words: _If I might suffer more, I would suffer more._ He said
  • not, _If it were needful to suffer more:_ for though it were not
  • needful, if He _might_ suffer more, He would.
  • This deed, and this work about our salvation, was ordained as well as
  • God might ordain it. And here I saw a Full Bliss in Christ: for His
  • bliss should not have been full, if it might any better have been done.
  • [1] "ffor al thynketh him but litil in reward of His love" [in
  • comparison with].
  • [2] MS. "Reward."
  • [3] MS. "Reward."
  • [4] See xxi., xxiii.
  • [5] MS. "and," probably here, at in other places, with something of the
  • force of "but."
  • CHAPTER XXIII
  • "The Glad Giver" "All the Trinity wrought in the Passion of Jesus
  • Christ"
  • And in these three words: _It is a joy, a bliss, an endless satisfying
  • to me_, were shewed three heavens, as thus: For the joy, I understood
  • the pleasure of the Father; and for the bliss, the worship of the
  • Son; and for the endless satisfying,[1] the Holy Ghost. The Father is
  • pleased, the Son is worshipped, the Holy Ghost is satisfied.[2]
  • And here saw I, for the Third Beholding in His blissful Passion: that
  • is to say, _the Joy and the Bliss that make Him to be well-satisfied
  • in it._ For our Courteous Lord shewed His Passion to me in five
  • manners: of which the first is the bleeding of the head; the second
  • is, discolouring of His face; the third is, the plenteous bleeding of
  • the body, in seeming [as] from the scourging; the fourth is, the deep
  • dying:--these four are aforetold for the pains of the Passion. And
  • the fifth is [this] that was shewed for the joy and the bliss of the
  • Passion.
  • For it is God's will that we have true enjoying with Him in our
  • salvation, and therein He willeth [that] we be mightily comforted and
  • strengthened; and thus willeth He that merrily with His grace our soul
  • be occupied. For we are His bliss: for in us He enjoyeth without end;
  • and so shall we in Him, with His grace.
  • And all that He hath done for us, and doeth, and ever shall, was never
  • cost nor charge to Him, nor might be, but only that [which] He did in
  • our manhood, beginning at the sweet Incarnation and lasting to the
  • Blessed Uprise on Easter-morrow:[3] so long dured the cost and the
  • charge about our redemption in _deed_: of [the] which deed He enjoyeth
  • endlessly, as it is aforesaid.
  • Jesus willeth that we take heed to the bliss that is in the blessed
  • Trinity [because] of our salvation and that _we_ desire to have as much
  • spiritual enjoying, with His grace, (as it is aforesaid): that is to
  • say, that the enjoying of our salvation be [as] like to the joy that
  • Christ hath of our salvation as it may be while we are here.
  • All the Trinity wrought in the Passion of Christ, ministering abundance
  • of virtues and plenty of grace to us by Him: but only the Maiden's Son
  • suffered: whereof all the blessed Trinity endlessly enjoyeth. All this
  • was shewed in these words: _Art thou well pleased?_--and by that other
  • word that Christ said: _If thou art pleased, then am I pleased;_--as if
  • He said: _It is joy and satisfying enough to me, and I ask nought else
  • of thee for my travail but that I might well please thee_.
  • And in this He brought to mind the property of a glad giver. A glad
  • giver taketh but little heed of the thing that he giveth, but all his
  • desire and all his intent is to please him and solace him to whom he
  • giveth it. And if the receiver take the gift highly and thankfully,
  • then the courteous giver setteth at nought all his cost and all his
  • travail, for joy and delight that he hath pleased and solaced him that
  • he loveth. Plenteously and fully was this shewed.
  • Think also wisely of the greatness of this word "_ever_." For in it
  • was shewed an high knowing of love[4] that _He_ hath in our salvation,
  • with manifold joys that follow of the Passion of Christ. One is that He
  • rejoiceth that He hath done it in deed, and He shall no more suffer;
  • another, that He bought us from endless pains of hell.
  • [1] "lykyng."
  • [2] "lykith."
  • [3] "Esterne morrow" = Easter morning.
  • [4] Experience of loving (?).
  • _THE TENTH REVELATION_
  • CHAPTER XXIV
  • "Our Lord looked unto His [wounded] Side, and beheld, rejoicing....
  • _Lo! how I loved thee_"
  • Then with a glad cheer our Lord looked unto His Side and beheld,
  • rejoicing. With His sweet looking He led forth the understanding of His
  • creature by the same wound into His Side within. And then he shewed a
  • fair, delectable place, and large enough for all mankind that shall be
  • saved to rest in peace and in love.[1] And therewith He brought to mind
  • His dearworthy blood and precious water which he let pour all out for
  • love. And with the sweet beholding He shewed His blessed heart even
  • cloven in two.
  • And with this sweet enjoying, He shewed unto mine understanding,
  • in part, _the blessed Godhead_, stirring then the poor soul[2] to
  • understand, as it may be said, that is, to think on,[3] the _endless_
  • Love that was without beginning, and is, and shall be ever. And with
  • this our good Lord said full blissfully: _Lo, how that I loved thee,_
  • as if He had said: _My darling, behold and see thy Lord, thy God that
  • is thy Maker and thine endless joy, see what satisfying and bliss I
  • have in thy salvation; and for my love rejoice [thou] with me._
  • And also, for more understanding, this blessed word was said: _Lo,
  • how I loved thee! Behold and see that I loved thee so much ere I died
  • for thee that I would die for thee; and now I have died for thee and
  • suffered willingly that which I may. And now is all my bitter pain and
  • all my hard travail turned to endless joy and bliss to me and to thee.
  • How should it now be that thou shouldst anything pray that pleaseth me
  • but that I should full gladly grant it thee? For my pleasing is thy
  • holiness and thine endless joy and bliss with me._
  • This is the understanding, simply as I can say it, of this blessed
  • word: _Lo, how I loved thee._ This shewed our good Lord for to make us
  • glad and merry.
  • [1] See note on the passage in li., "long and broad, all full of
  • endless heavens"; "He hath, beclosed in Him, all heavens and all joy
  • and bliss."
  • [2] See xiii., "the simplicity of the soul."
  • [3] MS. "that is to mene the endles love."
  • _THE ELEVENTH REVELATION_
  • CHAPTER XXV
  • "I wot well that thou wouldst see my blessed Mother...." "Wilt thou see
  • in her how thou art loved?"
  • And with this same cheer of mirth and joy our good Lord looked down
  • on the right side and brought to my mind where our Lady stood in the
  • time of His Passion; and said: _Wilt thou see her?_ And in this sweet
  • word [it was] as if He had said: _I wot well that thou wouldst see
  • my blessed Mother: for, after myself, she is the highest joy that I
  • might shew thee, and most pleasance and worship to me; and most she
  • is desired to be seen of my blessed creatures._ And for the high,
  • marvellous, singular love that He hath to this sweet Maiden, His
  • blessed Mother, our Lady Saint Mary, He shewed her highly rejoicing, as
  • by the meaning of these sweet words; as if He said: _Wilt thou see how
  • I love her, that thou mightest joy with me in the love that I have in
  • her and she in me?_
  • And also (unto more understanding this sweet word) our Lord speaketh to
  • all mankind that shall be saved, as it were all to one person, as if He
  • said: _Wilt thou see in her how thou art loved? For thy love I made her
  • so high, so noble and so worthy; and this pleaseth me, and so will I
  • that it doeth thee._
  • For after Himself she is the most blissful sight.
  • But hereof am I not learned to long to see her bodily presence while I
  • am here, but the virtues of her blessed soul: her truth, her wisdom,
  • her charity; whereby I may learn to know myself and reverently dread my
  • God. And when our good Lord had shewed this and said this word: _Wilt
  • thou see her?_ I answered and said: _Yea, good Lord, I thank Thee; yea,
  • good Lord, if it be Thy will._ Oftentimes I prayed this, and I weened
  • to have seen her in bodily presence, but I saw her not so. And Jesus in
  • that word shewed me ghostly sight of her: right as I had seen her afore
  • little and simple, so He shewed her then high and noble and glorious,
  • and pleasing to Him above all creatures.
  • And He willeth that it be known; that [so] all those that please them
  • in Him should please them in her, and in the pleasance that He hath
  • in her and she in Him.[1] And, to more understanding, He shewed this
  • example: _As if a man love a creature singularly, above all creatures,_
  • he willeth to make all creatures to love and to have pleasance in that
  • creature that he loveth so greatly. And in this word that Jesus said:
  • _Wilt thou see her?_ methought it was the most pleasing word that He
  • might have given me of her, with that ghostly Shewing that He gave me
  • of her. For our Lord shewed me nothing in special but our Lady Saint
  • Mary; and her He shewed three times.[2] The first was as she was with
  • Child; the second was as she was in her sorrows under the Cross; the
  • third is as she is now in pleasing, worship, and joy.
  • [1] "And he wil that it be knowen that al those that lyke in him should
  • lyken in hir and in the lykyng that he hath in hir and she in him."
  • [2] See (1) iv. (referred to in vii.); (2) xviii.
  • _THE TWELFTH REVELATION_
  • CHAPTER XXVI
  • "It is I, it is I"
  • And after this our Lord shewed Himself more glorified, as to my sight,
  • than I saw Him before [in the Shewing] wherein I was learned that our
  • soul shall never have rest till it cometh to Him, knowing that He is
  • fulness of joy, homely and courteous, blissful and very life.
  • Our Lord Jesus oftentimes said: _I it am, I it am: I it am that is
  • highest, I it am that thou lovest, I it am that thou enjoyest, I it
  • am that thou servest, I it am that thou longest for, I it am that thou
  • desirest, I it am that thou meanest, I it am that is all. I it am that
  • Holy Church preacheth and teacheth thee, I it am that shewed me here to
  • thee._ The number of the words passeth my wit and all my understanding
  • and all my powers. And they are the highest, as to my sight: for
  • therein is comprehended--I cannot tell,--but the joy that I saw in
  • the Shewing of them passeth all that heart may wish for and soul may
  • desire. Therefore the words be not declared here; but every man after
  • the grace that God giveth him in understanding and loving, receive them
  • in our Lord's meaning.
  • _THE THIRTEENTH REVELATION_
  • CHAPTER XXVII
  • "Often I wondered why by the great foreseeing wisdom of God the
  • beginning of sin was not hindered: for then, methought, all should have
  • been well." "Sin is behovable--[playeth a needful part]--; but all
  • shall be well"
  • After this the Lord brought to my mind the longing that I had to Him
  • afore. And I saw that nothing letted me but sin. And so I looked,
  • generally, upon us all, and methought: _If sin had not been, we should
  • all have been clean and like to our Lord, as He made us._
  • And thus, in my folly, afore this time often I wondered why by the
  • great foreseeing wisdom of God the beginning of sin was not letted: for
  • then, methought, all should have been well. This stirring [of mind]
  • was much to be forsaken, but nevertheless mourning and sorrow I made
  • therefor, without reason and discretion.
  • But Jesus, who in this Vision informed me of all that is needful to
  • me, answered by this word and said: _It behoved that there should be
  • sin;[1] but all shall be well, and all shall be well, and all manner of
  • thing shall be well._
  • In this naked word _sin_, our Lord brought to my mind, generally, _all
  • that is not good_, and the shameful despite and the utter noughting[2]
  • that He bare for us in this life, and His dying; and all the pains
  • and passions of all His creatures, ghostly and bodily; (for we be all
  • partly noughted, and we shall be noughted following our Master, Jesus,
  • till we be full purged, that is to say, till we be fully noughted of
  • our deadly flesh and of all our inward affections which are not very
  • good;) and the beholding of this, with all pains that ever were or ever
  • shall be,--and with all these I understand the Passion of Christ for
  • most pain, and overpassing. All this was shewed in a touch and quickly
  • passed over into comfort: for our good Lord would not that the soul
  • were affeared of this terrible sight.
  • But I saw not _sin_: for I believe it hath no manner of substance nor
  • no part of being, nor could it be known but by the pain it is cause of.
  • And thus[3] pain, _it_ is something, as to my sight, for a time; for
  • it purgeth, and maketh us to know ourselves and to ask mercy. For the
  • Passion of our Lord is comfort to us against all this, and so is His
  • blessed will. And for the tender love that our good Lord hath to all
  • that shall be saved, He comforteth readily and sweetly, signifying
  • thus: _It is sooth[4] that sin is cause of all this pain; but all shall
  • be well, and all shall be well, and all manner [of] thing shall be
  • well._
  • These words were said full tenderly, showing no manner of blame to me
  • nor to any that shall be saved. Then were it a great unkindness[5] to
  • blame or wonder on God for my sin, since He blameth not me for sin.
  • And in these words I saw a marvellous high mystery hid in God, which
  • mystery He shall openly make known to us in Heaven: in which knowing we
  • shall verily see the cause why He suffered sin to come. In which sight
  • we shall endlessly joy in our Lord God.[6]
  • [1] "Synne is behovabil, but al shal be wel & al shal be wel & al
  • manner of thyng shal be wele."
  • [2] Being made as nothing, set at nought.
  • [3] S. de Cressy has "this" instead of _thus_.
  • [4] _i.e._ truth, an actual reality. See lxxxii.
  • [5] As it were, an unreasonable contravention of natural, filial trust.
  • [6] See also chap. lxi. From the _Enchiridion_ of Saint
  • Augustine:--"All things that exist, therefore, seeing that the Creator
  • of them all is supremely good, are themselves good. But because they
  • are not like their Creator, supremely and unchangeably good, their good
  • may be diminished and increased. But for good to be diminished is an
  • evil, although, however much it may be diminished, it is necessary, if
  • the being is to continue, that some good should remain to constitute
  • the being. For however small or of whatever kind the being may be, the
  • good which makes it a being cannot be destroyed without destroying the
  • being itself.... So long as a being is in process of corruption, there
  • is in it some good of which it is being deprived; and if a part of the
  • being should remain which cannot be corrupted, this will certainly
  • be an incorruptible being, and accordingly the process of corruption
  • will result in the manifestation of this great good. But if it do
  • not cease to be corrupted, neither can it cease to possess good of
  • which corruption may deprive it. But if it should be thoroughly and
  • completely consumed by corruption, there will then be no good left,
  • because there will be no being. Wherefore corruption can consume the
  • good only by consuming the being. Every being, therefore, is a good; a
  • great good, if it cannot be corrupted; a little good, if it can: but in
  • any case, only the foolish or ignorant will deny that it is a good. And
  • if it be wholly consumed by corruption, then the corruption itself must
  • cease to exist, as there is no being left in which it can dwell."
  • Chap. x. "By the Trinity, thus supremely and equally and unchangeably
  • good, all things were created; and these are not supremely and equally
  • and unchangeably good, but yet they are good, even taken separately.
  • Taken as a whole, however, they are very good, because their _ensemble_
  • constitutes the universe in all its wonderful order and beauty."--_The
  • Works of Aurelius Augustine, Bishop of Hippo_, (Edited by the Rev.
  • Marcus Dods, D.D.), vol. ix.
  • CHAPTER XXVIII
  • "Each brotherly compassion that man hath on his fellow Christians, with
  • charity, it is Christ in him"
  • Thus I saw how Christ hath compassion on us for the cause of sin.
  • And right as I was afore in the [Shewing of the] Passion of Christ
  • fulfilled with pain and compassion, like so in this [sight] I was
  • fulfilled, in part, with compassion of all mine even-Christians--for
  • that well, well beloved people that shall be saved. For God's servants,
  • Holy Church, shall be shaken in sorrow and anguish, tribulation in this
  • world, as men shake a cloth in the wind.
  • And as to this our Lord answered in this manner: _A great thing shall I
  • make hereof in Heaven of endless worship and everlasting joys._
  • Yea, so far forth I saw, that our Lord joyeth of the tribulations of
  • His servants, with ruth and compassion. On each person that He loveth,
  • to His bliss for to bring [them], He layeth something that is no blame
  • in His sight, whereby they are blamed and despised in this world,
  • scorned, mocked,[1] and outcasted. And this He doeth for to hinder the
  • harm that they should take from the pomp and the vain-glory of this
  • wretched life, and make their way ready to come to Heaven, and up-raise
  • them in His bliss everlasting. For He saith: _I shall wholly break you
  • of your vain affections and your vicious pride; and after that I shall
  • together gather you, and make you mild and meek, clean and holy, by
  • oneing to me._
  • And then I saw that each kind compassion that man hath on his
  • even-Christians with charity, it is Christ in him.
  • That same noughting that was shewed in His Passion, it was shewed again
  • here in this Compassion. Wherein were two manner of understandings
  • in our Lord's meaning. The one was the bliss that we are brought to,
  • wherein He willeth that we rejoice. The other is for comfort in our
  • pain: for He willeth that we perceive that it shall all be turned to
  • worship and profit by virtue of His passion, that we perceive that
  • we suffer not alone but with Him, and see Him to be our Ground, and
  • that we see His pains and His noughting passeth so far all that we may
  • suffer, that it may not be fully thought.
  • The beholding of this will save us from murmuring[2] and despair in the
  • feeling of our pains. And if we see soothly that our sin deserveth it,
  • yet His love excuseth us, and of His great courtesy He doeth away all
  • our blame, and beholdeth us with ruth and pity as children innocent and
  • unloathful.
  • [1] "Something that is no lak in his syte, whereby thei are lakid
  • & dispisyd in thys world, scornyd" (a word like "rapyd"--probably
  • "mokyd," as in S. de Cressy) "& outcasten."
  • [2] "gruching."
  • CHAPTER XXIX
  • "How could all be well, for the great harm that is come by sin to the
  • creature?"
  • But in this I stood beholding things general, troublously and mourning,
  • saying thus to our Lord in my meaning, with full great dread: _Ah! good
  • Lord, how might all be well, for the great hurt that is come, by sin,
  • to the creature?_ And here I desired, as far as I durst, to have some
  • more open declaring wherewith I might be eased in this matter.
  • And to this our blessed Lord answered full meekly and with full lovely
  • cheer, and shewed that Adam's sin was the most harm that ever was
  • done, or ever shall be, to the world's end; and also He shewed that
  • this [sin] is openly known in all Holy Church on earth. Furthermore
  • He taught that I should behold the glorious Satisfaction[1]: for this
  • Amends-making[2] is more pleasing to God and more worshipful, without
  • comparison, than ever was the sin of Adam harmful. Then signifieth our
  • blessed Lord thus in this teaching, that we should take heed to this:
  • _For since I have made well the most harm, then it is my will that thou
  • know thereby that I shall make well all that is less._
  • [1] "asyeth" = _asseth_, Satisfying, Fulfilment. See p. 2.
  • [2] "asyeth making". See preceding note.
  • CHAPTER XXX
  • "Two parts of Truth: the part that is open: our Saviour and our
  • salvation;--and the part that is hid and shut up from us: all beside
  • our salvation"
  • He gave me understanding of two parts [of truth]. The one part is our
  • Saviour and our salvation. This blessed part is open and clear and fair
  • and light, and plenteous,--for all mankind that is of good will, and
  • shall be, is comprehended in this part. Hereto are we bounden of God,
  • and drawn and counselled and taught inwardly by the Holy Ghost and
  • outwardly by Holy Church in the same grace. In this willeth our Lord
  • that we be occupied, joying in Him; for He enjoyeth in us. The more
  • plenteously that we take of this, with reverence and meekness, the more
  • thanks we earn of Him and the more speed[1] to ourselves, thus--may we
  • say--enjoying _our_ part of our Lord. The other [part] is hid and shut
  • up from us: that is to say, all that is beside our salvation. For it is
  • our Lord's privy counsel, and it belongeth to the royal lordship of God
  • to have His privy counsel in peace, and it belongeth to His servant,
  • for obedience and reverence, not to learn[2] wholly His counsel. Our
  • Lord hath pity and compassion on us for that some creatures make
  • themselves so busy therein; and I am sure if we knew how much we should
  • please Him and ease ourselves by leaving it, we would. The saints that
  • be in Heaven, they will to know nothing but that which our Lord willeth
  • to shew them: and also their charity and their desire is ruled after
  • the will of our Lord: and thus ought we to will, like to them. Then
  • shall we nothing will nor desire but the will of our Lord, as they do:
  • for we are all one in God's seeing.
  • And here was I learned that we shall trust and rejoice only in our
  • Saviour, blessed Jesus, for all thing.
  • [1] _i.e._ profit.
  • [2] "It longyth to the ryal Lordship of God to have his privy councell
  • in pece, and it longyth to his servant for obedience and reverens not
  • to wel wetyn his counselye."
  • CHAPTER XXXI
  • "The Spiritual Thirst (which was in Him from without beginning) is
  • desire in Him as long as we be in need, drawing us up to His Bliss"
  • And thus our good Lord answered to all the questions and doubts that I
  • might make, saying full comfortably: _I may make all thing well, I can
  • make all thing well, I will make all thing well, and I shall make all
  • thing well; and thou shalt see thyself that all manner of thing shall
  • be well._
  • In that He saith, _I may_, I understand [it] for the Father; and in
  • that He saith, _I can_, I understand [it] for the Son; and where He
  • saith, _I will_, I understand [it] for the Holy Ghost; and where He
  • saith, _I shall_, I understand [it] for the unity of the blessed
  • Trinity: three Persons and one Truth; and where He saith, _Thou shalt
  • see thyself_, I understand the oneing of all mankind that shall be
  • saved unto the blessed Trinity. And in these five words God willeth we
  • be enclosed in rest and in peace.
  • Thus shall the Spiritual Thirst of Christ have an end. For this is the
  • Spiritual Thirst of Christ: the love-longing that lasteth, and ever
  • shall, till we see that sight on Doomsday. For we that shall be saved
  • and shall be Christ's joy and His bliss, some be yet here and some be
  • to come, and so shall some be, unto that day. Therefore this is His
  • thirst and love-longing, to have us altogether whole in Him, to His
  • bliss,--as to my sight. For we be not now as fully whole in Him as we
  • shall be then.
  • For we know in our Faith, and also it was shewed in all [the
  • Revelations] that Christ Jesus is both God and man. And anent the
  • Godhead, He is Himself highest bliss, and was, from without beginning,
  • and shall be, without end: which endless bliss may never be heightened
  • nor lowered in itself. For this was plenteously seen in every Shewing,
  • and specially in the Twelfth, where He saith: _I am that [which] is
  • highest_. And anent Christ's Manhood, it is known in our Faith, and
  • also [it was] shewed, that He, with the virtue of Godhead, for love, to
  • bring us to His bliss suffered pains and passions, and died. And these
  • be the works of Christ's Manhood wherein He rejoiceth; and that shewed
  • He in the Ninth Revelation, where He saith: _It is a joy and bliss and
  • endless pleasing to me that ever I suffered Passion for thee._ And
  • this is the bliss of Christ's _works_, and thus he signifieth where He
  • saith in that same Shewing: we be His bliss, we be His meed, we be His
  • worship, we be His crown.
  • For anent that Christ is our Head, He is glorified and impassible; and
  • anent His Body in which all His members are knit, He is not yet fully
  • glorified nor all impassible. Therefore the same desire and thirst
  • that He had upon the Cross (which desire, longing, and thirst, as to
  • my sight, was in Him from without beginning) the same hath He yet, and
  • shall [have] unto the time that the last soul that shall be saved is
  • come up to His bliss.
  • For as verily as there is a property in God of ruth and pity, so verily
  • there is a property in God of thirst and longing. (And of the virtue of
  • this longing in Christ, _we_ have to long again to Him: without which
  • no soul cometh to Heaven.) And this property of longing and thirst
  • cometh of the endless Goodness of God, even as the property of pity
  • cometh of His endless Goodness. And though longing and pity are two
  • sundry properties, as to my sight, in this standeth the point of the
  • Spiritual Thirst: which is _desire in Him as long as we be in need_,
  • drawing us up to His bliss. And all this was seen in the Shewing of
  • Compassion: for that shall cease on Doomsday.
  • Thus He hath ruth and compassion on us, and He hath longing to have us;
  • but His wisdom and His love suffereth not the end to come till the best
  • time.
  • CHAPTER XXXII
  • "There be deeds evil done in our sight, and so great harms taken, that
  • it seemeth to us that it were impossible that ever it should come to
  • good end." "That Great Deed ordained ... by which our Lord God shall
  • make all things well"
  • One time our good Lord said: _All thing shall be well_; and another
  • time he said: _Thou shalt see thyself that all_ MANNER _[of] thing
  • shall be well_; and in these two [sayings] the soul took sundry
  • understandings.
  • One was that He willeth we know that not only He taketh heed to noble
  • things and to great, but also to little and to small, to low and to
  • simple, to one and to other. And so meaneth He in that He saith: ALL
  • MANNER OF THINGS _shall be well_. For He willeth we know that the least
  • thing shall not be forgotten.
  • Another understanding is this, that there be deeds evil done in our
  • sight, and so great harms taken, that it seemeth to us that it were
  • impossible that ever it should come to good end. And upon this we look,
  • sorrowing and mourning therefor, so that we cannot resign us unto the
  • blissful beholding of God as we should do. And the cause of this is
  • that the use of our reason is now so blind, so low, and so simple, that
  • we cannot know that high marvellous Wisdom, the Might and the Goodness
  • of the blissful Trinity. And thus signifieth He when He saith: THOU
  • SHALT SEE THYSELF _if[1] all manner of things shall be well_. As if He
  • said: _Take now heed faithfully and trustingly, and at the last end
  • thou shalt verily see it in fulness of joy_.
  • And thus in these same five words aforesaid: _I may make all things
  • well_, etc., I understand a mighty comfort of all the works of our Lord
  • God that are yet to come. There is a Deed the which the blessed Trinity
  • shall do in the last Day, as to my sight, and when the Deed shall be,
  • and how it shall be done, is unknown of all creatures that are beneath
  • Christ, and shall be till when it is done.
  • ["The Goodness and the Love of our Lord God will that we wit [know]
  • that it shall be; And the Might and the Wisdom of him by the same Love
  • will hill [conceal] it, and hide it from us what it shall be, and how
  • it shall be done."][2]
  • And the cause why He willeth that we know [this Deed shall be], is for
  • that He would have us the more eased in our soul and [the more] set at
  • peace in love[3]--leaving the beholding of all troublous things that
  • might keep us back from true enjoying of Him. This is that Great Deed
  • ordained of our Lord God from without beginning, treasured and hid in
  • His blessed breast, only known to Himself: by which He shall make all
  • things well.
  • For like as the blissful Trinity made all things of nought, right so
  • the same blessed Trinity shall make well all that is not well.
  • And in this sight I marvelled greatly and beheld our Faith, marvelling
  • thus: Our Faith is grounded in God's word, and it belongeth to our
  • Faith that we believe that God's word shall be saved in all things;
  • and one point of our Faith is that many creatures shall be condemned:
  • as angels that fell out of Heaven for pride, which be now fiends; and
  • man[4] in earth that dieth out of the Faith of Holy Church: that is
  • to say, they that be heathen men; and also man[5] that hath received
  • Christendom and liveth unchristian life and so dieth out of charity:
  • all these shall be condemned to hell without end, as Holy Church
  • teacheth me to believe. And all this [so] standing,[6] methought it was
  • impossible that all manner of things should be well, as our Lord shewed
  • in the same time.
  • And as to this I had no other answer in Shewing of our Lord God but
  • this: _That which is impossible to thee is not impossible to me: I
  • shall save my word in all things and I shall make all things well._
  • Thus I was taught, by the grace of God, that I should steadfastly hold
  • me in the Faith as I had aforehand understood, [and] therewith that I
  • should firmly believe that all things shall be well, as our Lord shewed
  • in the same time.
  • For this is the Great Deed that our Lord shall do, in which Deed He
  • shall save His word and He shall make all well that is not well. How it
  • shall be done there is no creature beneath Christ that knoweth it, nor
  • shall know it till it is done; according to the understanding that I
  • took of our Lord's meaning in this time.
  • [1] "if" = "that." (Acts xxvi. 8.)
  • [2] Inserted from Serenus de Cressy's version.
  • [3] "pecid in love--levyng the beholdyng of al tempests that might
  • letten us of trew enjoyeng in hym." S. de Cressy: "let us of true
  • enjoying in him."
  • [4] S. de Cressy, "many."
  • [5] S. de Cressy, "many."
  • [6] "stondyng al this."
  • CHAPTER XXXIII
  • "It is God's will that we have great regard to all His deeds that He
  • hath done, but evermore it needeth us to leave the beholding what the
  • Deed shall be"
  • And yet in this I desired, as [far] as I durst, that I might have full
  • sight of Hell and Purgatory. But it was not my meaning to make proof of
  • anything that belongeth to the Faith: for I believed soothfastly that
  • Hell and Purgatory is for the same end that Holy Church teacheth, but
  • my meaning was that I might have seen, for learning in all things that
  • belong to my Faith: whereby I might live the more to God's worship and
  • to my profit.
  • But for [all] my desire, I could[1] [see] of this right nought, save
  • as it is aforesaid in the First Shewing, where I saw that the devil is
  • reproved of God and endlessly condemned. In which sight I understood
  • as to all creatures that are of the devil's condition in this life,
  • and therein end, that there is no more mention made of them afore God
  • and all His Holy than of the devil,--notwithstanding that they be of
  • mankind--whether they be christened or not.
  • For though the Revelation was made of goodness in which was made
  • little mention of evil, yet I was not drawn thereby from any point
  • of the Faith that Holy Church teacheth me to believe. For I had
  • sight of the Passion of Christ in diverse Shewings,--the First, the
  • Second, the Fifth, and the Eighth,--wherein I had in part a feeling
  • of the sorrow of our Lady, and of His true friends that saw Him in
  • pain; but I saw not so properly specified the Jews that did Him to
  • death. Notwithstanding I knew in my Faith that they were accursed and
  • condemned without end, saving those that converted, by grace. And I
  • was strengthened and taught generally to keep me in the Faith in every
  • point, and in all as I had before understood: hoping that I was therein
  • with the mercy and the grace of God; desiring and praying in my purpose
  • that I might continue therein unto my life's end.
  • And it is God's will that we have great regard to all His deeds that
  • He hath done, but evermore it needeth us to leave the beholding what
  • the Deed shall be. And let us desire to be like our brethren which
  • be saints in Heaven, that will right nought but God's will and are
  • well pleased both with hiding and with shewing. For I saw soothly in
  • our Lord's teaching, the more we busy us to know His secret counsels
  • in this or any other thing, the farther shall we be from the knowing
  • thereof.
  • [1] "I coude of this right nowte."
  • CHAPTER XXXIV
  • "All that is speedful for us to learn and to know, full courteously
  • will our Lord shew us"
  • Our Lord God shewed two manner of secret things. One is this great
  • Secret [Counsel] with all the privy points that belong thereto: and
  • these secret things He willeth we should know [as _being_, but as]
  • _hid_ until the time that He will clearly shew them to us. The other
  • are the secret things that He willeth to make open and known to us; for
  • He would have us understand that it is His will that we should know
  • them. They are secrets to us not only for that He willeth that they
  • be secrets to us, but they are secrets to us for our blindness and
  • our ignorance; and thereof He hath great ruth, and therefore He will
  • Himself make them more open to us, whereby we may know Him and love
  • Him and cleave to Him. For all that is speedful for us to learn and to
  • know, full courteously will our Lord shew us: and [of] that is this
  • [Shewing], with all the preaching and teaching of Holy Church.
  • God shewed full great pleasance that He hath in all men and women that
  • mightily and meekly and with all their will take the preaching and
  • teaching of Holy Church. For it is His Holy Church: He is the Ground,
  • He is the Substance, He is the Teaching, He is the Teacher, He is the
  • End, He is the Meed for which every kind soul travaileth.
  • And _this_ [of the Shewing] is [made] known, and shall be known to
  • every soul to which the Holy Ghost declareth it. And I hope truly that
  • all those that seek this, He shall speed: for they seek God.
  • All this that I have now told, and more that I shall tell after, is
  • comforting against sin. For in the Third Shewing when I saw that God
  • doeth all that is done, I saw no sin: and then I saw that all _is_
  • well. But when God shewed me for sin, then said He: _All_ SHALL _be
  • well_.
  • CHAPTER XXXV
  • "I desired to learn assuredly as to a certain creature that I loved....
  • It is more worship to God to behold Him in _all_ than in any special
  • thing"
  • And when God Almighty had shewed so plenteously and joyfully of His
  • Goodness, I desired to learn assuredly as to a certain creature that
  • I loved, if it should continue in good living, which I hoped by the
  • grace of God was begun. And in this desire for a _singular_ Shewing,
  • it seemed that I hindered myself: for I was not taught in this time.
  • And then was I answered in my reason, as it were by a friendly
  • intervenor[1]: _Take it_ GENERALLY, _and behold the graciousness of the
  • Lord God as He sheweth to thee: for it is more worship to God to behold
  • Him in all than in any special thing_. And therewith I learned that
  • it is more worship to God to know all-thing in general, than to take
  • pleasure in any special thing. And if I should do wisely according to
  • this teaching, I should not only be glad for nothing in special, but
  • I should not be greatly distressed for no manner of thing[2]: for ALL
  • _shall be well_. For the fulness of joy is to behold God in _all_: for
  • by the same blessed Might, Wisdom, and Love, that He made all-thing, to
  • the same end our good Lord leadeth it continually, and thereto Himself
  • shall bring it; and when it is time we shall see it. And the ground
  • of this was shewed in the First [Revelation], and more openly in the
  • Third, where it saith: _I saw God in a point_.
  • All that our Lord doeth is rightful, and that which He suffereth[3] is
  • worshipful: and in these two is comprehended good and ill: for all that
  • is good our Lord doeth, and that which is evil our Lord suffereth. I
  • say not that any evil is worshipful, but I say the sufferance of our
  • Lord God is worshipful: whereby His Goodness shall be known, without
  • end, in His marvellous meekness and mildness, by the working of mercy
  • and grace.
  • _Rightfulness_ is that thing that is so good that [it] may not be
  • better than it is. For God Himself is very Rightfulness, and all His
  • works are done rightfully as they are ordained from without beginning
  • by His high Might, His high Wisdom, His high Goodness. And right as He
  • ordained unto the best, right so He worketh continually, and leadeth
  • it to the same end; and He is ever full-pleased with Himself and with
  • all His works. And the beholding of this blissful accord is full
  • sweet to the soul that seeth by grace. All the souls that shall be
  • saved in Heaven without end be made rightful in the sight of God, and
  • by His own goodness: in which rightfulness we are endlessly kept, and
  • marvellously, above all creatures.
  • And _Mercy_ is a working that cometh of the goodness of God, and it
  • shall last in working all along, as sin is suffered to pursue rightful
  • souls. And when sin hath no longer leave to pursue, then shall the
  • working of mercy cease, and then shall all be brought to rightfulness
  • and therein stand without end.
  • And by His sufferance we fall; and in His blissful Love with His Might
  • and His Wisdom we are kept; and by mercy and grace we are raised to
  • manifold more joys.
  • Thus in Rightfulness and Mercy He willeth to be known and loved, now
  • and without end. And the soul that wisely beholdeth it in grace, it is
  • well pleased with both, and endlessly enjoyeth.
  • [1] "A friendful mene" = intermediary (person or thing), medium:
  • compare chaps. xix., lv.
  • [2] See xxxvi. 74.
  • [3] _i.e._ alloweth.
  • CHAPTER XXXVI
  • "My sin shall not hinder His Goodness working.... A deed shall be
  • done--as we come to Heaven--and it may be known here in part;--though
  • it be truly taken for the general Man, yet it excludeth not the
  • special. For what our good Lord will do by His poor creatures, it is
  • now unknown to me"
  • Our Lord God shewed that a deed shall be done, and Himself shall do
  • it, and I shall do nothing but sin, and my sin shall not hinder[1] His
  • Goodness working. And I saw that the beholding of this is a heavenly
  • joy in a fearing soul which evermore kindly by grace desireth God's
  • will. This deed shall be begun here, and it shall be worshipful to God
  • and plenteously profitable to His lovers in earth; and ever as we come
  • to Heaven we shall see it in marvellous joy, and it shall last thus in
  • working unto the last Day; and the worship and the bliss of it shall
  • last in Heaven afore God and all His Holy [ones] for ever.
  • Thus was this deed seen and understood in our Lord's signifying: and
  • the cause why He shewed it is to make us rejoice in Him and in all
  • His works. When I saw His Shewing continued, I understood that it
  • was shewed for a great thing that was for to come, which thing God
  • shewed that He Himself should do it: which deed hath these properties
  • aforesaid. And this shewed He well blissfully, signifying that I should
  • take it myself faithfully and trustingly.
  • But what this deed should be was kept secret from me.
  • And in this I saw that He willeth not that we dread to know the things
  • that He sheweth: He sheweth them because He would have us know them; by
  • which knowing He would have us love Him and have pleasure and endlessly
  • enjoy in Him. For the great love that He hath to us He sheweth us all
  • that is worshipful and profitable for the time. And the things that He
  • will now have privy, yet of His great goodness He sheweth them _close_:
  • in which shewing He willeth that we believe and understand that we
  • shall see the same verily in His endless bliss. Then ought we to
  • rejoice in Him for all that He sheweth and all that He hideth; and if
  • we steadily[2] and meekly do thus, we shall find therein great ease;
  • and endless thanks we shall have of Him therefor.
  • And this is the understanding of this word:--That it shall be done for
  • me, meaneth that it shall be done for the general Man: that is to say,
  • all that shall be saved. It shall be worshipful and marvellous and
  • plenteous, and God Himself shall do it; and this shall be the highest
  • joy that may be, to behold the deed that God Himself shall do, and man
  • shall do right nought but sin. Then signifieth our Lord God thus, as
  • if He said: _Behold and see! Here hast thou matter of meekness, here
  • hast thou matter of love, here hast thou matter to make nought of[3]
  • thyself, here hast thou matter to enjoy in me;--and, for my love, enjoy
  • [thou] in me: for of all things, therewith mightest thou please me
  • most_.
  • And as long as we are in this life, what time that we by our folly turn
  • us to the beholding of the reproved, tenderly our Lord God toucheth us
  • and blissfully calleth us, saying in our soul: _Let be all thy love, my
  • dearworthy child: turn thee to me--I am enough to thee--and enjoy in
  • thy Saviour and in thy salvation_. And that this is our Lord's working
  • in us, I am sure the soul that hath understanding[4] therein by grace
  • shall see it and feel it.
  • And though it be so that this deed be truly taken for the general Man,
  • yet it excludeth not the special. For what our good Lord will do by His
  • poor creatures, it is now unknown to me.
  • But this deed and that other aforesaid, they are not both one but two
  • sundry. This deed shall be done sooner (and that [time] shall be as we
  • come to Heaven), and to whom our Lord giveth it, it may be known here
  • in part. But that Great Deed aforesaid shall neither be known in Heaven
  • nor earth till it is done.
  • And moreover He gave special understanding and teaching of working of
  • miracles, as thus:--_It is known that I have done miracles here afore,
  • many and diverse, high and marvellous, worshipful and great. And so as
  • I have done, I do now continually, and shall do in coming of time_.
  • It is known that afore miracles come sorrow and anguish and
  • tribulation[5]; and that is for that we should know our own feebleness
  • and our mischiefs that we are fallen in by sin, to meeken us and make
  • us to dread God and cry for help and grace. Miracles come after that,
  • and they come of the high Might, Wisdom, and Goodness of God, shewing
  • His virtue and the joys of Heaven so far at it may be in this passing
  • life: and that to strengthen our faith and to increase our hope, in
  • charity. Wherefore it pleaseth Him to be known and worshipped in
  • miracles. Then signifieth He thus: He willeth that we be not borne over
  • low for sorrow and tempests that fall to us: for it hath ever so been
  • afore miracle-coming.
  • [1] "lettyn his goodnes werkyng."
  • [2] "wilfully."
  • [3] "to nowten."
  • [4] "is a perceyvid" (S. de Cressy, "pearced"; Collins, "pierced";) =
  • has perception.
  • [5] See v., xlviii., lix., lxi.
  • CHAPTER XXXVII
  • "In every soul that shall be saved is a Godly Will that never assented
  • to sin, nor ever shall."--"For failing of Love on our part, therefore
  • is all our travail"
  • God brought to my mind that I should sin. And for pleasance that I had
  • in beholding of Him, I attended not readily to that shewing; and our
  • Lord full mercifully abode, and gave me grace to attend. And this
  • shewing I took singularly to myself; but by all the gracious comfort
  • that followeth, as ye shall see, I was learned to take it for all mine
  • even-Christians: _all in general and nothing in special_: though our
  • Lord shewed me that I should sin, by me alone is understood all.
  • And therein I conceived a soft dread. And to this our Lord answered:
  • _I keep thee full surely_. This word was said with more love and
  • secureness and spiritual keeping than I can or may tell. For as it
  • was shewed that [I][1] should sin, right so was the comfort shewed:
  • secureness and keeping for all mine even-Christians.
  • What may make me more to love mine even-Christians than to see in God
  • that He loveth all that shall be saved as it were all one soul?
  • For in every soul that shall be saved is a Godly Will that never
  • assented to sin, nor ever shall. Right as there is a beastly will in
  • the lower part that may will no good, right so there is a Godly Will in
  • the higher part, which will is so good that it may never will evil, but
  • ever good. And therefore we are that which He loveth and endlessly we
  • do that which Him pleaseth.
  • This shewed our Lord in [shewing] the wholeness of love that we stand
  • in, in His sight: yea, that He loveth us now as well while we are here,
  • as He shall do while we are there afore His blessed face. But for
  • failing of love on our part, therefore is all our travail.
  • [1] Perhaps the omitted word is "_all_"; but de Cressy has "I" as
  • above: "that I should sin."
  • CHAPTER XXXVIII
  • In Heaven "the token of sin is turned to worship."--_Examples thereof_
  • Also God shewed that sin shall be no shame to man, but worship. For
  • right as to every sin is answering a pain by truth, right so for every
  • sin, to the same soul is given a bliss by love: right as diverse sins
  • are punished with diverse pains according as they be grievous, right so
  • shall they be rewarded with diverse joys in Heaven according as they
  • have been painful and sorrowful to the soul in earth. For the soul that
  • shall come to Heaven is precious to God, and the place so worshipful
  • that the goodness of God suffereth never that soul to sin that shall
  • come there without that the which sin shall be rewarded; and it is made
  • known without end, and blissfully restored by overpassing worship.
  • For in this Sight mine understanding was lifted up into Heaven, and
  • then God brought merrily to my mind David, and others in the Old Law
  • without number; and in the New Law He brought to my mind first Mary
  • Magdalene, Peter and Paul, and those of Inde;[1] and Saint John of
  • Beverley[2]; and others also without number: how they are known in the
  • Church in earth with their sins, and it is to them no shame, but all is
  • turned for them to worship. And therefore our courteous Lord sheweth
  • [it thus] for them here in part like as it is there in fulness: for
  • there the token of sin is turned to worship.
  • And Saint John of Beverley, our Lord shewed him full highly, in
  • comfort to us for homeliness; and brought to my mind how he is a dear
  • neighbour,[3] and of our knowing. And God called him _Saint John of
  • Beverley_ plainly as we do, and that with a most glad sweet cheer,
  • shewing that he is a full high saint in Heaven in His sight, and a
  • blissful. And with this he made mention that in his youth and in his
  • tender age he was a dearworthy servant to God, greatly God loving and
  • dreading, and yet God suffered him to fall, mercifully keeping him that
  • he perished not, nor lost no time. And afterward God raised him to
  • manifold more grace, and by the contrition and meekness that he had in
  • his living, God hath given him in Heaven manifold joys, overpassing
  • that [which] he should have had if he had not fallen. And that this is
  • sooth, God sheweth in earth with plenteous miracles doing about his
  • body continually.
  • And all this was to make us glad and merry in love.
  • [1] S. Thomas and S. Jude. According to tradition the Gospel was
  • carried to India by these Apostles.
  • [2] S. John of Beverley was consecrated Bishop of Hexham in 687,
  • and was afterwards Archbishop of York. "He founded the monastery of
  • Beverley in the midst of the wood called Deira, among the ruins of the
  • deserted Roman settlement of Pentuaria. This monastery, like so many
  • others of the Anglo-Saxons, was a double community of monks and nuns.
  • In 718 John retired for the remaining years of his life to Beverley,
  • where he died in 721 on the 7th of May.... He was canonised in 1037.
  • Henschenius the Bollandist, in the second tome of May, has published
  • books of the miracles wrought at the relicks of St John of Beverley
  • written by eye-witnesses. His sacred bones were honourably translated
  • into the church of Alfric, Archbishop of York, in 1037. A feast in
  • honour of his translation was kept on the 25th of October."--Alban
  • Butler's _Lives of the Saints_, etc.
  • Perhaps the fact that the Saint's original Feast Day of the 7th of
  • May occurred on the second day of Julian's illness, had something to
  • do with his being brought to her mind a few days after with so much
  • vividness.
  • [3] "and browte to mynd how he is an hende neybor and of our
  • knowyng"--_i.e._ he was a countryman of our own. "hende" = near,
  • urbane, gentle.
  • CHAPTER XXXIX
  • "Sin is the sharpest scourge.... By contrition we are made clean, by
  • compassion we are made ready, and by true longing towards God we are
  • made worthy"
  • Sin is the sharpest scourge that any chosen soul may be smitten with:
  • which scourge thoroughly beateth[1] man and woman, and maketh him
  • hateful in his own sight, so far forth that afterwhile[2] he thinketh
  • himself he is not worthy but as to sink in hell,--till [that time] when
  • contrition taketh him by touching of the Holy Ghost, and turneth the
  • bitterness into hopes of God's mercy. And then He beginneth his wounds
  • to heal, and the soul to quicken [as it is] turned unto the life of
  • Holy Church. The Holy Ghost leadeth him to confession, with all his
  • will to shew his sins nakedly and truly, with great sorrow and great
  • shame that he hath defouled the fair image of God. Then receiveth he
  • penance for every sin [as] enjoined by his doomsman[3] that is grounded
  • in Holy Church by the teaching of the Holy Ghost. And this is one
  • meekness that greatly pleaseth God; and also bodily sickness of God's
  • sending, and also sorrow and shame from without, and reproof, and
  • despite of this world, with all manner of grievance and temptations
  • that we be cast in,[4] bodily and ghostly.
  • Full preciously our Lord keepeth us when it seemeth to us that we are
  • near forsaken and cast away for our sin and because we have deserved
  • it. And because of meekness that we get hereby, we are raised well-high
  • in God's sight by His grace, with so great contrition, and also
  • compassion, and true longing to God. Then they be suddenly delivered
  • from sin and from pain, and taken up to bliss, and made even high
  • saints.
  • By contrition we are made clean, by compassion we are made ready, and
  • by true longing toward God we are made worthy. These are three means,
  • as I understand, whereby that all souls come to heaven: that is to say,
  • that have been sinners in earth and shall be saved: for by these three
  • medicines it behoveth that every soul be healed. Though the soul be
  • healed, his wounds are seen afore God,--not as wounds but as worships.
  • And so on the contrary-wise, as we be punished here with sorrow and
  • penance, we shall be rewarded in heaven by the courteous love of our
  • Lord God Almighty, who willeth that none that come there lose his
  • travail in any degree. For He [be]holdeth sin as sorrow and pain to
  • His lovers, to whom He assigneth no blame, for love. The meed that we
  • shall receive shall not be little, but it shall be high, glorious, and
  • worshipful. And so shall shame be turned to worship and more joy.
  • But our courteous Lord willeth not that His servants despair, for often
  • nor for grievous falling: for our falling hindereth[5] not Him to love
  • us. Peace and love are ever in us, being and working; but we be not
  • alway in peace and in love. But He willeth that we take heed thus that
  • He is Ground of all our whole life in love; and furthermore that He is
  • our everlasting Keeper and mightily defendeth us against our enemies,
  • that be full fell and fierce upon us;--and so much our need is the more
  • for [that] we give them occasion by our falling.[6]
  • [1] "al forbetyth." S. de Cressy: "all to beateth," Judges ix. 53.
  • [2] "otherwhile."
  • [3] S. de Cressy: "Dome's-man, _i.e._ Confessarius."
  • [4] MS. "will be cast in."
  • [5] letteth not Him to love us.
  • [6] See chap. lxviii. Inx both passages the Brit. Mus. MS. seems to
  • have "him," not "hem" = them. The reading here might be: "For we give
  • _Him_ occasion by our failing"--occasion to keep and defend us: and so
  • in lxxviii.: "He keepeth us mightily and mercifully in the time that
  • we are in our sin and among all our enemies that are full fell upon
  • us;--and so much we are in the more peril. For we give Him occasion
  • thereto and know not our own need." Or possibly the sense is (1): He
  • defendeth us "so much [as] our need is the more" [so much more as]; and
  • (2) "so much [more as] we are in the more peril." But S. de Cressy's
  • version has in both passages "them," and this reading agrees with chap.
  • lxxvi.: "We have this [fear] by the stirring of our enemy and by our
  • own folly and blindness"--we who "fall often into sin."
  • CHAPTER XL
  • "True love teacheth us that we should hate sin only for love." "To me
  • was shewed no harder hell than sin." "God willeth that we endlessly
  • hate the sin and endlessly love the soul, as God loveth it"
  • This is a sovereign friendship of our courteous Lord that He keepeth
  • us so tenderly while we be in sin; and furthermore He toucheth us
  • full privily and sheweth us our sin by the sweet light of mercy and
  • grace. But when we see our self so foul, then ween we that God were
  • wroth with us for our sin, and then are we stirred of the Holy Ghost
  • by contrition unto prayer and desire for the amending of our life with
  • all our mights, to slacken the wrath of God, unto the time we find a
  • rest in soul and a softness in conscience. Then hope we that God hath
  • forgiven us our sins: and it is truth. And then sheweth our courteous
  • Lord Himself to the soul--well-merrily and with glad cheer--with
  • friendly welcoming as if it[1] had been in pain and in prison, saying
  • sweetly thus: _My darling I am glad thou art come to me: in all thy
  • wo I have ever been with thee; and now seest thou my loving and we be
  • oned in bliss_. Thus are sins forgiven by mercy and grace, and our soul
  • is worshipfully received in joy like as it shall be when it cometh to
  • Heaven, as oftentimes as it cometh by the gracious working of the Holy
  • Ghost and the virtue of Christ's Passion.
  • Here understand I in truth that all manner of things are made ready
  • for us by the great goodness of God, so far forth that what time we be
  • ourselves in peace and charity, we be verily saved. But because we may
  • not have this in fulness while we are here, therefore it falleth to
  • us evermore to live in sweet prayer and lovely longing with our Lord
  • Jesus. For He longeth ever to bring us to the fulness of joy; as it is
  • aforesaid, where He sheweth the Spiritual Thirst.
  • But now if any man or woman because of all this spiritual comfort that
  • is aforesaid, be stirred by folly to say or to think: _If this be true,
  • then were it good to sin [so as] to have the more meed_,--or else to
  • charge the less [guilt] to sin,--beware of this stirring: for verily
  • if it come it is untrue, and of the enemy of the same true love that
  • teacheth us that we should hate sin only for love. I am sure by mine
  • own feeling, the more that any kind[2] soul seeth this in the courteous
  • love of our Lord God, the lother he is to sin and the more he is
  • ashamed. For if afore us were laid [together] all the pains in Hell and
  • in Purgatory and in Earth--death and other--, and [by itself] sin, we
  • should rather choose all that pain than sin. For sin is so vile and so
  • greatly to be hated that it may be likened to no pain which is not sin.
  • And to me was shewed no harder hell than sin. For a kind[3] soul hath
  • no hell but sin.
  • And [when] we give our intent to love and meekness, by the working of
  • mercy and grace we are made all fair and clean. As mighty and as wise
  • as God is to save men, so willing He is. For Christ Himself is [the]
  • ground of all the laws of Christian men, and He taught us to do good
  • against ill: here may we see that He is Himself this charity, and doeth
  • to us as He teacheth us to do. For He willeth that we be like Him in
  • wholeness of endless love to ourself and to our even-Christians: no
  • more than His love is broken to us for our sin, no more willeth He that
  • our love be broken to ourself and to our even-Christians: but [that we]
  • endlessly hate the sin and endlessly love the soul, as God loveth it.
  • Then shall we hate sin like as God hateth it, and love the soul as God
  • loveth it. And this word that He said is an endless comfort: _I keep
  • thee securely_.
  • [1] "he," that is, the soul.
  • [2] A naturally-loving, filial human soul.
  • [3] A naturally-loving, filial human soul.
  • _THE FOURTEENTH REVELATION._
  • CHAPTER XLI
  • "_I am the Ground of thy beseeching._" "Also to prayer belongeth
  • thanking"
  • After this our Lord shewed concerning Prayer. In which Shewing I see
  • two conditions in our Lord's signifying: one is rightfulness, another
  • is sure trust.
  • But yet oftentimes our trust is not full: for we are not sure that God
  • heareth us, as we think because of our unworthiness, and because we
  • feel right nought, (for we are as barren and dry oftentimes after our
  • prayers as we were afore); and this, in our feeling our folly, is cause
  • of our weakness.[1] For thus have I felt in myself.
  • And all this brought our Lord suddenly to my mind, and shewed these
  • words, and said: _I am Ground of thy beseeching: first it is my will
  • that thou have it; and after, I make thee to will it; and after, I make
  • thee to beseech it and thou beseechest it. How should it then be that
  • thou shouldst not have thy beseeching?_
  • And thus in the first reason, with the three that follow, our good Lord
  • sheweth a mighty comfort, as it may be seen in the same words. And in
  • the first reason,--where He saith: _And thou beseechest it_, there He
  • sheweth [His] full great pleasance, and endless meed that He will give
  • us for our beseeching. And in the second reason, where He saith: _How
  • should it then be?_ etc., this was said for an impossible [thing].
  • For it is most impossible that we should beseech mercy and grace, and
  • not have it. For everything that our good Lord maketh us to beseech,
  • Himself hath ordained it to us from without beginning. Here may we see
  • that our beseeching is not cause of God's goodness; and that shewed
  • He soothfastly in all these sweet words when He saith: _I am [the]
  • Ground_.--And our good Lord willeth that this be known of His lovers in
  • earth; and the more that we know [it] the more should we beseech, if it
  • be wisely taken; and so is our Lord's meaning.
  • Beseeching is a true, gracious, lasting will of the soul, oned and
  • fastened into the will of our Lord by the sweet inward work of the
  • Holy Ghost. Our Lord Himself, He is the first receiver of our prayer,
  • as to my sight, and taketh it full thankfully and highly enjoying; and
  • He sendeth it up above and setteth it in the Treasure, where it shall
  • never perish. It is there afore God with all His Holy continually
  • received, ever speeding [the help of] our needs; and when we shall
  • receive our bliss it shall be given us for a degree of joy, with
  • endless worshipful thanking from[2] Him.
  • Full glad and merry is our Lord of our prayer; and He looketh
  • thereafter and He willeth to have it because with His grace He maketh
  • us like to Himself in condition as we are in kind: and so is His
  • blissful will. Therefore He saith thus: _Pray inwardly,[3] though thee
  • thinketh it savour thee not: for it is profitable, though thou feel
  • not, though thou see nought; yea, though thou think thou canst not.
  • For in dryness and in barrenness, in sickness and in feebleness, then
  • is thy prayer well-pleasant to me, though thee thinketh it savour thee
  • nought but little. And so is all thy believing prayer in my sight._ For
  • the meed and the endless thanks that He will give us, _therefor_ He is
  • covetous to have us pray continually in His sight. God accepteth the
  • goodwill and the travail of His servant, howsoever we feel: wherefore
  • it pleaseth Him that we work both in our prayers and in good living,
  • by His help and His grace, reasonably with discretion keeping our
  • powers[4] [turned] to Him, till when that we have Him that we seek, in
  • fulness of joy: that is, Jesus. And that shewed He in the Fifteenth
  • [Revelation], farther on, in this word: _Thou shalt have me to thy
  • meed_.
  • And also to prayer belongeth thanking. Thanking is a true inward
  • knowing, with great reverence and lovely dread turning ourselves
  • with all our mights unto the working that our good Lord stirreth us
  • to, enjoying and thanking inwardly. And sometimes, for plenteousness
  • it breaketh out with voice, and saith: _Good Lord, I thank Thee![5]
  • Blessed mayst Thou be!_ And sometime when the heart is dry and feeleth
  • not, or else by temptation of our enemy,--then it is driven by reason
  • and by grace to cry upon our Lord with voice, rehearing His blessed
  • Passion and His great Goodness; and the virtue of our Lord's word
  • turneth into the soul and quickeneth the heart and entereth[6] it by
  • His grace into true working, and maketh it pray right blissfully. And
  • truly to enjoy our Lord, it is a full blissful thanking in His sight.
  • [1] MS.: "_And this in our felyng our foly is cause of our wekenes._"
  • S. de Cressy: "And thus in our feelings our folly is cause of our
  • weakness."
  • [2] "of" = by, from.
  • [3] "inderly" = inwardly--or from the heart: heartily, as in lxvi.
  • [4] _i.e._ Faculties.--MS. "Mights."
  • [5] "Grante mercy" = _grand-merci_.
  • [6] "entrith," leadeth.
  • CHAPTER XLII
  • "Prayer is a right understanding of that fulness of joy that is to
  • come, with accordant longing and sure trust"
  • Our Lord God willeth that we have true understanding, and specially
  • in three things that belong to our prayer. The first is: _by whom and
  • how that our prayer springeth. By whom_, He sheweth when He saith:
  • _I am [the] Ground_; and _how_, by His Goodness: for He saith first:
  • _It is my will._ The second is: _in what manner and how we should
  • use our prayer_; and that is that our will be turned unto the will
  • of our Lord, enjoying: and so meaneth He when He saith: _I make thee
  • to will it_. The third is that we should know _the fruit and the end
  • of our prayers_: that is, that we be oned and like to our Lord in
  • all things; and to this intent and for this end was all this lovely
  • lesson shewed. And He will help us, and we shall make it so as He saith
  • Himself;--Blessed may He be!
  • For this is our Lord's will, that our prayer and our trust be both
  • alike large. For if we trust not as much as we pray, we do not full
  • worship to our Lord in our prayer, and also we tarry[1] and pain our
  • self. The cause is, as I believe, that we know not truly that our Lord
  • is [the] Ground on whom our prayer springeth; and also that we know not
  • that it is given us by the grace of His love. For if we knew this, it
  • would make us to trust to have, of our Lord's gift, all that we desire.
  • For I am sure that no man asketh mercy and grace with true meaning, but
  • if mercy and grace be first given to him.
  • But sometimes it cometh to our mind that we have prayed long time, and
  • yet we think to ourselves that we have not our asking. But herefor
  • should we not be in heaviness. For I am sure, by our Lord's signifying,
  • that either we abide a better time, or more grace, or a better gift. He
  • willeth that we have true knowing in Himself that He is Being; and in
  • this knowing He willeth that our understanding be grounded, with all
  • our mights and all our intent and all our meaning; and in this ground
  • He willeth that we take our place and our dwelling, and by the gracious
  • light of Himself He willeth that we have understanding of the things
  • that follow. The first is our noble and excellent making; the second,
  • our precious and dearworthy again-buying; the third, all-thing that
  • He hath made beneath us, [He hath made] to serve us, and for our love
  • keepeth it. Then signifieth He thus, as if He said: _Behold and see
  • that I have done all this before thy prayers; and now thou art, and
  • prayest me_. And thus He signifieth that it belongeth to us to learn
  • that the greatest deeds be [already] done, as Holy Church teacheth; and
  • in the beholding of this, with thanking, we ought to pray for the deed
  • that is now in doing: and that is, that He rule and guide us, to His
  • worship, in this life, and bring us to His bliss. And therefor He hath
  • done all.
  • Then signifieth He thus: that we [should] see that He doeth it, and
  • that we [should] pray therefor. For the one is not enough. For if we
  • pray and see not that He doeth it, it maketh us heavy and doubtful; and
  • that is not His worship. And if we see that He doeth, and we pray not,
  • we do not our debt, and so may it not be: that is to say, so is it not
  • [the thing that is] in His beholding. But to see that He doeth it, and
  • to pray forthwithal,--so is he worshipped and we sped. All-thing that
  • our Lord hath ordained to do, it is His will that we pray therefor,
  • either in special or in general. And the joy and the bliss that it is
  • to Him, and the thanks and the worship that we shall have therefor, it
  • passeth the understanding of creatures, as to my sight.
  • For prayer is a right[2] understanding of that fulness of joy that is
  • to come, with well-longing and sure trust. Failing of our bliss that we
  • be kindly ordained to, maketh us to long; true understanding and love,
  • with sweet mind in our Saviour, graciously maketh us to trust. And in
  • these two workings our Lord beholdeth us continually[3]: for it is our
  • due part, and His Goodness may no less assign to us.
  • Thus it belongeth to us to do our diligence; and when we have done it,
  • then shall us yet think that [it] is nought,--and sooth it is. But
  • if we do as we can, and ask, in truth, for mercy and grace, all that
  • faileth us we shall find in Him. And thus signifieth He where He saith:
  • _I am Ground of thy beseeching_. And thus in this blessed word, with
  • the Shewing, I saw a full overcoming against all our weakness and all
  • our doubtful dreads.
  • [1] _i.e._ torment, tire, hinder.
  • [2] "rythwis" = right manner of.
  • [3] Or: 'And for these two workings our Lord looketh to us
  • continually.' See above: "so is it not in His beholding," and chap.
  • xliii. "for He beholdeth us in love and would make us partners of His
  • good deed."
  • CHAPTER XLIII
  • "Prayer uniteth the soul to God"
  • Prayer oneth the soul to God. For though the soul be ever like to
  • God in kind and substance, restored by grace, it is often unlike in
  • condition, by sin on man's part. Then is prayer a witness that the soul
  • willeth as God willeth; and it comforteth the conscience and enableth
  • man to grace. And thus He teacheth us to pray, and mightily to trust
  • that we shall have it. For He beholdeth us in love and would make us
  • partners of His good deed, and therefore He stirreth us to pray for
  • that which it pleaseth him to do. For which prayer and good will, that
  • we have of His gift, He will reward us and give us endless meed.
  • And this was shewed in this word: _And thou beseechest it_. In this
  • word God shewed so great pleasance and so great content, as though He
  • were much beholden to us for every good deed that we do (and yet it
  • is _He_ that doeth it) because that we beseech Him mightily to do all
  • things that seem to Him good: as if He said: _What might then please me
  • more than to beseech me, mightily, wisely, and earnestly, to do that
  • thing that I shall do?_
  • And thus the soul by prayer accordeth to God.
  • But when our courteous Lord of His grace sheweth Himself to our soul,
  • we have that [which] we desire. And then we see not, for the time,
  • what we should more pray, but all our intent with all our might is
  • set wholly to the beholding of Him. And this is an high unperceivable
  • prayer, as to my sight: for all the cause wherefor we pray it, is oned
  • into the sight and beholding of Him to whom we pray; marvellously
  • enjoying with reverent dread, and with so great sweetness and delight
  • in Him that we can pray right nought but as He stirreth us, for the
  • time. And well I wot, the more the soul seeth of God, the more it
  • desireth Him by His grace.
  • But when we see Him not so, then feel we need and cause to pray,
  • because of failing, for enabling of our self, to Jesus. For when the
  • soul is tempested, troubled, and left to itself by unrest, then it is
  • time to pray, for to make itself pliable and obedient[1] to God. (But
  • the soul by no manner of prayer maketh God pliant to it: for He is ever
  • alike in love.)
  • And this I saw: that what time we see needs wherefor we pray, then
  • our _good Lord followeth us_, helping our desire; and when we of His
  • special grace plainly behold Him, seeing none other needs, then _we
  • follow Him_ and He draweth us unto Him by love. For I saw and felt that
  • His marvellous and plentiful Goodness fulfilleth all our powers; and
  • therewith I saw that His continuant working in all manner of things is
  • done so goodly, so wisely, and so mightily, that it overpasseth all our
  • imagining, and all that we can ween and think; and then we can do no
  • more but behold Him, enjoying, with an high, mighty desire to be all
  • oned unto Him,--centred to His dwelling,--and enjoy in His loving and
  • delight in His goodness.
  • And then shall we, with His sweet grace, in our own meek continuant
  • prayer come unto Him now in this life by many privy touchings of sweet
  • spiritual sights and feeling, measured to us as our simpleness may bear
  • it. And this is wrought, and shall be, by the grace of the Holy Ghost,
  • so long till we shall die in longing, for love. And then shall we all
  • come into our Lord, our Self clearly knowing, and God fully having;
  • and we shall endlessly be all had in God: Him verily seeing and fully
  • feeling, Him spiritually hearing, and Him delectably in-breathing, and
  • [of] Him sweetly drinking.[2]
  • And then shall we see God face to face, homely and fully. The creature
  • that is made shall see and endlessly behold God which is the Maker.
  • For thus may no man see God and live after, that is to say, in this
  • deadly life. But when He of His special grace will shew Himself here,
  • He strengtheneth the creature above its self, and He measureth the
  • Shewing, after His own will, as it is profitable for the time.
  • [1] "supple and buxum."
  • [2] To express the fulness of spiritual perception the mystic seizes
  • on all the five sense-perceptions as symbols. For the last word S.
  • de Cressy gives again the word "smelling" (rendered here, above, by
  • "in-breathing"). Collins reads the Brit. Mus. MS. as "following"; but
  • the word there is "swelowyng" = swallowing.
  • _ANENT CERTAIN POINTS IN THE FOREGOING FOURTEEN REVELATIONS_
  • CHAPTER XLIV
  • "God is endless, sovereign Truth,--Wisdom,--Love, not-made; and man's
  • Soul is a creature in God which hath the same properties made"
  • God shewed in all the Revelations, oftentimes, that man worketh
  • evermore His will and His worship lastingly without any stinting. And
  • _what_ this work is, was shewed in the First, and that in a marvellous
  • example: for it was shewed in the working of the soul of our blissful
  • Lady, Saint Mary: [that is, the working of] Truth and Wisdom.[1] And
  • _how_ [it is done] I hope by the grace of the Holy Ghost I shall tell,
  • as I saw.
  • Truth seeth God, and Wisdom beholdeth God, and of these two cometh the
  • third: that is, a holy marvellous[2] delight in God; which is Love.
  • Where Truth and Wisdom are verily, there is Love verily, coming of
  • them both. And all of God's making: for He is endless sovereign Truth,
  • endless sovereign Wisdom, endless sovereign Love, unmade; and man's
  • Soul is a creature in God which hath the same properties _made_,[3]
  • and evermore it doeth that it was made for: it seeth God, it beholdeth
  • God, and it loveth God. Whereof God enjoyeth in the creature; and the
  • creature in God, endlessly marvelling.
  • In which marvelling he seeth his God, his Lord, his Maker so high, so
  • great, and so good, in comparison with him that is made, that scarcely
  • the creature seemeth ought to the self. But the clarity and the
  • clearness of Truth and Wisdom maketh him to see and to bear witness[4]
  • that he is made for Love: in which God endlessly keepeth him.
  • [1] See chap. iv.
  • [2] _i.e. marvelling._
  • [3] chaps. liv., lv.
  • [4] "beknowen."
  • CHAPTER XLV
  • "All heavenly things and all earthly things that belong to Heaven are
  • comprehended in these two judgments"
  • God deemeth us [looking] upon our Nature-Substance, which is ever
  • kept one in Him, whole and safe without end: and _this_ doom is
  • [because] of His rightfulness [in the which it is made and kept]. And
  • man judgeth [looking] upon our changeable Sense-soul, which seemeth
  • now one [thing], now other,--according as it taketh of the [higher or
  • lower] parts,--and [is that which] showeth outward. And _this_ wisdom
  • [of man's judgment] is _mingled_ [because of the diverse things it
  • beholdeth]. For sometimes it is good and easy, and sometimes it is hard
  • and grievous. And in as much as it is good and easy it belongeth to the
  • rightfulness; and in as much as it is hard and grievous [by reason of
  • the sin beheld, which sheweth in our Sense-soul,] our good Lord Jesus
  • reformeth it by [the working in our Sense-soul of] mercy and grace
  • through the virtue of His blessed Passion, and so bringeth it to the
  • rightfulness.
  • And though these two [judgments] be thus accorded and oned, yet both
  • shall be known in Heaven without end. The first doom, which is of
  • God's rightfulness, is [because] of His high endless life [in our
  • Substance]; and this is that fair sweet doom that was shewed in all the
  • fair Revelation, in which I saw Him assign to us no manner of blame.
  • But though this was sweet and delectable, yet in the beholding only of
  • this, I could not be fully eased: and that was because of the doom of
  • Holy Church, which I had afore understood and which was continually
  • in my sight. And therefore by _this_ doom methought I understood that
  • sinners are worthy sometime of blame and wrath; but these two could
  • I not see in God; and therefore my desire was more than I can or may
  • tell. For the higher doom was shewed by God Himself in that same time,
  • and therefore me behoved needs to take it; and the lower doom was
  • learned me afore in Holy Church, and therefore I might in no way leave
  • the lower doom. Then was this my desire: that I might see in God in
  • what manner that which the doom of Holy Church teacheth is true in His
  • sight, and how it belongeth to me verily to know it; whereby the two
  • dooms might both be saved, so as it were worshipful to God and right
  • way to me.
  • And to all this I had none other answer but a marvellous example of a
  • lord and of a servant, as I shall tell after: and that full mistily
  • shewed.[1] And yet I stand desiring, and will unto my end, that I might
  • by grace know these two dooms as it belongeth to me. For all heavenly,
  • and all earthly things that belong to Heaven, are comprehended in
  • these two dooms. And the more understanding, by the gracious leading
  • of the Holy Ghost, that we have of these two dooms, the more we shall
  • see and know our failings. And ever the more that we see them, the
  • more, of nature, by grace, we shall long to be fulfilled of endless joy
  • and bliss. For we are made thereto, and our Nature-Substance is now
  • blissful in God, and hath been since it was made, and shall be without
  • end.
  • [1] Chap. li.
  • CHAPTER XLVI
  • "It is needful to see and to know that we are sinners: wherefore we
  • deserve pain and wrath." "He is God: Good, Life, Truth, Love, Peace:
  • His Clarity and His Unity suffereth Him not to be wroth"
  • But our passing life that we have here in our sense-soul knoweth not
  • what our Self is. [And when we verily and clearly see and know what
  • our Self is][1] then shall we verily and clearly see and know our Lord
  • God in fulness of joy. And therefore it behoveth needs to be that the
  • nearer we be to our bliss, the more we shall long [after it]: and
  • that both by nature and by grace. We may have knowing of our Self in
  • this life by continuant help and virtue of our high Nature. In which
  • knowing we may exercise and grow, by forwarding and speeding of mercy
  • and grace; but we may never fully know our Self until the last point:
  • in which point this passing life and manner of pain and woe shall have
  • an end. And therefore it belongeth properly to us, both by nature and
  • by grace, to long and desire with all our mights to know our Self in
  • fulness of endless joy.
  • And yet in all this time, from the beginning to the end, I had two
  • manner of beholdings. The one was endless continuant love, with
  • secureness of keeping, and blissful salvation,--for of this was all
  • _the Shewing_. The other was of the common teaching of Holy Church, in
  • which I was afore informed and grounded--and with all my will having in
  • use and understanding. And the beholding of _this_ went not from me:
  • for by the Shewing I was not stirred nor led therefrom in no manner
  • of point, but I had therein teaching to love it and find it good[2]:
  • whereby I might, by the help of our Lord and His grace, increase and
  • rise to more heavenly knowing and higher loving.
  • And thus in all the Beholding methought it was needful to see and to
  • know that we are sinners, and do many evils that we ought to leave,
  • and leave many good deeds undone that we ought to do: wherefore we
  • deserve pain and wrath. And notwithstanding all this, I saw soothfastly
  • that our Lord was never wroth, nor ever shall be. For He is God: Good,
  • Life, Truth, Love, Peace; His Clarity[3] and His Unity suffereth Him
  • not to be wroth. For I saw truly that it is against the property of
  • His Might to be wroth, and against the property of His Wisdom, and
  • against the property of His Goodness. God is the Goodness that may not
  • be wroth, for He is not [other] but Goodness: our soul is oned to Him,
  • unchangeable Goodness, and between God and our soul is neither wrath
  • nor forgiveness in His sight. For our soul is so fully oned to God of
  • His own Goodness that between God and our soul may be right nought.
  • And to this understanding was the soul led by love and drawn by might
  • in every Shewing: _that it is thus_ our good Lord shewed, and _how it
  • is thus in truth of His great Goodness_. And He willeth that we desire
  • to learn it--that is to say, as far as it belongeth to His creature
  • to learn it. For all things that the simple soul[4] understood, God
  • willeth that they be shewed and [made] known. For the things that He
  • will have privy, mightily and wisely Himself He hideth them, for love.
  • For I saw in the same Shewing that much privity is hid, which may never
  • be known until the time that God of His goodness hath made us worthy
  • to see it; and therewith I am well-content, abiding our Lord's will in
  • this high marvel. And now I yield me to my Mother, Holy Church, as a
  • simple child oweth.
  • [1] So S. de Cressy has it. There is evidently an omission in the MS.
  • of part of this sentence. See lvi., lxxii. The dim sight of God comes
  • before the dim sight of the Self, but the clear sight of God comes
  • after the clear sight of the Self.
  • [2] "like it."
  • [3] Cressy has: "He is Peace; and His Might, His Wisdom, His Charity,
  • and His Unity," etc.
  • [4] Chap. ii. "a simple creature"; "the soul," xxiv., xiii., etc., and
  • xxxii. p. 64.
  • CHAPTER XLVII
  • "We fail oftentimes of the sight of Him, and anon we fall into our
  • self, and then find we no feeling of right,--nought but contrariness
  • that is in our self"
  • Two things belong to our soul as duty: the one is that we reverently
  • marvel, the other that we meekly suffer, ever enjoying in God. For He
  • would have us understand that we shall in short time see clearly in
  • Himself all that we desire.
  • And notwithstanding all this, I beheld and marvelled greatly: _What
  • is the mercy and forgiveness of God?_ For by the teaching that I had
  • afore, I understood that the mercy of God should be the forgiveness of
  • His wrath after the time that we have sinned. For methought that to a
  • soul whose meaning and desire is to love, the wrath of God was harder
  • than any other pain, and therefore I took[1] that the forgiveness of
  • His wrath should be one of the principal points of His mercy. But
  • howsoever I might behold and desire, I could in no wise see this point
  • in all the Shewing.[2]
  • But how I understood and saw of the work of mercy, I shall tell
  • somewhat, as God will give me grace. I understood this: Man is
  • changeable in this life, and by frailty and overcoming falleth into
  • sin: he is weak and unwise of himself, and also his will is overlaid.
  • And in this time he is in tempest and in sorrow and woe; and the cause
  • is blindness: for he seeth not God. For if he saw God continually,
  • he should have no mischievous feeling, nor any manner of motion or
  • yearning that serveth to sin.[3]
  • Thus saw I, and felt in the same time; and methought that the sight and
  • the feeling was high and plenteous and gracious in comparison with that
  • which our common feeling is in this life; but yet I thought it was but
  • small and low in comparison with the great desire that the soul hath to
  • see God.
  • For I felt in me five manner of workings, which be these: Enjoying,
  • mourning, desire, dread, and sure hope. Enjoying: for God gave me
  • understanding and knowing that it was Himself that I saw; mourning:
  • and that was for failing; desire: and that was I might see Him ever
  • more and more, understanding and knowing that we shall never have
  • full rest till we see Him verily and clearly in heaven; dread was:
  • for it seemed to me in all that time that that sight should fail, and
  • I be left to myself; sure hope was in the endless love: that I saw I
  • should be kept by His mercy and brought to His bliss. And the joying
  • in His sight with this sure hope of His merciful keeping made me to
  • have feeling and comfort so that mourning and dread were not greatly
  • painful. And yet in all this I beheld in the Shewing of God that this
  • manner of sight may not be continuant in this life,--and that for His
  • own worship and for increase of our endless joy. And therefore we fail
  • oftentimes of the sight of Him, and anon we fall into our self, and
  • then find we no feeling of right,--naught but contrariness that is in
  • our self; and that of the elder root of our first sin,[4] with all the
  • sins that follow, of our contrivance. And in this we are in travail and
  • tempest[5] with feeling of sins, and of pain in many divers manners,
  • spiritual and bodily, as it is known to us in this life.
  • [1] understood--took it.
  • [2] "But for nowte that I myte beholden and desyrin I could not se."
  • [3] "ne no manner steryng ne [or _ye_ = the] yernyng."
  • [4] _i.e._ contrariness, springing from the beginning of sin in the
  • first fall of man.
  • [5] "traveylid and tempested."
  • CHAPTER XLVIII
  • "I beheld the property of Mercy, and I beheld the property of Grace:
  • which have two manners of working in one love"
  • But our good Lord the Holy Ghost, which is endless life dwelling in
  • our soul, full securely keepeth us; and worketh therein a peace and
  • bringeth it to ease by grace, and accordeth it to God and maketh it
  • pliant.[1] And this is the mercy and the way that our Lord continually
  • leadeth us in as long as we be here in this life which is changeable.
  • For I saw no wrath but on man's part; and that forgiveth He in us.
  • For wrath is not else but a forwardness and a contrariness to peace
  • and love; and either it cometh of failing of might, or of failing of
  • wisdom, or of failing of goodness: which failing is not in God, but is
  • on our part. For we by sin and wretchedness have in us a wretched and
  • continuant contrariness to peace and to love. And that shewed He full
  • often in His lovely Regard of Ruth and Pity.[2] For the ground of mercy
  • is love, and the working of mercy is our keeping in love. And this was
  • shewed in such manner that I could[3] not have perceived of the part of
  • mercy but as it were alone in love; that is to say, as to my sight.
  • Mercy is a sweet gracious working in love, mingled with plenteous pity:
  • for mercy worketh in keeping us, and mercy worketh turning to us all
  • things to good. Mercy, by love, suffereth us to fail in measure and
  • in as much as we fail, in so much we fall; and in as much as we fall,
  • in so much we die: for it needs must be that we die in so much as we
  • fail of the sight and feeling of God that is our life. Our failing is
  • dreadful, our falling is shameful, and our dying is sorrowful: but in
  • all this the sweet eye of pity and love is lifted never off us, nor the
  • working of mercy ceaseth.[4]
  • For I beheld the property of mercy, and I beheld the property of
  • grace: which have two manners of working in one love. Mercy is a
  • pitiful property which belongeth to the Motherhood in tender love; and
  • grace is a worshipful property which belongeth to the royal Lordship
  • in the same love. Mercy worketh: keeping, suffering, quickening, and
  • healing; and all is tenderness of love. And grace worketh: raising,
  • rewarding, endlessly overpassing that which our longing and our travail
  • deserveth, spreading abroad and shewing the high plenteous largess[5]
  • of God's royal Lordship in His marvellous courtesy; and this is of
  • the abundance of love. For grace worketh our dreadful failing into
  • plenteous, endless solace; and grace worketh our shameful falling into
  • high, worshipful rising; and grace worketh our sorrowful dying into
  • holy, blissful life.
  • For I saw full surely that ever as our contrariness worketh to us here
  • in earth pain, shame, and sorrow, right so, on the contrary wise, grace
  • worketh to us in heaven solace, worship, and bliss; and overpassing.
  • And so far forth, that when we come up and receive the sweet reward
  • which grace hath wrought for us, then we shall thank and bless our
  • Lord, endlessly rejoicing that ever we suffered woe. And that shall be
  • for a property of blessed love that we shall know in God which we could
  • never have known without woe going before.
  • And when I saw all this, it behoved me needs to grant that the mercy of
  • God and the forgiveness is to slacken and waste _our_ wrath.
  • [1] "buxum" = ready to bend or obey.
  • [2] "lovely chere," loving Look. See li., lxxi., etc.
  • [3] "I cowth not a perceyven of."
  • [4] "But in all this the swete eye of pite and love cumith never of us,
  • ne the werkyng of mercy cesyth not."
  • [5] or largeness.
  • CHAPTER XLIX
  • "Where our Lord appeareth, peace is taken, and wrath hath no place."
  • "Immediately is the soul made at one with God when it is truly set at
  • peace in itself"
  • For this was an high marvel to the soul which was continually shewed in
  • all the Revelations, and was with great diligence beholden, that our
  • Lord God, anent Himself may not forgive, for He may not be wroth: it
  • were impossible. For this was shewed: that our life is all grounded and
  • rooted in love, and without love we may not live; and therefore to the
  • soul that of His special grace seeth so far into the high, marvellous
  • Goodness of God, and seeth that we are endlessly oned to Him in love,
  • it is the most impossible that may be, that God should be wroth.
  • For wrath and friendship be two contraries. For He that wasteth and
  • destroyeth our wrath and maketh us meek and mild,--it behoveth needs
  • to be that He [Himself] be ever one in love, meek and mild: which is
  • contrary to wrath.
  • For I saw full surely that where our Lord appeareth, peace is taken and
  • wrath hath no place. For I saw no manner of wrath in God, neither for
  • short time nor for long;--for in sooth, as to my sight, if God might
  • be wroth for an instant,[1] we should never have life nor place nor
  • being. For as verily as we have our being of the endless Might of God
  • and of the endless Wisdom and of the endless Goodness, so verily we
  • have our keeping in the endless Might of God, in the endless Wisdom,
  • and in the endless Goodness. For though we feel in ourselves, [frail]
  • wretches, debates and strifes, yet are we all-mannerful enclosed in
  • the mildness of God and in His meekness, in His benignity and in His
  • graciousness.[2] For I saw full surely that all our endless friendship,
  • our place, our life and our being, is in God.
  • For that same endless Goodness that keepeth us when we sin, that we
  • perish not, the same endless Goodness continually treateth in us a
  • peace against our wrath and our contrarious falling, and maketh us to
  • see our need with a true dread, and mightily to seek unto God to have
  • forgiveness, with a gracious desire of our salvation. And though we, by
  • the wrath and the contrariness that is in us, be now in tribulation,
  • distress, and woe, as falleth to our blindness and frailty, yet are we
  • _securely_ safe by the merciful keeping of God, that we perish not.
  • But we are not _blissfully_ safe, in having of our endless joy, till
  • we be all in peace and in love: that is to say, full pleased with God
  • and with all His works, and with all His judgments, and loving and
  • peaceable with our self and with our even-Christians and with all that
  • God loveth, as love beseemeth.[3] And this doeth God's Goodness in us.
  • Thus saw I that God is our very Peace, and He is our sure Keeper when
  • we are ourselves in unpeace, and He continually worketh to bring us
  • into endless peace. And thus when we, by the working of mercy and
  • grace, be made meek and mild, we are fully safe; suddenly is the soul
  • oned to God when it is truly peaced in itself: for in Him is found no
  • wrath. And thus I saw when we are all in peace and in love, we find
  • no contrariness, nor no manner of letting through that contrariness
  • which is now in us; [nay], our Lord of His Goodness maketh it to us
  • full profitable. For that contrariness is cause of our tribulations
  • and all our woe, and our Lord Jesus taketh them and sendeth them up to
  • Heaven, and there are they made more sweet and delectable than heart
  • may think or tongue may tell. And when we come thither we shall find
  • them ready, all turned into very fair and endless worships. Thus is
  • God our steadfast Ground: and He shall be our full bliss and make us
  • unchangeable, as He is, when we are there.
  • [1] "a touch."
  • [2] "buxumhede."
  • [3] "liketh."
  • CHAPTER L
  • "The blame of our sin continually hangeth upon us." "In the sight of
  • God the soul that shall be saved was never dead, nor ever shall be dead"
  • And in this life mercy and forgiveness is our way and evermore leadeth
  • us to grace. And by the tempest and the sorrow that we fall into on our
  • part, we be often dead as to man's doom in earth; but in the sight of
  • God the soul that shall be saved was never dead, nor ever shall be.
  • But yet here I wondered and marvelled with all the diligence of my
  • soul, saying thus within me: _Good Lord, I see Thee that art very
  • Truth; and I know in truth[1] that we sin grievously every day and be
  • much blameworthy; and I may neither leave the knowing of Thy truth,[2]
  • nor do I see Thee shew to us any manner of blame. How may this be?_
  • For I knew by the common teaching of Holy Church and by mine own
  • feeling, that the blame of our sin continually hangeth upon us, from
  • the first man unto the time that we come up unto heaven: then was this
  • my marvel that I saw our Lord God shewing to us no more blame than if
  • we were as clean and as holy as Angels be in heaven. And between these
  • two contraries my reason was greatly travailed through my blindness,
  • and could have no rest for dread that His blessed presence should pass
  • from my sight and I be left in unknowing [of] how He beholdeth us in
  • our sin. For either [it] behoved me to see in God that sin was all done
  • away, or else me behoved to see in God how He seeth it, whereby I might
  • truly know how it belongeth to me to see sin, and the manner of our
  • blame. My longing endured, Him continually beholding;--and yet I could
  • have no patience for great straits[3] and perplexity, thinking: _If I
  • take it thus that we be no sinners and not blameworthy, it seemeth as I
  • should err and fail of knowing of this truth[4]; and if it be so that
  • we be sinners and blameworthy,--Good Lord, how may it then be that I
  • cannot see this true thing[5] in Thee, which art my God, my Maker, in
  • whom I desire to see all truths?_[6]
  • For three points make me hardy to ask it. The first is, because it is
  • so low a thing: for if it were an high thing I should be a-dread. The
  • second is, that it is so common: for if it were special and privy, also
  • I should be a-dread. The third is, that it needeth me to know it (as
  • methinketh) if I shall live here for knowing of good and evil, whereby
  • I may, by reason and grace, the more dispart them asunder, and love
  • goodness and hate evil, as Holy Church teacheth. I cried inwardly,
  • with all my might seeking unto God for help, saying thus: _Ah! Lord
  • Jesus, King of bliss, how shall I be eased? Who shall teach me and tell
  • me that [thing] me needeth to know, if I may not at this time see it in
  • Thee?_
  • [1] "sothly."
  • [2] "sothe."
  • [3] "awer," liii. note 1.
  • [4] "soth."
  • [5] "sothnes."
  • [6] "trueths."
  • CHAPTER LI
  • "He is the Head, and we be His members." "Therefore our Father nor may
  • nor will more blame assign to us than to His own Son, precious and
  • worthy Christ"
  • And then our Courteous Lord answered in shewing full mistily a
  • wonderful example of a Lord that hath a Servant: and He gave me sight
  • to my understanding of both. Which sight was shewed doubly in the
  • Lord and doubly in the Servant: the one part was shewed spiritually
  • in bodily likeness, and the other part was shewed more spiritually,
  • without bodily likeness.
  • For the first [sight], thus, I saw two persons in bodily likeness: that
  • is to say, a Lord and a Servant; and therewith God gave me spiritual
  • understanding. The Lord sitteth stately in rest and in peace; the
  • Servant standeth by afore his Lord reverently, ready to do his Lord's
  • will. The Lord looketh upon his Servant full lovingly and sweetly, and
  • meekly he sendeth him to a certain place to do his will. The Servant
  • not only he goeth, but suddenly he starteth, and runneth in great
  • haste, for love to do his Lord's will. And anon he falleth into a
  • slade,[1] and taketh full great hurt. And then he groaneth and moaneth
  • and waileth and struggleth, but he neither may rise nor help himself by
  • no manner of way.
  • And of all this the most mischief[2] that I saw him in, was failing of
  • comfort: for he could not turn his face to look upon his loving Lord,
  • which was to him full near,--in Whom is full comfort;--but as a man
  • that was feeble and unwise for the time, he turned his mind[3] to his
  • feeling and endured in woe.
  • In which woe he suffered seven great pains. The first was the sore
  • bruising that he took in his falling, which was to him feelable pain;
  • the second was the heaviness of his body; the third was feebleness
  • following from these two; the fourth, that he was blinded in his reason
  • and stunned in his mind, so far forth that almost he had forgotten his
  • own love; the fifth was that he might not rise; the sixth was most
  • marvellous to me, and that was that he lay all alone: I looked all
  • about and beheld, and far nor near, high nor low, I saw to him no help;
  • the seventh was that the place which he lay on was a long, hard, and
  • grievous [place].
  • I marvelled how this Servant might meekly suffer there all this woe,
  • and I beheld with carefulness to learn if I could perceive in him any
  • fault, or if the Lord should assign to him any blame. And in sooth
  • there was none seen: for only his goodwill and his great desire was
  • cause of his falling; and he was unlothful, and as good inwardly as
  • when he stood afore his Lord, ready to do his will. And right thus
  • continually his loving Lord full tenderly beholdeth him. But now with
  • a _double_ manner of Regard: one outward, full meekly and mildly,
  • with great ruth and pity,--and this was of the first [sight], another
  • _inward,_ more spiritually,--and this was shewed with a leading of mine
  • understanding into the Lord, [in the] which I saw Him highly rejoicing
  • for the worshipful restoring that He will and shall bring His Servant
  • to by His plenteous grace; and this was of that other shewing.
  • And now [was] my understanding led again into the first [sight]; both
  • keeping in mind. Then saith this courteous Lord in his meaning: _Lo,
  • lo, my loved Servant, what harm and distress he hath taken in my
  • service for my love,--yea, and for his goodwill. Is it not fitting that
  • I award him [for] his affright and his dread, his hurt and his maim
  • and all his woe? And not only this, but falleth it not to me to give
  • a gift that [shall] be better to him, and more worshipful, than his
  • own wholeness should have been?--or else methinketh I should do him no
  • grace._
  • And in this an inward spiritual Shewing of the Lord's meaning descended
  • into my soul: in which I saw that it behoveth needs to be, by virtue of
  • His great [Goodness] and His own worship, that His dearworthy Servant,
  • which He loved so much, should be verily and blissfully rewarded, above
  • that he should have been if he had not fallen. Yea, and so far forth,
  • that his falling and his woe, that he hath taken thereby, shall be
  • turned into high and overpassing worship and endless bliss.
  • And at this point the shewing of the example vanished, and our good
  • Lord led forth mine understanding in sight and in shewing of the
  • Revelation to the end. But notwithstanding all this forth-leading, the
  • marvelling over the example went never from me: for methought it was
  • given me for an answer to my desire, and yet could I not take therein
  • full understanding to mine ease at that time. For in the Servant that
  • was shewed for Adam, as I shall tell, I saw many diverse properties
  • that might in no manner of way be assigned[4] to single Adam. And
  • thus in that time I stood for much part in unknowing: for the full
  • understanding of this marvellous example was not given me in that time.
  • In which mighty example three properties of the Revelation be yet
  • greatly hid; and notwithstanding this [further forthleading], I saw and
  • understood that every Shewing is full of secret things [left hid].
  • And therefore me behoveth now to tell three properties in which I
  • am somewhat eased. The first is the beginning of teaching that I
  • understood therein, in the same time; the second is the inward teaching
  • that I have understood therein afterward; the third, all the whole
  • Revelation from the beginning to the end (that is to say of this Book)
  • which our Lord God of His goodness bringeth oftentimes freely to the
  • sight of mine understanding. And these three are so oned, as to my
  • understanding, that I cannot, nor may, dispart them. And by these
  • three, as one, I have teaching whereby I ought to believe and trust in
  • our Lord God, that of the same goodness of which He shewed it, and for
  • the same end, right so, of the same goodness and for the same end He
  • shall declare it to us when it is His will.
  • For, twenty years after the time of the Shewing, save three months,
  • I had teaching inwardly, as I shall tell: _It belongeth to thee to
  • take heed to all the properties and conditions that were shewed in the
  • example, though thou think that they be misty and indifferent[5] to thy
  • sight_. I assented willingly, with great desire, and inwardly [beheld]
  • with heedfulness[6] all the points and properties that were shewed in
  • the same time, as far forth as my wits and understanding would serve:
  • beginning my beholding at the Lord and at the Servant, and the manner
  • of sitting of the Lord, and the place that he sat on, and the colour of
  • his clothing and the manner of shape, and his countenance without, and
  • his nobleness and his goodness within; at the manner of standing of the
  • Servant, and the place where, and how; at his manner of clothing, the
  • colour and the shape; at his outward having and at his inward goodness
  • and his unloathfulness.
  • The Lord that sat stately in rest and in peace, I understood that He is
  • God. The Servant that stood afore the Lord, I understood that it was
  • shewed for Adam: that is to say, one man was shewed, that time, and his
  • falling, to make it thereby understood how God beholdeth All-Man and
  • his falling. For in the sight of God all man is one man, and one man
  • is all man. This man was hurt in his might and made full feeble; and
  • he was stunned in his understanding so that he [was] turned from the
  • beholding of his Lord. But his will was kept whole in God's sight;--for
  • his will I saw our Lord commend and approve. But himself was letted and
  • blinded from the knowing of this will; and this is to him great sorrow
  • and grievous distress: for neither doth he see clearly his loving Lord,
  • which is to him full meek and mild, nor doth he see truly what himself
  • is in the sight of his loving Lord. And well I wot when these two are
  • wisely and truly seen, we shall get rest and peace here in part, and
  • the fulness of the bliss of Heaven, by His plenteous grace.
  • And this was a beginning of teaching which I saw in the same time,
  • whereby I might come to know in what manner He beholdeth us in our sin.
  • And then I saw that only Pain blameth and punisheth, and our courteous
  • Lord comforteth and sorroweth; and ever He is to the soul in glad
  • Cheer, loving, and longing to bring us to His bliss.
  • The place that the Lord sat on was simple, on the earth, barren and
  • desert, alone in wilderness; his clothing was ample and full seemly,
  • as falleth to a Lord; the colour of his cloth was blue as azure, most
  • sad and fair, his cheer was merciful; the colour of his face was
  • fair-brown,--with full seemly features; his eyes were black, most fair
  • and seemly, shewing [_outward_] full of lovely _pity_, and [shewing],
  • _within_ him, an high Regard,[7] long and broad, all full of endless
  • heavens. And the lovely looking wherewith He looked upon His Servant
  • continually,--and especially in his falling,--methought it might melt
  • our hearts for love and burst them in two for joy. The fair looking
  • shewed [itself] of a seemly mingledness which was marvellous to behold:
  • the one [part] was Ruth and Pity, the other was Joy and Bliss. The
  • Joy and Bliss passeth as far Ruth and Pity as Heaven is above earth:
  • the Pity was earthly and the Bliss was heavenly: the Ruth and Pity of
  • the Father was [in regard] of the falling of Adam, which is His most
  • loved creature; the Joy and Bliss was [in regard] of His dearworthy
  • Son, which is even with the Father. The Merciful Beholding of His
  • Countenance[8] of love fulfilled all earth and descended down with Adam
  • into hell, with which continuant pity Adam was kept from endless death.
  • And thus Mercy and Pity dwelleth with mankind unto the time we come up
  • into Heaven.
  • But man is blinded in this life and therefore we may not see our
  • Father, God, as He is. And what time that He of His goodness
  • willeth to shew Himself to man, He sheweth Himself homely, as man.
  • Notwithstanding, I reason, in verity[9] we ought to know and believe
  • that the Father is not man.
  • But his sitting on the earth barren and desert, is to signify this:--He
  • made man's soul to be His own City and His dwelling-place: which is
  • most pleasing to Him of all His works. And what time that man was
  • fallen into sorrow and pain, he was not all seemly to serve in that
  • noble office; and therefore our Lord Father would prepare Himself
  • no other place, but would sit upon the earth abiding mankind, which
  • is mingled with earth, till what time by His grace His dearworthy
  • Son had brought again His City into the noble fairness with His hard
  • travail. The blueness of the clothing betokeneth His steadfastness; the
  • brownness of his fair face, with the seemly blackness of the eyes, was
  • most accordant to shew His holy soberness. The length and breadth of
  • his garments, which were fair, flaming about, betokeneth that He hath,
  • beclosed in Him, all Heavens, and all Joy and Bliss:[10] and this was
  • shewed in a touch [of time], where I have said: _Mine understanding
  • was led into the Lord_; in which [inward shewing] I saw Him highly
  • _rejoice_ for the worshipful restoring that He will and shall bring His
  • servant to by His plenteous grace.
  • And yet I marvelled, beholding the Lord and the Servant aforesaid. I
  • saw the Lord sit stately, and the Servant standing reverently afore his
  • Lord. In which Servant there is double understanding, one _without_,
  • another _within. Outwardly_:--he was clad simply, as a labourer which
  • were got ready for his toil;[11] and he stood full near the Lord--not
  • evenly in front[12] of him, but in part to one side, on the left. His
  • clothing was a white kirtle, single, old, and all defaced, dyed with
  • sweat of his body, strait-fitting to him, and short--as it were an
  • handful beneath the knee; [thread]bare, seeming as it should soon be
  • worn out, ready to be ragged and rent. And of this I marvelled greatly,
  • thinking: this is now an unseemly clothing for the Servant that is so
  • greatly loved to stand in afore so worshipful a Lord. And _inwardly_ in
  • him was shewed a ground of love: which love that he had to the Lord was
  • even-like[13] to the love that the Lord had to him.
  • The wisdom of the Servant saw inwardly that there was one thing to
  • do which should be to the worship of the Lord. And the Servant, for
  • love, having no regard to himself nor to nothing that might befall
  • him, hastily he started and ran at the sending of his Lord, to do that
  • thing which was his will and his worship. For it seemed by his outward
  • clothing as he had been a continuant labourer of long time, and by the
  • _inward sight_ that I had both of the Lord and the Servant it seemed
  • that he was a[14] new [one], that is to say, new beginning to travail:
  • which Servant was never sent out afore.
  • There was a treasure in the earth which the Lord loved. I marvelled and
  • thought what it might be, and I was answered in mine understanding: _It
  • is a food which is delectable and pleasant to the Lord_. For I saw the
  • Lord sit as a man, and I saw neither meat nor drink wherewith to serve
  • him. This was one marvel. Another marvel was that this majestic Lord
  • had no servant but one, and him he sent out. I beheld, thinking what
  • manner of labour it might be that the Servant should do. And then I
  • understood that he should do the greatest labour and hardest travail:
  • that is, he should be a gardener, delve and dyke, toil and sweat,
  • and turn the earth upside-down, and seek the deepness, and water the
  • plants in time. And in this he should continue his travail and make
  • sweet floods to run, and noble and plenteous fruits to spring, which he
  • should bring afore the Lord to serve him therewith to his desire. And
  • he should never turn again till he had prepared this food all ready as
  • he knew that it pleased the Lord. And then he should take this food,
  • with the drink in the food, and bear it full worshipfully afore the
  • Lord. And all this time the Lord should sit in the same place, abiding
  • his Servant whom he sent out.
  • And yet I marvelled from whence the Servant came. For I saw in the Lord
  • that HE hath within Himself endless life, and all manner of goodness,
  • save that treasure that was in the earth. And [also] _that_ [treasure]
  • was grounded in the Lord in marvellous deepness of endless love, but
  • it was not all to His worship till the Servant had thus nobly prepared
  • it, and brought it before Him in himself present. And without the Lord
  • was nothing but wilderness. And I understood not all what this example
  • meant, and therefore I marvelled whence the Servant came.
  • In the Servant is comprehended the Second Person in the Trinity; and
  • in the Servant is comprehended Adam: that is to say, All-Man. And
  • therefore when I say the _Son_, it meaneth the Godhead which is even
  • with the Father; and when I say the _Servant_, it meaneth Christ's
  • Manhood, which is rightful Adam. By the nearness of the Servant is
  • understood the Son, and by the standing on the left side is understood
  • Adam. The Lord is the Father, God; the Servant is the Son, Christ
  • Jesus; the Holy Ghost is Even[15] Love which is in them both.
  • When Adam fell, God's Son fell: because of the rightful oneing which
  • had been made in heaven, God's Son might not [be disparted] from Adam.
  • (For by Adam I understand All-Man.) Adam fell from life to death, into
  • the deep[16] of this wretched world, and after that into hell: God's
  • Son fell with Adam, into the deep[17] of the Maiden's womb, who was the
  • fairest daughter of Adam; and for this end: to excuse Adam from blame
  • in heaven and in earth; and mightily He fetched him out of hell.
  • By the wisdom and goodness that was in the Servant is understood
  • God's Son; by the poor clothing as a labourer standing near the left
  • side, is understood the Manhood and Adam, with all the scathe[18] and
  • feebleness that followeth. For in all this our good Lord shewed His own
  • Son and Adam but _one_ Man. The virtue and the goodness that we have is
  • of Jesus Christ, the feebleness and the blindness that we have is of
  • Adam: which two were shewed in the Servant.
  • And thus hath our good Lord Jesus taken upon Him all our blame, and
  • therefore our Father nor may nor will more blame assign to us than to
  • His own Son, dearworthy Christ. Thus was He, the Servant, afore His
  • coming into earth standing ready afore the Father in purpose, till what
  • time He would send Him to do that worshipful deed by which mankind was
  • brought again into heaven;--that is to say, notwithstanding that He is
  • God, even with the Father as anent the Godhead. But in His foreseeing
  • purpose that He would be Man, to save man in fulfilling of His Father's
  • will, so He stood afore His Father as a Servant, willingly[19] taking
  • upon Him all our charge. And then He started full readily at the
  • Father's will, and anon He fell full low, into the Maiden's womb,
  • having no regard to Himself nor to His hard pains.
  • The white kirtle is the flesh; the singleness is that there was right
  • nought atwix the Godhead and Manhood; the straitness is poverty; the
  • eld is of Adam's wearing; the defacing, of sweat of Adam's travail; the
  • shortness sheweth the Servant's labour.
  • And thus I saw the Son saying in His meaning[20]: _Lo! my dear Father,
  • I stand before Thee in Adam's kirtle, all ready to start and to run: I
  • would be in the earth to do Thy worship when it is Thy will to send me.
  • How long shall I desire?_ Full soothfastly wist the Son when it would
  • be the Father's will and how long He should desire: that is to say,
  • [He wist it] anent the Godhead: for He is the Wisdom of the Father;
  • wherefore this question was shewed with understanding of the _Manhood_
  • of Christ. For all mankind that shall be saved by the sweet Incarnation
  • and blissful Passion of Christ, all is the Manhood of Christ: for He
  • is the Head and we be His members. To which members the day and the
  • time is unknown when every passing woe and sorrow shall have an end,
  • and the everlasting joy and bliss shall be fulfilled; which day and
  • time for to see, all the Company of Heaven longeth. And all that shall
  • be under heaven that shall come thither, their way is by longing and
  • desire. Which desire and longing was shewed in the Servant's standing
  • afore the Lord,--or else thus in the Son's standing afore the Father in
  • Adam's kirtle. For the longing[21] and desire of all Mankind that shall
  • be saved appeared in Jesus: for Jesus is All that shall be saved, and
  • All that shall be saved is Jesus. And all of the Charity of God; with
  • obedience, meekness, and patience, and virtues that belong to us.
  • Also in this marvellous example I have teaching with me as it were
  • the beginning of an A.B.C., whereby I have some understanding of
  • our Lord's meaning. For the secret things of the Revelation be hid
  • therein;--notwithstanding that _all_ the Shewings are full of secret
  • things. The _sitting_ of the Father betokeneth His Godhead: that is
  • to say, by shewing of rest and peace: for in the Godhead may be no
  • travail.[22] And that He shewed Himself as _Lord_, betokeneth His
  • [governance] to our manhood. The _standing_ of the Servant betokeneth
  • travail; _on one side_, and on the _left_, betokeneth that he was not
  • all worthy to stand even-right afore the Lord; his _starting_ was the
  • Godhead, and the _running_ was the Manhood: for the Godhead started
  • from the Father into the Maiden's womb, falling into the taking of our
  • Kind. And in this falling he took great sore: the _sore_ that He took
  • was our flesh, in which He had also swiftly feeling of deadly pains.
  • That he stood _adread_ before the Lord and not even-right, betokeneth
  • that His clothing was not seemly[23] to stand in even-right afore the
  • Lord, nor _that_ might not, nor should not, be His office while He
  • was a labourer; nor also He might not sit in rest and peace with the
  • Lord till He had won His peace rightfully with His hard travail; and
  • that he stood by the _left_ side [betokeneth] that the Father left
  • His own Son, willingly,[24] in the Manhood to suffer all man's pains,
  • without sparing of Him. By that _his kirtle was in point to be ragged
  • and rent_, is understood the blows, the scourgings, the thorns and the
  • nails, the drawing and the dragging, His tender flesh rending. (As
  • I saw in some part [before] how the flesh was rent from the skull,
  • falling in pieces until the time when the bleeding ceased, and then
  • it began to dry again, cleaving to the bone.) And by the _struggling
  • and writhing, groaning and moaning,_ is understood that He might never
  • rise almightily from the time that He was fallen into the Maiden's
  • womb, till his body was slain and dead, He yielding the soul into the
  • Father's hands with all Mankind for whom He was sent.
  • And at this point He began first to shew His might: for He went into
  • Hell, and when He was there He raised up the great Root out of the deep
  • deepness which rightfully was knit to Him in high Heaven. The body was
  • in the grave till Easter-morrow, and from that time He lay nevermore.
  • For then was rightfully ended the struggling and the writhing, the
  • groaning and the moaning. And our foul deadly flesh that God's Son
  • took on Him, which was Adam's old kirtle, strait, [worn]-bare, and
  • short, was then by our Saviour made fair, new, white and bright and of
  • endless cleanness; loose and long[25]; fairer and richer than was then
  • the clothing which [before] I saw on the Father: for that clothing was
  • blue, but Christ's clothing is [coloured] now of a fair seemly medlour,
  • which is so marvellous that I can it not describe: for it is all of
  • very worships.
  • Now sitteth not the Son on earth in wilderness, but He sitteth in
  • His noblest Seat, which He made in Heaven most to His pleasing. Now
  • standeth not the Son afore the Father as a Servant afore the Lord
  • dreadingly, meanly clad, in part naked; but He standeth afore the
  • Father even-right, richly clad in blissful largeness, with a Crown
  • upon His head of precious richness. For it was shewed that _we be His
  • Crown_: which Crown is the Joy of the Father, the Worship of the Son,
  • the Satisfying of the Holy Ghost, and endless marvellous Bliss to all
  • that be in Heaven. Now standeth not the Son afore the Father on the
  • left side, as a labourer, but He sitteth on His Father's right hand,
  • in endless rest and peace.[26] (But it is not meant that the Son
  • sitteth on the right hand, side by side, as one man sitteth by another
  • in this life,--for there is no such sitting, as to my sight, in the
  • Trinity,--but He sitteth on His Father's right hand,--that is to say:
  • in the highest nobleness of the Father's joys.) Now is the Spouse,
  • God's Son, in peace with His loved Wife, which is the Fair Maiden of
  • endless Joy. Now sitteth the Son, Very God and Man, in His City in rest
  • and peace: which [City] His Father hath adight to Him of His endless
  • purpose; and the Father in the Son; and the Holy Ghost in the Father
  • and in the Son.
  • [1] _i.e._ a steep hollow place; a ravine.
  • [2] _i.e._ injury, harm.
  • [3] "entended."
  • [4] "aret" = reckoned.
  • [5] _i.e._ not of definite purport, indistinct.
  • [6] "avisement."
  • [7] MS. "within him an _heyward_ long and brode, all full of endless
  • hevyns." Cressy and Collins transcribe this word without explanation,
  • but give "heavenliness" for "heavens." It seems most likely that "hey"
  • has been written as if affixed to "ward" (_i.e. "regard," "deeming,"_
  • or _"reward"_), or else to _"reward,"_ meaning, as usual, _regard_
  • ("Beholding"). See pp. 108 and 113.
  • If "_an heyward_"--"long and brode all full of endless hevyns,"--were
  • to be rendered as "an high reward," revealed for the future along
  • with, though less clearly than, the divine pity for the pains of the
  • present, reference might be made to Revelation ix. pp. 47, 50: "It is
  • a joy, a bliss, an endless satisfying to me that ever suffered Passion
  • for thee." ... "In this feeling mine understanding was lifted up into
  • Heaven: and there I saw three heavens"; and to Rev. x. p. 51: "then
  • with a glad Cheer our Lord looked into His Side and beheld, rejoicing.
  • With His sweet looking He led forth the understanding of His creature
  • by the same wound into His Side within. And then He shewed a fair
  • delectable place, and large enough for all mankind that shall be saved
  • to rest in peace and in love."
  • But "Regard" (scope of true, continuing, divine Sight, Insight,
  • All-comprehending sight) seems more likely to be the true rendering.
  • "Long and broad" go strangely with the word, but on p. 113 the _length
  • and breadth_ of the garments is interpreted immediately after the
  • colour of the eyes, and is said to betoken that "He hath in Him, all
  • Heavens, and all Joy and Bliss," and indeed these words but fill out
  • the idea of the more frequently used "high" to signify the "enclosing"
  • of "endless heavens:" that Sphere of "fulness" which is infinite.
  • With this passage may be compared one below, on p. 113: "The Merciful
  • Beholding of His loving Cheer fulfilled all earth and descended
  • down with Adam into hell, ... and thus Mercy and Pity dwelleth with
  • mankind unto the time we come up into Heaven." The other, the Inward,
  • the _high_ Beholding or Regard it not said to "fill" Heaven, but to
  • be "full of" endless Heavens. So elsewhere it is said that in our
  • _Sense-soul_, the lower part of human nature, _God dwells_, but that
  • our _Substance_, the higher part, _dwells in God_. (The regard of Mercy
  • and Pity is with the Sense-soul; the high Regard of Joy and Bliss is
  • with the Substance.) P. 132, chap. lv.: "I saw that our Substance is in
  • God, and also I saw that in our Sense-soul God is." lvi. p. 135:" The
  • worshipful City that our Lord Jesus sitteth in, it is our Sense-part,
  • in which He is enclosed; and our Nature-Substance is beclosed in Jesus,
  • with the blessed Soul of Christ sitting in rest in the Godhead."
  • [8] "lofly cher."
  • [9] "I reson sothly we owen."
  • [10] See p. 112, the "high reward."
  • [11] "which wer disposed to travel."
  • [12] "even fornempts" = strait opposite.
  • [13] _i.e._ equal (MS. "even like").
  • [14] S. de Cressy: "anaved"; MS. "anew."
  • [15] _i.e._ equal--see p. 114. "All of the Charity of God," the mutual
  • love that also embraces created souls, p. 118.
  • [16] "the slade."
  • [17] "the slade."
  • [18] "mischief."
  • [19] "wilfully" = voluntarily, of His own Will as God.
  • [20] purpose, intent, thought or speech.
  • [21] "langor."
  • [22] _i.e._ painful toil. "He sitteth ... in peace and rest. And
  • the Godhead ruleth and careth for heaven and earth and all that is"
  • (lxvii.).
  • [23] "honest."
  • [24] "wilfully."
  • [25] "wyde and syde" = wide and long.
  • [26] But see also xxxix. p. 81, lxxx. p. 194.
  • CHAPTER LII
  • "We have now matter of mourning: for our sin is cause of Christ's
  • pains; and we have, lastingly, matter of joy: for endless love made Him
  • to suffer"
  • And thus I saw that God rejoiceth that He is our Father, and God
  • rejoiceth that He is our Mother, and God rejoiceth that He is Very
  • Spouse and our soul is His loved Wife. And Christ rejoiceth that He
  • is our Brother, and Jesus rejoiceth that He is our Saviour. These are
  • five high joys, as I understand, in which He willeth that we enjoy; Him
  • praising, Him thanking, Him loving, Him endlessly blessing.
  • All that shall be saved, we have in us, for the time of this life, a
  • marvellous mingling[1] both of weal and woe: we have in us our Lord
  • Jesus uprisen, we have in us the wretchedness and the mischief of
  • Adam's falling, dying. By Christ we are steadfastly kept, and by His
  • grace touching us we are raised into sure trust of salvation. And by
  • Adam's falling we are so broken, in our feeling, in diverse manners
  • by sins and by sundry pains, in which we are made dark, that scarsely
  • we can take any comfort. But in our intent[2] we abide in God, and
  • faithfully trust to have mercy and grace; and this is His own working
  • in us. And of His goodness He openeth the eye of our understanding, by
  • which we have sight, sometime more and sometime less, according as God
  • giveth ability to receive. And now we are raised into the one, and now
  • we are suffered to fall into the other.
  • And thus is this medley so marvellous in us that scarsely we know
  • of our self or of our even-Christian in what way we stand, for the
  • marvellousness of this sundry feeling. But that same Holy Assent,
  • _that_ we assent to God when we feel Him, truly setting our will to be
  • with Him, with all our heart, and with all our soul, and with all our
  • might. And then we hate and despise our evil stirrings and all that
  • might be occasion of sin, spiritual and bodily.[3] And yet nevertheless
  • when this sweetness is hid, we fall again into blindness, and so into
  • woe and tribulation in diverse manners. But then is this our comfort,
  • that we _know in our faith_ that by virtue of Christ which is our
  • Keeper, we assent never thereto, but we groan there-against, and dure
  • on, in pain and woe, praying, unto that time that He sheweth Him again
  • to us.
  • And thus we stand in this medley all the days of our life. But He
  • willeth that we trust that He is lastingly with as. And that in
  • three manner.--He is with us in Heaven, very Man, in His own Person,
  • us updrawing; and that was shewed in [the Shewing of] the Spiritual
  • Thirst. And He is with us in earth, us leading; and that was shewed
  • in the Third [Shewing], where I saw God in a Point. And He is with us
  • in our soul, endlessly dwelling, us ruling and keeping; and that was
  • shewed in the Sixteenth [Shewing], as I shall tell.
  • And thus in the Servant was shewed the scathe and blindness of Adam's
  • falling; and in the Servant was shewed the wisdom and goodness of
  • God's Son. And in the Lord was shewed the ruth and pity of Adam's woe,
  • and in the Lord was shewed the high nobility and the endless worship
  • that Mankind is come to by the virtue of the Passion and death of His
  • dearworthy Son. And therefore mightily He joyeth in his falling for the
  • high raising and fulness of bliss that Mankind is come to, overpassing
  • that we should have had if he had not fallen.--And thus to see this
  • overpassing nobleness was mine understanding led into God in the same
  • time that I saw the Servant fall.
  • And thus we have, now, matter of mourning: for our sin is cause of
  • Christ's pains; and we have, lastingly, matter of joy: for endless love
  • made Him to suffer. And therefore the creature that seeth and feeleth
  • the working of love by grace, hateth nought but sin: for of all things,
  • to my sight, love and hate are [the] hardest and most unmeasureable
  • contraries. And notwithstanding all this, I saw and understood in our
  • Lord's meaning that we may not in this life keep us from sin as wholly
  • in full cleanness as we shall be in Heaven. But we may well by grace
  • keep us from the sins which would lead us to endless pains, as Holy
  • Church teacheth us; and eschew venial [ones] reasonably up to our
  • might. And if we by our blindness and our wretchedness any time fall,
  • we should readily rise, knowing the sweet touching of grace, and with
  • all our will amend us upon the teaching of Holy Church, according as
  • the sin is grievous, and go forthwith to God in love; and neither, on
  • the one side, fall over low, inclining to despair, nor, on the other
  • side, be over-reckless, as if we made no matter of it[4]; but nakedly
  • acknowledge our feebleness, finding that we may not stand a twinkling
  • of an eye but by Keeping of grace, and reverently cleave to God, on Him
  • only trusting.
  • For after one wise is the Beholding by[5] God, and after another wise
  • is the Beholding by[6] man. For it belongeth to man meekly to accuse
  • himself, and it belongeth to the proper Goodness of our Lord God
  • courteously to excuse man. And these be two parts that were shewed in
  • the double Manner of Regard with which the Lord beheld the falling of
  • His loved Servant. The one was shewed outward, very meekly and mildly,
  • with great ruth and pity; and that of endless Love. And right thus
  • willeth our Lord that we accuse our self, earnestly and truly seeing
  • and knowing our falling and all the harms that come thereof; seeing
  • and learning[7] that we can never restore it; and therewith that we
  • earnestly and truly see and know His everlasting love that He hath to
  • us, and His plenteous mercy. And thus graciously to see and know both
  • together is the meek accusing that our Lord asketh of us, and Himself
  • worketh it where it is. And this is the lower part of man's life, and
  • it was shewed in the [Lord's] _outward_ manner of Regard. In which
  • shewing I saw _two_ parts: the one is the rueful falling of man, the
  • other is the worshipful Satisfaction[8] that our Lord hath made for man.
  • The other manner of Regard was shewed _inward_: and that was more
  • highly and all [fully] _one_.[9] For the life and the virtue that we
  • have in the lower part is of the higher, and it cometh down to us [from
  • out] of the Natural love of the [high] Self, by [the working of] grace.
  • Atwix [the life of] the one and [the life of] the other there is right
  • nought: for it is all one love. Which one blessed love hath now, in us,
  • double working: for in the lower part are pains and passions, mercies
  • and forgiveness, and such other that are profitable; but in the higher
  • part are none of these, but all one high love and marvellous joy:
  • in[10] which joy all pains are highly restored. And in this [time] our
  • Lord showed not only our Excusing[11] [from blame, in His beholding of
  • our higher part], but the worshipful nobility that He shall bring us
  • to [by the working of grace in our lower part], turning all our blame
  • [that is therein, from our falling] into endless worship [when we be
  • oned to the high Self above].[12]
  • [1] "medlour," "medle."
  • [2] "menyng."
  • [3] "And thus is this medle so mervelous in us that onethys we knowen
  • of our selfe or of our evyn Cristen in what way we stonden for the
  • marveloushede of this sundry felyng. But that ilke holy assent that we
  • assenten to God when we feel hym truly willand to be with him with al
  • our herte, with al our soule and with al our myte, and than we haten
  • and dispisen our evil sterings and al that myte be occasion of synne
  • gostly and bodily."
  • [4] "gove no fors" = gave it no force.
  • [5] "of."
  • [6] "of."
  • [7] "witand" = witting.
  • [8] "Asseth."
  • [9] "and al on"--perhaps for _all is one_.
  • [10] "in" = _in, into,_ or _unto_.
  • [11] _i.e. Exculpating_--as in Romans ii. 15.
  • [12] "Man,--seeing he is not a simple nature--in one aspect of his
  • being, which is the better, and that I may speak more openly what I
  • ought to speak, his very self, is immortal; but on the other side,
  • which is weak and fallen, and which alone is known to those who have
  • no faith except in sensible things, he is obnoxious to mortality and
  • mutability."--From the _Didascolon_ of Hugo of St Victor, as quoted in
  • F. D. Maurice's _Mediæval Philosophy_, p. 147.
  • CHAPTER LIII
  • "In every soul that shall be saved is a Godly Will that never assented
  • to sin, nor ever shall." "Ere that He made us He loved us, and when we
  • were made we loved Him"
  • And I saw that He willeth that we understand He taketh not harder the
  • falling of any creature that shall be saved than He took the falling of
  • Adam, which, we know, was endlessly loved and securely kept in the time
  • of all his need, and now is blissfully restored in high overpassing
  • joy. For our Lord is so good, so gentle, and so courteous, that He may
  • never assign default [in those] in whom He shall ever be blessed and
  • praised.
  • And in this that I have now told was my desire in part answered, and my
  • great difficulty[1] some deal eased, by the lovely, gracious Shewing of
  • our good Lord. In which Shewing I saw and understood full surely that
  • in every soul that shall be saved is a Godly Will that never assented
  • to sin, nor ever shall: which Will is so good that it may never will
  • evil, but evermore continually it willeth good; and worketh good in the
  • sight of God. Therefore our Lord willeth that we know this in the Faith
  • and the belief; and especially that we have all this blessed Will whole
  • and safe in our Lord Jesus Christ. For that same Kind[2] that Heaven
  • shall be filled with behoveth needs, of God's rightfulness, so to have
  • been knit and oned to Him, that therein was kept a Substance
  • which might never, nor should, be parted from Him; and _that_ through
  • His own Good Will in His endless foreseeing purpose.
  • But notwithstanding this rightful knitting and this endless oneing, yet
  • the redemption and the again-buying of mankind is needful and speedful
  • in everything, as it is done for the same intent and to the same end
  • that Holy Church in our Faith us teacheth.
  • For I saw that God _began_ never to love mankind: for right the same
  • that mankind shall be in endless bliss, fulfilling the joy of God as
  • anent His works, right so the same, mankind hath been in the foresight
  • of God: known and loved from without beginning in his[3] rightful
  • intent. By the endless assent of the full accord of all the Trinity,
  • the Mid-Person willed to be Ground and Head of this fair Kind: out of
  • Whom we be all come, in Whom we be all enclosed, into Whom we shall
  • all wend,[4] in Him finding our full Heaven in everlasting joy, by the
  • foreseeing purpose of all the blessed Trinity from without beginning.
  • For ere that He made us He loved us, and when we were made we loved
  • Him. And this is a Love that is _made_, [to our Kindly Substance], [by
  • virtue] of the Kindly Substantial _Goodness_ of the Holy Ghost; Mighty,
  • in Reason, [by virtue] of the _Might_ of the Father; and Wise, in Mind,
  • [by virtue] of the _Wisdom_ of the Son. And thus is Man's Soul made by
  • God and in the same point knit to God.
  • And thus I understand that man's Soul is made of nought: that is to
  • say, it is made, but of nought that is made. And thus:--When God
  • should make man's body He took the clay of earth, which is a matter
  • mingled and gathered of all bodily things; and thereof He made man's
  • body. But to the making of man's Soul He would take right nought, but
  • made it. And thus is the Nature-made rightfully oned to the Maker,
  • which is Substantial Nature not-made: that is, God. And therefore it is
  • that there may nor shall be right nought atwix God and man's Soul.
  • And in this endless Love man's Soul is kept whole, as the matter of the
  • Revelations signifieth and sheweth: in which endless Love we be led
  • and kept of God and never shall be lost. For He willeth we[5] be aware
  • that our Soul is a life, which life of His Goodness and His Grace shall
  • last in Heaven without end, Him loving, Him thanking, Him praising. And
  • right the same that we shall be without end, the same we were treasured
  • in God and hid, known and loved from without beginning.
  • Wherefore He would have us understand that the noblest thing that ever
  • He made is mankind: and the fullest Substance and the highest Virtue is
  • the blessed Soul of Christ. And furthermore He would have us understand
  • that His[6] dear worthy Soul [of Manhood] was preciously knit to Him in
  • the making [by Him of Manhood's Substantial Nature] which knot is so
  • subtle and so mighty that (it)[7]--[man's soul]--is oned into God: in
  • which oneing it is made endlessly holy. Furthermore He would have us
  • know that all the souls that shall be saved in Heaven without end, are
  • knit and oned in this oneing and made holy in this holiness.
  • [1] "awer" = awe, travail of perplexity, dilemma--see l. note 3.
  • [2] Man's nature.
  • [3] Or (it may be): "In His Rightful Intent ... the Mid-Person
  • willed...."
  • [4] "wynden."
  • [5] "wetyn" = wit.
  • [6] S. de Cressy has "this "; the word in the MS. is more like "his."
  • [7] The pronoun "it" given by S. de Cressy is omitted in the MS. The
  • meaning is, perhaps, that the Manhood-Substance, or Soul of Christ,
  • was in its making, by the Second Person in the Trinity, so united to
  • Himself that Man's Substance and each man's soul (in salvation), being
  • one with it, are one with God the Son. See li. p. 117.
  • CHAPTER LIV
  • "Faith is nought else but a right understanding, with true belief and
  • sure trust, of our Being: that we are in God, and God is in us: Whom we
  • see not"
  • And because of this great, endless love that God hath to all Mankind,
  • He maketh no disparting in love between the blessed Soul of Christ and
  • the least soul that shall be saved. For it is full easy to believe and
  • to trust that the dwelling of the blessed Soul of Christ is full high
  • in the glorious Godhead, and verily, as I understand in our Lord's
  • signifying, where the blessed Soul of Christ is, there is the Substance
  • of all the souls that shall be saved by Christ.
  • Highly ought we to rejoice that God dwelleth in our soul, and much more
  • highly ought we to rejoice that our soul dwelleth in God. Our soul is
  • _made_ to be God's dwelling-place; and the dwelling-place of the soul
  • is God, Which is _unmade_. And high understanding it is, inwardly to
  • see and know that God, which is our Maker, dwelleth in our soul; and an
  • higher understanding it is, inwardly to see and to know that our soul,
  • that is made, dwelleth in God's Substance: of which Substance, God, we
  • are that we are.
  • And I saw no difference between God and our Substance: but as it were
  • all God; and yet mine understanding took that our Substance is in God:
  • that is to say, that God is God, and our Substance is a creature in
  • God. For the Almighty Truth of the Trinity is our Father: for He made
  • us and keepeth us in Him; and the deep Wisdom of the Trinity is our
  • Mother, in Whom we are all enclosed; the high Goodness of the Trinity
  • is our Lord, and in Him we are enclosed, and He in us. We are enclosed
  • in the Father, and we are enclosed in the Son, and we are enclosed
  • in the Holy Ghost. And the Father is enclosed in us, and the Son is
  • enclosed in us, and the Holy Ghost is enclosed in us: Almightiness,
  • All-Wisdom, All-Goodness: one God, one Lord.
  • And our faith is a Virtue that cometh of our Nature-Substance into our
  • Sense-soul by the Holy Ghost; in which all our virtues come to us: for
  • without that, no man may receive virtue. For it is nought else but a
  • right understanding, with true belief, and sure trust, of our Being:
  • that we are in God, and God in us, Whom we see not. And this virtue,
  • with all other that God hath ordained to us coming therein, worketh
  • in us great things. For Christ's merciful working is in us, and we
  • graciously accord to Him through the gifts and the virtues of the Holy
  • Ghost. This working maketh that we are Christ's children, and Christian
  • in living.
  • CHAPTER LV
  • "Christ is our Way"--"Mankind shall be restored from double death"
  • And thus Christ is our Way, us surely leading in His laws, and Christ
  • in His body mightily beareth us up into heaven. For I saw that
  • Christ, us all having in Him that shall be saved by Him, worshipfully
  • presenteth His Father in heaven with us; which present full thankfully
  • His Father receiveth, and courteously giveth it to His Son, Jesus
  • Christ: which gift and working is joy to the Father, and bliss to the
  • Son, and pleasing to the Holy Ghost. And of all things that belong to
  • us [to do], it is most pleasing to our Lord that we enjoy in this joy
  • which is in the blessed Trinity [in virtue] of our salvation. (And this
  • was seen in the Ninth Shewing, where it speaketh more of this matter.)
  • And notwithstanding all our feeling of woe or weal, God willeth that
  • we should understand and hold[1] by faith that we are more verily in
  • heaven than in earth.
  • Our Faith cometh of the natural Love of our soul, and of the clear
  • light of our Reason, and of the steadfast Mind which we have from[2]
  • God in our first making. And what time that our soul is inspired into
  • our body, in which we are made sensual, so soon mercy and grace begin
  • to work, having of us care and keeping with pity and love: in which
  • working the Holy Ghost formeth, in our Faith, _Hope_ that we shall come
  • again up above to our Substance, into the Virtue of Christ, increased
  • and fulfilled through the Holy Ghost. Thus I understood that the
  • sense-soul is grounded in Nature, in Mercy, and in Grace: which Ground
  • enableth us to receive gifts that lead us to endless life.
  • For I saw full assuredly that our Substance is in God, and also I saw
  • that in our sense-soul[3] God is: for in the self-[same] point that
  • our Soul is made sensual, in the self-[same] point is the City of God
  • ordained to Him from without beginning; into which seat He cometh,
  • and never shall remove [from] it. For God is never out of the soul:
  • in which He dwelleth blissfully without end. And this was seen in the
  • Sixteenth Shewing where it saith: _The place that Jesus taketh in our
  • soul, He shall never remove [from] it_. And all the gifts that God may
  • give to creatures, He hath given to His Son Jesus for us: which gifts
  • He, dwelling in us, hath enclosed in Him unto the time that we be waxen
  • and grown,--our soul with our body and our body with our soul, either
  • of them taking help of other,--till we be brought up unto stature, as
  • nature worketh. And then, in the ground of nature, with working of
  • mercy, the Holy Ghost graciously inspireth into us gifts leading to
  • endless life.
  • And thus was my understanding led of God to see in Him and to
  • understand, to perceive and to know, that our soul is _made-trinity_,
  • like to the unmade blissful Trinity,[4] known and loved from without
  • beginning, and in the making oned to the Maker, as it is aforesaid.
  • This sight was full sweet and marvellous to behold, peaceable, restful,
  • sure, and delectable.
  • And because of the worshipful oneing that was thus made by God
  • betwixt the soul and body, it behoveth needs to be that mankind shall
  • be restored from double death: which restoring might never be until
  • the time that the Second Person in the Trinity had taken the lower[5]
  • part of man's nature; to Whom the highest[6] [part] was oned in the
  • First-making. And these two parts were in Christ, the higher and the
  • lower: which is but one Soul; the higher part was one in peace with
  • God, in full joy and bliss; the lower part, which is sense-nature,[7]
  • suffered for the salvation of mankind.
  • And these two parts [in Christ] were seen and felt in the Eighth
  • Shewing, in which my body was fulfilled with feeling and mind of
  • Christ's Passion and His death, and furthermore with this was a subtile
  • feeling and privy inward sight of the High Part which I was shewed in
  • the same time when I could not, [even] for the friendly[8] proffer
  • [made to me], look up into Heaven: and that was because of that mighty
  • beholding [that I had] of the Inward Life. Which Inward Life is that
  • High Substance, that precious Soul, [of Christ], which is endlessly
  • rejoicing in the Godhead.
  • [1] "feythyn."
  • [2] "of."
  • [3] "sensualite."
  • [4] Wisdom, Truth, Love or Goodness, p. 93.
  • [5] the Sense-soul.
  • [6] the Substance.
  • [7] "sensualite."
  • [8] "wher I myte not for the mene profir lokyn up on to hevyn." "mene"
  • = medium, is perhaps a sub. in the gen. = intervenor's, intermediary's.
  • See xix. p. 42 and xxxv. p. 70, S. de Cressy has: "Where I might not
  • for the mean profer look up"; Collins: "for the meanwhile."
  • CHAPTER LVI
  • "God is nearer to us than our own soul" "We can never come to full
  • knowing of God till we know first clearly our own Soul"
  • And thus I saw full surely that it is readier to us to come to
  • the knowing of God than to know our own Soul. For our Soul is so
  • deep-grounded in God, and so endlessly treasured, that we may not come
  • to the knowing thereof till we have first knowing of God, which is the
  • Maker, to whom it is oned. But, notwithstanding, I saw that we have,
  • for fulness, to desire wisely and truly to know our own Soul: whereby
  • we are learned to seek it where it is, and that is, in God. And thus by
  • gracious leading of the Holy Ghost, we should know them both in one:
  • whether we be stirred to know God or our Soul, both [these stirrings]
  • are good and true.
  • God is nearer to us than our own Soul: for He is [the] Ground in whom
  • our Soul standeth, and He is [the] Mean that keepeth the Substance
  • and the Sense-nature together so that they shall never dispart. For
  • our soul sitteth in God in very rest, and our soul standeth in God in
  • very strength, and our Soul is kindly rooted in God in endless love:
  • and therefore if we will have knowledge of our Soul, and communing and
  • dalliance therewith, it behoveth to seek unto our Lord God in whom it
  • is enclosed. (And of this enclosement I saw and understood more in the
  • Sixteenth Shewing, as I shall tell.)
  • And as anent our Substance and our Sense-part, both together may
  • rightly be called our Soul:[1] and that is because of the oneing that
  • they have in God. The worshipful City that our Lord Jesus sitteth in is
  • our Sense-soul, in which He is enclosed: and our Kindly Substance is
  • enclosed in Jesus with the blessed Soul of Christ sitting in rest in
  • the Godhead.
  • And I saw full surely that it behoveth needs to be that we should be
  • in longing and in penance unto the time that we be led so deep into
  • God that we verily and truly know our own Soul. And truly I saw that
  • into this high deepness our good Lord Himself leadeth us in the same
  • love that He made us, and in the same love that He bought us by Mercy
  • and Grace through virtue of His blessed Passion. And notwithstanding
  • all this, we may never come to full knowing of God till we know first
  • clearly our own Soul. For until the time that our Soul is in its full
  • powers[2] we cannot be all fully holy: and that is [until the time]
  • that our Sense-soul by the virtue of Christ's Passion be brought up to
  • the Substance, with all the profits of our tribulation that our Lord
  • shall make us to get by Mercy and Grace.
  • I had, in part, [experience of the] Touching [of God in the soul],
  • and it is grounded in Nature. That is to say, our Reason is grounded
  • in God, which is Substantial Naturehood.[3] [Out] of this Substantial
  • Naturehood Mercy and Grace springeth and spreadeth into us, working all
  • things in fulfilling of our joy: these are our Ground in which we have
  • our Increase and our Fulfilling.
  • These be three properties in one Goodness: and where one worketh, all
  • work in the things which be _now_ belonging to us. God willeth that we
  • understand [this], desiring with all our heart to have knowing of them
  • more and more unto the time that we be fulfilled: for fully to know
  • them is nought else but endless joy and bliss that we shall have in
  • Heaven, which God willeth should be begun here in knowing of His love.
  • For only by our Reason we may not profit, but if we have evenly
  • therewith Mind and Love: nor only in our Nature-Ground that we have
  • in God we may not be saved but if we have, coming of the same Ground,
  • Mercy and Grace. For of these three working all together we receive
  • all our Goodness. Of the which the first [gifts] are goods of Nature:
  • for in our First making God gave us as full goods as we might receive
  • in our spirit alone,[4]--and also greater goods; but His foreseeing
  • purpose in His endless wisdom willed that we should be double.
  • [1] "& anempts our substance and sensualite it may rytely be clepid our
  • soule."
  • [2] "the full myts."
  • [3] "I had in partie touching and it is grounded in kynd: that is to
  • sey, our reson is groundid in God, which is substantial kyndhede."
  • [4] "ffor in our first makyng God gaf us as ful goods and also greter
  • godes as we myte receivin only in our spirite." In the MS. the word
  • "spirit" is used only here, where it means "the Substance."
  • CHAPTER LVII
  • "In Christ our two natures are united"
  • And anent our Substance He made us noble, and so rich that evermore we
  • work His will and His worship. (Where I say "we," it meaneth Man that
  • shall be saved.) For soothly I saw that we are that which He loveth,
  • and do that which Him pleaseth, lastingly without any stinting: and
  • [that by virtue] of the great riches and of the high noble virtues by
  • measure come to our soul what time it is knit to our body: in which
  • knitting we are made Sensual.
  • And thus in our Substance we are full, and in our Sense-soul we fail:
  • which failing God will restore and fulfil by working of Mercy and Grace
  • plenteously flowing into us out of His own Nature-Goodness.[1] And thus
  • His Nature-Goodness maketh that Mercy and Grace work in us, and the
  • Nature-goodness that we have of Him enableth us to receive the working
  • of Mercy and Grace.
  • I saw that our nature is in God whole: in which [whole nature of
  • Manhood] He maketh diversities flowing out of Him to work His will:
  • whom Nature keepeth, and Mercy and Grace restoreth and fulfilleth. And
  • of these none shall perish: for our nature that is the higher part is
  • knit to God, in the making; and God is knit to our nature that is the
  • lower part, in our flesh-taking: and thus in Christ our two natures are
  • oned. For the Trinity is comprehended in Christ, in whom our higher
  • part is grounded and rooted; and our lower part the Second Person hath
  • taken: which nature first to Him was made-ready.[2] For I saw full
  • surely that all the works that God hath done, or ever shall, were fully
  • known to Him and aforeseen from without beginning. And for Love He made
  • Mankind, and for the same Love would be Man.
  • The next[3] Good that we receive is our Faith, in which our
  • profiting beginneth. And it cometh [out] of the high riches of our
  • nature-Substance into our Sensual soul, and it is grounded in us
  • through the Nature-Goodness of God, by the working of Mercy and Grace.
  • And thereof come all other goods by which we are led and saved. For the
  • Commandments of God come therein: in which we ought to have two manners
  • of understanding: [the one is that we ought to understand and know]
  • which are His biddings, to love and to keep them; the other is that we
  • ought to know His forbiddings, to hate and to refuse them. For in these
  • two is all our working comprehended. Also in our faith come the Seven
  • Sacraments, each following other in order as God hath ordained them to
  • us: and all manner of virtues.
  • For the same virtues that we have received of our Substance, given to
  • us in Nature by the Goodness of God,--the same virtues by the working
  • of Mercy are given to us in Grace through the Holy Ghost, _renewed_:
  • which virtues and gifts are treasured to us in Jesus Christ. For in
  • that same[4] time that God knitted Himself to our body in the Virgin's
  • womb, He took our Sensual soul:[5] in which taking He, us all having
  • enclosed in Him, oned it to our Substance: in which oneing He was
  • perfect Man. For Christ having knit in Him each[6] man that shall be
  • saved, is perfect Man. Thus our Lady is our Mother in whom we are all
  • enclosed and of her born,[7] in Christ: (for she that is Mother of our
  • Saviour is Mother of all that shall be saved in our Saviour;) and our
  • Saviour is our Very Mother in whom we be endlessly borne,[8] and never
  • shall come out of Him.
  • Plenteously and fully and sweetly was this shewed, and it is spoken of
  • in the First, where it saith: _We are all in Him enclosed and He is
  • enclosed in us_. And that [enclosing of Him in us] is spoken of in the
  • Sixteenth Shewing, where it saith: _He sitteth in our soul_.
  • For it is His good-pleasure to reign in our Understanding blissfully,
  • and sit in our Soul restfully, and to dwell in our Soul endlessly,
  • us all working into Him: in which working He willeth that we be His
  • helpers, giving to Him all our attending, learning His lores, keeping
  • His laws, desiring that all be done that He doeth; truly trusting in
  • Him.
  • For soothly I saw that our Substance is in God.[9]
  • [1] "kynde godhede."
  • [2] "adyte."
  • [3] or the _first_.
  • [4] "ilk" = "same."
  • [5] Here, as above, the MS. term for the "_Sensual soul_" is the
  • "_Sensualite_."
  • [6] "ilk" = "each."
  • [7] The MS. word is in both cases "borne," which may mean either _born_
  • or _borne_. S. de Cressy gives "born" both for the first word and the
  • second. See lx. "He sustaineth us within Himself in love," etc.; and
  • lxiii. "In the taking of our nature He quickened us," etc.
  • [8] See preceding note.
  • [9] From _The Scale [or Ladder] of Perfection,_ by Walter Hilton
  • (Fourteenth century), edition of 1659, Part III. ch. ii.:--
  • "The soule of a man is a life consisting of three powers, _Memory,
  • Understanding,_ and _Will,_ after the image and likeness of the blessed
  • Trinity.... Whereby you may see, that man's soule (which may be called
  • a created Trinity) was in its natural state replenished in its three
  • powers, with the remembrance, sight, and love of the most blessed
  • uncreated Trinity, which is God.... But when Adam sinned, choosing
  • love and delight in himselfe, and in the creatures, he lost all his
  • excellency and dignity, and thou also in him."
  • Ch. III. Sec. i. "And though we should prove not to be able to recover
  • it fully here in this life, yet should we desire and endeavour to
  • recover the image and likeness of the dignity we had, so that our soul
  • might be reformed as it were in a shadow by grace to the image of the
  • Trinity which we had by nature, and hereafter shall have fully in
  • bliss...." Sec. ii. "Seeke then that which thou hast lost, that thou
  • mayest finde it; for well I wote, whosoever once hath an inward sight,
  • but a little of that dignity and that spirituall fairness which a soule
  • hath by creation, and shall have again by grace, he will loath in his
  • heart all the blisse, the liking, and the fairnesse of this world....
  • Nevertheless as thou hast not as yet seen what it is fully, for thy
  • spiritual eye is not yet opened, I shall tell thee one word for all, in
  • the which thou shalt seeke, desire, and finde it; for in that one word
  • is all that thou hast lost. This word is Jesus.... If thou feelest in
  • thy heart a great desire to Jesus ... then seekest thou well thy Lord
  • Jesus. And when thou feelest this desire to God, or to Jesus (for it
  • is all one) holpen and comforted by a ghostly might, insomuch that it
  • is turned into love, affection, and spiritual fervour and sweetnesse,
  • into light and knowing of truth, so that for the time the point of thy
  • thought is set upon no other created thing, nor feeleth any stirring
  • of vain-glory, nor of selfe-love, nor any other evill affection (for
  • they cannot appear at that time) but this thy desire is onely enclosed,
  • rested, softened, suppled, and annoynted in Jesus, then hast thou found
  • somewhat of Jesus; I mean not him as he is, but a shadow of him; for
  • the better that thou findest him, the more shalt thou desire him. Then
  • observe by what manner of Prayer or Meditation or exercise of Devotion
  • thou findest greatest and purest desire stirred up in thee to him, and
  • most feeling of him, by that kind of prayer, exercise, or worke seekest
  • thou him best, and shalt best finde him....
  • "See then the mercy and courtesie of Jesus. Thou hast lost him, but
  • where? soothly in thy house, that is to say, in thy soul, that if
  • thou hadst lost all thy reason of thy soule, by its first sinne, thou
  • shouldst never have found him again; but he left thee thy reason, and
  • so he is still in thy soule, and never is quite lost out of it.
  • "Nevertheless, thou art never the nearer him, till thou hast found
  • him. He is in thee, though he be lost from thee; but thou art not in
  • him, till thou hast found him. This is his mercy also, that he would
  • suffer himself to be lost onely where he may be found, so that thou
  • needest not run to _Rome_, nor to _Jerusalem_ to seeke him there, but
  • turne thy thoughts into thy owne soule, where he is hid, as the Prophet
  • saith; _Truly thou art the hidden God_, hid in thy soule, and seek him
  • there. Thus saith he himselfe in the Gospel; _The kingdome of heaven is
  • likened to a treasure hid in the field, the which when a man findeth,
  • for joy thereof, he goeth and selleth all that he hath, and buyeth that
  • field_. Jesus is a treasure hid in the soule....
  • "As long as Jesus findeth not his image reformed in thee, he is
  • strange, and the farther from thee: therefore frame and shape thyself
  • to be arrayed in his likenesse, that is in humility and charity, which
  • are his liveries, and then will he know thee, and familiarly come
  • to thee, and acquaint thee with his secrets. Thus saith he to his
  • Disciples; _Who so loveth me, he shall be loved of my Father, and I
  • will manifest my selfe unto him_. There is not any vertue nor any good
  • work that can make thee like to our Lord, without Humility and Charity,
  • for these two above all other are most acceptable ('most leyf') to
  • him, which appeareth plainly in the Gospel, where our Lord speaketh of
  • humility thus; _Learn of me, for I am meeke and humble in heart_. He
  • saith not, learn of me to go barefoot, or to go into the desart, and
  • there to fast forty dayes, nor yet to choose to your selves Disciples
  • (as I did) but learne of me meeknesse, for I am meek and lowly in
  • heart. Also of charity he saith thus; _This is my Commandment, that ye
  • love one another as I loved you, for by that shall men know you for
  • my Disciples_. Not that you worke miracles, or cast out Devills, or
  • preach, or teach, but that each one of you love one another in charity.
  • If therefore thou wilt be like him, have humility and charity. Now thou
  • knowest what charity is, _viz._ To love thy neighbour as thy selfe."
  • Chap. IV. Sec. 1.... "Now I shall tell thee (according to my feeble
  • ability) how thou mayest enter into thy selfe to see the ground of sin,
  • and destroy it as much as thou canst, and so recover a part of thy
  • souls dignity.... Draw in thy thoughts ... and set thy intent and full
  • purpose, as if thou wouldst not seek nor find any thing but onely the
  • grace and spiritual presence of Jesus."
  • "This will be painful; for vaine thoughts will presse into thy heart
  • very thick, to draw thy minde down to them. And in doing thus, thou
  • shalt find somewhat, but not Jesus whom thou seekest, but onely a naked
  • remembrance of his name. But what then shalt thou finde? Surely this;
  • A darke and ill-favoured image of thy owne soule, which hath neither
  • light of knowledge nor feeling of love of God.... This is not the image
  • of Jesus, but the image of sin, which St Paul calleth a _body of sinne
  • and of death_.... Peradventure now thou beginnest to thinke with thy
  • selfe what this image is like, and that thou shouldst not study much
  • upon it, I will tell thee. It is like no bodily thing; What is it then
  • saist thou? Verily it is _nought_, or no reall thing, as thou shalt
  • finde, if thou try by doing as I have spoken; that is, draw in thy
  • thoughts into thy selfe from all bodily things, and then shalt thou
  • find right _nought_ wherein thy soule may rest.
  • "This _nothing_ is nought else but darknesse of conscience, and a
  • lacking of the love of God and of light; as sin is nought but a want
  • of good, if it were so that the ground of sin was much abated and
  • dryed up in thee, and thy soule was reformed right as the image of
  • Jesus; then if thou didst draw into thy selfe thy heart, thou shouldst
  • not find this _Nought_, but thou shouldst find Jesus; not only the
  • naked remembrance of this name, but Jesus Christ in thy soule readily
  • teaching thee, thou shouldst there find light of understanding, and
  • no darknesse of ignorance, a love and liking of him; and no pain of
  • bitternesse, heavinesse, or tediousenesse of him....
  • "And here also thou must beware that thou take Jesus Christ into thy
  • thoughts against this darknesse in thy mind, by busie prayer and
  • fervent desire to God, not setting the point of thy thoughts on that
  • foresaid _Nought_, but on Jesus Christ whom thou desirest. Think
  • stifly on his passion, and on his Humility, and through his might thou
  • shalt arise. Do as if thou wouldst beate downe this darke image, and
  • go through-stitch with it. Thou shalt hate ('agryse') and loath this
  • darknesse and this _Nought_, just as the Devill, and thou shalt despise
  • and all to break it ('brest it').
  • "For within this Nought is Jesus hid in his joy, whom thou shalt not
  • finde with all thy seeking, unlesse thou passe this darknesse of
  • conscience.
  • "This is the ghostly travel I spake of, and the cause of all this
  • writing is to stir thee thereto, if thou have grace. This darknesse
  • of conscience, and this _Nought_ is the image of the first _Adam_: St
  • Paul knew it well, for he said thus of it; As we have before borne the
  • _image of the earthly man_, that is the first _Adam, right so that we
  • might now beare the image of the heavenly man_, which is Jesus, the
  • second _Adam_. St _Paul_ bare this image oft full heavily, for it was
  • so cumbersome to him, that he cryed out of it, saying thus; _O who
  • shall deliver me from this body and this image of death_. And then he
  • comforted himselfe and others also thus: _The grace_ of God through
  • Jesus Christ."
  • CHAPTER LVIII
  • "All our life is in three: 'Nature, Mercy, Grace.' The high Might of
  • the Trinity is our Father, and the deep Wisdom of the Trinity is our
  • Mother, and the great Love of the Trinity is our Lord"
  • God, the blessed Trinity, which is everlasting Being, right as He is
  • endless from without beginning, right so it was in His purpose endless,
  • to make Mankind. Which fair Kind first was prepared[1] to His own
  • Son, the Second Person. And when He would, by full accord of all the
  • Trinity, He made us all at once; and in our making He knit us and oned
  • us to Himself: by which oneing we are kept as clear and as noble as
  • we were made. By the virtue of the same precious oneing, we love our
  • Maker and seek Him, praise Him and thank Him, and endlessly enjoy Him.
  • And this is the work which is wrought continually in every soul that
  • shall be saved: which is the Godly Will aforesaid. And thus in our
  • making, God, Almighty, is our Nature's Father; and God, All-Wisdom, is
  • our Nature's Mother; with the Love and the Goodness of the Holy Ghost:
  • which is all one God, one Lord. And in the knitting and the oneing He
  • is our Very, True Spouse, and we His loved Wife, His Fair Maiden: with
  • which Wife He is never displeased. For He saith: I love thee and thou
  • lovest me, and our love shall never be disparted in two.
  • I beheld the working of all the blessed Trinity: in which beholding
  • I saw and understood these three properties: the property of the
  • Fatherhood, the property of the Motherhood, and the property of the
  • Lordhood, in one God. In our Father Almighty we have our keeping and
  • our bliss as anent our natural Substance, which is to us by our making,
  • without beginning. And in the Second Person in skill[2] and wisdom
  • we have our keeping as anent our Sense-soul: our restoring and our
  • saving; for He is our Mother, Brother, and Saviour. And in our good
  • Lord, the Holy Ghost, we have our rewarding and our meed-giving for our
  • living and our travail, and endless overpassing of all that we desire,
  • in His marvellous courtesy, of His high plenteous grace.
  • For all our life is in _three_: in the first we have our Being, in the
  • second we have our Increasing, and in the third we have our Fulfilling:
  • the first is Nature, the second is Mercy, and the third is Grace.
  • For the first, I understood that the high Might of the Trinity is our
  • Father, and the deep Wisdom of the Trinity is our Mother, and the great
  • Love of the Trinity is our Lord: and all this have we in Nature and in
  • the making of our Substance.[3]
  • And furthermore I saw that the Second Person, which is our Mother as
  • anent the Substance, that same dearworthy Person is become our Mother
  • as anent the Sense-soul. For we are double by God's making: that is
  • to say, Substantial and Sensual. Our Substance is the higher part,
  • which we have in our Father, God Almighty; and the Second Person of
  • the Trinity is our Mother in Nature, in making of our Substance: in
  • whom we are grounded and rooted. And He is our Mother in Mercy, in
  • taking of our Sense-part. And thus our Mother is to us in diverse
  • manners working: in whom our parts are kept undisparted. For in our
  • Mother Christ we profit and increase, and in Mercy He reformeth us
  • and restoreth, and, by the virtue of His Passion and His Death and
  • Uprising, oneth us to our Substance. Thus worketh our Mother in Mercy
  • to all His children which are to Him yielding[4] and obedient.
  • And Grace worketh with Mercy, and specially in two properties, as it
  • was shewed: which working belongeth to the Third Person, the Holy
  • Ghost. He worketh _rewarding_ and _giving_. Rewarding is a large
  • giving-of-truth that the Lord doeth to him that hath travailed;
  • and giving is a courteous working which He doeth freely of Grace,
  • fulfilling and overpassing all that is deserved of creatures.
  • Thus in our Father, God Almighty, we have our being; and in our Mother
  • of Mercy we have our reforming and restoring: in whom our Parts are
  • oned and all made perfect Man; and by [reward]-yielding and giving in
  • Grace of the Holy Ghost, we are fulfilled.
  • And our Substance is [in] our Father, God Almighty, and our Substance
  • is [in][5] our Mother, God, All-wisdom; and our Substance is in our
  • Lord the Holy Ghost, God All-goodness. For our Substance is whole in
  • each Person of the Trinity, which is one God. And our Sense-soul is
  • only in the Second Person Christ Jesus; in whom is the Father and the
  • Holy Ghost: and in Him and by Him we are mightily taken out of Hell,
  • and out of the wretchedness in Earth worshipfully brought up into
  • Heaven and blissfully oned to our Substance: increased in riches and in
  • nobleness by all the virtues of Christ, and by the grace and working of
  • the Holy Ghost.
  • [1] MS. "adyte to" = ordained to, made ready for.
  • [2] MS. "Witt."
  • [3] "in our substantiall makyng."
  • [4] "buxum."
  • [5] S. de Cressy gives the "in" twice missed in the Brit. Mus. MS.
  • CHAPTER LIX
  • "Jesus Christ that doeth Good against evil is our Very Mother: we have
  • our Being of Him where the Ground of Motherhood beginneth,--with all
  • the sweet Keeping by Love, that endlessly followeth."
  • And all this bliss we have by Mercy and Grace: which manner of bliss we
  • might never have had nor known but if that property of Goodness which
  • is God had been contraried: whereby we have this bliss. For wickedness
  • hath been suffered to rise contrary to the Goodness, and the Goodness
  • of Mercy and Grace contraried against the wickedness and turned all to
  • goodness and to worship, to all these that shall be saved. For it is
  • the property in God which doeth good against evil. Thus Jesus Christ
  • that doeth good against evil is our Very Mother: we have our Being of
  • Him,--where the Ground of Motherhood beginneth,--with all the sweet
  • Keeping of Love that endlessly followeth. As verily as God is our
  • Father, so verily God is our Mother; and that shewed He in all, and
  • especially in these sweet words where He saith: _I it am_.[1] That is
  • to say, _I it am, the Might and the Goodness of the Fatherhood; I it
  • am, the Wisdom of the Motherhood; I it am, the Light and the Grace that
  • is all blessed Love: I it am, the Trinity, I it am, the Unity: I am the
  • sovereign Goodness of all manner of things. I am that maketh thee to
  • love: I am that maketh thee to long: I it am, the endless fulfilling of
  • all true desires._
  • For there the soul is highest, noblest, and worthiest, where it is
  • lowest, meekest, and mildest: and [out] of this _Substantial Ground_ we
  • have all our virtues in our Sense-part by gift of Nature, by helping
  • and speeding of Mercy and Grace: without the which we may not profit.
  • Our high Father, God Almighty, which is Being, He knew and loved us
  • from afore any time: of which knowing, in His marvellous deep charity
  • and the foreseeing counsel of all the blessed Trinity, He willed that
  • the Second Person should become our Mother. Our Father [willeth], our
  • Mother worketh, our good Lord the Holy Ghost confirmeth: and therefore
  • it belongeth to us to love our God in whom we have our being: Him
  • reverently thanking and praising for[2] our making, mightily praying to
  • our Mother for[3] mercy and pity, and to our Lord the Holy Ghost for[4]
  • help and grace.
  • For in these three is all our life: Nature, Mercy, Grace: whereof we
  • have meekness and mildness; patience and pity; and hating of sin and
  • of wickedness,--for it belongeth properly to virtue to hate sin and
  • wickedness. And thus is Jesus our Very Mother in Nature [by virtue] of
  • our first making; and He is our Very Mother in Grace, by taking our
  • nature made. All the fair working, and all the sweet natural office of
  • dearworthy Motherhood is impropriated[5] to the Second Person: for in
  • Him we have this Godly Will whole and safe without end, both in Nature
  • and in Grace, of His own proper Goodness. I understood three manners of
  • beholding of Motherhood in God: the first is grounded in our Nature's
  • _making_; the second is _taking_ of our nature,--and there beginneth
  • the Motherhood of Grace; the third is Motherhood of _working_,--and
  • therein is a forthspreading by the same Grace, of length and breadth
  • and height and of deepness without end. And all is one Love.
  • [1] it is I.
  • [2] MS. "of."
  • [3] MS. "of."
  • [4] MS. "of."
  • [5] Or "appropriated to"; MS. "impropried" = made to be the property
  • of; assigned and consigned to.
  • CHAPTER LX
  • "The Kind, loving, Mother"
  • But now behoveth to say a little more of this forthspreading, as I
  • understand in the meaning of our Lord: how that we be brought again by
  • the Motherhood of Mercy and Grace into our Nature's place, where that
  • we were made by the Motherhood of Nature-Love: which kindly-love, it
  • never leaveth us.
  • Our Kind Mother, our Gracious Mother,[1] for that He would all wholly
  • become our Mother in all things, He took the Ground of His Works full
  • low and full mildly in the Maiden's womb. (And that He shewed in the
  • First [Shewing] where He brought that meek Maid afore the eye of mine
  • understanding in the simple stature as she was when she conceived.)
  • That is to say: our high God is sovereign Wisdom of all: in this low
  • place He arrayed and dight Him full ready in our poor flesh, Himself to
  • do the service and the office of Motherhood in all things.
  • The Mother's service is nearest, readiest, and surest: [nearest, for
  • it is most of nature; readiest, for it is most of love; and surest][2]
  • for it is most of truth. This office none might, nor could, nor ever
  • should do to the full, but He alone. We know that all our mothers'
  • bearing is [bearing of] us to pain and to dying: and what is this but
  • that our Very Mother, Jesus, He--All-Love--beareth us to joy and to
  • endless living?--blessed may He be! Thus He sustaineth[3] us within
  • Himself in love; and travailed, unto the full time that He would suffer
  • the sharpest throes and the most grievous pains that ever were or ever
  • shall be; and died at the last. And when He had finished, and so borne
  • us to bliss, yet might not all this make full content to His marvellous
  • love; and that sheweth He in these high overpassing words of love: _If
  • I might suffer more, I would suffer more_.
  • He might no more die, but He would not stint of working: wherefore then
  • it behoveth Him to feed us; for the dearworthy love of Motherhood hath
  • made Him debtor to us. The mother may give her child suck of her milk,
  • but our precious Mother, Jesus, He may feed us with Himself, and doeth
  • it, full courteously and full tenderly, with the Blessed Sacrament
  • that is precious food of my life; and with all the sweet Sacraments He
  • sustaineth us full mercifully and graciously. And so meant He in this
  • blessed word where that He said: _It is I[4] that Holy Church preacheth
  • thee and teacheth thee._ That is to say: _All the health and life of
  • Sacraments, all the virtue and grace of my Word, all the Goodness that
  • is ordained in Holy Church for thee, it is I_. The Mother may lay the
  • child tenderly to her breast, but our tender Mother, Jesus, He may
  • homely lead us into His blessed breast, by His sweet open side, and
  • shew therein part of the Godhead and the joys of Heaven, with spiritual
  • sureness of endless bliss. And that shewed He in the Tenth [Shewing],
  • giving the same understanding in this sweet word where He saith: _Lo!
  • how I loved thee_; looking unto [the Wound in] His side, rejoicing.
  • This fair lovely word _Mother_, it is so sweet and so close in Nature
  • of itself[5] that it may not verily be said of none but of _Him_;
  • and to her that is very Mother of Him and of all. To the property of
  • Motherhood belongeth natural love, wisdom, and knowing; and it is
  • good: for though it be so that our bodily forthbringing be but little,
  • low, and simple in regard of our spiritual forthbringing, yet it is He
  • that doeth it in the creatures by whom that it is done. The Kindly,[6]
  • loving Mother that witteth and knoweth the need of her child, she
  • keepeth it full tenderly, as the nature[7] and condition of Motherhood
  • will. And as it waxeth in age, she changeth her working, but not her
  • love. And when it is waxen of more age, she suffereth that it be
  • beaten[8] in breaking down of vices, to make the child receive virtues
  • and graces. This working, with all that be fair and good, our Lord
  • doeth it in them by whom it is done: thus He is our Mother in Nature by
  • the working of Grace in the lower part for love of the higher part. And
  • He willeth that we know this: for He will have all our love fastened
  • to Him. And in this I saw that all our duty that we owe, by God's
  • bidding, to Fatherhood and Motherhood, for [reason of] God's Fatherhood
  • and Motherhood is fulfilled in true loving of God; which blessed love
  • Christ worketh in us. And this was shewed in all [the Revelations] and
  • especially in the high plenteous words where He saith: _It is I that
  • thou lovest_.
  • [1] Our Mother by Nature, our Mother In Grace.
  • [2] These clauses, probably omitted by mistake, are in S. de Cressy's
  • version.
  • [3] S. de Cressy has "sustained." See lvii. p. 139.
  • [4] "I it am."
  • [5] "so kynd of the self."
  • [6] "kynde."
  • [7] "kind."
  • [8] "bristinid."
  • CHAPTER LXI
  • "By the assay of this falling we shall have an high marvellous knowing
  • of Love in God, without end. For strong and marvellous is that love
  • which may not, nor will not, be broken for trespass"
  • And in our spiritual forthbringing He useth more tenderness of keeping,
  • without any likeness: by as much as our soul is of more price in His
  • sight. He kindleth our understanding, He directeth our ways, He easeth
  • our conscience, He comforteth our soul, He lighteneth our heart, and
  • giveth us, in part, knowing and believing in His blissful Godhead,
  • with gracious mind in His sweet Manhood and His blessed Passion, with
  • reverent marvelling in His high, overpassing Goodness; and maketh us
  • to love all that He loveth, for His love, and to be well-pleased with
  • Him and all His works. And when we fall, hastily He raiseth us by
  • His lovely calling[1][2] and gracious touching. And when we be thus
  • strengthened by His sweet working, then we with all our will choose
  • Him, by His sweet grace, to be His servants and His lovers lastingly
  • without end.
  • And after this He suffereth some of us to fall more hard and more
  • grievously than ever we did afore, as us thinketh. And then ween we
  • (who be not all wise) that all were nought that we have begun. But this
  • is not so. For it needeth us to fall, and it needeth us to see it.
  • For if we never fell, we should not know how feeble and how wretched
  • we are of our self, and also we should not fully know that marvellous
  • love of our Maker. For we shall see verily in heaven, without end, that
  • we have grievously sinned in this life, and notwithstanding this, we
  • shall see that we were never hurt in His love, we were never the less
  • of price in His sight. And by the assay of this falling we shall have
  • an high, marvellous knowing of love in God, without end. For strong
  • and marvellous is that love which may not, nor will not, be broken for
  • trespass. And this is one understanding of [our] profit. Another is the
  • lowness and meekness that we shall get by the sight of our falling:
  • for thereby we shall highly be raised in heaven; to which raising
  • we might[3] never have come without that meekness. And therefore it
  • needeth us to see it; and if we see it not, though we fell it should
  • not profit us. And commonly, first we fall and later we see it: and
  • both of the Mercy of God.
  • The mother may suffer the child to fall sometimes, and to be hurt in
  • diverse manners for its own profit, but she may never suffer that any
  • manner of peril come to the child, for love. And though our earthly
  • mother may suffer her child to perish, our heavenly Mother, Jesus, may
  • not suffer us that are His children to perish: for He is All-mighty,
  • All-wisdom, and All-love; and so is none but He,--blessed may He be!
  • But oftentimes when our falling and our wretchedness is shewed us, we
  • are so sore adread, and so greatly ashamed of our self, that scarcely
  • we find where we may hold us. But then willeth not our courteous Mother
  • that we flee away, for Him were nothing lother. But He willeth then
  • that we use the condition of a child: for when it is hurt, or adread,
  • it runneth hastily to the mother for help, with all its might. So
  • willeth He that we do, as a meek child saying thus: _My kind Mother, my
  • Gracious Mother, my dearworthy Mother, have mercy on me: I have made
  • myself foul and unlike to Thee, and I nor may nor can amend it but with
  • thine help and grace_. And if we feel us not then eased forthwith, be
  • we sure that He useth the condition of a wise mother. For if He see
  • that it be more profit to us to mourn and to weep, He suffereth it,
  • with ruth and pity, unto the best time, for love. And He willeth then
  • that we use the property of a child, that evermore of nature trusteth
  • to the love of the mother in weal and in woe.
  • And He willeth that we take us mightily to the Faith of Holy Church and
  • find there our dearworthy Mother, in solace of true Understanding, with
  • all the blessed Common. For one single person may oftentimes be broken,
  • as it seemeth to himself, but the whole Body of Holy Church was never
  • broken, nor never shall be, without end. And therefore a sure thing it
  • is, a good and a gracious, to will meekly and mightily to be fastened
  • and oned to our Mother, Holy Church, that is, Christ Jesus. For the
  • food of mercy that is His dearworthy blood and precious water is
  • plenteous to make us fair and clean; the blessed wounds of our Saviour
  • be open and enjoy to heal us; the sweet, gracious hands of our Mother
  • be ready and diligently about us. For He in all this working useth the
  • office of a kind nurse that hath nought else to do but to give heed
  • about[4] the salvation of her child.
  • It is His office to save us: it is His worship to do [for] us,[5] and
  • it is His will [that] we know it: for He willeth that we love Him
  • sweetly and trust in Him meekly and mightily. And this shewed He in
  • these gracious words: _I keep thee full surely_.
  • [1] "clepyng."
  • [2] From the _Ancren Riwle_ (Camden Society's version, edited by J.
  • Morton, D.D.), p. 231: "The sixth comfort is, that our Lord, when He
  • suffereth us to be tempted, playeth with us, as the mother with her
  • young darling: she flies from him, and hides herself, and lets him
  • sit alone, and look anxiously around, and call _Dame! Dame!_ and weep
  • awhile; and then she leapeth forth laughing, with outspread arms,
  • and embraceth and kisseth him, and wipeth his eyes. In like manner,
  • our Lord sometimes leaveth us alone, and withdraweth His grace, His
  • comfort, and His support, so that we feel no delight in any good that
  • we do, nor any satisfaction of heart; and yet, at that very time, our
  • dear Father loveth us never the less, but doth it for the great love
  • that He hath to us."
  • p. 135: "The fourth reason why our Lord hideth Himself is, that thou
  • mayest seek him more earnestly, and call, and weep after Him, as the
  • little baby doth after his mother" ("ase deth thet lutel baban"--in
  • another manuscript 'lite barn'--"efter his moder").
  • [3] _i.e._ could.
  • [4] "entend about."
  • [5] S. de Cressy has here "to do it." This MS. seems to have: "to don
  • us," possibly for to work at us, carry out our salvation to perfection,
  • or, to take in hand for us, "to _do_ for us." See _The Paston Letters_,
  • vol. ii. (Letter 472), _May_ 1463, "he prayid hym that he wold don for
  • hym in hys mater, and gaf hym a reward; and withinne ryth short tym
  • after, his mater sped."
  • CHAPTER LXII
  • "God is Very Father and Very Mother of Nature: and all natures that He
  • hath made to flow out of Him to work His will shall be restored and
  • brought again into Him by the salvation of Mankind through the working
  • of Grace"
  • For in that time He shewed our frailty and our fallings, our
  • afflictings and our settings at nought,[1] our despites and our
  • outcastings, and all our woe so far forth as methought it might befall
  • in this life. And therewith He shewed His blessed Might, His blessed
  • Wisdom, His blessed Love: that He keepeth us in this time as tenderly
  • and as sweetly to His worship, and as surely to our salvation, as He
  • doeth when we are in most solace and comfort. And thereto He raiseth us
  • spiritually and highly in heaven, and turneth it all to His worship and
  • to our joy, without end. For His love suffereth us never to lose time.
  • And all this is of the Nature-Goodness of God, by the working of Grace.
  • God is Nature[2] in His being: that is to say, that Goodness that is
  • Nature, it is God. He is the ground, He is the substance, He is the
  • same thing that is Nature-hood.[3] And He is very Father and very
  • Mother of Nature: and all natures that He hath made to flow out of Him
  • to work His will shall be restored and brought again into Him by the
  • salvation of man through the working of Grace.
  • For of all natures[4] that He hath set in diverse creatures by part,
  • in man is all the whole; in fulness and in virtue, in fairness and
  • in goodness, in royalty and nobleness, in all manner of majesty, of
  • preciousness and worship. Here may we see that we are all beholden to
  • God for nature, and we are all beholden to God for grace. Here may we
  • see us needeth not greatly to seek far out to know sundry natures, but
  • to Holy Church, unto our Mother's breast: that is to say, unto our own
  • soul where our Lord dwelleth; and there shall we find all now in faith
  • and in understanding. And afterward verily in Himself clearly, in bliss.
  • But let no man nor woman take this singularly to himself: for it is
  • not so, it is general: for it is [of] our precious Christ, and to Him
  • was this fair nature adight[5] for the worship and nobility of man's
  • making, and for the joy and the bliss of man's salvation; even as He
  • saw, wist, and knew from without beginning.
  • [1] "our brekyngs and our nowtyngs."
  • [2] "kynde."
  • [3] "kindhede."
  • [4] "kyndes."
  • [5] _i.e._ made ready, prepared, appointed.
  • CHAPTER LXIII
  • "As verily as sin is unclean, so verily is it unkind"--a disease or
  • monstrous thing against nature. "He shall heal us full fair."
  • Here may we see that we have verily of Nature to hate sin, and we have
  • verily of Grace to hate sin. For Nature is all good and fair in itself,
  • and Grace was sent out to save Nature and destroy sin, and bring again
  • fair nature to the blessed point from whence it came: that is God; with
  • more nobleness and worship by the virtuous working of Grace. For it
  • shall be seen afore God by all His Holy in joy without end that Nature
  • hath been assayed in the fire of tribulation and therein hath been
  • found no flaw, no fault.[1] Thus are Nature and Grace of one accord:
  • for Grace is God, as Nature is God: He is two in manner of working and
  • one in love; and neither of these worketh without other: they be not
  • disparted.
  • And when we by Mercy of God and with His help accord us to Nature and
  • Grace, we shall see verily that sin is in sooth viler and more painful
  • than hell, without likeness: for it is contrary to our fair nature. For
  • as verily as sin is unclean, so verily is it unnatural,[2] and thus an
  • horrible thing to see for the loved[3] soul that would be all fair and
  • shining in the sight of God, as Nature and Grace teacheth.
  • Yet be we not adread of this, save inasmuch as dread may speed us:
  • but meekly make we our moan to our dearworthy Mother, and He shall
  • besprinkle us in His precious blood and make our soul full soft and
  • full mild, and heal us full fair by process of time, right as it is
  • most worship to Him and joy to us without end. And of this sweet fair
  • working He shall never cease nor stint till all His dearworthy children
  • be born and forthbrought. (And that shewed He where He shewed [me]
  • understanding of the ghostly Thirst, that is the love-longing that
  • shall last till Doomsday.)
  • Thus in [our] Very Mother, Jesus, our life is grounded, in the
  • foreseeing Wisdom of Himself from without beginning, with the high
  • Might of the Father, the high sovereign Goodness of the Holy Ghost. And
  • in the taking of our nature He quickened us; in His blessed dying upon
  • the Cross He bare us to endless life; and from that time, and now, and
  • evermore unto Doomsday, He feedeth us and furthereth us: even as that
  • high sovereign Kindness of Motherhood, and as Kindly need of Childhood
  • asketh.
  • Fair and sweet is our Heavenly Mother in the sight of our souls;
  • precious and lovely are the Gracious Children in the sight of our
  • Heavenly Mother, with mildness and meekness, and all the fair virtues
  • that belong to children in Nature. For of nature the Child despaireth
  • not of the Mother's love, of nature the Child presumeth not of itself,
  • of nature the Child loveth the Mother and each one of the other
  • [children]. These are the fair virtues, with all other that be like,
  • wherewith our Heavenly Mother is served and pleased.
  • And I understood none higher stature in this life than Childhood,
  • in feebleness and failing of might and of wit, unto the time that
  • our Gracious Mother hath brought us up to our Father's Bliss.[4] And
  • then shall it verily be known to us His meaning in those sweet words
  • where He saith: _All shall be well: and thou shalt see, thyself, that
  • all manner of things shall be well_. And then shall the Bliss of our
  • Mother, in Christ, be new to begin in the Joys of our God: which new
  • beginning shall last without end, new beginning.
  • Thus I understood that all His blessed children which be come out of
  • Him by Nature shall be brought again into Him by Grace.
  • [1] "no lak (blame), no defaute."
  • [2] "as sothly as sin is onclene as sothly is it onkinde."
  • [3] S. de Cressy has "the loving soul."
  • [4] "Our fader bliss."
  • _THE FIFTEENTH REVELATION_
  • CHAPTER LXIV
  • "_Thou shalt come up above._" "A very fair creature, a little
  • Child--nimble and lively, whiter than lily"
  • Afore this time I had great longing and desire of God's gift to be
  • delivered of this world and of this life. For oftentimes I beheld the
  • woe that is here, and the weal and the bliss that is being there: (and
  • if there had been no pain in this life but the absence of our Lord,
  • methought it was some-time more than I might bear;) and this made me
  • to mourn, and eagerly to long. And also from mine own wretchedness,
  • sloth, and weakness, me liked not to live and to travail, as me fell to
  • do.
  • And to all this our courteous Lord answered for comfort and patience,
  • and said these words: _Suddenly thou shalt be taken from all thy pain,
  • from all thy sickness, from all thy distress[1] and from all thy woe.
  • And thou shalt come up above and thou shalt have me to thy meed, and
  • thou shalt be fulfilled of love and of bliss. And thou shalt never have
  • no manner of pain, no manner of misliking, no wanting of will; but ever
  • joy and bliss without end. What should it then aggrieve thee to suffer
  • awhile, seeing that it is my will and my worship?_
  • And in this word: _Suddenly thou shalt be taken_,--I saw that God
  • rewardeth man for the patience that he hath in abiding God's will, and
  • for his time, and [for] that man lengtheneth his patience over the
  • time of his living. For not-knowing of his time of passing, that is a
  • great profit: for if a man knew his time, he should not have patience
  • over that time; but, as God willeth, while the soul is in the body it
  • seemeth to itself that it is ever at the point to be taken. For all
  • this life and this languor that we have here is but a point, and when
  • we are taken suddenly out of pain into bliss then pain shall be nought.
  • And in this time I saw a body lying on the earth, which body shewed
  • heavy and horrible,[2] without shape and form, as it were a swollen
  • quag of stinking mire.[3] And suddenly out of this body sprang a full
  • fair creature, a little Child, fully shapen and formed, nimble[4] and
  • lively, whiter than lily; which swiftly[5] glided up into heaven.
  • And the swollenness of the body betokeneth great wretchedness of our
  • deadly flesh, and the littleness of the Child betokeneth the cleanness
  • of purity in the soul. And methought: _With this body abideth[6] no
  • fairness of this Child, and on this Child dwelleth no foulness of this
  • body_.
  • It is more blissful that man be taken from pain, than that pain be
  • taken from man;[7] for if pain be taken from us it may come again:
  • therefore it is a sovereign comfort and blissful beholding in a loving
  • soul that we shall be taken from pain. For in this behest[8] I saw
  • a marvellous compassion that our Lord hath in us for our woe, and a
  • courteous promising[9] of clear deliverance. For He willeth that we be
  • comforted in the overpassing;[10] and _that_ He shewed in these words:
  • _And thou shalt come up above, and thou shalt have me to thy meed, and
  • thou shalt be fulfilled of joy and bliss_.
  • It is God's will that we set the point of our thought in this blissful
  • beholding as often as we may,--and as long time keep us therein with
  • His grace; for this is a blessed contemplation to the soul that is led
  • of God, and full greatly to His worship, for the time that it lasteth.
  • And [when] we fall again to our heaviness, and spiritual blindness,
  • and feeling of pains spiritual and bodily, by our frailty, it is God's
  • will that we know that He hath not forgotten us. And so signifieth He
  • in these words: _And thou shalt never more have pain; no manner of
  • sickness, no manner of misliking, no wanting of will; but ever joy and
  • bliss without end. What should it then aggrieve thee to suffer awhile,
  • seeing it is my will and my worship?_
  • It is God's will that we take His behests[11] and His comfortings as
  • largely and as mightily as we may take them, and also He willeth that
  • we take our abiding and our troubles[12] as lightly as we may take
  • them, and set them at nought. For the more lightly we take them, and
  • the less price we set on them, for love, the less pain we shall have
  • in the feeling of them, and the more thanks and meed we shall have for
  • them.
  • [1] "disese."
  • [2] "uggley."
  • [3] a "bolned quave of styngand myre."
  • [4] "swifie" = agile, quick.
  • [5] "sharply."
  • [6] "beleveth."
  • [7] "full blissful ... mor than."
  • [8] _i.e._ promise, proclamation.
  • [9] "behoting."
  • [10] _i.e._ the exceeding fulness of heavenly bliss.
  • [11] See note 8 above.
  • [12] "diseases" = discomforts, distresses.
  • CHAPTER LXV
  • "The Charity of God maketh in us such a unity that, when it is truly
  • seen, no man can part himself from other"
  • And thus I understood that what man or woman with firm will[1] chooseth
  • God in this life, for love, he may be sure that he is loved without
  • end: which endless love worketh in him that grace. For He willeth that
  • we be as assured in hope of the bliss of heaven while we are here, as
  • we shall be in sureness while we are there. And ever the more pleasance
  • and joy that we take in this sureness, with reverence and meekness, the
  • better pleaseth Him, as it was shewed. This reverence that I mean is
  • a holy courteous dread of our Lord, to which meekness is united: and
  • that is, that a creature seeth the Lord marvellous great, and itself
  • marvellous little. For these virtues are had endlessly by the loved of
  • God, and this may now be seen and felt in measure through the gracious
  • presence of our Lord when it is [seen]: which presence in all things
  • is most desired, for it worketh marvellous assuredness in true faith,
  • and sure hope, by greatness of charity, in dread that is sweet and
  • delectable.
  • It is God's will that I see myself as much bound[2] to Him in love as
  • if He had done for me all that He hath done; and thus should every soul
  • think inwardly of its[3] Lover. That is to say, the Charity of God
  • maketh in us such a unity that, when it is truly seen, no man can part
  • himself from other. And thus ought our soul to think that God hath done
  • for it[4] all that He hath done.
  • And this sheweth He to make us to love Him and nought dread but Him.
  • For it is His will that we perceive that all the might of our Enemy
  • is taken into our Friend's hand; and therefore the soul that knoweth
  • assuredly this, he[5] shall not dread but Him that he loveth. All
  • other dread he[6] setteth among passions and bodily sickness and
  • imaginations. And therefore though we be in so much pain, woe, and
  • distress that it seemeth to us we can think [of] right nought but [of]
  • that [which] we are in, or [of] that [which] we feel, [yet] as soon as
  • we may, pass we lightly over, and set we it at nought. And why? For
  • that God willeth we know [Him]; and if we know Him and love Him and
  • reverently dread Him, we shall have peace, and be in great rest, and
  • it shall be great pleasance to us, all that He doeth. And this shewed
  • our Lord in these words: _What should it then aggrieve thee to suffer
  • awhile, sith it is my will and my worship?_
  • Now have I told you of Fifteen Revelations, as God vouchsafed to
  • minister them to [my] mind, renewed by lightings and touchings, I hope
  • of the same Spirit that shewed them all.
  • Of which Fifteen Shewings the First began early in the morn, about
  • the hour of four; and they lasted, shewing by process full fair and
  • steadily, each following other, till it was nine of the day, overpassed.
  • [1] "wilfully."
  • [2] "bounden" = beholden.
  • [3] "his."
  • [4] "him."
  • [5] _i.e._ the soul.
  • [6] _i.e._ the soul.
  • CHAPTER LXVI
  • "All was closed, and I saw no more." "For the folly of feeling a little
  • bodily pain I unwisely lost for the time the comfort of all this
  • blessed Shewing of our Lord God"
  • And after this the good Lord shewed the Sixteenth [Revelation] on the
  • night following, as I shall tell after: which Sixteenth was conclusion
  • and confirmation to all Fifteen.
  • But first me behoveth to tell you as anent my feebleness, wretchedness
  • and blindness.--I have said in the beginning: _And in this [moment] all
  • my pain was suddenly taken from me:_ of which pain I had no grief nor
  • distress as long as the Fifteen Shewings lasted following. And at the
  • end all was close, and I saw no more. And soon I felt that I should
  • live and languish;[1] and anon my sickness came again: first in my head
  • with a sound and a din, and suddenly all my body was fulfilled with
  • sickness like as it was afore. And I was as barren and as dry as [if]
  • I never had comfort but little. And as a wretched creature I moaned
  • and cried for feeling of my bodily pains and for failing of comfort,
  • spiritual and bodily.
  • Then came a Religious person to me and asked me how I fared. I said I
  • had raved to-day. And he laughed loud and heartily.[2] And I said: _The
  • Cross that stood afore my face, methought it bled fast_. And with this
  • word the person that I spake to waxed all sober and marvelled. And anon
  • I was sore ashamed and astonished for my recklessness, and I thought:
  • _This man taketh in sober earnest[3] the least word that I might say_.
  • Then said I no more thereof. And when I saw that he took it earnestly
  • and with so great reverence, I wept, full greatly ashamed, and would
  • have been shriven; but at that time I could tell it no priest, for I
  • thought: _How should a priest believe me? I believe not our Lord God._
  • This [Shewing] I believed verily for the time that I saw Him, and so
  • was then my will and my meaning ever for to do without end; but as a
  • fool I let it pass from my mind. Ah! lo, wretch that I am! this was a
  • great sin, great unkindness, that I for folly of feeling of a little
  • bodily pain, so unwisely lost for the time the comfort of all this
  • blessed Shewing of our Lord God. Here may you see what I am of myself.
  • But herein would our Courteous Lord not leave me. And I lay still till
  • night, trusting in His mercy, and then I began to sleep. And in the
  • sleep, at the beginning, methought the Fiend set him on my throat,
  • putting forth a visage full near my face, like a young man's and it was
  • long and wondrous lean: I saw never none such. The colour was red like
  • the tilestone when it is new-burnt, with black spots therein like black
  • freckles--fouler than the tilestone. His hair was red as rust, clipped
  • in front,[4] with full locks hanging on the temples. He grinned on me
  • with a malicious semblance, shewing white teeth: and so much methought
  • it the more horrible. Body nor hands had he none shapely, but with his
  • paws he held me in the throat, and would have strangled me, but he
  • might not.
  • This horrible Shewing was made [whilst I was] sleeping, and so was none
  • other. But in all this time I trusted to be saved and kept by the mercy
  • of God. And our Courteous Lord gave me grace to waken; and scarcely
  • had I my life. The persons that were with me looked on me, and wet my
  • temples, and my heart began to comfort. And anon a light smoke came
  • in the door, with a great heat and a foul stench. I said: _Benedicite
  • Domine! it is all on fire that is here!_ And I weened it had been a
  • bodily fire that should have burnt us all to death. I asked them that
  • were with me if they felt any stench. They said, Nay: they felt none. I
  • said: _Blessed be God!_ For then wist I well it was the Fiend that was
  • come to tempest me. And anon I took to that [which] our Lord had shewed
  • me on the same day, with all the Faith of Holy Church (for I beheld it
  • is both one), and fled thereto as to my comfort. And anon all vanished
  • away, and I was brought to great rest and peace, without sickness of
  • body or dread of conscience.
  • [1] "langiren."
  • [2] "inderly" = inwardly; so de Cressy; (Collins has "drolly").
  • [3] "sadly" = solidly, soberly.
  • [4] "evisid aforn with syde lokks hongyng on the thounys" (or thowngs,
  • or thoungs). Bradley's _Dictionary of Middle English--thun(?)wange_ =
  • temple, _evesed_ p. ple of _efesian_ = to clip the edges (_cf. eaves_).
  • The Paris MS. however reads: "His hair was rede as rust not scoryd
  • afore, with syde lockes hangyng on the thouwonges." S. de Cressy gives
  • this as: "his hair was red as rust not scoured; afore with side locks
  • hanging down in flakes."
  • _THE SIXTEENTH REVELATION_
  • CHAPTER LXVII
  • "The place that Jesus taketh in our soul He shall never remove from,
  • without end:--for in us His homliest home and His endless dwelling."
  • "Our soul can never have rest in things that are beneath itself--yet
  • may it not abide in the beholding of its self"
  • And then our Lord opened my spiritual eye and shewed me my soul in
  • midst of my heart. I saw the Soul so large as it were an endless
  • world, and as it were a blissful kingdom. And by the conditions that
  • I saw therein I understood that it is a worshipful City. In the midst
  • of that City sitteth our Lord Jesus, God and Man, a fair Person of
  • large stature, highest Bishop, most majestic[1] King, most worshipful
  • Lord; and I saw Him clad majestically.[2] And worshipfully He sitteth
  • in the Soul, even-right[3] in peace and rest. And the Godhead ruleth
  • and sustaineth[4] heaven and earth and all that is,--sovereign Might,
  • sovereign Wisdom, and sovereign Goodness,--[but] the place that Jesus
  • taketh in _our Soul_ He shall never remove it, without end, as to my
  • sight: for in us is His _homliest_ home and His _endless_ dwelling.[5]
  • And in this [sight] He shewed the satisfying that He hath of the
  • making of Man's Soul. For as well as the Father might make a creature,
  • and as well as the Son could make a creature, so well would the Holy
  • Ghost that Man's Soul were made: and so it was done. And therefore the
  • blessed Trinity enjoyeth without end in the making of Man's Soul: for
  • He saw from without beginning what should please Him without end. All
  • thing that He hath made sheweth His Lordship,--as understanding was
  • given at the same time by example of a creature that is to see great
  • treasures and kingdoms belonging to a lord; and when it had seen all
  • the nobleness beneath, then, marvelling, it was moved to seek above to
  • the high place where the lord dwelleth, knowing, by reason, that his
  • dwelling is in the worthiest place. And thus I understood in verity
  • that our Soul may never have rest in things that are beneath itself.
  • And when it cometh above all creatures into the Self, yet may it not
  • abide in the beholding of its Self, but all the beholding is blissfully
  • set in God that is the Maker dwelling therein. For in Man's Soul is His
  • very dwelling; and the highest light and the brightest shining of the
  • City is the glorious love of our Lord, as to my sight.
  • And what may make us more to enjoy in God than to see in Him that He
  • enjoyeth in the highest of all His works? For I saw in the same Shewing
  • that if the blessed Trinity might have made Man's Soul any better,
  • any fairer, any nobler than it was made, He should not have been
  • full pleased with the making of Man's Soul. And He willeth that our
  • hearts be mightily raised above the deepness of the earth and all vain
  • sorrows, and rejoice[6] in Him.
  • [1] "solemnest."
  • [2] "solemnly" = in state.
  • [3] _i.e._ straight-set.
  • [4] "gemeth."
  • [5] "woning."
  • [6] "enjoyen."
  • CHAPTER LXVIII
  • "He said not: _Thou shalt not be tempested, thou shalt not be
  • travailed, thou shalt not be afflicted_; but He said: _Thou shalt not
  • be overcome_"
  • This was a delectable Sight and a restful Shewing, that it is so
  • _without end_. The beholding of this while we are here is full pleasing
  • to God and full great profit to us; and the soul that thus beholdeth,
  • it maketh it like to Him that is beheld, and oneth it in rest and peace
  • by His grace. And this was a singular joy and bliss to me that I saw
  • Him _sitting_: for the [quiet] secureness of sitting sheweth endless
  • dwelling.
  • And He gave me to know soothfastly that it was He that shewed me all
  • afore. And when I had beheld this with heedfulness, then shewed our
  • good Lord words[1] full meekly without voice and without opening of
  • lips, right as He had [afore] done, and said full sweetly: _Wit it now
  • well that it was no raving that thou sawest to-day: but take it and
  • believe it, and keep thee therein, and comfort thee therewith, and
  • trust thou thereto: and thou shalt not be overcome._
  • These Last Words were said for believing and true sureness that it is
  • our Lord Jesus that shewed me all. And right as in the first word that
  • our good Lord shewed, signifying His blissful Passion,--_Herewith is
  • the devil overcome_,--right so He said in the last word, with full
  • true secureness, meaning us all: _Thou shalt not_ be overcome. And
  • all this teaching in this true comfort, it is general, to all mine
  • even-Christians, as it is aforesaid: and so is God's will.
  • And this word: _Thou shalt not be overcome_, was said full clearly[2]
  • and full mightily, for assuredness and comfort against all tribulations
  • that may come. He said not: _Thou shalt not be tempested, thou shall
  • not be travailed, thou shah not be afflicted_; but He said: _Thou shalt
  • not be overcome_. God willeth that we take heed to these words, and
  • that we be ever strong in sure trust, in weal and woe. For He loveth
  • and enjoyeth us, and so willeth He that we love and enjoy Him and
  • mightily trust in Him; and _all shall be well_.
  • And soon after, all was close and I saw no more.
  • [1] See lxx. "He shewed it all [the Revelation] again within in my
  • soul."
  • [2] "sharply" = decisively.
  • CHAPTER LXIX
  • "I was delivered from the Enemy by the virtue of Christ's Passion"
  • After this the Fiend came again with his heat and with his stench,
  • and gave me much ado,[1] the stench was so vile and so painful, and
  • also dreadful and travailous. Also I heard a bodily jangling,[2] as if
  • it had been of two persons; and both, to my thinking, jangled at one
  • time as if they had holden a parliament with a great busy-ness; and
  • all was soft muttering, so that I understood nought that they said.
  • And all this was to stir me to despair, as methought,--seeming to
  • me as [though] they mocked at praying of prayers[3] which are said
  • boisterously with [the] mouth, failing [of] devout attending and wise
  • diligence: the which we owe to God in our prayers.
  • And our Lord God gave me grace mightily for to trust in Him, and to
  • comfort my soul with bodily speech as I should have done to another
  • person that had been travailed. Methought _that_ busy-ness[4] might
  • not be likened to no bodily busy-ness. My bodily eye I set in the same
  • Cross where I had been in comfort afore that time; my tongue with
  • speech of Christ's Passion and rehearsing the Faith of Holy Church;
  • and my heart to fasten on God with all the trust and the might. And I
  • thought to myself, saying: _Thou hast now great busy-ness to keep thee
  • in the Faith for that thou shouldst not be taken of the Enemy: wouldst
  • thou now from this time evermore be so busy to keep thee from sin, this
  • were a good and a sovereign occupation!_ For I thought in sooth were I
  • safe from sin, I were full safe from all the fiends of hell and enemies
  • of my soul.
  • And thus he occupied me all that night, and on the morn till it was
  • about prime day. And anon they were all gone, and all passed; and they
  • left nothing but stench, and that lasted still awhile; and I scorned
  • him.
  • And thus was I delivered from him by the virtue of Christ's Passion:
  • for _therewith is the Fiend overcome_, as our Lord Jesus Christ said
  • afore.
  • [1] "made me full besy."
  • [2] _i.e._ gabbling.
  • [3] "bidding of bedes."
  • [4] see above, "made me full busy."
  • CHAPTER LXX
  • "Above the Faith is no goodness kept in this life, as to my sight,
  • and beneath the Faith is no help of soul; but _in_ the Faith, _there_
  • willeth the Lord that we keep us"
  • In all this blessed Shewing our good Lord gave understanding that the
  • Sight should pass: which blessed Shewing the Faith keepeth, with His
  • own good will and His grace. For He left with me neither sign nor token
  • whereby I might know it, but He left with me His own blessed word in
  • true understanding, bidding me full mightily that I should believe it.
  • And so I do,--Blessed may He be!--I believe that He is our Saviour that
  • shewed it, and that it is the Faith that He shewed: and therefore I
  • believe it, rejoicing. And thereto I am bounden by all His own meaning,
  • with the next words that follow: _Keep thee therein, and comfort thee
  • therewith, and trust thou thereto_.
  • Thus I am bounden to keep it in my faith. For on the same day that it
  • was shewed, what time that the Sight was passed, as a wretch I forsook
  • it, and openly I said that I had raved. Then our Lord Jesus of His
  • mercy would not let it perish, but He showed it all again _within in
  • my soul_[1] with more fulness, with the blessed light of His precious
  • love: saying these words full mightily and full meekly: _Wit it now
  • well: it was no raving that thou sawest this day_. As if He had said:
  • _For that the Sight was passed from thee, thou losedst it and hadst
  • not skill to keep[2] it. But wit[3] it now_; that is to say, _now that
  • thou seest it_. This was said not only for that same time, but also to
  • set thereupon the ground of my faith when He saith anon following: _But
  • take it, believe it, and keep thee therein and comfort thee therewith
  • and trust thou thereto; and thou shalt not be overcome_.
  • In these six words that follow (_Take it_--[etc.]) His meaning is to
  • fasten it faithfully in our heart: for He willeth that it dwell with
  • us in faith to our life's end, and after in fulness of joy, desiring
  • that we have ever steadfast trust in His blissful behest--knowing His
  • Goodness.
  • For our faith is contraried in diverse manners by our own blindness,
  • and our spiritual enemy, within and without; and therefore our precious
  • Lover helpeth us with spiritual sight and true teaching in sundry
  • manners within and without, whereby that we may know Him. And therefore
  • in whatsoever manner He teacheth us, He willeth that we perceive Him
  • wisely, receive Him sweetly, and keep us in Him faithfully. For above
  • the Faith is no goodness kept in this life, as to my sight, and beneath
  • the Faith is no help of soul; but in the Faith, there willeth the Lord
  • that we keep us. For we have by His goodness and His own working to
  • keep us in the Faith; and by His sufferance through ghostly enmity we
  • are assayed in the Faith and made mighty. For if our faith had none
  • enmity, it should deserve no meed, according to the understanding that
  • I have in all our Lord's teaching.
  • [1] see ch. lxviii.
  • [2] "couthest not."
  • [3] _i.e._ learn, perceive, know for certainty by the conviction of
  • reason and consciousness--grasp once for all the truth beheld.
  • CHAPTER LXXI
  • "Three manners of looking seen in our Lord's Countenance"
  • Glad and joyous and sweet is the Blissful lovely Cheer[1] of our Lord
  • to our souls. For He [be]holdeth[2] us ever, living in love-longing:
  • and He willeth that _our_ soul be in glad cheer to Him, to give Him His
  • meed. And thus, I hope, with His grace He hath [drawn], and more shall
  • draw, the Outer Cheer to the Inner Cheer, and make us all one with Him,
  • and each of us with other, in true lasting joy that is Jesus.
  • I have signifying of Three manners of Cheer of our Lord. The first is
  • Cheer of Passion, as He shewed while He was here in this life, dying.
  • Though this [manner of] Beholding be mournful and troubled, yet it is
  • glad and joyous: for He is God.--The second manner of Cheer is [of]
  • Ruth and Compassion: and this sheweth He, with sureness of Keeping,
  • to all His lovers that betake them[3] to His mercy. The third is the
  • Blissful Cheer, as it shall be without end: and this was [shewed]
  • oftenest and longest-continued.
  • And thus in the time of our pain and our woe He sheweth us Cheer of
  • His Passion and His Cross, helping us to bear it by His own blessed
  • virtue. And in the time of our sinning He sheweth to us Cheer of Ruth
  • and Pity, mightily keeping us and defending us against all our enemies.
  • And these be the common Cheer which He sheweth to us in this life;
  • therewith mingling the third: and that is His Blissful Cheer, like,
  • in part, as it shall be in Heaven. And that [shewing is] by gracious
  • touching and sweet lighting of the spiritual life, whereby that we are
  • kept in sure faith, hope, and charity, with contrition and devotion,
  • and also with contemplation and all manner of true solace and sweet
  • comforts.
  • [1] "Cher," in earlier chapters rendered by _manner of Countenance_ or
  • _Regard_.
  • [2] The word of the MS. might be: "he havith" (possibly "draweth"), or
  • "behadith" or "behavith." There is a verb "bi-hawen" _to behold_--in
  • other forms bihabben, bi-halden--; and "behave" had the meaning of to
  • _manage, govern_. Elsewhere in the MS. to _regard_, if not _to fix the
  • eyes upon_, is expressed (_e.g._ in xxxix.) simply by _to "holden"_
  • without the prefix. S. de Cressy has here "he beheld."
  • [3] "that have to"; S. de Cressy, "have need to."
  • CHAPTER LXXII
  • "As long as we be meddling with any part of sin we shall never see
  • clearly the Blissful Countenance of our Lord"
  • But now behoveth me to tell in what manner I saw sin deadly in the
  • creatures which shall not die for sin, but live in the joy of God
  • without end.
  • I saw that two contrary things should never be together in one place.
  • The most contrary that are, is the highest bliss and the deepest pain.
  • The highest bliss that is, is to have Him in clarity of endless life,
  • Him verily seeing, Him sweetly feeling, all-perfectly having in fulness
  • of joy. And thus was the Blissful Cheer of our Lord shewed in Pity:[1]
  • in which Shewing I saw that sin is most contrary,--so far forth that
  • as long as we be meddling with any part of sin, we shall never see
  • clearly the Blissful Cheer of our Lord. And the more horrible and
  • grievous that our sins be, the deeper are we for that time from this
  • blissful sight. And therefore it seemeth to us oftentimes as we were in
  • peril of death, in a part of hell, for the sorrow and pain that the sin
  • is to us. And thus we are dead for the time from the very sight of our
  • blissful life. But in all this I saw soothfastly that we be not dead in
  • the sight of God, nor He passeth never from us. But He shall never have
  • His full bliss in us till we have our full bliss in Him, verily seeing
  • His fair Blissful Cheer. For we are ordained thereto in nature, and get
  • thereto by grace. Thus I saw how sin is deadly for a short time in the
  • blessed creatures of endless life.
  • And ever the more clearly that the soul seeth this Blissful Cheer
  • by grace of loving, the more it longeth to see it in fulness. For
  • notwithstanding that our Lord God dwelleth in us and is here with us,
  • and albeit He claspeth us and encloseth[2] us for tender love that He
  • may never leave[3] us, and is more near to us than tongue can tell or
  • heart can think, yet may we never stint of moaning nor of weeping nor
  • of longing till when we see Him clearly in His Blissful Countenance.
  • For in that precious blissful sight there may no woe abide, nor any
  • weal fail.[4]
  • And in this I saw matter of mirth and matter of moaning: matter of
  • mirth: for our Lord, our Maker, is so near to us, and in us, and we
  • in Him, by sureness of keeping through His great goodness; matter of
  • moaning: for our ghostly eye is so blind and we be so borne down by
  • weight of our mortal flesh and darkness of sin, that we may not see
  • our Lord God clearly in His fair Blissful Cheer. No; and because of
  • this dimness[5] scarsely we can believe and trust His great love and
  • our sureness[6] of keeping. And therefore it is that I say we may
  • never stint of moaning nor of weeping. This "weeping" meaneth not all
  • in pouring out of tears by our bodily eye, but also hath more ghostly
  • understanding. For the kindly desire of our soul is so great and so
  • unmeasurable, that if there were given us for our solace and for our
  • comfort all the noble things that ever God made in heaven and in earth,
  • and we saw not the fair Blissful Cheer[7] of Himself, yet we should
  • not stint of moaning nor ghostly weeping, that is to say, of painful
  • longing, till when we [should] see verily the fair Blissful Cheer of
  • our Maker. And if we were in all the pain that heart can think and
  • tongue may tell, if we might in that time see His fair Blissful Cheer,
  • all this pain should not aggrieve us.
  • Thus is that Blissful Sight [the] end of all manner of pain to the
  • loving soul, and the fulfilling of all manner of joy and bliss. And
  • that shewed He in the high, marvellous words where He said: _I it am
  • that is highest; I it am that is lowest; I it am that is all_.
  • It belongeth to us to have three manner of knowings: the first is that
  • we know our Lord God; the second is that we know our self: what we are
  • by Him, in Nature and Grace; the third is that we know meekly what our
  • self is anent our sin and feebleness. And for these three was all the
  • Shewing made, as to mine understanding.
  • [1] That is: in the Shewing of Pity (Rev. ii) ch. x., in which it was
  • shewed _darkly_. S. de Cressy has "in _party_" = _part_, but the word
  • seems to be "_pite_" = _pity_.
  • [2] halsith; beclosith.
  • [3] levyn; tellen; thyn ken; stint; see.
  • [4] "abiden, ne no wele fallen."
  • [5] "myrkehede, unethes we can leven and trowen."
  • [6] "sekirnes."
  • [7] The words "Blissful Cheer" cannot be rendered by the more beautiful
  • and familiar BLESSED COUNTENANCE, and even "_Blissful_ Countenance"
  • might fail to bring out the reference to _one Aspect_ of the Divine
  • Face, one part of the threefold Truth.
  • CHAPTER LXXIII
  • "Two manners of sickness that we have: impatience, or sloth;--despair,
  • or mistrustful dread"
  • All the blessed teaching of our Lord was shewed by three parts: that
  • is to say, by bodily sight, and by word formed in mine understanding,
  • and by spiritual sight. For the bodily sight, I have said as I saw, as
  • truly as I can; and for the words, I have said them right as our Lord
  • shewed them to me; and for the spiritual sight, I have told some deal,
  • but I may never fully tell it: and therefore of this sight I am stirred
  • to say more, as God will give me grace.
  • God shewed two manners of sickness that we have: the one is impatience,
  • or sloth: for we bear our travail and our pains heavily; the other is
  • despair, or doubtful dread, which I shall speak of after. _Generally_,
  • He shewed _sin_, wherein that all is comprehended, but in special He
  • shewed only these two. And these two are they that most do travail
  • and tempest us, according to that which our Lord shewed me; and of
  • them He would have us be amended. I speak of such men and women as for
  • God's love hate sin and dispose themselves to do God's will: then by
  • our spiritual blindness and bodily heaviness we are most inclining to
  • these. And therefore it is God's will that they be known, for then we
  • shall refuse them as we do other sins.
  • And for help of this, full meekly our Lord shewed the patience that He
  • had in His Hard Passion; and also the joying and the satisfying that
  • He hath of that Passion, for love. And this He shewed in example that
  • we should gladly and wisely bear our pains, for that is great pleasing
  • to Him and endless profit to us. And the cause why we are travailed
  • with them is for lack in knowing[1] of Love. Though the three Persons
  • in the Trinity[2] be all even[3] in Itself, the soul[4] took most
  • understanding in Love; yea, and He willeth that in all things we have
  • our beholding and our enjoying in Love. And of this knowing are we most
  • blind. For some of us believe that God is Almighty and may do all,
  • and that He is All-Wisdom and can do all; but that He is All-Love and
  • will do all, there we stop short.[5] And this not-knowing it is, that
  • hindereth most God's lovers, as to my sight.
  • For when we begin to hate sin, and amend us by the ordinance of Holy
  • Church, yet there dwelleth a dread that letteth us, because of the
  • beholding of our self and of our sins afore done. And some of us
  • because of our every-daily sins: for we hold not our Covenants, nor
  • keep we our cleanness that our Lord setteth us in, but fall oftentimes
  • into so much wretchedness that shame it is to see it. And the beholding
  • of this maketh us so sorry and so heavy, that scarsely we can find any
  • comfort.
  • And this dread we take sometime for a meekness, but it is a foul
  • blindness and a weakness.[6] And we cannot despise it as we do another
  • sin, that we know [as sin]: for it cometh [subtly] of Enmity, and it
  • is against truth. For it is God's will that of all the properties of
  • the blissful Trinity, we should have most sureness and comfort in Love:
  • for Love maketh Might and Wisdom full meek to us. For right as by the
  • courtesy of God He forgiveth our sin after the time that we repent us,
  • right so willeth He that _we_ forgive our sin, as anent our unskilful
  • heaviness and our doubtful dreads.
  • [1] "for _unknowing_."
  • [2] seen as Might, Wisdom, Love.
  • [3] _i.e._ equal.
  • [4] _i.e._ Julian (xiii., xxiv., xlvi.).
  • [5] "astynten."
  • [6] S. de Cressy: "a wickedness"; but the MS. word is "waykenes."
  • CHAPTER LXXIV
  • "There is no dread that fully pleaseth God in us but reverent dread"
  • For I understand [that there be] four manner of dreads. One is the
  • dread of an affright that cometh to a man suddenly by frailty. This
  • dread doeth good, for it helpeth to purge man, as doeth bodily sickness
  • or such other pain as is not sin. For all such pains help man if
  • they be patiently taken. The second is dread of pain, whereby man is
  • stirred and wakened from sleep of sin. He is not able for the time to
  • perceive the soft comfort of the Holy Ghost, till he have understanding
  • of this dread of pain, of bodily death, of spiritual enemies; and
  • this dread stirreth us to seek comfort and mercy of God, and thus
  • this dread helpeth us,[1] and enableth us to have contrition by the
  • blissful touching of the Holy Ghost. The third is doubtful dread.
  • Doubtful dread in as much as it draweth to despair, God will have it
  • turned in us into love by the knowing of love: that is to say, that
  • the bitterness of doubt be turned into the sweetness of natural love
  • by grace. For it may never please our Lord that His servants doubt in
  • His Goodness. The fourth is reverent dread: for there is no dread that
  • fully pleaseth God in us but reverent dread. And that is full soft, for
  • the more it is had, the less it is felt for sweetness of love.
  • Love and Dread are brethren, and they are rooted in us by the Goodness
  • of our Maker, and they shall never be taken from us without end. We
  • have of nature to love and we have of grace to love: and we have of
  • nature to dread and we have of grace to dread. It belongeth to the
  • Lordship and to the Fatherhood to be dreaded, as it belongeth to the
  • Goodness to be loved: and it belongeth to us that are His servants and
  • His children to dread Him for Lordship and Fatherhood, as it belongeth
  • to us to love Him for Goodness.
  • And though this reverent-dread and love be not parted asunder, yet they
  • are not both one, but they are two in property and in working, and
  • neither of them may be had without other. Therefore I am sure, he that
  • loveth, he dreadeth, though that he feel it but a little.
  • All dreads other than reverent dread that are proffered to us, though
  • they come under the colour of holiness yet are not so true, and hereby
  • may they be known asunder.--That dread that maketh us hastily to flee
  • from all that is not good and fall into our Lord's breast, as the Child
  • into the Mother's bosom,[2] with all our intent and with all our mind,
  • knowing our feebleness and our great need, knowing His everlasting
  • goodness and His blissful love, only seeking to Him for salvation,
  • cleaving to [Him] with sure trust: that dread that bringeth us into
  • this working, it is natural,[3] gracious, good and true. And all that
  • is contrary to this, either it is wrong, or it is mingled with wrong.
  • Then is this the remedy, to know them both and refuse the wrong.
  • For the natural property of dread which we have in this life by the
  • gracious working of the Holy Ghost, the same shall be in heaven afore
  • God, gentle, courteous, and full delectable. And thus we shall in
  • love be homely and near to God, and we shall in dread be gentle and
  • courteous to God: and both alike equal.
  • Desire we of our Lord God to dread Him reverently, to love Him meekly,
  • to trust in Him mightily; for when we dread Him reverently and love
  • Him meekly our trust is never in vain. For the more that we trust, and
  • the more mightily, the more we please and worship our Lord that we
  • trust in. And if we fail in this reverent dread and meek love (as God
  • forbid we should!), our trust shall soon be misruled for the time. And
  • therefore it needeth us much to pray our Lord of grace that we may have
  • this reverent dread and meek love, of His gift, in heart and in work.
  • For without this, no man may please God.
  • [1] Here the transcriber of the B. Mus. MS. repeats (by mistake, no
  • doubt) "to seek," etc. S. de Cressy: "helpeth us as an entry."
  • [2] S. de Cressy: "Mothers Arme," but MS. (B.M.) "Moder barme."
  • [3] "kinde."
  • CHAPTER LXXV
  • "We shall see verily the cause of all things that He hath done; and
  • evermore we shall see the cause of all things that He hath permitted"
  • I saw that God can do all that we need. And these three that I shall
  • speak of we need: love, longing, pity. Pity in love keepeth us in the
  • time of our need; and longing in the same love draweth us up into
  • Heaven. For the Thirst of God is to have the general Man unto Him: in
  • which thirst He hath drawn His Holy that be now in bliss; and getting
  • His lively members, ever He draweth and drinketh, and yet He thirsteth
  • and longeth.
  • I saw three manners of longing in God, and all to one end; of which we
  • have the same in us, and by the same virtue and for the same end.
  • The first is, that He longeth to teach us to know Him and love Him
  • evermore, as it is convenient and speedful to us. The second is, that
  • He longeth to have us up to His Bliss, as souls are when they are taken
  • out of pain into Heaven. The third is to fulfill us in bliss; and
  • that shall be on the Last Day, fulfilled ever to last. For I saw, as
  • it is known in our Faith, that the pain and the sorrow shall be ended
  • to all that shall be saved. And not only we shall receive the same
  • bliss that souls afore have had in heaven, but also we shall receive
  • a new [bliss], which plenteously shall be flowing out of God into us
  • and shall fulfill us; and these be the goods which He hath ordained
  • to give us from without beginning. These goods are treasured and hid
  • in Himself; for unto that time [no] Creature is mighty nor worthy to
  • receive them.
  • In this [fulfilling] we shall see verily the cause of all things that
  • He hath done; and evermore we shall see the cause of all things that He
  • hath suffered.[1] And the bliss and the fulfilling shall be so deep and
  • so high that, for wonder and marvel, all creatures shall have to God so
  • great reverent dread, overpassing that which hath been seen and felt
  • before, that the pillars of heaven shall tremble and quake. But this
  • manner of trembling and dread shall have no pain; but it belongeth to
  • the worthy might of God thus to be beholden by His creatures, in great
  • dread trembling and quaking for meekness of joy, marvelling at the
  • greatness of God the Maker and at the littleness of all that is made.
  • For the beholding of this maketh the creature marvellously meek and
  • mild.
  • Wherefore God willeth--and also it belongeth to us, both in nature
  • and grace--that we wit and know of this, desiring this sight and this
  • working; for it leadeth us in right way, and keepeth us in true life,
  • and oneth us to God. And as good as God is, so great He is; and as
  • much as it belongeth to His goodness to be loved, so much it belongeth
  • to His greatness to be dreaded. For this reverent dread is the fair
  • courtesy that is in Heaven afore God's face. And as much as He shall
  • then be known and loved overpassing that He is now, in so much He shall
  • be dreaded overpassing that He is now. Wherefore it behoveth needs to
  • be that all Heaven and earth shall tremble and quake when the pillars
  • shall tremble and quake.
  • [1] _i.e._ permitted; "all that is good our Lord doeth, and that which
  • is evil our Lord suffereth," xxxv.
  • CHAPTER LXXVI
  • "The soul that beholdeth the fair nature of our Lord Jesus, it hateth
  • no hell but sin"
  • I speak but little of reverent dread, for I hope it may be seen in this
  • matter aforesaid. But well I wot our Lord shewed me no souls but those
  • that dread Him. For well I wot the soul that truly taketh the teaching
  • of the Holy Ghost, it hateth more sin for vileness and horribleness
  • than it doth all the pain that is in hell. For the soul that beholdeth
  • the fair nature[1] of our Lord Jesus, it hateth no hell but sin, as to
  • my sight. And therefore it is God's will that we know sin, and pray
  • busily and travail earnestly and seek teaching meekly that we fall not
  • blindly therein; and if we fall, that we rise readily. For it is the
  • most pain that the soul may have, to turn from God any time by sin.
  • The soul that willeth to be in rest when [an] other man's sin cometh
  • to mind, he shall flee it as the pain of hell, seeking unto God for
  • remedy, for help against it. For the beholding of other man's sins,
  • it maketh as it were a thick mist afore the eyes of the soul, and we
  • cannot, for the time, see the fairness of God, but if we may behold
  • them with contrition with him, with compassion on him, and with holy
  • desire to God for him. For without this it harmeth[2] and tempesteth
  • and hindereth the soul that beholdeth them. For this I understood in
  • the Shewing of Compassion.
  • In this blissful Shewing of our Lord I have understanding of two
  • contrary things: the one is the most wisdom that any creature may
  • do in this life, the other is the most folly. The most wisdom is
  • for a creature to do after the will and counsel of his highest
  • sovereign Friend. This blessed Friend is Jesus, and it is His will
  • and His counsel that we hold us with Him, and fasten us to Him
  • homely--evermore, in what state soever that we be; for whether-so that
  • we be foul or clean, we are all one in His loving. For weal nor for woe
  • He willeth never we flee from Him. But because of the changeability
  • that we are in, in our self, we fall often into sin. Then we have this
  • [doubting dread] by the stirring of our enemy and by our own folly and
  • blindness: for they say thus: _Thou seest well thou art a wretched
  • creature, a sinner, and also unfaithful. For thou keepest not the
  • Command[3]; thou dost promise oftentimes our Lord that thou shalt do
  • better, and anon after, thou fallest again into the same, especially
  • into sloth and losing of time._ (For that is the beginning of sin, as
  • to my sight,--and especially to the creatures that have given them to
  • serve our Lord with inward beholding of His blessed Goodness.) And this
  • maketh us adread to appear afore our courteous Lord. Thus is it our
  • enemy that would put us aback[4] with his false dread, [by reason] of
  • our wretchedness, through pain that he threateth us with. For it is his
  • meaning to make us so heavy and so weary in this, that we should let
  • out of mind the fair, Blissful Beholding of our Everlasting Friend.
  • [1] "kindness."
  • [2] "noyith."
  • [3] S. de Cressy--"thy Covenant."
  • [4] "on bakke."
  • CHAPTER LXXVII
  • "Accuse not thyself overmuch, deeming that thy tribulation and thy woe
  • is all thy fault." "All thy living is penance profitable." "In the
  • remedy He willeth that we rejoice"
  • Our good Lord shewed the enmity of the Fiend: in which Shewing I
  • understood that all that is contrary to love and peace is of the Fiend
  • and of his part. And we have, of our feebleness and our folly, to fall;
  • and we have, of mercy and grace of the Holy Ghost, to rise to more
  • joy. And if our enemy aught winneth of us by our falling, (for it is
  • his pleasure,[1]) he loseth manifold more in our rising by charity and
  • meekness. And this glorious rising, it is to him so great sorrow and
  • pain for the hate that he hath to our soul, that he burneth continually
  • in envy. And all this sorrow that he would make us to have, it shall
  • turn to himself. And for this it was that our Lord scorned him, and [it
  • was] this [that] made me mightily to laugh.
  • Then is this the remedy, that we be aware of our wretchedness and flee
  • to our Lord: for ever the more needy that we be, the more speedful it
  • is to us to draw nigh to Him.[2] And let us say thus in our thinking:
  • _I know well I have a shrewd pain; but our Lord is All-Mighty and
  • may punish me mightily; and He is All-Wisdom and can punish me
  • discerningly; and He is All-Goodness and loveth me full tenderly_. And
  • in this beholding it is necessary for us to abide; for it is a lovely
  • meekness of a sinful soul, wrought by mercy and grace of the Holy
  • Ghost, when we willingly and gladly take the scourge and chastening of
  • our Lord that Himself will give us. And it shall be full tender and
  • full easy, if that we will only hold us satisfied with Him and with all
  • His works.
  • For the penance that man taketh of himself was not shewed me: that is
  • to say, it was not shewed specified. But specially and highly and with
  • full lovely manner of look was it shewed that we shall meekly bear and
  • suffer the penance that God Himself giveth us, with mind in His blessed
  • Passion. (For when we have mind in His blessed Passion, with pity and
  • love, then we suffer with Him like as His friends did that saw it. And
  • this was shewed in the Thirteenth Shewing, near the beginning, where it
  • speaketh of Pity.) For He saith: _Accuse not [thy]self overdone much,
  • deeming that thy tribulation and thy woe is all for thy fault; for I
  • will not that thou be heavy or sorrowful indiscreetly. For I tell thee,
  • howsoever thou do, thou shalt have woe. And therefore I will that thou
  • wisely know thy penance; and [thou] shalt see in truth that all thy
  • living is penance profitable._
  • This place is prison and this life is penance, and in the remedy He
  • willeth that we rejoice. The remedy is that our Lord is with us,
  • keeping and leading into the fulness of joy. For this is an endless joy
  • to us in our Lord's signifying, that He that shall be our bliss when we
  • are there, He is our keeper while we are here. Our way and our heaven
  • is true love and sure trust; and of this He gave understanding in all
  • [the Shewings] and especially in the Shewing of the Passion where He
  • made me mightily to choose Him for my heaven.[3]
  • Flee we to our Lord and we shall be comforted, touch we Him and we
  • shall be made clean, cleave we to Him and we shall be sure,[4] and safe
  • from all manner of peril.
  • For our courteous Lord willeth that we should be as homely with Him as
  • heart may think or soul may desire. But [let us] beware that we take
  • not so recklessly this homeliness as to leave courtesy. For our Lord
  • Himself is sovereign homeliness, and as homely as He is, so courteous
  • He is: for He is very courteous. And the blessed creatures that shall
  • be in heaven with Him without end, He will have them like to Himself in
  • all things. And to be like our Lord perfectly, it is our very salvation
  • and our full bliss.
  • And if we wot not how we shall do all this, desire we of our Lord and
  • He shall teach us: for it is His own good-pleasure and His worship;
  • blessed may He be!
  • [1] S. de Cressy, "likeness"; Collins, "business." The word may be
  • "Lifenes" = lefness, pleasure; lif = lef = lief = (Morris' _Specimens
  • of Early English_) pleasing, dear.
  • [2] "neyghen him."
  • [3] ch. xix.
  • [4] "sekir."
  • CHAPTER LXXVIII
  • "Though we be highly lifted up into contemplation by the special gift
  • of our Lord, yet it is needful to us to have knowledge and sight of our
  • sin and our feebleness"
  • Our Lord of His mercy sheweth us our sin and our feebleness by the
  • sweet gracious light of Himself; for our sin is so vile and so horrible
  • that He of His courtesy will not shew it to us but by the light of
  • His grace and mercy. Of four things therefore it is His will that we
  • have knowing: the first is, that He is our Ground from whom we have
  • all our life and our being. The second is, that He keepeth us mightily
  • and mercifully in the time that we are in our sin and among all our
  • enemies, that are full fell upon us; and so much we are in the more
  • peril for [that] we give them occasion thereto, and know not our own
  • need.[1] The third is, how courteously He keepeth us, and _maketh us to
  • know_ that we go amiss. The fourth is, how steadfastly He abideth us
  • and changeth no regard:[2] for He willeth that we be turned [again],
  • and oned to Him in love as He is to us.
  • And thus by this gracious knowing we may see our sin profitably without
  • despair. For truly we need to see it, and by the sight we shall be
  • made ashamed of our self and brought down as anent our pride and
  • presumption; for it behoveth us verily to see that of ourselves we are
  • right nought but sin and wretchedness. And thus by the sight of the
  • less that our Lord sheweth us, the more is reckoned[3] which we see
  • not. For He of His courtesy measureth the sight to us; for it is so
  • vile and so horrible that we should not endure to see it as it is. And
  • by this meek knowing after this manner, through contrition and grace
  • we shall be broken from all that is not our Lord. And then shall our
  • blessed Saviour perfectly heal us, and one us to Him.
  • This breaking and this healing our Lord meaneth for the general Man.
  • For he that is highest and nearest with God, he may see himself
  • sinful--and needeth to--with me; and I that am the least and lowest
  • that shall be saved, I may be comforted with him that is highest: so
  • hath our Lord oned us in charity; [as] where He shewed me that I should
  • sin.[4]
  • And for joy that I had in beholding of Him I attended not readily
  • to that Shewing, and our courteous Lord stopped there and would not
  • further teach me till that He gave me grace and will to attend.
  • And hereby was I learned that though we be highly lifted up into
  • contemplation by the special gift of our Lord, yet it is needful to us
  • therewith to have knowing and sight of our sin and our feebleness. For
  • without this knowing we may not have true meekness, and without this
  • [meekness] we may not be saved.
  • And afterward, also, I saw that we may not have this knowing from our
  • self; nor from none of all our spiritual enemies: for they will us not
  • so great good. For if it were by their will, we should not see it until
  • our ending day. Then be we greatly beholden[5] to God for that He will
  • Himself, for love, shew it to us in time of mercy and grace.
  • [1] See ch. xxxix. p. 81.
  • [2] "chere" = manner of looking on us; mien.
  • [3] S. de Cressy: "wasted," but the indistinct word of the Brit. Mus.
  • MS. is probably "_castid_," for "cast," or "_casten_" = conjectured.
  • [4] ch. xxxvii.
  • [5] _i.e._ in gratitude.
  • CHAPTER LXXIX
  • "I was taught that I should see mine own sin, and not other men's sin
  • except it may be for comfort and help of my fellow-Christians" (lxxvi.)
  • Also I had of this [Revelation] more understanding. In that He shewed
  • me that I should sin, I took it nakedly to mine own singular person,
  • for I was none otherwise shewed at that time. But by the high,
  • gracious comfort of our Lord that followed after, I saw that His
  • meaning was for the general Man: that is to say, All-Man; which is
  • sinful and shall be unto the last day. Of which Man I am a member, as
  • I hope, by the mercy of God. For the blessed comfort that I saw, it is
  • large enough for us all. And here was I learned that I should see mine
  • own sin, and not other men's sins but if it may be for comfort and help
  • of mine even-Christians.
  • And also in this same Shewing where I saw that I should sin, there was
  • I learned to be in dread for unsureness of myself. For I wot not how I
  • shall fall, nor I know not the measure nor the greatness of sin; for
  • that would I have wist, with dread, and thereto I had none answer.
  • Also our courteous Lord in the same time He shewed full surely and
  • mightily the endlessness and the unchangeability of His love; and,
  • afterward, that by His great goodness and His grace inwardly keeping,
  • the love of Him and our soul shall never be disparted in two, without
  • end.[1]
  • And thus in this dread I have matter of meekness that saveth me from
  • presumption, and in the blessed Shewing of Love I have matter of true
  • comfort and of joy that saveth me from despair. All this homely Shewing
  • of our courteous Lord, it is a lovely lesson and a sweet, gracious
  • teaching of Himself in comforting of our soul. For He willeth that
  • we [should] know by the sweetness and homely loving of Him, that all
  • that we see or feel, within or without, that is contrary to this is of
  • the enemy and not of God. And thus;--If we be stirred to be the more
  • reckless of our living or of the keeping of our hearts because that we
  • have knowing of this plenteous love, then need we greatly to beware.
  • For this stirring, if it come, is untrue; and greatly we ought to hate
  • it, for it all hath no likeness of God's will. And when that we be
  • fallen, by frailty or blindness, then our courteous Lord toucheth us
  • and stirreth us and calleth us; and then willeth He that we see our
  • wretchedness and meekly be aware of it.[2] But He willeth not that
  • we abide thus, nor He willeth not that we busy us greatly about our
  • accusing, nor He willeth not that we be wretched over our self;[3] but
  • He willeth that we hastily turn ourselves unto Him. For He standeth all
  • aloof and abideth us sorrowfully and mournfully till when we come, and
  • hath haste to have us to Him. For we are His joy and His delight, and
  • He is our salve and our life.
  • When I say He standeth all alone, I leave the speaking of the blessed
  • Company of heaven, and speak of His office and His working here on
  • earth,--upon the condition of the Shewing.
  • [1] See xxxvii., xl., xlviii., lxi., lxxxii.
  • [2] "ben it aknowen." S. de Cressy, "be it a knowen."
  • [3] MS. "wretchful of our selfe." S. de Cressy, "wretchful on our self."
  • CHAPTER LXXX
  • "Himself is nearest and meekest, highest and lowest, and doeth all."
  • "Love suffereth never to be without Pity"
  • By three things man standeth in this life; by which three God is
  • worshipped, and we be speeded,[1] kept and saved.
  • The first is, use of man's Reason natural; the second is, common
  • teaching of Holy Church; the third is, inward gracious working of the
  • Holy Ghost. And these three be all of one God: God is the ground of our
  • natural reason; and God, the teaching of Holy Church; and God is the
  • Holy Ghost. And all be sundry gifts to which He willeth that we have
  • great regard, and attend us thereto. For these work in us continually
  • all together; and these be great things. Of which great things He
  • willeth that we have knowing here as it were in an A.B.C., that is to
  • say, that we have a little knowing; whereof we shall have fulness in
  • Heaven. And that is for to speed us.
  • We know in our Faith that God alone took our nature, and none but He;
  • and furthermore that Christ alone did all the works that belong to
  • our salvation, and none but He; and right so He alone doeth now the
  • last end: that is to say, He dwelleth here with us, and ruleth us
  • and governeth us in this living, and bringeth us to His bliss. And
  • this shall He do as long as any soul is in earth that shall come to
  • heaven,--and so far forth that if there were no such soul but one,
  • He should be withal alone till He had brought him up to His bliss. I
  • believe and understand the ministration of angels, as clerks tell us:
  • but it was not shewed me. For Himself is nearest and meekest, highest
  • and lowest, and doeth all. And not only all that we need, but also He
  • doeth all that is worshipful, to our joy in heaven.
  • And where I say that He abideth sorrowfully and moaning, it meaneth
  • all the true feeling that _we_ have in our self, in contrition and
  • compassion, and all sorrowing and moaning that we are not oned with our
  • Lord. And all such that is speedful, it is Christ in us. And though
  • some of us feel it seldom, it passeth never from Christ till what time
  • He hath brought us out of all our woe. For love suffereth never to be
  • without pity. And what time that we fall into sin and leave the mind of
  • Him and the keeping of our own soul, then keepeth Christ alone all the
  • charge; and thus standeth He sorrowfully and moaning.
  • Then belongeth it to us for reverence and kindness to turn us hastily
  • to our Lord and leave Him not alone. He is here alone with us all: that
  • is to say, only for us He is here. And what time I am strange to Him by
  • sin, despair or sloth, then I let my Lord stand alone, in as much as it
  • is in me. And thus it fareth with us all which be sinners. But though
  • it be so that we do thus oftentimes, His Goodness suffereth us never to
  • be alone, but lastingly He is with us, and tenderly He excuseth us, and
  • ever shieldeth us from blame in His sight.
  • [1] _i.e._ helped onwards.
  • CHAPTER LXXXI
  • "God seeth all our living a penance: for nature-longing of our love is
  • to Him a lasting penance in us." "His love maketh Him to long"
  • Our Good Lord shewed Himself in diverse manners both in heaven and in
  • earth, but I saw Him take no place save in man's soul.
  • He shewed Himself in earth in the sweet Incarnation and in His blessed
  • Passion. And in other manner He shewed Himself in earth [as in the
  • Revelation] where I say: _I saw God in a Point_.[1] And in another
  • manner He shewed Himself in earth thus as it were in pilgrimage: that
  • is to say, He is here with us, leading us, and shall be till when He
  • hath brought us all to His bliss in heaven. He shewed Himself diverse
  • times reigning, as it is aforesaid; but principally in man's soul. He
  • hath taken there His resting-place and His worshipful City: out of
  • which worshipful See He shall never rise nor remove without end.
  • Marvellous and stately[2] is the place where the Lord dwelleth,
  • and therefore He willeth that we readily answer to[3] His gracious
  • touching, more rejoicing in His whole love than sorrowing in our often
  • fallings. For it is the most worship to Him of anything that we may
  • do, that we live gladly and merrily, for His love, in our penance.
  • For He beholdeth us so tenderly that He seeth all our living [here] a
  • penance: for nature's longing in us is to Him aye-lasting penance in
  • us[4]: which penance He worketh in us and mercifully He helpeth us to
  • bear it. For His love maketh _Him_ to long [for us]; His wisdom and His
  • truth with His rightfulness maketh _Him_ to suffer us [to be] here: and
  • in this same manner [of longing and abiding] He willeth to see it in
  • us. For this is our natural penance,--and the highest, as to my sight.
  • For this penance goeth[5] never from us till what time that we be
  • fulfilled, when we shall have Him to our meed. And therefore He willeth
  • that we set our hearts in the Overpassing[6]: that is to say, from the
  • pain that we feel into the bliss that we trust.
  • [1] ch. xi.
  • [2] "solemne."
  • [3] "entenden to" = turn our attention, respond to.
  • [4] or, at in S. de Cressy, "For kind longing in us to him is a lasting
  • penance in us."
  • [5] "cometh."
  • [6] The exceeding Bliss. "Our light affliction, which is but for a
  • moment, worketh for us a far more exceeding and eternal weight of
  • glory."--2 Cor. iv. 17.
  • CHAPTER LXXXII
  • "In falling and in rising we are ever preciously kept in one Love"
  • But here shewed our courteous Lord the moaning and the mourning of
  • the soul, signifying thus: _I know well thou wilt live for my love,
  • joyously and gladly suffering all the penance that may come to thee;
  • but in as much as thou livest not without sin thou wouldest suffer, for
  • my love, all the woe, all the tribulation and distress that might come
  • to thee. And it is sooth.[1] But be not greatly aggrieved with sin that
  • falleth to thee against thy will._
  • And here I understood that [which was shewed] that the Lord beholdeth
  • the servant with pity and not with blame.[2] For this passing life
  • asketh[3] not to live all without blame and sin. He loveth us
  • endlessly, and we sin customably, and He sheweth us full mildly, and
  • then we sorrow and mourn discreetly, turning us unto the beholding
  • of His mercy, cleaving to His love and goodness, seeing that He is
  • our medicine, perceiving that we do nought but sin. And thus by the
  • meekness we get by the sight of our sin, faithfully knowing His
  • everlasting love, Him thanking and praising, we please Him:--_I love
  • thee, and thou lovest me, and our love shall not be disparted in two:
  • for thy profit I suffer [these things to come]._ And all this was
  • shewed in spiritual understanding, saying these blessed words: _I keep
  • thee full surely_.
  • And by the great desire that I saw in our blessed Lord that we shall
  • live in this manner,--that is to say, in longing and enjoying, as all
  • this lesson of love sheweth,--thereby I understood that that which is
  • contrarious to us is not of Him but of enmity; and He willeth that we
  • know it by the sweet gracious light of His kind love. If any such lover
  • be in earth which is continually kept from falling, I know it not:
  • for it was not shewed me. But this was shewed: that in falling and in
  • rising we are ever preciously kept in one Love. For in the Beholding of
  • God we fall not, and in the beholding of self we stand not; and both
  • these [manners of beholding] be sooth as to my sight. But the Beholding
  • of our Lord God is the highest soothness.[4] Then are we greatly bound
  • to God[5] [for] that He willeth in this living to shew us this high
  • soothness. And I understood that while we be in this life it is full
  • speedful to us that we see both these at once. For the higher Beholding
  • keepeth us in spiritual solace and true enjoying in God; [and] that
  • other that is the lower Beholding keepeth us in dread and maketh us
  • ashamed of ourself. But our good Lord willeth ever that we hold us much
  • more in the Beholding of the higher, and [yet] leave not the knowing of
  • the lower, unto the time that we be brought up above, where we shall
  • have our Lord Jesus unto our meed and be fulfilled of joy and bliss
  • without end.
  • [1] _i.e._ truth. See xxvii., "It is sooth that sin it cause of all
  • this pain."
  • [2] ch. li.
  • [3] _i.e._ "demandeth not that we live."
  • [4] sooth, soothness: _i.e._ truth, trueness. "Both these ben soth, as
  • to my syte. But the beholdyng of our Lord God is the heyest sothnes."
  • See chaps. xlv., liii., etc., the two "Deemings": the Beholding by God
  • of the higher Self and the Beholding by man of the lower self.
  • [5] in gratitude, obligation.
  • CHAPTER LXXXIII
  • "Life, Love, and Light"
  • I had, in part, touching, sight, and feeling in three properties of
  • God, in which the strength and effect of all the Revelation standeth:
  • and they were seen in every Shewing, and most properly in the Twelfth,
  • where it saith oftentimes: [_It is I._] The properties are these: Life,
  • Love, and Light.[1] In life is marvellous homeliness, and in love is
  • gentle courtesy, and in light is endless Nature-hood. These properties
  • were in one Goodness: unto which Goodness my Reason would be oned, and
  • cleave to it with all its might.
  • I beheld with reverent dread, and highly marvelling in the sight
  • and in the feeling of the sweet accord, that our Reason is in God;
  • understanding that it is the highest gift that we have received; and it
  • is grounded in nature.
  • Our faith is a light by nature coming of our endless Day, that is our
  • Father, God. In which light our Mother, Christ, and our good Lord, the
  • Holy Ghost, leadeth us in this passing life. This light is measured
  • discreetly, needfully standing to us in the night. The light is cause
  • of our life; the night is cause of our pain and of all our woe: in
  • which we earn meed and thanks of God. For we, with mercy and grace,
  • steadfastly know and believe our light, going therein wisely and
  • mightily.
  • And at the end of woe, suddenly our eyes shall be opened, and in
  • clearness of light our sight shall be full: which light is God, our
  • Maker and Holy Ghost, in Christ Jesus our Saviour.
  • Thus I saw and understood that our faith is our light in our night:
  • which light is God, our endless Day.
  • [1] _Cf._ chs. lxxxv. and lxxxvi. These words might be (as Life,
  • Light, and Love) for the Trinity of _Might_ ("the Father willeth"),
  • _Wisdom_ ("the Son worketh"), _Love_ ("the Holy Ghost confirmeth"):
  • _one Goodness_: or as it is sometimes denoted, the Trinity of
  • _Might, Wisdom, Goodness: one Love_. But here the thought seems to
  • be centred in _Light_ as the manifestation of Being (of _Kyndhede_ =
  • relationships, correspondences of nature): of the Triune Divine Light
  • which in Man is corresponding Reason, Faith, Charity: Charity keeping
  • man, while here, in Faith and Hope; Charity leading him from and
  • through and into the Eternal Divine Love.
  • CHAPTER LXXXIV
  • "Charity"
  • The light is Charity, and the measuring of this light is done to us
  • profitably by the wisdom of God. For neither is the light so large that
  • we may see our blissful Day, nor is it shut from us; but it is such a
  • light in which we may live meedfully, with travail deserving[1] the
  • endless worship of God. And this was seen in the Sixth Shewing where He
  • said: _I thank thee of thy service and of thy travail_. Thus Charity
  • keepeth us in Faith and Hope, and Hope leadeth us in Charity. And in
  • the end all shall be Charity.
  • I had three manners of understanding of this light, Charity. The first
  • is Charity unmade; the second is Charity made; the third is Charity
  • given. Charity unmade is God; Charity made is our soul in God; Charity
  • given is virtue. And that is a precious gift of working in which we
  • love God, for Himself; and ourselves, in God; and that which God
  • loveth, for God.
  • [1] _i.e._ earning the endless praise.
  • CHAPTER LXXXV
  • "Lord, blessed mayest Thou be, for it is thus: it is well"
  • And in this sight I marvelled highly. For notwithstanding our simple
  • living and our blindness here, yet endlessly our courteous Lord
  • beholdeth us in this working, rejoicing; and of all things, we may
  • please Him best wisely and truly to believe, and to enjoy with Him and
  • in Him. For as verily as we shall be in the bliss of God without end,
  • Him praising and thanking, so verily we have been in the foresight of
  • God, loved and known in His endless purpose from without beginning. In
  • which unbegun love He made us; and in the same love He keepeth us and
  • never suffereth us to be hurt [in manner] by which our bliss might be
  • lost. And therefore when the Doom is given and we be all brought up
  • above, then shall we clearly see in God the secret things which be now
  • hid to us. Then shall none of us be stirred to say in any wise: _Lord,
  • if it had been thus, then it had been full well_; but we shall say
  • all with one voice: _Lord, blessed mayst thou be, for it is thus: it
  • is well; and now see we verily that all-thing is done as it was then
  • ordained before that anything was made._
  • CHAPTER LXXXVI
  • "Love was our Lord's Meaning"
  • This book is begun by God's gift and His grace, but it is not yet
  • performed, as to my sight.
  • For Charity pray we all; [together] with _God's_ working, thanking,
  • trusting, enjoying. For thus will our good Lord be prayed to, as by the
  • understanding that I took of all His own meaning and of the sweet words
  • where He saith full merrily: _I am the Ground of thy beseeching_. For
  • truly I saw and understood in our Lord's meaning that He shewed it for
  • that He willeth to have it known more than it is: in which knowing He
  • will give us grace to love to Him and cleave to Him. For He beholdeth
  • His heavenly treasure with so great love on earth that He willeth to
  • give us more light and solace in heavenly joy, in drawing to Him of our
  • hearts, for sorrow and darkness[1] which we are in.
  • And from that time that it was shewed I desired oftentimes to learn[2]
  • what was our Lord's meaning. And fifteen years after, and more, I was
  • answered in ghostly understanding, saying thus: _Wouldst thou learn[3]
  • thy Lord's meaning in this thing? Learn it well: Love was His meaning.
  • Who shewed it thee? Love. What shewed He thee? Love. Wherefore shewed
  • it He? For Love. Hold thee therein and thou shalt learn and know more
  • in the same. But thou shalt never know nor learn therein other thing
  • without end._ Thus was I learned[4] that Love was our Lord's meaning.
  • And I saw full surely that ere God made us He loved us; which love was
  • never slacked, nor ever shall be. And in this love He hath done all His
  • works; and in this love He hath made all things profitable to us; and
  • in this love our life is everlasting. In our making we had beginning;
  • but the love wherein He made us was in Him from without beginning: in
  • which love we have our beginning. And all this shall we see in God,
  • without end.
  • [1] "merkness" = dimness.
  • [2] "witten" = to see clearly.
  • [3] "witten" = to see clearly.
  • [4] "lerid."
  • POSTSCRIPT BY A SCRIBE
  • [The Sloane MS. is entitled "Revelations to one who could not read a
  • Letter, Anno Dom. 1373," and each chapter is headed by a few lines
  • denoting its contents. These titles are in language similar to that of
  • the text, and are probably the work of an early scribe. No doubt it
  • is the same scribe who after the last sentence of the book adds the
  • aspiration:] _Which Jesus mot grant us_
  • _Amen._
  • [And to him also may be assigned this conclusion:--]
  • Thus endeth the Revelation of Love of the blissid Trinite shewid by
  • our Savior Christ Jesu for our endles comfort and solace and also to
  • enjoyen in him in this passand journey of this life.
  • _Amen Jesu Amen_
  • I pray Almyty God that this booke com not but to the hands of them
  • that will be his faithfull lovers, and to those that will submitt
  • them to the faith of holy Church, and obey the holesom understondying
  • and teching of the men that be of vertuous life, sadde Age and sound
  • lering: ffor this Revelation is hey Divinitye and hey wisdom, wherfore
  • it may not dwelle with him that is thrall to synne and to the Devill.
  • And beware thou take not on thing after thy affection and liking, and
  • leve another: for that is the condition of an heretique. But take every
  • thing with other. And, trewly understonden, All is according to holy
  • Scripture and groundid in the same. And _that_ Jesus, our very love,
  • light and truth, shall shew to all clen soulis that with mekeness aske
  • profe reverently this wisdom of hym.
  • And thou to whom this boke shall come, thank heyley and hertily our
  • Saviour Christ Jesu that he made these shewings and revelations, for
  • the, and to the, of his endles love, mercy and goodnes for thine and
  • our save guide, to conduct to everlastying bliss: _the which Jesus mot
  • grant us._ AMEN.
  • GLOSSARY
  • _Adight_ = prepared, ordained.
  • _Adventure_ = chance, hazard.
  • _After_ = according to.
  • _All thing_ = with the verb singular--kept here chiefly to express
  • _all_, the _whole_ of things related to each other, though often, as in
  • the original, meaning simply _every, each_. In Early and Middle English
  • _thing_ had no _s_ in the plural.
  • _And_ had sometimes the force of _but_, and once or twice in the MS. it
  • is used in its sense of _if_, or of _and though_, or _and when_.
  • _Asseth, asyeth, asyeth-making_ = satisfaction; fulfilment
  • (theologically used).
  • _Asketh_ = requireth, demandeth.
  • _Avisement_ = consideration; observation with self-consulting.
  • _Beclosed_ = enclosed.
  • _Behest_ = promise: a thing proclaimed; afterwards, command.
  • _Behold in_ = behold. _Beholding_ = manner of regarding things.
  • _Belongeth to, behoveth_ = is incumbent, befitteth.
  • _Blissful_ = used sometimes as _blessed_.
  • _Bodily_ = perceived by any of the bodily senses, effected by material
  • agency.
  • _Braste_ = burst.
  • _Busyness_ = the state of being busy; _great busyness_ = much ado.
  • _But if_ = unless, save.
  • _Cause_ = reason, end, object.
  • _Cheer_ = expression of countenance shewing sorrow or gladness; mien.
  • _Close_ = shut away; hid, or partially hid.
  • _Come from_ = go from.
  • _Common: the Blessed Common_ = the Christian Community.
  • _Contrarious_ = perverse. Various other forms are used from to
  • _contrary_, to oppose.
  • _Could_ and _can_ refer to knowledge and practical skill, ability.
  • _Courteous_ = gently considerate and fair; reverentially ceremonious;
  • Gracious.
  • _Deadly_ = mortal.
  • _Dearworthy_ = precious; beloved and honoured.
  • _Depart_ = dispart, part.
  • _Deserve_ = earn.
  • _Disease_ = distress, trouble, want of case.
  • _Doom, deeming_ = judgment. _Doomsman_ = priestly confessor.
  • _Enjoy in_ = enjoy; rejoice in.
  • _Entend_ = attend.
  • _Enter_ = to lead in.
  • _Even_ = equal; _even-like; even-right_ = straight, straight-facing.
  • _Even-Christian_ (_even-cristen_, sing. or pl.) = fellow-Christian.
  • _Hamlet_ V. i., "And the more the pity that great folk have countenance
  • in this world to drown or hang themselves more than their even
  • Christian."
  • _Faithfully_ = trustfully.
  • _For that_ = because.
  • _Fulfilled of_ = filled full with. _Fulfilling_ = fulfilment, Perfect
  • Bliss.
  • _Garland_ = crown.
  • _Generally_ = relating to things or people in general, not "in special."
  • _Grante mercy_ = ("grand merci") great thanks.
  • _Have to_ = betake one's self to.
  • _Hastily_ = quickly, soon.
  • _Homely_ = intimate, simple, as of one at home.
  • _Honest_ = fair, seemly.
  • _If_ = that (chap. xxxii., "Thou shalt see--if all--shall be well" Acts
  • xxvi. 8).
  • _Impropriated (impropried) to_ = appropriated to.
  • _Indifferent_ (to thy sight, chap. li.) = indistinct.
  • _Intellect_ = understanding, that which is to be understood, inference.
  • xiii.
  • _Intent_ = attention.
  • _Kind_ = nature, race, birth, species; natural, etc.; _kindly_ = as by
  • birth and kinship, natural, filial, gentle, genial, human and humane.
  • _Known_ = made known.
  • _Languor_ = to languish.
  • _Learn_ = teach.
  • _Let_, "_letten_" = hinder (letted).
  • _Like (it liketh him, meliketh)_ = to suit, be similar to the desire,
  • to be pleasing (Amos iv. 5). _Liking_ = pleasure, pleasance.
  • _Likeness_ ("without any likeness") = comparison.
  • _May, might,_ often for _can_ and _could_ of modern usage.
  • _Mean_ = to think, say, signify, intend; to have in one's mind.
  • _Mean, means_ = medium, intermediary thing, or person, or communication.
  • _Mind_ = feeling, memory, sympathetic perception or realisation.
  • _Mischief_ = hurt, injury, harm.
  • _Mights_ = powers, faculties.
  • _Morrow_ = morning.
  • _Moaning_ = sorrowing.
  • _Naked_ = simple, single, plain, by itself.
  • _Needs_ = of need; it _behoveth needs_ = is incumbent through necessity.
  • _Oweth_ = ought, is bound by duty or debt.
  • _One_ (oned, oneing) = to make one, unite.
  • _Over_ = upper.
  • _Overpassing_ = exceeding; the _overpassing_ = the Restoration,
  • the heavenly Fulfilment of the Company of souls made _more_ than
  • conquerors; the Supernal Blessedness.
  • _Pass_ = to die.
  • _Passing_ = surpassingly.
  • _Regard, in regard of_ = in respect of, comparison with. _Regard_ =
  • look, sight.
  • _Ready_ = prepared; _readily_ = quickly.
  • _Sad_ = Sober ("sad votaress," Milton, _Comus_), originally "firm"
  • ("rype and sad corage," Chaucer: _The Clerkes Tale_, 164).
  • _Say_ = tell.
  • _Skilfully_ = discerningly, with practical knowledge and ability.
  • _Slade_ = a steep, hollow place; a ravine.
  • _So far forth_ = to such a measure.
  • _Solemn_ = festal, as of a yearly feast, stately, ceremonial.
  • _Sooth_ = very reality, that which _is; soothly, soothfastly_.
  • _Speed_ = prospering, furtherance, profit.
  • _Stint_ ("stinten") = to cease.
  • _Stirring_ ("stering") = moving, prompting, motion.
  • _Substantial_ and _sensual_, relating respectively (in the writer's
  • psychology) to the _Substance_ or higher self, and the soul inhabiting
  • the body on earth, called by her the _Sensualite_, and in chap. lvii.
  • _the sensual soul; cf._ Genesis i. 27, with ii. 7.
  • _Tarry_ = to vex, delay.
  • _Touch_ (a) = an instant. _Touching_ = influence.
  • _Trow_ = believe.
  • _Unknowing_ = ignorance; _unmade_ = not made.
  • _Ween_ = suppose, expect, think.
  • _Will; He will_ = He willeth that. _Wilfully_ = with firm will,
  • resolutely.
  • _Wit_ to know by perception, to experience, find, learn. Knowledge
  • knows: _Wisdom wits_.
  • _Worship_ = honour, praise, glory.
  • _Wretch_ = a poor, a mean creature of no account.
  • [THE END.]
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