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  • The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Form of Perfect Living and Other Prose
  • Treatises, by Richard Rolle of Hampole, Translated by Geraldine E. Hodgson
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  • Title: The Form of Perfect Living and Other Prose Treatises
  • Author: Richard Rolle of Hampole
  • Release Date: June 20, 2008 [eBook #25856]
  • Language: English
  • Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
  • ***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE FORM OF PERFECT LIVING AND
  • OTHER PROSE TREATISES***
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  • THE FORM OF PERFECT LIVING
  • AND
  • OTHER PROSE TREATISES.
  • by
  • RICHARD ROLLE,
  • OF HAMPOLE,
  • A.D. 1300-1349.
  • Rendered into Modern English by Geraldine E. Hodgson, D.Litt.,
  • Lecturer in Education in the University of Bristol.
  • London:
  • Thomas Baker, 72, Newman Street, W.
  • 1910.
  • Printed By W. C. Hemmons,
  • St. Stephen Street,
  • Bristol.
  • "Love is a life, joining together the loving and the loved."
  • "Truth may be without love, but it cannot help without it."
  • RICHARD ROLLE
  • (_The Form of Perfect Living_, ch. x.).
  • Preface.
  • This book is not intended for those who are acquainted with Anglo-Saxon
  • and Middle English; but for those who care for the thought, specially
  • the religious and devotional thought, of our forefathers. My one aim has
  • been to make a portion of that thought accurately intelligible to modern
  • readers, with the greatest possible saving of trouble to them. When I
  • could use the old word or phrase, with certainty of its being
  • understood, I have done so. When I could not, I have replaced it with
  • the best modern equivalent I could find or invent. In extenuation of the
  • occasional use of Rolle's expression, "by their lone," I may urge its
  • expressiveness, the absence of an equivalent, and the fact that it may
  • still be heard in remote places. Where possible, I have retained the
  • archaic order of the original Text. Such irregular constructions, as
  • _e.g._, the use of a singular pronoun in the first half of a sentence,
  • and of a plural in the second half, I have left unaltered; for the
  • meaning was perfectly clear. In short, I have endeavoured to make
  • Richard Rolle as he was as significant as possible to English men and
  • women of to-day as they are, when they are not professed students of
  • English language. In such an undertaking, it is obvious that I must have
  • presented endless vulnerable places to the learned. I can only repeat
  • that the book was never meant for them, but for those who will perhaps
  • forgive me if I describe them as specialists in religious thought
  • rather than in English Language.
  • The rendering is made from the texts printed by Professor Horstman in
  • his _Library of Early English Writers: Richard Rolle of Hampole an
  • English Father of the Church_.
  • GERALDINE E. HODGSON.
  • _The University, Bristol,
  • S. Mary Magdalene, 1910._
  • Contents.
  • PAGE.
  • Preface vii.
  • Introduction xi.
  • The Form of Perfect Living 1
  • Our Daily Work (a Mirror of Discipline).
  • (_From the Arundel MS._) 83
  • On Grace. (_From the Arundel MS._) 169
  • An Epistle on Charity 185
  • Contrition 190
  • Scraps from the Arundel MS. 192
  • Introduction.
  • Richard Rolle of Hampole is the earliest in time of our famous English
  • Mystics. Born in or about 1300, he died in 1349, seven years after
  • Mother Julian of Norwich was born. Walter Hilton died in 1392.
  • An exhaustive account of Rolle's life is given in Vol. ii. of Professor
  • Horstman's Edition of his works, a book unfortunately out of print. The
  • main facts are recorded in a brief "Life" appended to Fr. R. Hugh
  • Benson's _A Book of the Love of_ JESUS. Therefore, it will suffice to
  • say here that Richard Rolle seems to have been born at Thornton, near
  • Pickering, in Yorkshire, in or about 1300; that, finding the atmosphere
  • of Oxford University uncongenial, he left it, and for some four years
  • was supported, as a hermit, by the Dalton Family. By the end of that
  • time, through prayer, contemplation and self-denial, he had attained the
  • three stages of mystical life which he describes as _calor_, _dulcor_,
  • _canor_; (heat, sweetness, melody.) The next period of his life was less
  • easy. Having left the protection of the Daltons, and being without those
  • means of subsistence which are within the reach of priest or monk, this
  • hermit depended for his daily bread on other men's kindness. Not that he
  • was a useless person: apart from the utility of a life of Prayer, he
  • could point to counsel and exhortation given; to the existence of
  • converts consequent upon his ministrations. To add to his difficulties,
  • he preached a doctrine of high pure selflessness with which, the average
  • man, in all times, seems to have no abundant sympathy: and to crown all
  • he was endowed by nature with a sensitive temper. His remarkable gifts
  • forced him into public notice; his cast of thought and his temperament
  • were not calculated to win him ease or popularity. Professor Horstman is
  • peculiarly severe to those among his enemies and detractors "who called
  • themselves followers and disciples of Christ." The insertion here of
  • this painful passage would introduce a jarring note; moreover, the raked
  • embers of past controversy seldom tend to the spiritual improvement of
  • the present. An interesting judgment by Professor Horstman on Rolle's
  • place in mysticism is too long for quotation; but the following sentence
  • may be taken as the pith of it:--"His position as a mystic was mainly
  • the result of the development of scholasticism. The exuberant luxuriant
  • growth of the brain in the system of Scotus called forth the reaction
  • of the heart, and this reaction is embodied in Richard Rolle, who as
  • exclusively represents the side of feeling as Scotus that of reason and
  • logical consequence; either lacking the corrective of the other
  • element."
  • It is consoling to know that Rolle's last years were passed in peace, in
  • a cell, near a monastery of Cistercian nuns at Hampole, where the nuns
  • supported him, while he acted as their spiritual adviser.
  • In the book mentioned above, Fr. Hugh Benson has translated some of
  • Richard Rolle's Poems, and certain devotional Meditations. In this
  • Volume, four of his Prose Treatises have been selected from the rest of
  • his works, in the belief that they may supplement those parts of Rolle's
  • writings with which, those who are interested in these phases of
  • thought, are already familiar.
  • The first, _The Form of Perfect Living_, is a Rule of Life which he
  • wrote for a nun of Anderby, Margaret Kirkby, of whom Professor Horstman
  • writes: "She seems to have been his good angel, and perhaps helped to
  • smooth down his ruffled spirits. This friendship was lasting--it lasted
  • to their lives' ends."
  • This treatise was written of course to meet the requirements of the
  • "religious" life. It has seemed expedient, because supplementary, then,
  • to put next to it his work on _Our Daily Life_, which was meant for
  • those who are "in the world"; and which may give pause to some who might
  • otherwise criticise the first hastily, perhaps condemning it as
  • unpractical, or even objectionable in a world where, after all, men must
  • eat and drink and live, and where some, therefore must provide the
  • necessary means. Most intensely practical is this second treatise, and
  • perhaps nowhere more so than when it meets the needs of those who are
  • inclined to split straws over the definition of the word "good." What
  • _is_ a good action?--such people love to inquire, and like "jesting
  • Pilate," sometimes do not "stay for an answer." Richard Rolle has no
  • manner of doubt about his reply. An action must be good in itself,
  • _i.e._, so he would tell us, pleasing to God in its own nature. But the
  • matter by no means ends there for him. This good action must be
  • performed,--and it is this which is, now palpably, now subtly,
  • hard--_entirely_ for the sake of goodness, without the slightest taint
  • of self-seeking, of vanity, of secret satisfaction that we are not as
  • other men are, not even as this Pharisee or this Publican.
  • Such a motive, inspiring each person's whole work, would surely go far
  • to remove what is known as the Social Problem. It would make many a
  • house the dwelling of peace, many a business-place an abode of honour.
  • If we could get back to Richard Rolle's simplicity and to his unmovable
  • faith, then, his goal, even the acquisition of perfect love, might seem
  • to all of us less distressingly remote.
  • The present rendering has been taken from the longer and more elaborate
  • of the two MSS. containing the Treatise. The shorter form of his work
  • _On Grace_ and _the Epistle_ have been added in the hope that they may
  • meet the need of all, contemplative or active as they may chance to be.
  • There is, among his voluminous writings, a curious and interesting
  • _Revelation concerning Purgatory_, purporting to be a woman's dream
  • about one, Margaret, a soul in Purgatory. Amidst much natural horror,
  • not however exceeding that described by Dante, there are many quaint
  • side-lights thrown upon our forefathers' ways of thought; as _e.g._,
  • when Margaret's soul is weighed in one scale, against the fiend, "and a
  • great long worm with him," in the other; the worm of conscience, in
  • fact. But the work has not been included in this volume, lest it should
  • prove wholly unprofitable to a generation which if it be not readily
  • disturbed by sin, is easily and quickly shocked by crude suggestions
  • concerning its possible consequences and reward. They will find enough,
  • perhaps, in the treatise _on Daily Work_.
  • If any one should think that there, and in one portion of the treatise
  • _on Grace_, Rolle has dwelt harshly on considerations of fear, rather
  • than on those of love, he must not make the mistake of concluding that
  • these admonitions represent the whole of Catholic teaching on the point.
  • Men's temperaments differ, and teachers, meeting these various tempers,
  • differ in their modes of helping them. Side by side with Richard Rolle
  • may be put the words of S. Francis Xavier, in what is perhaps the most
  • beautiful of Christian hymns:--
  • My GOD, I love Thee; not because
  • I hope for heaven thereby,
  • Nor yet because who love Thee not
  • Are lost eternally.
  • . . . . . .
  • Not for the hope of gaining aught,
  • Not seeking a reward;
  • But as Thyself hast loved me,
  • O ever-loving Lord!
  • Moreover, no reader of the Epistle _on Charity_ can entertain any doubt
  • as to whether our English Mystic understood the mystery of limitless
  • love.
  • It is no doubt, easy to complain, as we read certain passages, that
  • Richard Rolle's recommendations are neither new nor original: but if
  • instead of dismissing them as familiar, we tried to put them into
  • practice, we should perhaps have less leisure for idle criticism of
  • others, and ourselves be less evil and tiresome people.
  • On the other hand, the accusation may be brought that he proposes an
  • impossibly high aim. No doubt, in such a pitch of devotion as is
  • suggested, _e.g._, in ch. viii. of _The Form of Perfect Living_, some
  • may think they find extravagance: but no doubt it was this same spirit
  • which inspired SS. Peter and Paul, and the other Apostles; which built
  • up the Early Church; which made Saints, Martyrs and Confessors; which
  • suggested such apparently forlorn hopes as that of S. Augustine of
  • Canterbury, when, to bring them the Gospel of JESUS Christ, he bearded
  • the rough Men of Kent, and (according to Robert of Brunne) reaped, as
  • his immediate reward, a string of fishtails hung on his habit, though
  • later, the conversion of these sturdy pagans. It was doubtless, too, the
  • spirit which inspired the best men and women in the English Church,
  • before they began to confuse the spheres of Faith and Reason, and to
  • disregard S. Hilary's warning about the difficulty of expressing in
  • human language that which is truly "incomprehensible,"--incomprehensible
  • in the old sense, as in the Athanasian Symbol, "Immensus Pater, immensus
  • Filius, immensus Spiritus sanctus"; till, indeed, men forgot, for all
  • practical purposes that infinity transcends the grasp of finite minds
  • (in fact, as well as in placidly accepted and then immediately neglected
  • theory); and can be apprehended only, and that imperfectly, by the best
  • aspirations of a heart, set of fixed purpose on that high goal.
  • To the modern Englishman, immersed in business anxieties, imperial
  • interests and domestic cares, the invitation repeated so often by
  • Richard Rolle, to love GOD supremely, may seem incalculably unreal and
  • remote, even though he might hesitate to confess it baldly. But what if
  • the Englishman who so loved GOD, were also the greater Englishman? And
  • what answer does history return to that plain question?
  • "Richard Rolle," Professor Horstman does not hesitate to write "was one
  • of the most remarkable men of his time, yea, of history. It is a strange
  • and not very creditable fact that one of the greatest of Englishmen has
  • hitherto been doomed to oblivion. In other cases, the human beast first
  • crucifies, and then glorifies or deifies the nobler minds, who swayed by
  • the Spirit, do not live as others live, in quest of higher ideals by
  • which to benefit the race; he, one of the noblest champions of humanity,
  • a hero, a saint, a martyr in this cause has never had his resurrection
  • yet--a forgotten brave. And yet, he has rendered greater service to his
  • country, and to the world at large, than all the great names of his
  • time. He rediscovered Love, the principle of Christ. He reinstalled
  • feeling, the spring of life which had been obliterated in the reign of
  • scholasticism. He re-opened the inner eye of man, teaching contemplation
  • in solitude, an unworldly life in abnegation, in chastity, in
  • charity.... He broke the hard crust that had gathered round the heart of
  • Christianity, by formalism and exteriority, and restored the free flow
  • of spiritual life."
  • This passage, to those who feel that there has been no age since the
  • Birth of Christ when the great principles of religious life have been
  • wholly lost, and who remember that Richard Rolle lived in the age of
  • Dante, may seem overstated. But it shews sufficiently at least, and for
  • that reason is quoted here, what a great Englishman he was, and what a
  • debt his unaware countrymen owe him; a debt which they could pay in the
  • way most grateful to him, by listening to his words.
  • It may be remarked, by the way, that Rolle is not inclined to substitute
  • individualism for the authority of the Church; a change which has been
  • brought against some mystics. There is immense emphasis laid, all
  • through his writings, on the importance of conduct. The penetrating
  • analysis, in ch. vi, of _The Form of Perfect Living_, of the possible
  • sins humanity can commit on its journey through the wilderness of this
  • world, hardly leaves a corner of the heart unlighted; lets not one
  • possible shift, twist or excuse of the human conscience go free. But it
  • all has the Church as its immediate background; the Mystical _Body_, not
  • the individual soul in isolation, is everywhere taken for granted. Man
  • lives not to himself nor dies to himself, even though he be Richard
  • Rolle the hermit, or Margaret Kirkby the recluse, that is the plain
  • teaching of these plain-speaking pages. And all through them too is a
  • tough common sense, and an unusually alert power of observation; and
  • there is perhaps an element of that business capacity, which some of the
  • Saints and Mystics have shewn, in his inclusion among "sins of deed" of
  • "beginning a thing that is above our might"; for in that there is not
  • only pride, but a kind of stupid incapacity surely.
  • It is quite possible that Rolle's tendency to repetition may tire any
  • one who reads him "straight on," as the phrase is. But it is doubtful
  • whether that be the best means of approach. If he be read in bits, he
  • will prove far more effective: and his ability to hit the right nail on
  • the head, and to hit it wonderfully hard, may occasionally bring his
  • words home to our immediate circumstances with an appositeness that may
  • be more than a coincidence.
  • In the past, the learned and ignorant alike have been guilty of the
  • operation which may be described as cutting man up into parts: _i.e._,
  • they have been inclined to treat him now as if he were all intellect,
  • then as if he were all feeling; while to the will a kind of intermediate
  • part has generally been allotted, as if it were the handmaid instead of
  • the master of the other two. And there is still, in some quarters, a
  • tendency to relegate the will and the feelings to an inferior plane, if
  • indeed they be allowed any place at all. In other quarters, the
  • onslaught is made on intellect. Men are bidden to be humble, to become
  • as little children; as if there were any humility in thinking
  • incorrectly or not at all; as if the odd, though suppressed, assumption
  • that children have no intellects had any ground in fact. It is surely a
  • true apostrophe--
  • "GOD! Thou art mind! Unto the master-mind,
  • Mind should be precious."
  • The Angelic Doctor himself paid a tribute to the importance and special
  • difficulties of intellect, and also to the necessity of uniting it with
  • will:--"the martyrs had greater merit in faith, not receding from the
  • faith for persecutions; and likewise men of learning have greater merit
  • of faith, not[1] receding from the faith for the reasons of philosophers
  • or heretics alleged against it." Richard Rolle, following on the same
  • lines as S. Thomas Aquinas, has nothing of this spirit of division: the
  • whole being is what he would fain see offered to GOD, whether it be so
  • by Margaret Kirkby, or by those who are "in the world," for whom _Our
  • Daily Work_ was written. In the image of GOD was man made, and therefore
  • GOD suffices for all the needs of man's nature: that, at least seems to
  • be the underlying idea when Rolle writes:--"GOD is light and burning.
  • Light clarifies our reason, burning kindles our will." May we not say
  • here too?--"What GOD has joined together, that let not man put asunder."
  • Above all things, Rolle aims at a perfect balance, culminating in a
  • harmony ruled by one power, and that the greatest in the world, Love.
  • Real love, he asks; not the degraded things to which men give that great
  • name, as to every passing gust of feeling, to every unworthy untamed
  • emotion: but the divine quality, when to the "lastingness," which he
  • requires, is also joined that which is the inner essence of Love, viz.,
  • sacrifice. "Love is a life," he writes, "joining together the loving and
  • the loved." And then he remembers the other great gift to men,
  • intellectual sincerity, which has inspired all "who follow Truth along
  • her star-paved way"; and he gives to that its place and due: "Truth may
  • be without love: but it cannot help without it." Even then, the whole
  • tale is not complete; the way of the Saints is not "Primrosed and hung
  • with shade." Love, with Rolle, is no easy sentimentality: it involves
  • definite sacrifice in more directions than one; it demands thought,
  • perseverance, supernatural strength, natural strenuousness; it is not a
  • selfish enjoyment of a circumambient atmosphere wrapping humanity,
  • without responsibility or effort of its own: "Love is a _Life_."
  • "Love," he writes, "is a perfection of learning; virtue of prophecy;
  • fruit of truth; help of sacraments; establishing of wit and knowledge;
  • riches of pure men: life of dying men. So, how good love is. If we
  • suffer to be slain; if we give all that we have (down) to a beggar's
  • staff: if we know as much as men may know on earth, all this is naught
  • but ordained sorrow and torment." Then, with that sound sense, which is
  • not the least element in the sum of his attractiveness, he utters a
  • subtle warning against that all too common sin, judging one another: "If
  • thou wilt ask how good is he or she, ask how much he or she loves: and
  • that no man can tell. For I hold it folly to judge a man's heart, that
  • none knows save GOD."
  • After this it cannot be necessary to say that Rolle is a true mystic.
  • "Many," so he tells us in this same chapter x., "Many speak and do good,
  • and love not GOD." But that will not suffice his exacting demands. A man
  • is not "good" until his interior disposition be all filled and taken up
  • with pure love of GOD. And as he analyses the Christian Character, there
  • is a pleasant blunt directness about this holy man:--"he that says he
  • loves GOD and will not do what is in him to shew love, tell him that he
  • lies."
  • It is possible that the alarming list of sins of the heart, in chapter
  • vi., may give the heedless and even the heedful matter for grave
  • thought, as each one finds himself ejaculating with spontaneous
  • fear--"Who can tell how oft he offendeth? Cleanse thou me from my secret
  • faults."
  • Surely no one need fear that the outcome of a study of Richard Rolle
  • will be effeminacy. Not that that indeed is the special temptation of
  • the English: a chill commonplace acquiescence in a convenient, if
  • baseless, hope that somehow "things will come all right," is far more
  • likely to lead them astray than any "burning yearning to GOD with a
  • wonderful delight and certainty." Is not George Herbert's cry apposite
  • still?
  • "O England, full of sin, but most of sloth!"
  • Nor can any one argue fairly that this absorption of the mystic is just
  • selfish idleness. It is, so it seems, as we read Rolle's injunctions, of
  • the nature of hard exacting toil. No doubt, there must be those who do
  • the material work of the world; who gain, among other things, those
  • "goods" which go to support the Mystics. But there will be no lack of
  • such workers, through the inroads of religion; the broad ways of daily
  • life are in no danger of contracting suddenly in to the path to the
  • strait gate. Moreover, natural life itself is a poor thing unsupported
  • by an unseen stream of spiritual refection. Here, as elsewhere in the
  • ordered economy of things, two forms of life are found to be
  • complementary. It is true, as Dr. Bigg once wrote:--"If Society is to be
  • permeated by religion, there must be reservoirs of religion like those
  • great storage places up among the hills which feed the pipes by which
  • water is carried to every home in the city. We shall need a special
  • class of students of GOD, men and women whose primary and absorbing
  • interest it is to work out the spiritual life in all its purity and
  • integrity."[2] It is indeed the idlest of criticism that condemns such
  • people as slothful or selfish.
  • There is one charm in our own Mystics which we may miss in S. John of
  • the Cross or S. Teresa for example; viz., that with all their zeal,
  • there is also an amazing reality and simplicity down at the bottom of
  • it, which may seem to us not present in the rhapsodies of more southern
  • lovers; though in all probability such seeming is purely racial.
  • Nevertheless, we may be thankful if we find the antidote to our national
  • prosaic ways in the sane zeal of others of our nation.
  • Lastly, as men read, they may be overcome perhaps by despair. This pure
  • untainted selflessness of which Richard Rolle writes almost glibly, how
  • can it be possible here and now? How can men and women, fixed in and
  • condemned to the dusty ways of common life, unable as they are to leave
  • the world even if they would, how can they so much as dream of such
  • unattainable heights? Is there no help for them in the often quoted
  • lines of a later English Mystic?--
  • "Who aimeth at the sky
  • Shoots higher much than he who means a tree."
  • For plain men and women, the key to the problem may lie in the question
  • put by Robert Browning into the mouth of Innocent XII.:--
  • "Is this our ultimate stage, or starting place
  • To try man's foot, if it will creep or climb,
  • 'Mid obstacles in seeming, points that prove
  • Advantage for who vaults from low to high,
  • And makes the stumbling-block a stepping-stone?"
  • Even though the goal be not reached, to have willed deliberately here
  • the first step may prove to have been not wholly unavailing.
  • FOOTNOTES:
  • [1] Quoted by Fr. Joseph Rickaby, S.J., in _Scholasticism_, p. 121.
  • [2] _Wayside Sketches_, p. 135.
  • The Form of Perfect Living.
  • The Form of Perfect Living
  • by
  • Richard Rolle.
  • CHAPTER I.
  • In every sinful man and woman that is bound in deadly sin, are three
  • wretchednesses, the which bring them to the death of hell. The first is:
  • _Default of ghostly strength_. That they are so weak within their heart,
  • that they can neither stand against the temptations of the fiend, nor
  • can they lift their will to yearn for the love of GOD and follow
  • thereto. The second is: _Use of fleshly desires_:--for they have no will
  • nor might to stand, they fall into lusts and likings of this world; and
  • because they think them sweet, they dwell in them still, many till
  • their lives' end, and so they come to the third wretchedness. The third
  • is, _Exchanging a lasting good for a passing delight_: as who say they
  • give endless joy for a little joy of this life. If they will turn them
  • and rise to penance, GOD will ordain their dwelling with angels and with
  • holy men. But because they choose the vile sin of this world, and have
  • more delight in the filth of their flesh than in the fairness of heaven,
  • they lose both the world and heaven. For he that hath not JESUS Christ
  • loses all that he hath, and all that he is, and all that he might get.
  • For he is not worthy of life, nor to be fed with swine's-meat. All
  • creatures shall be stirred in His vengeance in the day of Doom. These
  • wretchednesses that I have told you of are not only in worldly men and
  • women, who use gluttony, lust, and other open sins: but they are also in
  • others who seem in penance and godly life. For the devil that is enemy
  • to all mankind, when he sees a man or a woman among a thousand, turn
  • wholly to GOD, and forsake all the vanities and riches that men who love
  • this world covet, and seek lasting joy, a thousand wiles he has in what
  • manner he may destroy them. And when he can not bring them into such
  • sins which might make all men wonder at them who knew them, he beguiles
  • many so privily that they cannot oftentimes feel the trap that has taken
  • them.
  • Some he takes with _error_ that he puts them in. Some with _singular
  • wit_, when he makes them suppose that the thing that they say or do is
  • best; and therefore they will have no counsel of another who is better
  • and abler than they; and this is a foul stinking pride; for such man
  • would set his wit before all other. Some, the devil deceives through
  • _Vain-glory_, that is idle joy; when any have pride and delight in
  • themselves, of the penance that they suffer, of good deeds that they
  • do, of any virtue that they have; are glad when men praise them, sorry
  • when men blame them, have envy of them who are spoken better of than
  • they. They consider themselves so glorious, and so far surpassing the
  • life that other men lead, that they think that none should reprehend
  • them in anything that they do or say; and despise sinful men, and others
  • who will not do as they bid them. How mayst thou find a sinfuller wretch
  • than such a one? And so much the worse is he because he knows not that
  • he is evil, and is considered and honoured of men as wise and holy. Some
  • are deceived by _over-great lust and liking in meat and drink_, when
  • they pass measure and come into excess, and have delight therein; and
  • they know not that they sin, and therefore they amend them not, and so
  • they destroy virtues of soul. Some are destroyed with _over-great
  • abstinence_ of meat and drink and sleep. That is often temptation of
  • the devil, for to make them fall in the midst of their work, so that
  • they bring it to no ending as they should have done, had they known
  • reason and had discretion; and so they lose their merit for their
  • frowardness. This snare our enemy lays to take us with when we begin to
  • hate wickedness, and turn us to GOD. Then many begin a thing that they
  • can never more bring to an end: then they suppose that they can do
  • whatsoever their heart is set on. But oftentimes they fall or ever they
  • come midway; and that thing which they supposed was for them is
  • hindering to them. For we have a long way to heaven, and as many good
  • deeds as we do, as many prayers as we make, and as many good thoughts as
  • we think in truth and hope and charity, so many paces go we heavenwards.
  • Then, if we make us so weak and so feeble that we can neither work nor
  • pray as we should do, nor think, are we not greatly to blame that fail
  • when we had most need to be stalwart? And well I wot that it is not
  • GOD'S will that we so do. For the prophet says: "Lord, I shall keep my
  • strength to Thee," so that he might sustain GOD'S service till his
  • death-day, and not in a little and a short time waste it, and then lie
  • wailing and groaning by the wall. And it is much more peril than men
  • suppose. For S. Jerome says that he makes an offering of robbery who
  • outrageously torments his body by over-little meat or sleep. And S.
  • Bernard says: "Fasting and waking hinder not spiritual goods, but help,
  • if they be done with _discretion_; without that, they are vices."
  • Wherefore, it is not good to torture ourselves so much, and afterwards
  • to have displeasure at our deed. There have been many, and are who
  • suppose it is naught all that they do unless they be in so great
  • abstinence and fasting that all men speak of them who know them. But
  • oftentimes it befalls that the more outward joy or wondering they have
  • (on account) of the praising of men, the less joy they have within of
  • the love of GOD. By my judgment, they should please JESUS Christ much
  • more if they accepted for His sake--in thanking and praising Him, to
  • sustain their body in His service and to withhold themselves from great
  • speech of men--whatsoever GOD sent them in time and place, and gave
  • themselves since entirely to the love and the praising of that Lord
  • JESUS Christ: Who will stalwartly be loved, and lastingly be served, so
  • that their holiness were more seen in GOD'S eye than in man's. For all
  • the better thou art, and the less speech thou hast of men, the more is
  • thy joy before GOD. Ah! how great it is to be worthy of love, and to be
  • not loved. And what wretchedness it is, to have the name and the habit
  • of holiness, and be not so; but to cover pride, ire or envy under the
  • clothes of Christ's childhood. A foul thing it is to have liking and
  • delight in the words of men who can no more deem what we are in our soul
  • than they wot what we think. For ofttimes they say that he or she is in
  • the higher degree that is in the lower; and whom they say is in the
  • lower, is in the higher. Therefore I hold it to be but madness to be
  • gladder or sorrier whether they say good or ill. If we be trying to hide
  • us from speech and praise of this world, GOD will shew to us His praise,
  • and our joy. For that is His joy when we are strength-full to stand
  • against the privy and open temptation of the devil, and to seek nothing
  • but the honour and praise of Him, and that we might entirely praise Him.
  • And that ought to be our desire, our prayer and our intent, night and
  • day, that the fire of His love kindle our hearts, and the sweetness of
  • His grace be our comfort and our solace in weal and woe. Thou hast now
  • heard a part how the fiend deceives, with his subtle craft, unknowing
  • men and women. And if thou wilt do by good counsel and follow holy
  • teaching, as I hope that thou wilt, thou shall destroy his traps, and
  • burn in love's fire all the bands that he would bind thee with; and all
  • his malice shall turn thee to joy, and him to more sorrow. GOD suffers
  • him to tempt good men for their profit, that they may be the higher
  • crowned, when they, through His help, have overcome so cruel an enemy,
  • that oftentimes, both in body and soul, confounds many men.
  • In three manners, the devil has power to be in a man. In one manner,
  • hurting the good they have by _nature_, as in dumb men, and in others,
  • staining their thoughts. In another manner, snatching away the good
  • that they have of _grace_: and so he is in sinful men whom he has
  • deceived through delight of the world and of their flesh, and leads them
  • with him to hell. In the third manner, he torments a man's body, as we
  • read that he has done (to) Job. But wit thee well, if he beguile thee
  • not within, thou needst not dread what he may do to thee without, for he
  • may do no more than GOD gives him leave to do.
  • CHAPTER II.
  • Because thou hast forsaken the solace and the joy of this world, and
  • taken thee to solitary life, for GOD'S sake to suffer tribulation and
  • anguish here, and afterwards to come to that bliss which never more
  • ceases, I trow truly that the comfort of JESUS Christ, and the sweetness
  • of His love, with the fire of the Holy Ghost, that purges all sin, shall
  • be in thee, and with thee, leading thee and teaching thee how thou shalt
  • think, how thou shalt pray, what thou shalt work, so that in a few years
  • thou shalt have more delight to be by thy lone, and to speak to thy Love
  • and thy Spouse JESUS Christ, Who is high in heaven, than if thou wert
  • lady here of a thousand worlds. Men suppose that we are in torture and
  • in penance great; but we have more joy and more very delight in a day
  • than they have in the world all their life. They see our body: but they
  • see not our heart where our solace is. If they saw that, many of them
  • would forsake all that they have, for to follow us. Therefore, be
  • comforted and stalwart, and dread no annoy or anguish: but fasten all
  • thine intent in JESUS, that thy life be good and convenient; and look
  • that there be nothing in thee that should be displeasing to Him that
  • thou dost not soon amend it. The state which thou art in, which is
  • solitude, is most able of all other to revelation of the Holy Ghost. For
  • when S. John was in the Isle of Patmos, then GOD shewed him His secrets.
  • The goodness of GOD it is that He comforts them wonderfully that have no
  • comfort of the world, if they give their heart entirely to Him, and
  • covet not nor seek but Him: then He gives Himself to them in sweetness
  • and delight, in burning of love, and in joy and melody and dwells aye
  • with them, in their soul, so that the comfort of Him departs never from
  • them. And if they any time begin to err, through ignorance or frailty;
  • soon He shews them the right way; and all that they have need of, He
  • teaches them. No man to such revelation and grace on the first day may
  • come; but through long travel and carefulness to love JESUS Christ, as
  • thou shall here-afterward. Nevertheless, then he suffers them to be
  • tempted in sore manners, both waking and sleeping. For aye the more
  • temptations and the grievouser they stand against and overcome, the more
  • they shall joy in His love when they are passed. Waking, they are
  • sometimes tempted with foul thoughts, vile lusts, wicked delights, with
  • pride, ire, envy, despair, presumption and other many. But their remedy
  • shall be: Prayer: Weeping: Fasting: Waking. These things, if they be
  • done with discretion, they put away sin and filth from the soul, and
  • make it clean to receive the love of JESUS Christ, Who may not be loved,
  • but in cleanness. Also, sometimes the fiend tempts men and women, who
  • are solitary, by their love in a quaint manner and a subtle: he
  • transfigures himself in the likeness of an angel of light, and appears
  • to them, and says he is one of GOD'S angels come to comfort them, and so
  • he deceives fools. But they that are wise and will not quickly trust to
  • all spirits, but ask counsel of knowing men, he can not beguile them.
  • Also, I find written of a recluse, that was a good woman, to whom the
  • ill-angel oft-times appeared in the form of a good angel, and said that
  • he was come to bring her to heaven. Wherefore, she was right glad and
  • joyful. But nevertheless, she told it to her Shrift-father, and he, as a
  • wise man and wary, gave her this counsel. When he comes, he said, bid
  • him that he shew thee our Lady, S. Mary. When he has done so, say _Ave
  • Maria_. She did so. The fiend said: "Thou hast no need to see her; my
  • presence suffices to thee." And she said by all means she would see her.
  • He saw that it behoved him either to do her will, or she would despise
  • him: so quickly, he brought forth the fairest woman that might be as to
  • her sight, and shewed to her. And she set her on her knees and said,
  • _Ave Maria_. And so quickly all vanished away, and for shame never after
  • came he to her. This I say not, because I hope he shall have leave to
  • tempt thee in this manner, but because I will that thou beware, if any
  • such temptation befall thee sleeping or waking, that thou trust not over
  • quickly till thou knowest the truth. More privily he transfigures
  • himself into an angel of light--that commonly all men are tempted
  • with--when he hides ill under the likeness of good. And that is in two
  • manners. One is, when he eggs us on to over-great ease and rest of body,
  • and softness to our flesh, for need to sustain our nature. For such
  • thoughts he puts in us: that unless we eat well, and drink well, and
  • sleep well, and lie soft and sit warm, we can not serve GOD, nor last in
  • the labour that we have begun. But he thinks to bring us to over-great
  • pleasure. Another is, when under the likeness of ghostly good, he
  • entices us to sharp and over-great penance, for to destroy ourselves;
  • and says thus: "Thou wot'st well that he who suffers most penance for
  • GOD'S love, he shall have most meed. Therefore eat little, and feeble
  • meat; and drink less, the thinnest drink is good enough to thee. Reck
  • not of sleep: wear the hair-shirt and the habergeon. All thing that is
  • affliction for thy flesh, do it; so that there may be none that can
  • pass thee in penance. He that speaks thee thus, is about to slay thee
  • with over-great abstinence; as he that said the other to slay thee with
  • over-little. Therefore, if we will be rightly disposed, it behoves us to
  • set ourselves in a good mean, and that we may destroy our vices and hold
  • our flesh under, and nevertheless that it should be stalwart in the
  • service of JESUS Christ. Also, our enemy will not suffer us to be in
  • rest when we sleep, but then he is about to beguile us in many manners.
  • Sometimes, with ugly images, for to make us afraid and to make us
  • hateful of our state: sometimes with fair images, fair sights and that
  • seem comfortable; for to make us glad in vain, and make us think we are
  • better than we are. Sometimes, tells us we are holy and good, for to
  • bring us into pride; [sometimes says we are wicked and sinful for to
  • make us fall into despair.] But He Who is Ordainer of all things,
  • suffers not that our sleep be without reward to us, if we dress our life
  • to His Will. And wit thou well, thou sinnest not sleeping, if waking
  • thou beest evermore without excess of meat and drink, and without
  • ill-thoughts. But many a one the devil has deceived, through dreams,
  • when he has made them set their heart on them. For he has shewn them
  • some truth, but afterwards beguiled them with one that was false.
  • Therefore says the wise man that many cares follow dreams; and they fell
  • that hoped in them. Wherefore that thou beest not beguiled with them, I
  • will that thou wit that _there are six manners of dreams_. Two are, that
  • no man, holy or other, may escape: they are, if their stomach be
  • over-empty or over-full; then many vanities, in sore manners, befall
  • them sleeping. The third is of illusions of our enemy. The fourth is, of
  • thought before and of illusions following. And the fifth through the
  • revelation of the Holy Ghost, that is done in many a manner. The sixth
  • is, of thoughts before that are due to Christ or Holy Church, revelation
  • coming after. In thus many manners, the image of dreams touches men when
  • they sleep. But so much the less shall we give faith to any dream,
  • because we can not wit which is truth, which is false; which is of our
  • enemy, which is of the Holy Ghost. For where many dreams are, there are
  • many vanities. And many they may make to err, for they set up unwise
  • men, and so deceive them.
  • CHAPTER III.
  • I know that thy life is given to the service of GOD. Then is it shame to
  • thee, unless thou beest as good, or better, within thy soul, as thou art
  • seeming in the sight of men. Turn therefore thy thoughts perfectly to
  • GOD, as it seems that thou hast done thy body. For I will not that thou
  • shouldest ween that all are holy that have the habit of holiness, and
  • are not occupied with the world. Nor that all are ill who discourse of
  • earthly business. But they only are holy, what state or degree they be
  • in, the which despise all earthly things, that is to say, love it not;
  • and burn in the love of JESUS Christ; and all their desires are set to
  • the joy of heaven, and hate all sin, and cease not from good works, and
  • feel a sweetness in their heart of the love without end: and
  • nevertheless, they think themselves vilest of all, and hold themselves
  • wretchedest, least and lowest. This is holy men's life; follow it and be
  • holy. And if thou wilt be in the Apostles' reward, think not what thou
  • forsookest, but what thou despisest. For they who follow JESUS Christ in
  • willing poverty, and in meekness, and in charity, and in patience,
  • forsake as much as they can covet who follow Him not. And consider with
  • how great and how good will thou presentest thy vows before Him: for on
  • that He has set His eyes, and if thou with great desire offerest thy
  • prayers, with great fervour desirest to see Him, and seekest no earthly
  • comfort, but the savour of Heaven, and in contemplation thereof hast thy
  • delight. Wonderfully JESUS works in His lovers, those whom he reaves
  • from the pleasure of flesh and blood through tender love. He makes them
  • to will no earthly thing, and makes them rise to the solace of Him, and
  • to forget vanities and fleshly loves of the world, and to dread no
  • sorrow that may fall: to diminish over-great bodily ease: to suffer for
  • His love, seems to them joy; and to be solitary they have great comfort:
  • so that they be not hindered of that devotion. Now mayst thou see that
  • many are worse than they seem, and many are better than they seem, and
  • namely among those that have the habit of holiness. Therefore force
  • thyself, in all that thou mayest, that thou mayest be no worse than thou
  • seemest. And if thou wilt do as I teach thee in this short form of
  • living, I hope, through the grace of GOD, that if men hold thee to be
  • good, thou shalt be well better.
  • CHAPTER IV.
  • At the beginning then, bow thee entirely to thy Lord JESUS Christ. That
  • turning to JESUS is naught else but turning from all the covetousness
  • and the liking and the occupations and business of worldly things and of
  • fleshly lust and of vain love: so that thy thought, that was ever
  • downward, burrowing in the earth, whilst thou wert in the world, now
  • should be aye upward like fire; seeking the highest place in heaven,
  • right to thy Spouse, where He sits in His bliss. To Him thou art turned,
  • when His grace illumines thine heart; and forsakes all vices, and
  • conforms it to virtues and good manners, and to all manner of compliance
  • and debonairness. And that thou mayst last and grow in the goodness
  • that thou hast begun without slowness, and sorriness, and irking of thy
  • life; four things shalt thou have in thy thought, till thou beest in
  • perfect love. For when thou art come thereto, thy joy and desire will
  • aye be burning in Christ. One is: _the measure of thy life here, that it
  • is so short that scarcely is it anything_. For we live but in a
  • point--that is the least thing that may be. And soothly, our life is
  • less than a point, if we liken it to the life that lasts aye. Another
  • is: _uncertainty of our ending_. For we wot never when we shall die, nor
  • where we shall die, nor how we shall die, nor whither we shall go when
  • we are dead; and that GOD wills that this be uncertain to us, for He
  • wills that we be aye ready to die. The third is: _that we shall answer
  • before the righteous Judge_, for all the time that we have been here,
  • how we have lived, what our occupation has been and why, and what good
  • we might have done when we have been idle. Therefore said the prophet:
  • "He has called thee times again," that is every day He has lent us here
  • for to spend in good use, and in penance, and in GOD'S service. If we
  • waste it in earthly love and in vanities, full grievously must we be
  • condemned and punished; for that is one of the greatest sorrows that may
  • be: unless we try manfully in the love of GOD, and do good to all that
  • we may, while our short time lasts. And every time that we think not on
  • God we may count it as the thing that we have lost. The fourth is: _that
  • we think how great the joy is that they have who last in GOD'S love to
  • their ending_. For they shall be brethren and fellows with angels and
  • holy men, loving and thanking, praising and seeing the King of Joy in
  • the beauty and in the shining of His majesty. The which sight shall be
  • reward and food, and all delights that any creature may think, and more
  • than any can tell, to all His lovers, without end. It is much easier to
  • come to that bliss than to describe it. _Also think what pain and what
  • sorrow and tormenting they shall have_ who love not GOD above all things
  • that one sees in this world, but defile their body in the pleasures and
  • lusts of this life, in pride and greed and other sins; they shall burn
  • in the fire of hell with the devil whom they served, as long as GOD is
  • in heaven with His servants, that is evermore.
  • CHAPTER V.
  • I will that thou beest aye climbing to JESUS-ward, and increasing thy
  • love and thy service to Him; not as fools do; they begin in the highest
  • degree and come down to the lowest. I say not that if thou hast begun
  • unreasonable abstinence that thou hold it; but for many who were burning
  • at the beginning and able to (capable of) the love of JESUS Christ,
  • through over-great penance they have hindered themselves, and made
  • themselves so feeble that they cannot love GOD as they should. In the
  • which love that thou mayest wax aye more and more is my coveting and my
  • admonition. I consider thee never of the less merit if thou beest not
  • in so great abstinence; but if thou set all thy thought how thou mayest
  • love thy Spouse JESUS Christ more than thou hast done, then dare I say
  • that thy reward is waxing not waning.
  • CHAPTER VI.
  • Wherefore, that thou may'st be rightly disposed both for thy soul and
  • thy body, thou shalt understand four things. The first thing is: _what
  • thing defiles a man_. The second thing: _what makes him clean_. The
  • third: _what holds him in cleanness_. The fourth: _what thing draws him
  • for to ordain his will entirely at GOD'S will_. For the first, wit thou
  • that we sin in three things that make us foul: that is with _heart_ and
  • _mouth_ and _deed_. The sins of the heart are these: Ill-thought: ill
  • delight: assent to sin: desire of ill; wicked will: ill suspicion:
  • undevotion: if thou lettest thine heart any time be idle, without
  • occupation of the love, of the praising of GOD: ill dread: ill love:
  • error: fleshly affection to thy friends or to other that thou lovest:
  • joy in any man's ill-faring, whether they be enemy or none: contempt of
  • poor or sinful men: to honour rich men for their riches: unsuitable joy
  • in any world's vanity: sorrow of the world: impatience: perplexity, that
  • is doubt what to do and what not, for every man ought to be secure
  • (about) what he shall do and what he shall leave: obstinacy in ill:
  • annoyance (at having) to do good: sorrow that he did no more ill, or
  • that he did not have that pleasure or that will of his flesh which he
  • might have done: unstableness of thought: pain at penance: hypocrisy:
  • love to please men: dread to displease them: shame of good deed: joy of
  • ill deed: singular wit: desire for honour or dignity, or to be holden
  • better than another, or richer, or fairer, or more to be dreaded: vain
  • glory of any good of nature, of happening, or of grace: shame of poor
  • friends: pride of rich or of gentle kin, for all we alike are free
  • before GOD'S face, unless our deeds make any better or worse than
  • another, in spite of good counsel and of good teaching. _The sins of the
  • mouth_ are these: to swear oftentimes: forswearing: slander of Christ or
  • of any of His Saints; to name His name without reverence; gainsaying and
  • strife against truthfulness; murmuring against GOD for any anguish or
  • trouble or tribulation that may befall on earth: to say GOD'S Service
  • undevoutly and without reverence: backbiting; flattering: lying:
  • abusing: cursing: defaming: quarrelling: threatening: sowing of discord:
  • treason: false-witness: ill counsel: scorn: unbuxomness in speech: to
  • turn good deeds to ill: to make them be holden ill who do them: (we
  • ought to wrap up our neighbours' deeds in the best not the worst);
  • exciting any man to ire: reprehending in another what one does one's
  • self: vain speech: much speech: foul speech: to speak idle words: or to
  • speak words not needful: praising: polishing of words: defending sin:
  • shouting with laughter: making grimaces at any man: to sing secular
  • songs and to love them: to praise ill-deeds: to sing more for the glory
  • of men than of GOD. _The sins of deed are these_: gluttony: lechery:
  • drunkenness: simony: witch-craft: breaking of the holy-days: sacrilege:
  • to receive GOD'S Body in deadly sin: breaking of vows: apostacy:
  • dissipation in GOD'S service: to set example of ill deeds: to hurt any
  • man in his body, or in his goods, or in his fame: theft: rapine: usury:
  • deceit: selling of righteousness: to hearken ill: to give to harlots: to
  • withhold necessaries from the body, or to give it to excess: to begin a
  • thing that is above our might: custom to sin: falling often into sin:
  • feigning of more good than we have: for to seem holier, more learned
  • and wiser than we are: to hold office that we do not suffice to: or to
  • hold one that cannot be held without sin: to lead dances: to bring up
  • new fashions: to be rebellious against one's Sovereign: to insult those
  • who are less: to sin in sight, in hearing, in smelling, in touching, in
  • handling, in swallowing: in means: in signs: in beggings: writings. To
  • receive the circumstances, that is to say time, place, manner, number,
  • person, dwelling, knowledge, age, that makes thee sin more or less. To
  • desire a sin or to be tempted: to constrain one to sin. Other many sins
  • there are _of omission_, that is, of leaving good undone: when men leave
  • the good they should do. Not thinking about GOD, nor dreading, nor
  • praising Him, nor thanking Him for His gifts: to do not all that one
  • does for love of GOD: to sorrow not for one's sins as one should do: not
  • to dispose one's self to receive grace. And if one have taken grace,
  • not to use it as one ought; not to keep it: to turn not to the
  • inspiration of GOD: to conform not one's will to GOD'S will: to give not
  • attention to one's prayers, but mutter on and never reck save that they
  • be said; to do negligently what one was bound by vow to do, or by
  • command, or else enjoined in penance: to draw out at length what should
  • be done soon: having no joy at one's neighbour's profit as at one's own;
  • not sorrowing at his ill-faring: standing not against temptations:
  • forgiving not those who have done one harm: keeping not faith with one's
  • neighbour as one would that he did to one's self: and yielding not a
  • good deed for another if one can. Amending not those sins before one's
  • eyes: not appeasing strifes: not teaching them that are unlearned: not
  • comforting them that are in sorrow, or in sickness, or in poverty, or
  • in penance, or in prison. These sins, and many others make men foul.
  • _The things that cleanse us of that filth_, are three, against these
  • three manners of sins. The first is: _sorrow of heart_ against the sin
  • of thought: and that it behoves (thee to) be so perfect that thou beest
  • in full will never to sin more. And that thou mayest have sorrow for all
  • thy sins. And that all joy and solace, except of GOD and in GOD, be put
  • out of thine heart. The second is: _shrift of mouth_; against the sin of
  • mouth. And that shall be _hasty_, without delaying. _Naked_, without
  • excusing. Whole, without parting. Also (not) for to tell one sin to one
  • priest and another to another. Say all that thou wottest to one, or else
  • thy shrift is not worth. The Third is, _Satisfaction_; that has three
  • parts, Fasting, Prayer, and Alms-Deed. Not only to give poor men meat
  • and drink: but to forgive them that do thee wrong and pray for them:
  • and inform them who are at the point to perish what they shall do. For
  • the third thing, thou shalt wit that cleanness behoves to be kept in
  • heart, in mouth and in work. _Cleanness of heart_, three things keep:
  • one is, watchful thought and stable about GOD. Another is, care to keep
  • thy five wits, so that all the wicked stirrings of them be closed out of
  • the flesh. The third, honest and profitable occupation. Also, _cleanness
  • of mouth_, three things keep: one is that thou should'st bethink thee
  • before thou speakest. Another is that thou beest not of great but of
  • little speech; and specially ever till thine heart be established in the
  • love of JESUS Christ: so that men think thou ever lookest on Him,
  • whether thou speakest or not. But such a grace may'st thou not have on
  • the first day: but with long travel and great care to love Him from
  • habit, so that the eye of thine heart be aye upward, shalt thou come
  • thereto. The third, that thou for nothing, not even for meekness, shalt
  • lie to any man. For every lie is sin and ill: and not GOD'S will. Thou
  • needest not tell all the truth always, unless thou willest. But hate all
  • lies. If thou sayest a thing of thyself that seems to thy praise, but
  • thou sayst it to the praise of GOD and help of another, thou dost not
  • unwisely for thou speakest truth. But if thou will have aught private,
  • tell it to none but such a one that thou beest secure that it should not
  • be shewed (disclosed) but only to the praise of GOD, of whom is all
  • goodness, and who makes some better than others, and gives them special
  • grace, not only for themselves, but also for them that will do well
  • after their example. _Cleanness of work_, three things keep. One is: _a
  • careful thought of death_: for the wise man says; "Bethink thee of thy
  • last ending, and thou shalt not sin." The second: _flee from ill
  • fellowship_, that gives more example to love the world than GOD, earth
  • than heaven, filth of body than cleanness of soul. The third is:
  • _temperance and discretion in meat and drink_: that it be neither to
  • excess, nor beneath suitable sustenance for thy body. For both come to
  • one end: excess and over-great fasting: for neither is GOD'S will--and
  • that many will not suppose, for anything one may say. If you take
  • sustenance of such good as GOD sends for the time and the day, whatever
  • it be, I take out no manner of meat that Christian men use; with measure
  • and discretion, thou dost well; for so did Christ and His Apostles. If
  • you leave many meats that men have, not despising the meat that GOD has
  • made for man's help, but because thou thinkest thou hast no need
  • thereof, thou dost well: if thou seest that thou art stalwart to serve
  • GOD, and that it breaks not thy stomach. For if thou hast broken it with
  • over-great abstinence, appetite for meat is reft from thee: and often
  • shalt thou be in tremblings, as if thou wert ready to give up the ghost.
  • And wit thou well, thou didst sin that deed. And thou may'st not wit
  • soon whether thine abstinence be against thee, or with thee. For the
  • time thou art going, I counsel thee that thou should'st eat better and
  • more, as it comes, that thou beest not beguiled. And afterward, when
  • thou hast proved many things, and overcome many temptations, and knowest
  • better thyself and GOD than thou didst, then if thou seest that it be to
  • be done, thou mayst take to greater abstinence. And meanwhile thou mayst
  • do privy penance which all men need not know. Righteousness is not all
  • in fasting or in eating. But thou art righteous, if contempt and praise,
  • poverty and riches, hunger and need or delights and dainties be all
  • alike to thee. If thou takest these with love of GOD, I hold thee
  • blessed and high before JESUS. Men who come to thee, they love thee
  • because they see thy great abstinence, and because they see thee
  • enclosed: but I may not love thee so lightly for anything I see thee do
  • without, but if thy will be conformed entirely to GOD'S will. And set
  • not by their praise and blame, and never give thou heed if they speak
  • less good of thee than they did; but that thou shouldest be more burning
  • in GOD'S love than thou wert. For one thing I warn thee: I hope that GOD
  • has no perfect servant in earth without enemies of some men--For only
  • wretchedness has no enemy. _For to draw us that we conform our will to
  • GOD'S will_: are three things. One is, example of holy men and women,
  • who were intent, night and day, to serve GOD, and dread Him and love
  • Him. If we follow them on earth, we must be with them in heaven. Another
  • is the goodness of our Lord, which despises none, but gladly receives
  • all that come to His mercy: and He is homelier to them than brother or
  • sister, or any friend that they most love, or most trust in. The third
  • is the wonderful joy of the kingdom of heaven, which is more than tongue
  • may tell, or heart may think, or eye may see, or ear may hear. It is so
  • great that, as in hell nothing might live for great pain but that the
  • might of GOD suffers them not to die; so the joy in the sight of JESUS
  • in His GOD-head is so great that they must die of joy, if it were not
  • for His goodness, who wills that His lovers should be living aye in
  • bliss: also His righteousness wills that all who loved Him not, be aye
  • living in fire, which is horrible to any man that thinks: look then what
  • it is to feel. But they who will not think of it and dread it now, they
  • shall suffer it evermore. Now hast thou heard how thou mayst dispose thy
  • life, and rule it to GOD'S will. But I wot well that thou desirest to
  • hear some special point of the love of JESUS Christ, and of
  • contemplative life, which thou hast taken to thee in all men's sight.
  • (According) As I have grace and knowledge, I will teach thee.
  • CHAPTER VII.
  • Amore langueo. These two words are written in the Book of Love, that is
  • called the Song of Love, or the Song of Songs. For he that loves
  • greatly, lists often to sing of his love, for joy that he or she has
  • when they think on that they love, specially if their love be true and
  • loving. And this is the English of these two words: "I languish for
  • love." Separate men on earth have separate gifts and graces of GOD, but
  • the special gift of those who lead the solitary life, is for to love
  • JESUS Christ. Thou sayest to me, 'All men love Him who keep His
  • commandments.' That is Truth. But all men who keep His bidding keep not
  • also His Counsel. And all that do His Counsel are not all fulfilled by
  • the sweetness of His love, nor feel the fire of burning love of heart.
  • Therefore, the diversity of love makes the diversity of holiness and of
  • need. In heaven, the angels who are most burning in love, are nearest to
  • GOD. Also, men and women that have most of GOD'S love, whether they do
  • penance or none; they shall be in the highest degree in heaven: they who
  • love Him less, in the lower order. If thou lovest Him much, great joy
  • and sweetness and burning thou feelest in His love, that is thy comfort
  • and strength night and day. If thy love be not burning in Him: little is
  • thy delight. For Him may no man feel in joy and sweetness, unless they
  • be clean and filled with His love; and thereto shalt thou come with
  • great travail in prayer and thanking, having such meditations as are all
  • on the love and the praising of GOD. And when thou art at thy meal, ever
  • love GOD in thy thought, at each moment, and say thus in thine heart:
  • _Loved be Thou, King: and thanked be Thou, King, and blessed be Thou,
  • King, JESU all my joying, of all Thy good gifts: Who for me spilt Thy
  • blood, and died on the rood. Do Thou give me grace to sing the song of
  • Thy praise._ And think it not only whiles thou eatest, but both before
  • and after, and ever when thou prayest or speakest. Or if thou hast other
  • thoughts, that thou hast more sweetness in and devotion than in those
  • that I teach thee, thou may'st think them. For I hope that GOD will put
  • such thoughts in thine heart, as He is pleased with, and as thou art
  • ordained for. When thou prayest, look not how much thou sayest, but how
  • well: that the love of thine heart be aye upward, and thy thought on
  • what thou sayst as much as thou canst. If thou beest in prayers and
  • meditations all the day, I wot well that thou must wax greatly in the
  • love of JESUS Christ, and feel much of delight, and within short time.
  • CHAPTER VIII.
  • Three degrees of love I shall tell thee, for I would that thou mightest
  • win to the highest. The first degree is called _Insuperable_. The second
  • _Inseparable_. The third is, _Singular_. Thy love is Insuperable, when
  • nothing that is contrary to GOD'S love overcomes it: but it is stalwart
  • against all temptations; and stable, whether thou beest in ease or in
  • anguish, or in health or in sickness: so that men think that thou
  • wouldest not, even to have all the world without end, make GOD angry at
  • any time: and thou wert liefer, if so it should be, to suffer all the
  • pain and woe that might come to any creature, before thou wouldst do the
  • thing that should displease Him. In this manner shall thy love be
  • Insuperable that nothing can bring it down, but it may aye spring on
  • high. Blessed is he or she who is in this degree: but yet are they
  • blesseder who might hold to this degree and turn to the other, that is
  • to _Inseparable_. _Inseparable_ is thy love, when all thine heart, and
  • thy thought, and thy might is so wholly, so entirely and so perfectly
  • fastened, set and established in JESUS Christ, that thy thought comes
  • never from Him, never departs from Him, sleeping excepted: and as soon
  • as thou awakest, thine heart is on Him, saying _Ave Maria_, or _Gloria
  • Tibi, Domine_, or _Pater Noster_, or _Miserere mei, DEUS_, if thou hast
  • been tempted in thy sleep; or thinking on His love and His praise as
  • thou didst waking. When thou canst at no time forget Him, waking or
  • sleeping, whatso thou dost or sayst, then is thy love _Inseparable_.
  • Full great grace have they that be in this degree of love. And methinks
  • that thou, who hast nothing else to do but for to love GOD, mayst come
  • thereunto if any may get it.
  • The third degree is highest and most wondrous to win. That is called
  • _Singular_, for it has no peer. _Singular_ love is when all comfort and
  • solace is closed out of thine heart, but of JESUS Christ alone. Other
  • joy it delights not in. For the sweetness of Him in this degree is so
  • comforting, and lasting in His love, so burning and gladdening, that he
  • or she who is in this degree can as well feel the fire of love burning
  • in their soul, as thou canst feel thy finger burn if thou puttest it in
  • the fire. But that fire, if it be hot, is so delectable and so
  • wonderful, that I cannot tell it. Then, thy soul is loving JESUS,
  • thinking of JESUS, desiring JESUS; in covetousness of Him breathing; to
  • Him singing: of Him burning; in Him resting. Then the song of praise and
  • of love has come. Then, thy thought turns into song and into melody.
  • Then it behoves thee to sing the psalms which before thou said'st. Then
  • must thou be long over a few psalms. Then, thou wilt think death sweeter
  • than honey, for then thou art full of sighs to see Him whom thou lovest.
  • [Then mayst thou boldly say "I languish for love."] Then mayst thou say
  • "I sleep, and my heart wakes."
  • In the first degree, men may say "I languish for love," or "I long in
  • love." And in the second degree also: for languishing is when men fail
  • for sickness, and they who are in these two degrees fail from all the
  • covetousness of this world, and from lust and liking of sinful life, and
  • set their will and their heart to the love of GOD--therefore they may
  • say "I languish for love," and much more that are in the second degree
  • than in the first. But the soul that is in the third degree is all
  • burning fire, and like the nightingale that loves song and melody, and
  • fails for great love: so that the soul is only comforted in praising and
  • loving GOD; and till Death come, is singing ghostly to JESUS, and in
  • JESUS, and JESUS; not crying bodily with the mouth--of that manner of
  • singing I speak not, for both good and evil have that song. And this
  • manner of song have none unless they be in this third degree of love: to
  • the which degree it is impossible to come, but in a great multitude of
  • love. Therefore, if thou wilt wot what kind of joy that song has, I tell
  • thee, that no man wots, save he or she who feels it, who has it, and who
  • loves GOD singing therewith. One thing tell I thee, it is of heaven, and
  • GOD gives it to whom He will, but not without great grace coming before.
  • Who has it, he thinks all the song and all the minstrelsy of earth
  • naught but sorrow and woe (compared) thereto. In sovereign rest shall
  • they be who get it. Wanderers and brawlers, and keepers of comers and
  • goers early and late night and day, or any who are seized with any sin
  • witfully and willingly, or who have delight in any earthly thing, they
  • are also farther therefrom than heaven is from earth. In the first
  • degree, are many: in the second degree are full few; but in the third
  • degree are scarcely any: for aye the greater is the perfection the fewer
  • followers it has. In the first degree, men are likened to the stars, in
  • the second to the moon, in the third to the sun. Therefore says S. Paul:
  • "Others of the sun, others of the moon, others of the stars," so it is
  • of the lovers of GOD. In this third degree, if thou mayst win thereto,
  • thou shalt know of more joy than I have told thee yet. And among other
  • affections and songs, thou mayst, in thy longing, sing this in thine
  • heart to thy Lord JESUS, when thou dost covet His coming and thy going:
  • "_When wilt Thou come to comfort me: and bring me out of care, and give
  • me Thee, Whom I may see, having evermore? My heart when shall it burst?
  • for love then languished I no more. For love my thought has fast, and I
  • am fain to fare away. I stand still mourning for the loveliest of lore;
  • ...[3] is love-longing; it draws me to my day; The brand of sweet
  • burning for it holds me aye: From place and from playing: till I may get
  • sight of my sweet One, Who never wends away. In wealth be our waking,
  • without hurt or night. My love is everlasting, and longs unto that
  • sight._"
  • CHAPTER IX.
  • If thou wilt be well with GOD, and have grace to rule thy life, and come
  • to the joy of love: this name JESUS, fasten it so fast in thy heart that
  • it come never out of thy thought. And when thou speakest to Him, and
  • through custom sayst, JESUS, it shall be in thine ear, joy; in thy
  • mouth, honey; and in thine heart, melody: for men shall think joy to
  • hear that name be named, sweetness to speak it, mirth and song to think
  • it. If thou thinkest (on) JESUS continually, and holdest it firmly, it
  • purges thy sin, and kindles thine heart; it clarifies thy soul, it
  • removes anger and does away slowness. It wounds in love and fulfils
  • charity. It chases the devil, and puts out dread. It opens heaven, and
  • makes a contemplative man. Have JESUS in mind, for that puts all vices
  • and phantoms out from the lover. And often hail Mary, both day and
  • night. Much love and joy shalt thou feel, if thou wilt do after this
  • teaching. Thou need'st not covet greatly many books: hold love in thine
  • heart and work, and thou hast all that we can say or write: for fulness
  • of the law is charity: on that hangs everything.
  • CHAPTER X.
  • But now, thou mayst ask me and say, "Thou speakest so much of love; tell
  • me--_What is love, and where is love. And how I shall love GOD verily.
  • And how that I may know that I love Him. And in what state I may most
  • love Him._" These are hard questions to teach, to a feeble man and
  • fleshly as I am. But nevertheless therefore, I shall not delay that I
  • shall not shew my wit, and as I think it may be. For I hope in the help
  • of JESUS, who is the well of love and peace and sweetness. Thy first
  • asking is: _What is love?_ And I answer: Love is a burning yearning
  • after GOD, with a wonderful delight and certainty. GOD is light and
  • burning. Light clarifies our reason; burning kindles our will, that we
  • desire naught but Him. Love is a life, joining together the loving and
  • the loved. For meekness makes us sweet to GOD. Purity joins us to GOD.
  • Love makes us one with GOD. Love is the beauty of all virtues. Love is
  • the thing through which GOD loves us, and we Him, and each one of us
  • loves others. Love is the desire of the heart, aye thinking on that it
  • loves; and when it has that it loves, then it joys and nothing can make
  • it sorry. (Love is yearning between two, with lastingness of thoughts.)
  • Love is a stirring of the soul for to love GOD for Himself, and all
  • other things for GOD; the which love, when it is ordained in GOD, it
  • does away all inordinate love in anything that is not good. But all
  • deadly sin is inordinate love for a thing that is naught: then love puts
  • out all deadly sin. Love is a virtue which is the rightest affection of
  • man's soul. Truth may be without love: but it cannot help without it.
  • Love is a perfection of learning, virtue of prophecy, fruit of truth,
  • help of sacraments, establishing of wit and knowledge; riches of pure
  • men; life of dying men. So, how good love is. If we suffer to be slain;
  • if we give all that we have, (down) to a beggar's staff; if we know as
  • much as men may know on earth, all this is naught but ordained sorrow
  • and torment. If thou wilt ask how good is he or she, ask how much he or
  • she loves; and that no man can tell. For I hold it folly to judge a
  • man's heart; that none knows save GOD. Love is a righteous turning from
  • all earthly things, and is joined to GOD, without departing, and kindled
  • with the fire of the Holy Ghost: far from defiling, far from corruption,
  • bound to no vice of this life. High above all fleshly lusts, aye ready
  • and greedy for the contemplation of GOD. In all things not overcome.
  • The sum of all good affections. Health of good manners; goal of the
  • commandments of GOD; death of sins; life of virtues. Virtue whilst
  • fighting lasts, crown of over-comers. Mirth[4] to holy thoughts. Without
  • that, no man may please GOD; with that, no man sins. For if we love GOD
  • in all our heart, there is nothing in us through which we serve sin.
  • Very love cleanses the soul, and delivers it from the pain of hell, and
  • from the foul service of sin, and from the ugly fellowship of the
  • devils; and (out) of the fiend's son, makes GOD'S son, and partner of
  • the heritage of heaven. We shall force ourselves to clothe us in love,
  • as iron or coal does in the fire, as the air does in the sun, as the
  • wool does in the dye. The coal so clothes itself in fire that it is
  • fire. The air so clothes itself in the sun that it is light. And the
  • wool so substantially takes the dye that it is like it. In this manner
  • shall a true lover of JESUS Christ do: his heart shall so burn in love,
  • that it shall be turned into the fire of love, and be as it were all
  • fire; and he shall so shine in virtues that no part of him shall be
  • murky in vices.
  • The second asking is: _Where is love?_ And the answer: love is in thine
  • heart, and in the will of man; not in his hand, nor in his mouth: that
  • is to say, not in his work, but in his soul, "For many speak good and do
  • good, and love not GOD: as hypocrites, who suffer great penance, and
  • seem holy in man's sight. But because they seek praise and honour of
  • men, and favour, they have lost their meed: and in the sight of GOD,
  • they are devil's sons, and ravishing wolves. But if a man give
  • alms-deed, and take him to poverty and do penance, it is a sign that he
  • loves GOD: but therefore loves he Him not, save when he forsakes the
  • world only for GOD'S love, and sets all his thought on GOD, and loves
  • all men as himself: and all the good deeds that he may do, he does them
  • with intent to please JESUS Christ, and to come to the rest of heaven.
  • Then he loves GOD: and that love is in his soul, and so his deeds shew
  • without. If thou speakest good and doest good, men suppose that thou
  • lovest good: therefore look well that thy thought be in God, or else
  • thou deceivest thyself, and deceivest men. Nothing that I do without
  • (outside) proves that I love GOD.
  • For a wicked man might do as much penance in body, as much waking and
  • fasting as I do. How may I then ween that I love, or hold myself better,
  • on account of that which any man may do? Certainly, my heart, whether it
  • loves my GOD or not, wots no one but GOD, for nought that they may see
  • me do. Wherefore, love is in will verily, not in work, but in a sign of
  • love. For he that says he loves GOD, and will not do what is in him to
  • shew love, tell him that he lies. Love will not be idle, it is working
  • some good evermore. If it cease working, wit thou that it cools and goes
  • away.
  • The third asking is: _How shall I verily love GOD_? I answer; Very love
  • is to love Him with all thy might, stalwartly: in all thine heart,
  • wisely: in all thy soul, devoutly and sweetly. Stalwartly can no man
  • love Him save he be stalwart. He is stalwart, who is meek; for all
  • ghostly strength comes of meekness;--on whom rests the Holy Ghost? in a
  • meek soul. Meekness governs us and keeps us in all our temptations, so
  • that they overcome us not. But the devil deceives many that are meek,
  • through tribulations, and reproofs, and back-bitings*. But if thou beest
  • wroth for any anguish of this world, or for any word that men say of
  • thee, or for aught that men say to thee, thou art not meek, nor mayst
  • thou love GOD stalwartly. For love is stalwart as death, which slays
  • every living thing on earth, and hard as hell that spares not them that
  • are dead. And he who loves GOD perfectly grieves Him not, whatever shame
  • or anguish he may suffer; but he has delight and covets that he might be
  • worthy for to suffer torment and pain for Christ's love: and he has joy
  • that men reprove him and speak ill of him. Like a dead man, what so men
  • do or say, he answers not. Right-so, whoso loves GOD perfectly, they are
  • not stirred for any word that man may say. For he or she cannot love,
  • that cannot suffer pain or anger for their friend's love. For whoso
  • loves, they have no pain. Proud men or women love not stalwartly, for
  • they are so weak, and they fall at every stirring of the wind that is
  • temptation. They seek a higher place than Christ; for they will have
  • their will done, whether it be with right or with wrong: and Christ
  • wills that nothing but well be done, and without harm to other men. But
  • who is verily meek, they will not have their will in this world, but
  • that they may have it in the other fully. In nothing may men sooner
  • overcome the devil than in Meekness, which he much hates. For he may
  • wake, and fast and suffer pain more than any other creature may: but
  • meekness and love may he not have. Also, it behoves thee to love GOD
  • wisely, and that thou canst not do save thou beest wise. Thou art wise,
  • when thou art poor without desire of this world, and despisest thyself
  • for love of Christ: and expendest all thy wit and all thy might in His
  • service. For some who seem wise are most fools, for all their wisdom
  • they spill in covetousness and care about the world. If thou sawest a
  • man have precious stones wherewith he might buy a kingdom, if he gave
  • them for an apple, as a child will do, rightly mightest thou say that he
  • was not wise but a great fool. Just so, if we will, we have precious
  • stones: Poverty and penance and ghostly travail, with the which we may
  • buy the kingdom of heaven. For, if thou lovest poverty and despisest
  • riches and delights of this world, and holdest thyself vile and poor,
  • and thinkest thou hast naught of thyself save sin: for this poverty,
  • thou shalt have riches without end. And if thou hast _sorrow for thy
  • sins_, and because thou art so long in exile out of thy country, and
  • forsakest the solace of this life: thou shalt have for this sorrow the
  • joy of heaven. And if thou beest _in travail_, and punishest thy body
  • reasonably and wisely, by wakings, fastings, and in prayers and
  • meditations, and sufferest heat and cold, hunger and thirst, privation
  • and anguish for the love of JESUS Christ; for this travail thou shalt
  • come to rest that lasts aye, and sit on a settle of joy with angels. But
  • some there are who love not wisely, like children who love an apple,
  • more than a castle. So do many; they give the joy of heaven for a little
  • delight of their flesh, that is not worth a plum. Now canst thou see,
  • that whoso will love wisely, it behoves him to love lasting things,
  • lastingly; and passing things, passingly; so that his heart be settled
  • and fastened on nothing but GOD. And if thou wilt love JESUS verily,
  • thou shalt not only love Him stalwartly and wisely, but also _devoutly
  • and sweetly_. Sweet love is when thy body is chaste and thy thought
  • clean. Devout love is; when thou offerest thy prayers and thy thoughts
  • to GOD with ghostly joy, and burning heart in the heat of the Holy
  • Ghost; so that men think that thy soul is as it were drunken for
  • delight and solace of the sweetness of JESUS; and thy heart conceivest
  • so much of GOD'S help that men think thou mayst never be departed from
  • Him: and then thou comest into such rest and peace in soul, and quiet,
  • without thoughts of vanity, (or) of vices, as if thou wert in silence
  • and sleep, and set in Noe's ship, so that nothing may hinder thee from
  • devotion and sweet love. For thou hast gotten His love: all thy life,
  • until death come, in joy and comfort: and thou art verily Christ's
  • lover: and he rests in peace whose place is made in peace.
  • The fourth asking was: _how thou mightest know that thou wast in love
  • and charity_. I answer: that no man wots on earth that they are in
  • charity; save it be through any privilege or special grace that GOD has
  • given to any man or woman: that all others may not take example by. Holy
  • men and women trow that they have truth and hope and charity: and in
  • that do as well as they may, and hope certainly that they shall be safe;
  • they wot it not so quickly; for if they wish, their merit were the less.
  • And Solomon says it is so with righteous men and wise men, and that
  • their works are in GOD'S hand. And nevertheless, a man wots not whether
  • he be worthy hatred or love; but all is reserved uncertain for another
  • world. Nevertheless, if any had grace that he might win to the third
  • degree of love, which is called _Singular_, he should know that he was
  • in love. But in such manner were the knowing, that he might never bear
  • himself the higher, nor be in less care to love GOD; but so much the
  • more that he is secure of love, will he be busy to love Him and dread
  • Him, Who has made him so, and done that goodness to Him; and he that is
  • so high, he will not hold himself worthier than the sinfullest man that
  • goes on earth. Also seven experiments are there, that a man be in
  • charity. The first is; when all covetousness of earthly things is
  • quenched in him. For whereso covetousness is, is no love of Christ.
  • Then, if he have no covetousness, sign is that he has love. The second
  • is, burning yearning for heaven. For when men have felt aught of that
  • savour, the more they love, the more they covet: and he that has not
  • felt, he desires not. Therefore, when anyone is given so much, till he
  • love thereof (so) that he can find no joy in his life: token has he that
  • he is in charity. The third is; if his tongue be changed, that was wont
  • to speak of earth; now speaks of GOD, and of the life that lasts aye.
  • The fourth is: exercise of ghostly profit. As if any man or woman give
  • themselves entirely to GOD'S services, and meddle with no earthly
  • business. The fifth is: when the thing that is hard of itself seems
  • light for to do; the which love makes. For as Austin says: "Love it is
  • which brings the far thing near-to-hand, and the impossible to the
  • openly possible." The sixth is: hardness of thought to suffer all
  • anguish and hurt that comes--without this, all the other suffices not.
  • For whatso befalls him shall not make a righteous man sorry. For he who
  • is righteous, hates naught but sin; he loves naught but GOD, before GOD:
  • he dreads naught but to anger GOD. The seventh is: delectability in
  • soul, when he is in tribulation, and makes praise to GOD in the anger
  • that he suffers. And this shews well that he loves GOD, when no sorrow
  • can bring him down. For many love GOD while they are at ease; and in
  • adversity they grumble, and fall into so great sorriness, that scarcely
  • may any man comfort them: and so slander they GOD, striving and fighting
  • against His judgments. And that is caitiff praise that any wealth of the
  • world makes: but that praise is of great price that no violence of
  • sorrow can do away.
  • The fifth asking was: _In what state men may most love GOD?_ I answer,
  • in such state as it be that men are in most rest of body and soul, and
  • least occupied with any needs or business of this world. For the thought
  • of the love of JESUS Christ, and of the joy that lasts aye, seeks
  • outward rest, so that it be not hindered by comers and goers, and
  • occupation of worldly things; and it seeks within great silence from the
  • annoyances of desires, and of vanities, and of earthly thoughts. And
  • especially, all who love contemplative life they seek rest in body and
  • soul. For a great Doctor says: "They are GOD'S throne who dwell still in
  • one place, and are not running about, but in sweetness of Christ's love
  • are fixed." And I have loved for to sit: for no penance, nor fantasy,
  • nor that I wished men to talk of me, nor for no such thing: but only
  • because I knew that I loved GOD more, and longer lasted within the
  • comfort of love: than going, or standing, or kneeling. For sitting am I
  • in most rest, and my heart most upward. But therefore, peradventure, it
  • is not best that another should sit, as I did and will do to my death,
  • save he were disposed in his soul, as I was.
  • CHAPTER XI.
  • Seven gifts of the Holy Ghost are in men and women who are ordained to
  • the joy of heaven and lead their life in this world righteously. These
  • they are: _Wisdom: Understanding: Counsel: Strength: Knowledge: Pity_
  • and the _Fear of GOD_. Begin we at _Counsel_, for thereof is most need
  • at the beginning of our works, which we dislike not afterwards. With
  • these seven gifts, the Holy Ghost touches separate men separately.
  • _Counsel_ is doing away with the world's riches, delights, and all
  • things with which men may be ensnared in thought or deed: and therewith
  • (i.e. _Counsel_) be drawn inwardly to contemplation of GOD.
  • _Understanding_ is, to know what is for to do, and what to leave
  • (undone): and that which shall be given, to give it to them that have
  • need, not to others that have no need. _Wisdom_ is forgetting of earthly
  • things, and thinking of heaven, with discretion in all men's deeds. In
  • this gift, shines contemplation, that is, as S. Austen says "A ghostly
  • death of fleshly affection through the joy of a raised thought."
  • _Strength_ is; enduring to fulfil good purpose, that it be not left,
  • neither for weal nor for woe. _Pity is_: that a man be mild: and gainsay
  • no holy Writ when it smites his sins, whether he understand it or not;
  • but with all his might that he purge the vileness of sin, in himself and
  • in others. _Knowledge_ is that (which) makes a man in good hope, not
  • making him quake for his righteousness, but sorrowing for his sin; and
  • that a man gather earthly good only to the honour of GOD, and to other
  • men's advantage more than to his own. The _Fear of God_ is: that we
  • turn not again to our sin for any egging on: and then is fear perfect in
  • us and holy, when we dread to anger GOD in the least sin that we can
  • know, and flee it as poison.
  • CHAPTER XII.
  • Two lives there are that Christian men live. One is called Active life,
  • for it is more in bodily work. Another, contemplative life, for it is in
  • more ghostly sweetness. Active life is greatly outward, and in more
  • travail and in more peril, because of the temptations that are in the
  • world. Contemplative life is largely inward, therefore it is more
  • enduring and more certain, restfuller, more delectable, lovelier and
  • more rewarding. For, it has joy in GOD'S love, and savour in the life
  • that lasts aye, in this present time, if it be rightly led. And that
  • feeling of joy in the love of JESUS passes all other merits in earth.
  • For it is so hard to come to, because of the frailty of our flesh, and
  • the many temptations that we are beset with, which hinder us night and
  • day: all other things that come are light in regard thereof; for that
  • may no man deserve, but only it is given of GOD'S goodness to them who
  • verily give themselves to contemplation and to quiet for Christ's love.
  • To men and women who betake themselves to _active life_, two things
  • befall. One: to appoint their household in fear and in the love of GOD,
  • and to find them in necessaries, and themselves keep GOD'S commandments
  • entirely. Doing to their neighbours as they will that they do to them.
  • Another is that they do, so far as they can, the seven works of mercy.
  • The which are: to feed the hungry: to give the thirsty a drink; to
  • clothe the naked: to harbour them that have no housing: to visit the
  • sick, to comfort them that are in prison; to bury dead men.
  • All that can and who have property, they may not be quit with one or two
  • of these; but it behoves them to do them all, if they will on Dooms-Day
  • have the benison that JESUS shall give to all who do them. Or else they
  • may dread the malison that all men have who will not do them, when they
  • had goods to do them with.
  • _Contemplative life_ has two parts: a lower and a higher. The lower part
  • is meditation of holy writing, that is GOD'S word, and in other good
  • thoughts and sweet that men have of the grace of GOD, about the love of
  • JESUS Christ, and also in praising GOD in psalms and hymns and in
  • prayers. The higher part of contemplation is beholding and yearning
  • after the things of heaven, and joy in the Holy Ghost: that men have
  • oft, although it be so that they be not praying with the mouth, but only
  • thinking of GOD, and of the beauty of angels, and of holy souls. Then
  • may I say that contemplation is a wonderful joy of GOD'S love; the which
  • joy is praising GOD, that cannot be told; and that wonderful praising is
  • in the soul: and for abundance of joy and sweetness, it ascends into
  • the mouth; so that the heart and the tongue agree in one, and body and
  • soul joy, living in GOD. A man or woman that is appointed to
  • contemplative life, first GOD inspires them to forsake this world, and
  • all the vanity and covetousness and vile lust thereof. Afterwards He
  • leads them by their lone and speaks to their heart, and as the prophet
  • says "He gives them to suck of the sweetness of the beginning of love":
  • and then He sets them in the will to give themselves wholly to prayers
  • and meditations and tears. Afterwards, when they have suffered many
  • temptations, and when the foul annoyances of thoughts that are idle, and
  • of vanities which will encumber those who cannot destroy them, are
  • passing away, He makes them gather up their heart to them and fasten it
  • only in Him, and opens to the eye of their souls the gates of heaven:
  • and then the fire of love verily lies in their heart, and burns therein,
  • and makes it clean from all earthly filth, and afterwards they are
  • contemplative men, and ravished in love. For contemplation is a sight;
  • and they see into Heaven with their ghostly eye. But thou shalt wit that
  • no man has perfect sight of heaven, whilst they are living bodily here.
  • But as soon as they die, they are brought before GOD, and see Him face
  • to face, and eye to eye, and dwell with Him without end. For Him they
  • sought, and Him they coveted, and Him they loved, with all their might.
  • Lo, Margaret, I have told thee shortly the Form of Living, and how thou
  • mayst come to perfection, and to love Him whom thou hast taken thee to.
  • If it do thee good and profit to thee, thank GOD, and pray for me. The
  • grace of JESUS Christ be with thee, and keep thee. Amen.
  • Here endeth "The Form of Perfect Living."
  • FOOTNOTES:
  • [3] The text is imperfect here.
  • [4] Two MSS. substitute "arms" for "mirth."
  • Our Daily Work.
  • (A Mirror of Discipline.)
  • Our Daily Work.
  • (A Mirror of Discipline.)
  • Three things are needful to every man; to increase his reward, through
  • GOD'S grace helping, Who shall lead him. The first; that man be in
  • honest work, without losing of his time. The second; that he do his work
  • with a freedom of spirit, in place and in time, as work falls to each.
  • The third; that his outward bearing, wheresoever he come, be so honest
  • and fair, that praise is (given) to GOD, a stirring up of good to all
  • who see him, as the Apostle bids: _Omnia in vobis honesti et secundum
  • ordinem fiant_, that is "That ye do: be it done honestly and in order."
  • FIRST PART OF THE BOOK.
  • At the first: man shall look that he lose not his short time, nor spend
  • it wrongly, nor in idleness let it pass away. GOD has lent man his time,
  • to serve GOD in, and to gather grace with good works, to buy heaven
  • with. Not only this short time flies from us, but also the time of our
  • life, as the wise man says: "Our life-time passes away." And S. Gregory
  • says:--"Our life is like a man in a ship; sit he, stand he, sleep he,
  • wake he, ever he gets thitherward where the ship is driving with the
  • force of the weather. So we, in this short time, whatsoever we do, we
  • drive ever to our end." And our enemy, Death, follows us ever at our
  • back, with a sharp spear to stick us through, therefore says Seneca,
  • "life flies, death follows." And S. Augustine says "Life is nothing else
  • but a swift running to death." Therefore, there is naught to tell by,
  • how long man lives: save how well. Yet this short life is uncertain:
  • wherefore says Job:--"I know not how long I may endure, and whether
  • after a short space my Maker may take me away." And S. Gregory says: "I
  • wot not the time I shall dwell, nor when I shall be taken hence and led
  • to doom." And S. Jerome says:--"Nothing so much beguiles man, as that he
  • knows not the time of his life, that to him is uncertain." And yet hopes
  • he for long life for himself, as if he might, at his will, drive Death
  • back. Thus was the rich man deceived of whom speaks the Gospel of S.
  • Luke xvi. Therefore saith the psalm: "if riches increase, set not your
  • heart upon them." For riches fail and last not with man, but glide away
  • like a phantom. But when men have got goods together, with right, or
  • with wrong and poor men's curses, then suddenly, they go from their
  • goods, or else their goods from them. And Holy Writ says "The world
  • passeth away and the lust thereof." A man that is fallen in the water,
  • and through the force of the water is borne forth and torn from the
  • ground; if he may get anything that has good fastening like a root or a
  • stake, he may hinder the water from carrying him away; but by anything
  • that fleets as he does himself, he cannot fasten himself: and soothly,
  • willy nilly, in this life, as if in water, we are ever passing with the
  • goods of this world; and there is naught in this world to fasten by, so
  • that we shall not pass: for the Wise Man saith, "We shall all die, and
  • like water slip away into the Earth." And therefore Job speaks, as if he
  • said "Riches and friends had I many, but they all could not hinder me
  • from going forth and not coming again." And by what path, man shall go,
  • the prophet shews: "All flesh is grass, and all the glory of it as the
  • flower of the field." Man's flesh is as hay, and all his joy and
  • splendour as the flower of the meadow. Hay is first green grass, and
  • soon after brings forth flowers: and a while after, the flowers dry and
  • fall; after it is mown down with the scythe, and dried and taken to a
  • house to be beasts' food. Thus it befalls man: in his childhood he
  • springs and grows as the grass does; after, he comes to manhood and
  • flowers in fairness and strength and wit and having of goods;
  • afterwards: he draws to age, and then his flowers fall, that are his
  • virtue, fairness, strength, wit and other power; afterwards, he is
  • stricken down with the scythe of Death, afterwards taken to a house to
  • beasts' food, that is, dug into the earth to feed worms. Therefore says
  • the holy man; "when a man dies, he shall dwell with serpents and
  • beasts." A dead man is so disgusting to the world, that one cannot let
  • him be in his house three days together; but bears him forth, that he
  • harm none with the odour. Therefore, it is now time to work; for in the
  • time to come there is no time to work, but to receive rewards for deeds
  • done erewhile. And this the angel affirms with oath and says, "For the
  • angel has sworn that there will be no further time." Do we then as the
  • Apostle says: "While we have time, let us work good to all." And as the
  • Apostle counsels us, he did himself: for from the first hour of the day
  • until the fifth, he worked with his hands to win his food: and from the
  • fifth to the tenth, he preached to the people: from the tenth to even he
  • served the poor and pilgrims with such goods as he had; by night he was
  • praying, and thus spent he his time.
  • In three ways, man loses his time: in idleness; or in works that no good
  • comes of; or in good works, but not ordained as they should be. Against
  • idleness, Solomon says--"Idleness teaches much evil"; and Holy Writ says
  • "Whoso followeth idleness, is most foolish." A great fool he is who
  • forbears not from the thing that harms him. More fool he is, because he
  • wins himself no reward: most fool he is, because he wins himself pain.
  • Therefore GOD blames the idle: and says "Why standest thou all the day
  • idle?" Idleness wastes the goods that are prudently gotten, and entices
  • the fiend to the house: for as by good works the fiend is hindered from
  • entering man's heart, so idleness draws him thereto. And Seneca says:
  • "he lives not to himself who lives for his stomach and the ease of his
  • flesh whenever he can." For Job says "Man is born to labour." To work
  • was man bound after he had sinned, through GOD'S bidding, Who said to
  • him: "In the sweat of thy face shalt thou eat thy bread, till thou
  • returnest unto the ground from whence thou wast taken; because from the
  • ground thou art, and into the ground thou shalt go." Thou shalt work
  • stalwartly and not faintly, for He bids thee work, "with sweat of thy
  • face, even till thou returnest to the earth"; that is, all thy life time
  • that thou losest no time in idleness. Idleness smites a man as if he
  • were in a paralysis, and makes his limbs dry that he cannot work.
  • Therefore says the Psalmist: "They have hands and handle not; feet have
  • they but they walk not; mouths have they but they speak not; eyes have
  • they and see not; ears have they and hear not"; for their limbs are so
  • bound in sin, that to all good things, they are as dead; and to evil,
  • they are easy. Idleness is nurse to all vices, and makes a man reckless
  • about not doing what he is bound to do. And when the fiend finds a man
  • idle, he puts in his heart foul thoughts of fleshly filth, and other
  • follies that may bring him to sin; afterwards, he eggs him on to do them
  • indeed, and thus he does against the Apostle's bidding: "Will not to
  • give place to the devil." The idle man makes himself unworthy to dwell
  • in any place but hell. In heaven he cannot dwell; for heaven is full
  • reward to those who here spend their time in works that they hope are
  • pleasing to Christ. In purgatory the idle may not dwell; for there only
  • the good are purged in that cleansing fire, till they be as clean of sin
  • as when they were christened: therefore saith the Psalm-wright:--_In
  • labore hominum non sunt et cum hominibus non flagellabuntur_: that is
  • thus for to say; "The idle work not with men; therefore in purgatory
  • they shall not be pained with those men who are on the way to
  • heaven."[5]
  • Great shame it is to be idle in this time of grace, in the which we are
  • hired to work; and if we work as we ought, great reward awaits us. GOD
  • gives us an example of work, by Himself, as the Apostle says: "He
  • emptied Himself, and took upon Him the form of a servant, and was made
  • in the likeness of men; and being found in fashion as a man, he humbled
  • Himself, and became obedient unto death, even the death of the cross:
  • wherefore GOD hath also highly exalted Him, and given Him a name which
  • is above every name, that at the name of JESUS, every knee should bow,
  • of things in heaven, and things in earth, and things under the earth;
  • and that every tongue should confess that JESUS Christ is Lord, to the
  • glory of GOD the Father."
  • Over-proud then, and over-delicate is the servant, who rests in battle,
  • and sees His Lord assailed and evil-wounded by His enemies. Also, we
  • ought to work in this time of grace; for we are GOD'S bought thralls,
  • with the price of His dear-worthy Blood, to work in His vine-yard: and
  • yet He doth promise us reward, if we do with good-will that which, as a
  • debt, we ought to do. To His private friends, before the time of grace,
  • GOD promised only earthly goods, if they did well; to us the bliss of
  • Heaven, if we do well. It was long after, before they might come
  • thereto; for they went to hell and abode there, some a thousand years,
  • some two, some three, before they came to heaven. But now may men in a
  • little time win heaven, as, if any die soon after he is christened, or
  • if he have done full penance for his misdeeds; or be martyred for GOD'S
  • love. The time of supper that the gospel of S. Luke speaks of, to the
  • which GOD bade His servants call all that were bidden, is the time of
  • grace; which is now, in the which all is ready; so that there is naught
  • else to do but wash and go to meat, that is cleanse them of all their
  • sins that they have done since they were born. What losing of time it is
  • to travail about things that no profit comes of. Man ought to travail
  • only to the worship of GOD, and his soul-health. Thou shalt not deem the
  • man has lived long though he go with a staff stooping, and be
  • grey-haired; but deem him so old as he has lived well. Therefore
  • answered Barlaham to Josaphath, his disciple, when he asked him how old
  • he was: "I am," quoth he, "of 45 years." "Master," quoth Josaphath,
  • "methinks thou art of 60 years and more." Then said Barlaham, "Since I
  • was born has been 60 years; but those years that I spent in idleness and
  • sin before I took me to this life, I hold as years of death. But all
  • those I call years of life that I have served JESUS Christ my Lord in,
  • through His dear-worthy grace." Whoso would bethink himself what time
  • steals from him in long eating and drinking, in excess and useless
  • works, idle speech, and idle and foul thoughts, useless jests and other
  • vanities that men delight them in, he may soothly understand that though
  • he be old in years, that he has lived little time in the manner that he
  • ought to have lived; for he lived not to his profit, nor won him reward,
  • but peradventure pain for losing time.
  • It were a wonderful thing if the man who gives himself to business of
  • the world more than he need, had no hindrance in prayer, in rest of
  • heart, in soothfastness of words, in perfection of good works, in love
  • to GOD and all Christian men. Therefore, holy men, before now, who knew
  • their hindrances, they fled the world with all its vanities, as if it
  • had been accursed; for it seemed to them that they could not live a
  • righteous life therein; and therefore went they into the wilderness,
  • where they trowed to serve GOD in peace. Therefore says Seneca, "I have
  • become more avaricious, and more cruel, and more inhuman because I was
  • among men."
  • Three manners of occupations there are: as, various and much brawling;
  • raking about; and much caring about earthly things. Against much
  • brawling, Solomon says "The beginning of strife is as when one letteth
  • out water." "Let the water out," that is, "let the tongue fleet out in
  • quarrelling." But to the knowledge of GOD or of himself may no one come,
  • who lets his heart fleet out with much useless speech: for he makes a
  • way in himself for the fiend. Therefore Solomon likens such to a city
  • without a wall: "He that hath no rule over his own spirit is like a
  • city that is broken down and without walls." And because so much
  • hindrance of good is in much speech, the philosopher binds his disciples
  • with silence (during) their first five years. Also, Abbot Agathon bore a
  • stone in his mouth for three years to teach him to hold still. Against
  • those who are ever raking about to feed their wits with vanities and
  • lusts is the teaching of the angel, who taught holy Abbot Arsenius and
  • said:--"Arsenius, flee the world and its yearnings: keep thee in rest,
  • bridle thy tongue," that it fleet not out in quarrelling nor idle
  • speech. Where these three are is a way to GOD, and withdrawing from
  • evil. It tells of an Abbot who (for) fully 20 years sat in his school,
  • and never lifted up his head to see the school-roof. Against those who
  • care over-much about worldly goods, Solomon says this:--"Vain is their
  • hope, and their labour without fruit, because they can carry away
  • nothing of all their labour." This is seen every day, by the dead, who,
  • be they never so rich bear with them but a winding cloth.
  • The third manner of men are they that have a liking to do good, but
  • because they do it not in the manner they should do it in, they lose
  • their reward; for when good intent fails in any deed, the reward that
  • should fall to the good work fails. And that may be in four ways; first,
  • for the wickedness of the working; as the offering of Cain, that though
  • he offered to GOD of the fruit that was new, GOD would not look thereon:
  • but to the offering of Abel his brother, GOD looked. Therefore says S.
  • Gregory: "By the heart's will of him that offers is the gift received of
  • GOD or rejected: and GOD was not pleased with Abel for the offering, but
  • pleased with the offering for Abel, who in all his works was true and
  • good; but to Cain and to his offering GOD would not look, for he who
  • made the offering displeased GOD greatly." And why our offering, or what
  • we do that is in its nature good, displeases GOD, the prophet
  • says:--"When ye make many prayers, I will not hear: because your hands
  • are full of blood." The second that reaves away a man's reward for his
  • good deed, is vanity, which stirs man to do the good because he would be
  • praised. For vain-glory makes evil of good: as if alms-deed that is good
  • in nature be done for praising, it wins only sin. The third that
  • snatches a reward from a good deed is boasting by him that does the good
  • deed, as the Pharisee did, of whom GOD said to the folk that stood
  • before Him, "Soothly, this man has lost his reward for all his good
  • deed." Needful it is therefore that a man do what good he can, and do
  • not pride himself thereof in thought or in word; for he has not the
  • doing of a good deed of himself, nor of his own desiring. The fourth
  • that snatches from a man his reward for a good deed (is) when he does it
  • with the intent to be holden better than others, or to lessen the good
  • deed of others, or to outdo it if he can. Of such, S. Gregory tells a
  • tale in his dialogues: That once on a time the holy Bishop Fortunatus,
  • chased the fiend out of a man in one evening; and the fiend, when he was
  • chased out, put on the likeness of a pilgrim, and went through the city
  • where the Bishop lived, weeping and yelling like a poor wretch, who was
  • anxious for lodging that night, and thus he said; "Lo, what your Bishop,
  • whom ye consider so good, has done to me: he came to the house where I
  • had taken my lodging, and put me out by force: and now like a poor
  • wretch, of lodging am I desirous; over all, I seek lodging, and none
  • will have ruth on me." A man of that city who heard him, took him into
  • his house, and set him by the fire and eased him, as he wished. When
  • the man had inquired of him of far-off things, as men do to pilgrims,
  • the fiend leaped at the child in the cradle, and wrung its neck in two,
  • and cast it into the fire, and vanished away. Of this S. Gregory speaks
  • and says, "Many deeds seem good, and are not good, because they are not
  • done with a good will. And this man harboured the pilgrim for no pity of
  • him, but because he spake evil of the Bishop, and in order that he" (the
  • man) "should be held better and of more pity than the Bishop." Yet a
  • good deed is lost, if a man covet by it to have of man, riches, or
  • position, or honours or any worldly good. Yet through sin defiling, the
  • good deed is lost; and here-unto accords Holy Writ that says, "who
  • sinneth in one thing, loses many good things," which is, "he that in a
  • deadly thing sins, he loses many goods," save he amend him with shrift,
  • and do penance therefor.
  • SECOND PART OF THE BOOK.
  • The second part of this book teaches man to do his good work with
  • freedom of spirit, in place and in time, as falls to each work: not
  • compelled thereto, nor to do it with anger, nor with a dead heart. For
  • Holy Writ says: "GOD loves a cheerful giver," or GOD loves him who gives
  • Him aught with a glad heart: and certainly the works that turn out to
  • the praise of God, and the health of man's soul, like prayers and holy
  • thoughts, and a clear mind about GOD, and GOD'S deeds; these and others
  • like them will allow of little rest, if they be well (done). Prayer is a
  • sacrifice that greatly pleases GOD, if it be made in the manner it ought
  • to be: therefore GOD asks it of us as a debt, when He says this:--"GOD
  • created the peoples for His praise and His glory"; and "the Sacrifice of
  • praise shall honour Me." And the Apostle, "we ought always to pray and
  • not to faint." Therefore, it behoves man ever to pray and never to fail.
  • He is ever praying, who is doing good. And certainly men of religion are
  • bound to worship GOD with prayer, and men of Holy Church; for they live
  • by alms and tenths: for all the world labours to bring them what they
  • need close at hand, so that they may serve GOD in rest, and with their
  • holy prayers make reconciliation between GOD and man. And also maidens
  • and widows who have taken the oath of chastity, all these, more than
  • others, are bound to pray. He that will please GOD with prayer will
  • offer it to GOD with a free will and loving heart, and will prepare
  • himself before, as Solomon counsels: "Before prayer, prepare thy soul,
  • and be not as one that tempteth GOD." He tempts GOD who yearns not to
  • win that for which he prays: or despairs to speed well therein; and who
  • makes sin and evil life: such a man thinks not he loves. Of such S.
  • Gregory speaks:--"What wonder if tardily our prayers are heard by the
  • Lord, when we tardily or not at all hear the Lord when He commands?" And
  • Isidore:--"He cannot have assured confidence in his prayers who even
  • thus far in the commands of GOD is slothful, and whom the remembrance of
  • sinful doing delights." Whoever will speed of his prayer, let him do
  • what good he can; flee sin, call his heart from the world, and keep it
  • at home as the Gospel teaches; "When thou prayest, enter into thy
  • closet, and shut thy door, and pray to thy Father." "Enter," he says,
  • "thy bed," that is, "call thine heart home," and "then fasten thy door";
  • i.e., "hold thy wits in thee, that none go out." For it is but folly to
  • pray to GOD to come to us, poor needy wretches, to give us alms of His
  • dear-worthy grace, and not abide His coming, but turn our back on Him.
  • S. Isidore says that the soul must be cleansed from the stain of sin,
  • and the heart be withdrawn from the provocations of the world, in order
  • that prayer may rise without hindrance to GOD. For far is that man from
  • GOD, pray he never so much, whose prayers are mixed with worldly
  • thoughts: therefore says the Psalm "Be still, and see that I am GOD."
  • This ought to stir us up to pray with great dread and consideration for
  • we speak with Almighty-GOD, when we are naught but unworthy wretches.
  • For so did Abraham, GOD'S private friend, who said:--"I speak to my Lord
  • which am but dust and ashes." And Isidore says:--"we ought to pray with
  • sighings and tears, and remembrance of our grimly sins, and of the many
  • pains and bitter we shall endure for them, unless we amend us, and He
  • have pity on us." Also, he who prays shall hope to speed well in that
  • for which he prays; for Christ Himself said, "All things are possible to
  • the believing": therefore we shall pray to GOD as to our Father in that
  • for which we pray, if we love Him as our Father, and be His children.
  • For He says to all His.... He says[6] "Whatsoever ye shall ask the
  • Father in My Name, He shall give it to you." There are six things to
  • know in prayer: first, how a man shall prepare himself before. The
  • second, to whom he shall pray: the third, for whom he shall pray: the
  • fourth, what he shall ask in prayer: the fifth, what hinders prayer: the
  • sixth, what might and virtue prayer is of. The first is written already,
  • and begins at, "Before prayer, prepare thy soul," and lasts as far as
  • here. The second, to whom shalt thou pray? Soothly, before all others,
  • to GOD Almighty, as the prophet bids, "Be subject to GOD and pray to
  • Him." And in the Gospel, GOD says, "Thou shalt adore the Lord thy GOD."
  • Saints we honour and pray to, not as givers of goodness, but as GOD'S
  • friends to help us to win from Him that we pray after. Therefore, let us
  • believe in GOD with all our heart, and certain hope, and perfect
  • charity: our Lord GOD is to be loved. The third, for whom shall men
  • pray? A great clerk says, "Every Christian man is a living member of
  • Holy Church, therefore is he bound to pray for all, but specially for
  • men of Holy Church, as the Pope, Cardinals, Bishops, all who have cure
  • of men's souls: also for our foes and our friends; and all who are in
  • deadly sin, that they, through grace, may rise: for all who are in
  • Purgatory, whom GOD'S mercy awaits; and after, all who have occupations,
  • both quick and dead. And S. Gregory says that he who prays for all, the
  • sooner shall be heard and sped of his prayer: and S. Ambrose; "If thou
  • prayest for all, all will pray for thee." And S. Jerome; "Necessity
  • binds a man to pray for himself, but charity of brotherhood stirs him to
  • pray for all: and charity, more than necessity, stirs GOD to hear." The
  • fourth, what shall men ask in prayer? Certainly, grace in this life, and
  • endless joy in the other; for so GOD teaches us and says: "Seek first
  • the kingdom of GOD and His justice, and all these things shall be added
  • unto you." GOD is debtor to those who are righteous, to find them what
  • they need of earthly goods: for righteousness makes men GOD'S children,
  • and a father by his nature is bound to find for his children. Earthly
  • goods are not to be asked in prayer, for they have done harm to many,
  • therefore Solomon says "How long, ye fools, will ye desire those things
  • which are hurtful to you?" Therefore, every man should ask of GOD with
  • fear, that he ask and pray his Lord that if He see that his prayer be
  • necessary and reasonable, that He will fulfil it: and if it be not
  • necessary and reasonable, that He will withdraw it; for what may help
  • and what may harm, the Leech knows better than the sick man. But one of
  • these two shall we trust to have through prayer; either, that we pray
  • for, or that which is better for us. The fifth, what hinders our prayer
  • from being heard by God? Six things: the first is the sin of him who
  • prays; as GOD says through the prophet, "when ye make many prayers, I
  • will not hear; because your hands are full of blood." And David: "If I
  • have looked upon iniquity with my heart, the Lord will not hear." And
  • the prophet; "Our sins have hid His face from us." And the Gospel:
  • "Because we know GOD does not hear Sinners." The second is the
  • unworthiness of that for which men pray, and that GOD, through the
  • prophet, forbids them to pray for: "Pray not for this people, neither
  • lift up (praise) nor prayer for them; for I will not hear." It tells in
  • the life of the holy Fathers that one who was bound in sin came to the
  • holy Abbot, S. Anthony, and said, "holy Father, have mercy on me and
  • pray for me:" to whom the holy Abbot said; "I will have no mercy on
  • thee, unless thou helpest thyself and leavest thy sin." The third is
  • foul and idle thoughts, that hinder us from thinking on our prayers. Of
  • such false prayers, God says through His prophet: "This people honour ME
  • with their lips, but their heart is far from ME." It is great wickedness
  • of us unworthy wretches that when we speak with prayer to Almighty GOD,
  • we also unwittingly hearken not to what we say. Soothly, great
  • displeasure we do to GOD when we pray Him to hear our prayer, and we
  • will not hear it ourselves: but it is worse to waste our time in foul
  • and idle thoughts. Abraham, when he made a sacrifice to GOD, fowls of
  • the air lighted thereon, and would have defiled it; and he cleared those
  • birds away, so that none durst come nigh it, till all the time were
  • passed, and the sacrifice made. Let us do so with these flying thoughts,
  • which defile the sacrifice of our prayer. This sacrifice is agreeable to
  • GOD, when it comes from a clean and loving heart. GOD bids: "send prayer
  • to ME, and I shall send grace to thee; and whatso thou dost for ME, I
  • forget it not." The fourth, that hinders our prayer from being heard, is
  • hardness of heart; and that is in two manners; first hardness of heart
  • against the poor; and thereof the prophet says "who shuts his ear to the
  • cry of the poor, he may call and I will not hear him." The other is the
  • hardness of those who will not forgive to those who have misdone them:
  • to such, Solomon says:--"Forgive thy neighbour who has injured thee
  • while he prays to thee, and thy sins shall be forgiven." And the Gospel
  • says: "As thou standest praying, forgive if thou hast aught against any,
  • and your Father which is in heaven will forgive your sins." The fifth,
  • that hinders our prayer from being heard, is little yearning after the
  • things that men pray for: and S. Augustine says: "GOD stores this up for
  • thee, that with thy whole heart it may be desired; "for He will not to
  • give to Thee hastily, that so thou mayst learn great things greatly to
  • desire." And S. Gregory says: "if with our mouth we pray after the bliss
  • of heaven, and do not yearn for it in our heart, we are crying still."
  • The sixth, that hinders our prayer; is foul and idle speech, that we
  • fill our lips with; for if thou givest a great lord drink in a slutty
  • cup, were the drink never so good, he would feel disgust therewith, and
  • bid throw it away, were his thirst never so sore: so GOD does with a
  • prayer that comes from a foul mouth; He esteems it not, but turns
  • therefrom. Therefore says S. Gregory: "The more our lips are defiled
  • with foolish talking, so much the less are they heard by GOD in prayer."
  • The sixth, what might and virtue prayer is of. Men who were before this
  • age, who kept themselves in soothfastness, and spoke nothing idle, won
  • from GOD what they prayed for: and that was shewn to a holy hermit
  • Florentius, who dwelt in a wilderness unknown of men. So much vermin was
  • there about this hermitage, that none durst come thither by a long way.
  • A deacon was in that land, who heard of this hermit, and he came at the
  • last to the place where this hermit was dwelling; but he saw so much
  • vermin about that he durst not come near: but cried out for help in
  • fear. The holy man came out to know who it was that cried; and he saw a
  • man standing there, and inquired what he would have. And the deacon
  • said; "holy Father, I have sought thee from far, and now I have found
  • thee, I should have joy enough if I might come to thee, but I cannot for
  • these venomous beasts that are here so many." When the holy man heard
  • this, he fell down on his knees, and prayed GOD that He would destroy
  • those worms: and all soon a grisly storm arose with a thunder, and slew
  • all the worms. Then said the hermit to our Lord; "Lord, these beasts lie
  • here so thickly, that I cannot come to him nor he to me, save we be
  • poisoned by them. Lo, Lord, they lie here dead, but who shall lift them
  • away?" At his word, many birds came, and carried them all clean away.
  • Hereof speaks S. Gregory:--"Because GOD'S servants withdraw themselves
  • from the world and its works, uselessly they cannot speak: so they bind
  • them to silence that they dare say no word save it be teaching others or
  • praising GOD: and therefore, when they ask GOD aught, He grants it at
  • once." But we, woful wretches, who deal with the world, that chatter all
  • the day like magpies; now lie, now twist, now speak evil, now quarrel,
  • now backbite, now swear great oaths, these defile our prayer and hinder
  • it, that it is not heard; for our mouth is as far from praying GOD, as
  • it is near the world with idle speech. Prayer is so mightful if it have
  • its right, that it masters the fiend, and hinders him from doing his
  • will. For so it did the fiend whom Julian the Emperor commanded to go to
  • the other side of the world to bring him tidings how it was there. When
  • he had flown ten days' journey thitherward, he came over the place that
  • Publius the hermit dwelled in, who was praying at that time. And his
  • prayer overtook the fiend, and held him there fast fully ten days--for
  • all that time, the hermit was in prayer: and when he ceased, the fiend
  • turned back, for he could no further go, since prayer hindered him.
  • When thou hast gathered home thine heart and its wits, and hast
  • destroyed the things that might hinder thee from praying, and won to
  • that devotion which GOD sends to thee through His dear-worthy grace,
  • quickly rise from thy bed at the bell-ringing: and if no bell be there,
  • let the cock be thy bell: if there be neither cock nor bell, let GOD'S
  • love wake thee, for that most pleases GOD. And zeal, rooted in love,
  • wakens before both cock and bell, and has washed her face with sweet
  • love-tears; and her soul within has joy in GOD with devotion, and
  • liking, and bidding Him good-morning, and with other heavenly gladness
  • which GOD sends to His lovers. Blessed are they above others whom GOD
  • wakens, for they have many joys while others sleep, for they find that
  • gladness before them, rise they never so soon; for GOD Himself thus
  • says: "he that early wakens to ME, he shall find ME to speak with him,
  • and shall rejoice himself in ME, and have ME at his will." Be then a
  • waker, and rise quickly, and thank heartily thy Lord GOD, for the rest
  • thou hast had, and for the care of angels. Since a knight has great
  • liking to be called to come and speak with the king, when he knows it is
  • for his great profit: with greater reason, ought GOD'S knight, that is
  • every Christian man, to be ready at the calling of his Lord, Who calls
  • him for his great profit, and for nothing else. Soberly, rise thou with
  • a good cheer, and think that thou hearest GOD call thee with these
  • words: "Arise My love, My fair one, and come and shew Me thy face: I
  • yearn that the voice of thy prayer may ring in Mine ears." Think in thy
  • rising, how that night many men perished in life, and some in soul, and
  • some in body and soul: some burned, some drowned, some suddenly dead
  • without repentance or shrift, and their souls drawn by fiends to hell;
  • some fallen into deadly sin, as lust, gluttony, theft, envy,
  • manslaughter, and other several sins. And from all these perils, thy
  • good GOD hath delivered thee, of His goodness not of thy desert. What
  • hast thou done to GOD that He should care for thee so, and suffer so
  • many others to be lost? and peradventure thou hast done worse than they
  • have done. If thou lookest well at what GOD has done for thee though
  • thou hast not served Him, thou mayst find that GOD is as busy to do thee
  • profit as if He had naught else to do, and as if He had forgotten this
  • whole world, and thought only on thee. When thou hast this thought,
  • lift up thine heart to GOD and say:--"I thank Thee, dear-worthy Lord,
  • with all my heart, Who hast thus cared this night for me, a so unworthy
  • wretch, and hast suffered me that with life and health I thus abide this
  • day. I thank Thee, Lord, for this great good, and many others that Thou
  • hast done to me, a so unkind and unworthy wretch, more than all others:
  • that Thou shewest me such kindness against my evil deeds." And put
  • thyself and all thy friends in GOD'S hands, and say thus: "Into Thy
  • dear-worthy hands, my Lord, I yield my soul and body, and all my
  • friends, kindred and stranger: and all who have done me good bodily or
  • ghostly, and all who have received Christianity: that Thou, for the love
  • of Thy Mother, that dear-worthy Maiden, and the beseeching of Thy Saints
  • defend us this day or this night from all perils of body and soul, and
  • from all deadly sins, from temptation of the devil, and sudden death,
  • and from the pains of hell, and make us dread them. Do Thou hallow our
  • hearts with grace of Thy Holy Ghost, and make us, whatsoever we do here,
  • do Thy will, that we never separate from Thee, dear Lord. Amen." When
  • thou hast done, go to the Church or Oratory: and if thou canst win to
  • none, make thy chamber thy Church. In the church is most devotion to
  • pray, for then is GOD on the altar to hear those that to Him pray, and
  • grant them what they ask or what is better: and in presence of Saints,
  • and in worship of churches that are hallowed, protection of angels who
  • are there to serve their Lord and thee--for their office is to receive
  • thy prayer, and bear it to GOD, and bring thee grace from Him, as S.
  • Bernard says: "Rise then quickly, at GOD'S call, and put all heaviness
  • from thee, and answer thy Lord with the words which Samuel said to GOD
  • Who called him in the night: 'Speak Lord, for Thy servant heareth.'"
  • For eight things we ought to wake and ever be doing good: this short
  • life: the strait way we have to go: our good deeds that are so few: our
  • sins that are so many: death that we are sure of and wot not when: the
  • strait and so hard doom of Doom's-day, for every idle thought shall be
  • shewed there, then shall every foul word and sinful work be greatly
  • pressed, for GOD says "For every careless word," etc.: and S. Anselm,
  • "what wilt thou do in that day when all the time expended is required of
  • thee; how it has been laid out by thee, even to the minutest thought."
  • The seventh thing is the strong pain of hell: the eighth, is the joy of
  • heaven. After thine uprising, pray for the souls that are in pain of
  • Purgatory, and think that thou hearest them cry on thee the words of
  • Job: "Have mercy on me, have mercy on me, my friends, for the hand of
  • GOD is laid upon me," and help them with _De Profundis_, and _Absolve_.
  • After, greet our Lady, with _Salve Regina_, on thy knees. Go then to the
  • Church, and bid thy vain thoughts and business of the world keep outside
  • thereof: and at thine incoming, say to thy soul, "Enter thou into the
  • joy of thy Lord, and thou shalt hear His Voice, and behold His temple."
  • Holy Church is the entrance and gate of Heaven. After, fall down before
  • the Cross, and honour Him because He was slain on the Cross, and say "We
  • adore Thee, O Christ, and bless Thee, because by Thy holy Cross Thou
  • didst redeem the world." And then before thou uprisest, have in thy mind
  • how hotly His love burned, That died for thee on the Cross. After, begin
  • thy matins, but first cross thy lips and say "O Lord, open my lips":
  • i.e., "Lord, open my lips that all night have been shut from praising
  • Thee, and I cannot open them, except Thou help me." And then say, DEUS
  • _in adjutorium_, with these words, pour out thine heart before GOD and
  • say; "Lord, as my Doom's-Man, before Thee I stand: do Thou avenge me of
  • my foes, which hinder me from serving Thee, and they assail me keenly so
  • that I be soon overcome unless Thou dost help me." And at _Gloria
  • Patri_, bow down and say with thine heart, "Lord, of Thy blessing, I
  • beseech Thee." Turn thee to the angels who stand about to thy comfort
  • and help, and as thy wardens to keep thee from thy foes, and thus say to
  • them _Venite exultemus, Domino_. Afterwards, cast thine eye on somewhat,
  • and keep it there while thou makest thy prayers, for this helps much to
  • the stabling of thine heart; and paint there, thy Lord, as He was on the
  • cross; think on His feet and hands that were nailed to the tree; and on
  • the wide wound in His side, through the which way is made to thee, to
  • win His heart; thank thy Lord thereof, and love Him therefor: for these,
  • they who thither may win, find treasure of love. Think thou seest His
  • wounds streaming of blood, and falling down on the earth; and fall thou
  • down and lick up that blood sweetly, with tears kissing the earth, with
  • remembrance for that rich treasure, which for thy sins was shed, and say
  • thus with thine heart:--"Why lieth this blood here as if lost, and I
  • perish for thirst? Why drink I not of this rich payment that my Lord
  • gives me to drink and cool my tongue, and hear what GOD says to me: _He
  • who is thirsty, let him come and drink. Thou shalt taste and see how
  • pleasant the Lord is; how sweet, how mild, how merciful._ With such
  • meditations, angels come to thy soul, and GOD is there, and says to His
  • lover:--"What wouldest thou that I should do for thee?" and thou dost
  • answer; "Lord it is enough for me, a sinful wretch and outcast of Thy
  • people, to praise Thee and love Thee, if I could, for so I well ought."
  • If thou canst win to such thinkings in thy prayers, thou shalt have such
  • joys that it shall be a pain to thee to think of aught else. S. Bernard,
  • for the liking that he had for such stirrings desired that matins-time
  • might last till Dooms-day. Think, when thou standest or kneelest in
  • prayer, that thou seest JESUS Christ come with angels and holy Saints on
  • each side, and angels carrying before Him basketsfull of help which is
  • left from the feasts of Saints who dwell with GOD in heaven: that GOD
  • bade them gather up to help the poor with, that naught might be lost.
  • This help is meat to us poor wretches, who would perish in default of
  • it, unless GOD had pity on us. Think thou hearest GOD cry: "Whoso has
  • need of meat, put forth thine hand, and have." And bow thou with thine
  • head to GOD, and lament thy poverty to Him and say "There is no bread in
  • mine house"; and also say, "Lord, so long meatless have I been, that I
  • die of hunger save Thou takest pity on me; and naught can hold my life
  • in me, save meat that Thou givest." Stir thyself up with such
  • recollections, and by others that may kindle thy devotion and raise it
  • to Him, even until thou thinkest thou hearest Him say to thee, "Open thy
  • mouth wide, and I will fill it." And then, through GOD'S grace, shalt
  • thou feel something of that heavenly food that feeds all Hallows, that
  • thou mayest with liking sing the Maiden's Song, that is GOD'S Mother's,
  • _Magnificat anima mea dominum et exultavit spiritus meus in DEO salutari
  • meo_. When GOD, through His grace, sends thee such likings, turn thou
  • kindly to the angels who stand before thee, and to them say: "I pray you
  • as my keepers whom GOD has sent to me, that ye thank your good Lord for
  • me." And turn thou then to the altar, where GOD truly is, and say,
  • "Truly, O GOD, great is Thy mercy towards me," that is, "Soothly Lord,
  • great is Thy mercy that Thou shewest to me." With such love-stirrings,
  • GOD comes to His lovers: and waits not till the prayer be made, but
  • presses in to the midst, and softens the languishing soul, with a
  • bedewing of heavenly sweetness: and tears and sighings are messengers of
  • GOD'S coming. Blessed are they who thus mourn and languish to GOD, for
  • they shall never separate from GOD, but have Him ever at their will.
  • _How GOD comes to His lovers; and how sometimes He departs from them._
  • GOD, when He comes to His lovers gives them to taste how sweet He is;
  • and before they can fully feel, He goes from them, and, as an Eagle,
  • spreads His wings, and rises above them, as if He said: "Some part
  • mayst thou feel how sweet I am: but if ye will feel this sweetness to
  • the full, fly up after Me, and lift your hearts up to Me, where I am
  • sitting on My Father's right hand, and there ye shall be fulfilled in
  • joy of Me." GOD comes to His lovers to comfort them; he departs from
  • them so that they should humble themselves, and that they should not
  • over-much pride themselves for the joy that they have of His coming: for
  • if thy spouse were aye with thee, thou wouldest esteem thyself over well
  • and despise others: and if He were aye with thee thou wouldest impute it
  • to nature and not to Grace. Therefore, through His grace, He comes when
  • He will, and to whom He will, and departs when He will: so that His long
  • dwelling makes one not more unworthy; but that after His departing, He
  • be more yearned for and sought with zealous love and sighings and tears.
  • But beware thou, GOD'S lover, though thy Spouse withdraw Himself from
  • thee for a while, He sees all thy deeds, and thou canst hide nothing
  • from Him: and if He wit thou lovest any but Him, unless it be for love
  • of Him, or if thou makest any love-semblance to other than Him, so soon
  • He departs from thee. Jealous is thy Spouse, delicate, noble and rich;
  • seven times brighter than the sun; in fairness and might all others He
  • surpasses, and what so He wills is done in heaven and earth and hell. If
  • He sees any stain of filth in one who should be His dear, He turns from
  • him soon, for uncleanness can He see none. Therefore, be thou chaste,
  • shame-full, and mild of heart, and with love-longing yearn for Him above
  • all things. And when GOD withdraws this heavenly likeness and sweetness
  • from thee, as sometimes need be in this deadly life, give not thyself to
  • fleshly lusts and likings of the world; but to prayer and meditation,
  • reading of Holy Writ, or honest work. And ever mourn thou after thy
  • love, as a young child who misses his Mother. For he that, after such
  • knowing of GOD and tasting of His sweetness, turns him back and gives
  • him to sin, he has no defence for his sin against GOD. An unhappy chance
  • it is and full of care to love the fellowship of GOD and of His angels
  • and Saints and to serve the fiend and follow his counsel with lusts and
  • likings and works of sin: that heart which was hallowed through the Holy
  • Ghost to be GOD'S temple, that was raised here above his nature to have
  • heavenly likings and joy with GOD, all soon makes itself loathly and
  • foul with foul thoughts: those ears that heard the words that it is
  • allowable to speak to none, open themselves to hear back-bitings and
  • lyings and other idle speech; those eyes that just now were baptized
  • with tears, open themselves to see vanities: that tongue that just now
  • spake to GOD in prayer, all soon with that dirty tongue, forswears,
  • backbites, and speaks foul words. Pray we to GOD that of His goodness He
  • keep us from these vices. Of GOD'S coming men may know by this that S.
  • Bernard says: "When thou art stirred of man in outer or inner spirit to
  • care for righteousness and stand up for it, to be meek and patient, to
  • love thy brothers in GOD, to be buxom to thy superiors, to love chastity
  • and cleanness in body and soul, token is it that Almighty GOD comes to
  • visit thy soul." If thou takest godly chastening from thy friend for thy
  • sin, or words that stir thee to virtues and good ways, this makes way
  • for and token of GOD'S coming. Then if thou puttest from thee slowness
  • and heaviness, and with a love-yearning likest such words; then
  • dear-worthy GOD thy Lord hastes Him to thee, for the desire that GOD has
  • to thee; kindles thy desires to have likings for such words, and makes
  • thee bitterly repent thy sin and amend thy life. For, at His incoming,
  • He wakens the soul, stirs it and softens it, and washes its wounds with
  • wine, and softens them with oil; that is, stirs it to repent bitterly
  • what it has misdone, and softens it with hope of mercy and forgiveness
  • of sins. He rives sin up by the roots, as a gardener does evil weeds,
  • and grafts good trees, and sows good seed, where the weeds grew. So does
  • GOD, who is called a gardener while He is in man's soul: He rives up
  • sins by the roots, and grafts in that soul virtues and good ways: what
  • was dry He bedews it with grace: what was black and mirk, He makes it
  • white: what was bound, He looses: what was cold, He makes warm with
  • love. By these stirrings, mayst thou know thy Lord is come; by stirring
  • of thy heart, destroying of vices, withdrawing from lusts, amending of
  • life, repenting misdeeds, beginning of a new man in GOD, every day more
  • and more. And by this mayst thou wit, when He goes from thee; the
  • gladness wanes, slow thou waxest dry and heavy, as a stone; love cools
  • in thee like a pot that had been welded, and the fire was withdrawn
  • therefrom. But then needs the soul to mourn sorely until He come again.
  • If foul thoughts egg thee on to leave the Lord thy GOD, say this "Whose
  • is this image and superscription?" if he says "Caesar's," that is the
  • prince of this world, that is the fiend of hell, say to him, "Go again
  • thou foul fiend with thy false money: bear it again with thee to hell;
  • for my gates are shut, and my Lord dwells herein, therefore have I no
  • time to deal with thee." Think on that holy greeting that Gabriel made
  • to that maiden, Mary in Nazareth, how joyful she was in body and soul in
  • that time; through that quieting, with her assent, she was fulfilled of
  • grace, so that she won might and power, in heaven, and earth, and hell;
  • and on her hangs all the world's health and restoring of those that
  • fell. Think on the birth of her Child, how she bare Him without sorrow
  • and grief that all other women have naturally in time of birth; and she
  • clean maiden after. Think when He was born, they laid Him in a crib
  • before an ox and an ass, other cradle had He none. There was none to
  • serve Him with the light of torches as men do before great lords:
  • therefore there came a fire from heaven that lighted the house He was
  • in, and Bethlehem; and angels came from heaven to sing the child asleep
  • with a merry voice. Think how Three Kings came from far lands through
  • knowing of a star, and offered Him gold, incense and myrrh: think how
  • sweetly the child smiled on them, and with His lovely eyes sweetly
  • looked on them. Think how poorly His Mother was clad when the Kings
  • kneeled before her: for on her she had but a white smock as the clerks
  • say, more to cover herself with than for shewing of pride. Think how His
  • Mother came with Him to the Temple to make her offering of cleansing,
  • and bowed to fulfil the Law as if they were sinful. Think how the old
  • priest Symeon took the Child in his arms, and blessed GOD: for there,
  • through the stirring of the Holy Ghost, he saw the Saviour of all this
  • world between His hands, and prayed that he might pass out of this
  • world, "for mine eyes have seen Him Who saves the folk." Think of that
  • sorrow His Mother had when she missed Him and sought Him three days, and
  • then found Him among the Masters, hearing and inquiring of points of the
  • Law. Think how He came to be christened of S. John: how the Holy Ghost
  • lighted then on Him in the likeness of a Dove, the Father there with
  • voice recorded that He was His Son. Think how He hallowed wedlock in
  • the house of the Ruler of the Feast, and there, to show that He was
  • Almighty GOD changed water into wine. In the wilderness, how he fasted
  • 40 days without meat; how He overcame the fiend that tempted Him with
  • three: with gluttony, and covetousness, and vain-glory, and of the
  • wonder men had of His preaching, for all the words He spake to them were
  • full of grace. How He healed the sick, raised the dead, gave sight to
  • the blind, speech to the dumb, health to the leper, with touching of His
  • hands: and many other sicknesses that were in their nature incurable, He
  • healed through the might of His words, for He could do more than Nature.
  • How He was weary of much going; rested Him at the well; and then He bade
  • give Him water to drink for He thirsted sore. Then, open thine heart
  • with sore sighings, and think on the passion and pains that JESUS
  • Christ suffered, as they are written before on the xviii leaf.[7]
  • He may ask grace of GOD, and certainly trust to speed, who here stirs
  • himself up with good works, and with devotion and likings: flavours them
  • so that they may be savoury to his dear Lord. Works of penance, as
  • fasting, waking, hard fighting, forbearing of fleshly lusts, prayers,
  • alms-deed, and other things that we do with devotion and likings in GOD,
  • it behoves that so they be done with a glad heart, and with a freedom of
  • spirit. Devotion is a worthy affection that GOD sends to the heart to
  • gladden it with: but unworthy is he to have this gift, that will make no
  • dwelling-place in his heart for it. We seek with our belief what is
  • above us, but it savours us not, for we are so full of earth that we
  • have lost our taste. Why do so many men feel the stirrings that the
  • fiend forges, and suffer his enemy so often to overthrow him? I see
  • nothing that does this, save lack of grace. Among all other (things) I
  • trow we grieve GOD most, because we will not labour to win this grace of
  • GOD: and GOD promises His grace to all that will to receive, if that
  • their vessel be clean and empty to receive it in. But S. Bernard says:
  • "The heart that is loaded with covetousness of the world, it can have
  • neither devotion nor liking in GOD; for soothfastness and vanity, a
  • lasting and a failing thing, a ghostly thing and a bodily cannot be
  • brought together at any time." So worthy a thing is the comfort of GOD
  • that it will not rest in a breast where other comfort is. So delicious
  • is the liking in Him, that with no other liking can it accord. Whoso
  • yearns after other comfort to glad himself with, witnesses against
  • himself that he withstands GOD'S grace: unless it be honest comfort
  • betimes that he may thereby glad his nature with, and better serve GOD.
  • After thou hast spent thy time in prayers, and holy thoughts and good
  • works, in GOD'S holy dread, prepare thyself for food to strengthen thy
  • nature which would else fail. And to this intent shall every Christian
  • man clothe and feed his body; that it may the better serve his Lord, in
  • whatsoever he does. In the morning, thou shalt go to thy meat, with
  • soberness and measure; care for thy self in thy meat-time; and after
  • meat, make thou praising to thy Lord that He has fed thee, and also
  • before meat, and for all the good deeds that He has done to thee. First,
  • or ever thou goest to meat, thou shalt mourn as holy Job did, who thus
  • says, "Before I eat I sigh," because my nature is made weak and feeble
  • for Adam's sin; and every day needs bodily meat to uphold the nature
  • that else would fail in a little time. And, as it tells in the life of
  • the holy Fathers; Isidore that holy man, when he ate, he wept sore and
  • said, "I am ashamed of myself for I live by beastly meat as other beasts
  • do that have no reason by nature; and I, GOD'S reasonable creature, made
  • like to Himself, that should have dwelt in Paradise, and there have been
  • fed with heavenly food." When thou findest delight or savour in meat and
  • drink, think on the heavenly Saints whom all likings pass by, and we be
  • never satisfied till we feel thereof. Men of religion hear lessons of
  • holy men's lives at their meat, so that as the body is fed with bodily
  • food, so the soul be fed with holy words. Man's body is as a burning
  • furnace, and specially in the young; and delicious and hot meats and
  • drinks make that fire to burn hotter: therefore says S. John:--"Plenty
  • in time of youth is double fire." Therefore all that kindles sin in the
  • flesh is to be fled from. The wise man says, "If thou wilt abate the
  • flame, abate the brands." And S. John; "Flesh-meat and wine are kindling
  • of fleshly stirrings." And S. Austin; "the flesh is as a wild colt,
  • which is to be tamed with bridle and hunger." And Solomon; "Rod and
  • burden fall to the ass," that betokens our flesh. Wisely should a man
  • consider the meat that comes before him, and take of them in such
  • measure that they grieve him not, but that through them, he may serve
  • GOD better. Therefore S. John bids:--"Ever when thou eatest, ever hunger
  • thou, that after meat thou mayst read and pray and serve GOD better."
  • Holy men who have been before us enjoyed strong sharp meat, more to
  • abate hunger than for pleasure. Some lived by grass, some by roots, some
  • by spices and herbs and fruit that the earth bore; and in whatso they
  • ate they destroyed all taste that might stir them to pleasure. Also, S.
  • Germanus mixed ashes with his bread, that he should feel no pleasure in
  • his meat-time. Other sauce than hunger, they took none. S. Gregory says:
  • "bread made of bran and water, with cold or other simple pottage is good
  • food to the well-taught stomach, with sauce of GOD'S love if he have it
  • therewith: without this sauce, no sustenance has savour that man
  • enjoys." Some eat no meat before the night; some only every other day;
  • some fast three days together. Machari fasted all the Lenten-tide, save
  • Sundays, and ate naught but raw leaves. Some take no heed when they eat,
  • nor what they eat, flesh or fish: all tasted alike to them, so that
  • afterwards, they wist not what they ate. Some, when they were set down
  • to meat, and meat was brought before them, they forgot to eat, for so
  • they spent the day and the night in holy speech, that they thought of
  • naught else, till the undern-tide[8] of the second day, so that the
  • brethren came to them and asked why they could not eat: and then, for
  • the first time, thought they of meat, and they ate then as they thought
  • good, in GOD'S holy fear. When thou art set to thy meat, make before
  • thee a cross on the board with five crumbs to stir thee up to think on
  • Him who died for thee on the Cross; and think, here lies His head that
  • was crowned with thorns, there His hands, there His feet that were
  • nailed full fast; there was His sweet side that was opened with the
  • spear, from which came both blood and water to heal my dirty wounds.
  • When thou hast so done if thou canst, take part of thy bread and of thy
  • fish, and lay it by itself, and say thus quietly in thine heart, "Lord,
  • what wilt Thou give me for this pittance I make to Thee? how many
  • tears, how many love-yearnings and longings after Thee? how many
  • comforts of the Holy Ghost, how many stirrings to good things, how many
  • lookings towards me with Thy lovely eyes? Lord, wilt Thou for this meat
  • that the poor hungry man shall have for Thy sake, give me the love of
  • Thee?" When thou hast eaten what thou thinkest good, thank thy Lord that
  • He hath fed thee. After meat, be thou worthy, and keep thee from much
  • speech and idle games, and hold thy wits inward in fear of GOD. Seemly
  • it is to man, and pleasing to GOD, that his bearing be more honourable
  • and temperate after meat than before: that no taking of excess be seen
  • in him, that the flesh may serve the soul better in reading, praying and
  • other ghostly works, that may help to good things. Then Even-song say,
  • with the devotion that GOD sends thee, in Church or Oratory, or
  • wheresoever thou mayst say it best, away from the noise and throng of
  • the world. After, if thou needest, go sup: and short be thy supper time:
  • so in measure take thou meat and drink that it be no burden nor
  • grievance to thy nature, nor hindrance to serve thy Lord; or in time of
  • rest reave from thee thy sleep; or the fiend defile thee with foul
  • temptations in thy sleep, as he often does him who goes to bed with a
  • full stomach. Every man eat, as S. John says, "according as he is strong
  • or old, or according as his body is greater or less, or whole or sick;
  • take what is needful for sustenance of nature, and not as pleasure
  • asks." After supper, go to the Church or other place, where thou mayst
  • be most at rest, and say thy Compline, for in this time as S. Ambrose
  • saith, "birds in their language praise their Lord, and thank Him after
  • their kind, for the goods He has sent them." Call thou then on thy GOD
  • and say _Converte nos DEUS salutaris noster_, as if he said, "Lord, I
  • have been this day hindered by the world, that has greatly hindered me
  • from serving Thee; through temptation of the fiend and of my flesh oft
  • this day have I done amiss; therefore, my Lord, turn me now from the
  • world, and from all that may hinder me from praising Thee with a pure
  • heart and with all my wits, so that they be intent on Thee to work Thy
  • will," And then, say forth thy Compline, and after, other prayers with
  • the devotion that GOD sends thee. And after, before thou goest to bed,
  • hold a chapter with thine heart, and ask it in what things it is better
  • than it was. Hast thou shriven thee of that sin that thou didst then and
  • there? of the words that thou spakest there? of that evil will that was
  • in thee then? of that wrong that thou didst and saidst there to him? of
  • that handling? of that blame? of that foul thought? of that thing left
  • undone that thou should'st have done? art thou willing to leave off
  • such vices? What temptations withstood'st thou this day? in what art
  • thou meeker than thou wast? in what more chaste, more sober, more
  • patient, more temperate, more loving thy GOD in thy brother, or more
  • liking in GOD hast thou than thou hadst? Hast left that sin that thou,
  • through habit, fallest into so oft? and other many vices that thou hast
  • done and pleased the fiend with: and grieved thy good GOD, and hast
  • barred thyself against the grace that should help thee. And then, with a
  • repenting of those sins that bite thy conscience, knock on thy breast
  • and say a _Pater noster_ with _Ave Maria_, on thy knees, and soon in the
  • morning shrive thee of those sins. And if thou doest thus, I hope the
  • fiend shall be afeared to tempt thee, for thou art under GOD'S ward,
  • whilst thou bearest thee thus. After this reckoning, where-through thy
  • soul is raised to a blessed hope to the Father of mercy, and thy flesh
  • waxes heavy, go to thy rest: for if thou hinderest thy flesh of its
  • necessity, and work it beyond its might, faintly will it help thee, or
  • hinder thee withal. And or ever thou goest to rest commit thyself and
  • thy friends into GOD'S hands, who for us was nailed to the tree, and
  • beseech Him, for His mercy, that He guard thee from all perils of body
  • and soul, and arm thee with the token of the cross; for where the fiend
  • sees this mark soon he flies. Of this mark, it is written in the life of
  • S. Edmund: that as he went one time alone, a child appeared to him who
  • was wonderfully fair, and said, "Hail, my friend, whom I love in GOD."
  • S. Edmund was surprised at this greeting, and the child said to him,
  • "knowest thou me not?" And S. Edmund said to the child, "How should I
  • know thee? I never saw thee before." And the child said to him, "When
  • thou didst learn in school, I sat ever by thy side; and ever since I
  • have been with thee, wheresoever thou hast dwelt; for so my Lord has
  • fastened me to thee, that I might never part from thee, such is my
  • Lord's will. But behold on my forehead, and read what thou seest there."
  • He looked as he told him, and with heavenly letters, these four words,
  • he saw there written, _JESUS Nazarenus Rex iudeorum_. Then said the
  • child, "This is my Lord's name, thou seest thus written. This name I
  • will that thou have in mind, and print it in thy soul, and cross thy
  • front with this name; before thou goest to sleep; and from harassings of
  • the fiend, it shall protect thee that night, and from sudden death, and
  • all who thus by night cross themselves therewith." And when he had
  • spoken these words, he vanished away. Carry some holy thoughts to bed
  • with thee, and say thy prayers, till sleep fall on thee. To have soft
  • sleep and sweet, a sovereign help is measure and soberness in meat and
  • drink: with recollection of GOD'S law and Holy Writ; as GOD says through
  • the prophet, "Keep My law and My counsel, and if thou sleepest thou
  • shalt not be afraid; if thou dost rest thy sleep shall be sweet." And
  • ever, as thou wakenest, lift thine heart to GOD, with some holy thought,
  • and rise and pray to thy Lord that He grant release from pains to the
  • dead, and grace to the living, and life without end. If temptation of
  • lust stir thee in bed, think that thy good Lord hung on the Rood for
  • thee; think on His five wounds that streamed down of blood: think that
  • His bed was the hard knotty tree, and instead of a pillow He had a crown
  • of thorns. And say then, with sore sighing, till thy desire cool, "My
  • dear-worthy Lord hanged on the Rood for me; and I lie in this soft bed,
  • and welter me in sin, like a foul swine that loves but filth." Rise
  • then quickly, and hold thee with prayers, love-sighings and tears. Of
  • three points beware. The first, that the devotions thou hast through
  • grace stirring, be not known of others: hide them, so far as thou mayest
  • with will and deed for fear of vain glory. The second, that thou
  • thinkest not it is in thy power to have such devotions and stirrings
  • when thou wilt: but only through GOD'S grace when He will send them. The
  • third, that thou thinkest not over-well of thyself for such stirrings;
  • nor thinkest thou art therefore dear to GOD; nor deem another more
  • unworthy who does not as thou dost; but when thou hast done all well,
  • think soothly by thyself, and grant it in words; "It is nothing worth I
  • do, Lord: for I am but a useless thrall." If thou wilt lose no reward,
  • deem none other, but hold thyself most unworthy; for if thou fastest or
  • prayest more than another, perchance another surpasses thee in
  • meekness, and patience and loving. Therefore think of what thou lackest,
  • and not only of what thou hast. Nevertheless, GOD wills that thou
  • should'st think on those graces and goods He has done for thee, to stir
  • thee up to know thyself indebted to Him for them, and serve Him and love
  • Him the more; or if thou beest in grief to glad thee with. Sometimes, it
  • falls out that in GOD'S doom, one is better whom men deem evil than some
  • that men deem good. Many are worthy without and unclean within. Some
  • worldly and dissolute, and GOD'S private friends within. And some, in
  • man's sight bear themselves like angels; and in GOD'S sight, they stink
  • as sinful wretches. And some seem sinful to men's doom, and are full
  • dear to GOD Almighty, for their inward bearing is heavenly in GOD'S
  • bright sight. Therefore, judge we none other save ourselves. And pray we
  • for ourselves and all others to JESUS Christ, Mary's Son, Who for us
  • was nailed on the Rood, that whoso is bound in deadly sin, He loose
  • them; and they who are in good life, that He grant them end therein.
  • Two messengers are come to thee to bring thee tidings. The one is called
  • Fear, who comes from hell to warn thee of thy danger: the other is
  • called Hope that comes from Heaven to tell thee of bliss thou shalt have
  • if thou doest well. Fear says he saw so many betortured in hell, that if
  • all the wits of men were in one, he could not tell them: of gluttons,
  • unchaste, robbers, thieves, rich men with their servants who harmed the
  • poor: judges who would not give judgment except for reward: treasurers
  • who by subtilty maintained injustice: deemsters who condemned loyal men
  • and delivered stark thieves; workmen who worked dishonestly and took
  • full hire; tillers of the soil who tilled badly; prelates, with the
  • care of men's souls, who neither punished nor taught them; of all sorts
  • of men who have wrongly wrought; then I saw that every one bought it
  • bitterly. For there I saw want of all good, and plenty of pain and
  • sorrow; as hot fire burning ever, brimstone stinking: grisly devils like
  • dragons gaping ever; hunger and thirst for ever lasting, adders and
  • toads gnawing on the sinful. Such sorrow and yelling and gnashing of
  • teeth, I heard there, that nearly, for fear, I lost my wits. Such
  • mirkness there was, that I could grip it; and so bitter was the smoke
  • that it made the woe-ful wretches shed glowing tears; and bitterly I
  • heard them ban the day when they were born. Now, they long to die, and
  • cannot. Death, which, sometime they hated, were liefer to them now than
  • all the good of this world. And therefore I warn thee that thou amend
  • thee of thy sins with shrift and penance, and have a steadfast will to
  • leave them for ever: a seat I saw made for thee in hell of burning fire,
  • where devils should pain thee ever unendingly.
  • That other messenger, who is called Hope says he is come from Heaven to
  • tell thee of that untellable great joy that rules GOD'S friends; "to
  • tell thereof as it is may no earthly man speak though his tongue were of
  • steel. For there is a gracious fellowship of all GOD'S friends, orders
  • of angels, and of holy saints, and Almighty GOD above, Who gladdens them
  • all. Of all goodness, I saw plenty; beauty and riches that last for
  • ever; honour and power that never shall fail; wisdom and love and
  • everlasting joy. Then I heard melody and song of bright angels. So
  • worthy is that joy and so great withal, that whoso might taste of it a
  • blessed drop, he should be so ravished in liking of GOD, and such
  • yearning he should have to win thither, that all joys of the world were
  • pain to him. With so great a love he should be overtaken in yearning to
  • win to that bliss, that by a hundred times it should more stir him to
  • love virtue and flee sin than any fear he might have of the pain of
  • hell. And I tell thee for sooth, if thou wilt leave sin, and do GOD'S
  • bidding, and love Him as thou oughtest, a rich and a fair seat GOD has
  • made for thee wherein thou shalt dwell with Him unendingly.
  • THIRD PART OF THE BOOK.
  • The third and the last part of this book teaches a man to bear himself,
  • wheresoever he comes, and whatsoever he does: that it be to the praise
  • of GOD, and an example of good to all who see him: for thus the Apostle
  • counsels: "Let everything be done honestly and in order"; that is "all
  • that ye do, look ye do it honestly and orderly." Then at the first, let
  • every lover of GOD see that ye yearn not to mingle with the world, that
  • hinders and deceives all who deal with it, and hinders them from the
  • many good deeds they might do. And the man who will nowhere rest but aye
  • rake about; their eyes see many things, that the eye sends to the heart,
  • and such come not out easily when they are once imprinted. S. Bernard
  • complains of the harms that he felt in the world whilst he was therein,
  • and says "the world surrounded me and weighed me down": that is "The
  • world has besieged me on every side; and through the gates of my five
  • wits it shot at me and wounded me full sore; and through the wounds,
  • death presses in, to slay my sorry soul. Mine eyes look, and my thought
  • changes and kindles me in sin. Mine ears hear and my heart bows me
  • thereto. I smell with my nose, and it pleases my thoughts. With my mouth
  • I speak, and in my speech I please or beguile others: and with a little
  • over-soft feeling, lust kindles in my flesh; and the fiend, my foe, whom
  • I cannot see, stands ever against me with his bow bent." Therefore, if
  • necessity make man to go into this world, where are so many stirrings to
  • sin, with great fear shall he go, as into a battle to fight his foes. It
  • needs he be well armed against the arrows of his foe, that severely
  • shoots at him; and the more may he dread him because he cannot see him:
  • with foot-traps and snares is the way set full. Therefore, let him who
  • shall go forth, arm him with GOD'S holy fear. GOD warned His disciples
  • to be wary in the world when He said thus: "Soothly the world shall
  • withstand you with temptations." Therefore, if thou must go out, for
  • thine own profit or that of others, colour not thy going with any false
  • hue, to feign for thyself an occasion to dally with the world, for
  • pleasure or command, or to be known with praise before others....
  • And therefore they make a show with words and feign as they can, to be
  • holden holy of all who see them, that give themselves to dalliance with
  • the world, more than needs, as to buying, selling or quarrelling about
  • earthly things. And all their outward bearing so accords with the world
  • that David says: "They have mixed themselves with the peoples; they
  • partake of their works": that is, they mingle them with the folk of the
  • world, who have no knowledge of GOD, and such works as they see them do,
  • such works they do. Therefore, when thou needest to go forth, cross
  • thyself with the holy name of JESUS, Mary's Son, who died on the Rood
  • for thee, for then thou art more secure, whithersoever thou goest, as S.
  • Austin said to his brother, when they went forth. And S. John says:
  • "Whitherso thou goest, and whatsoever thou doest, thy forehead and thy
  • breast mark thou with the cross; for there is no other mark the fiend so
  • greatly dreads." See that thine outer-clothing be not over-loathsome,
  • nor over-curious, in shape nor in hue. Keep thy limbs to their business,
  • to which they were made, and do not cast thine eyes about like a child;
  • flourish not thine hands, and leap not with thy feet. When the heart of
  • man is out of ward, the limbs sometimes fail in their office. And, as
  • thou orderest thine outward bearing when thou goest forth, also look
  • thou that thou beest devout within, and specially in praying to and
  • praising the Lord. If in going out, thou canst not rest in saying thy
  • prayers, go the softlier. Many things hinder thee in toiling to pray;
  • weariness of limbs; men thou meetest who speak to thee; then thy five
  • wits fleet out of ward, and then the devotion of him who prays, cools.
  • When walking thou hast said thy prayers that thou art bound to say, lift
  • up thy heart to GOD, and pray to Him in thy thoughts in a blessed
  • recollection: think on the good things GOD has done for thee, and shall
  • do if thou truly servest Him: think on His biddings and do them indeed
  • according to thy might, for so GOD bids thee when He thus says:--"The
  • words which I command thee shall be in thine heart, and thou shalt
  • relate them to thy sons: and thou shall meditate on them, sitting in
  • thine house, and walking on thy journey, sleeping and arising." Or in
  • working, tell fair tales to thy fellows, or something from Holy Writ
  • that may soften your way, or glad you in GOD. And sometimes say the
  • Seven Psalms for the quick and the dead, that GOD give grace to the
  • quick and rest to the dead. When thou comest to the town to ease thy
  • body, seek where thou mayst most worthily dwell for thy condition and in
  • most peace: and where thou mayst most profit to thyself and others. Let
  • flesh-lust and vanity entice thee to no place: but inquire where any is
  • who most loves GOD, and thither draw thou. Seek not where thou mayst be
  • fed best, for there peradventure are many stirrings to sin. Harbour thee
  • with no woman unless thou knowest good of them for a long time. When
  • thou art come to the house thou shalt rest in, hold thy wits inward in
  • GOD'S holy fear; so that thine outer bearing be so ruled with grace that
  • thou mayst stir to good all whom thou seest, and through GOD'S grace
  • destroy mirkness of sin, and so fulfil GOD'S teaching, who says thus,
  • "So let your light shine before men, that they seeing your good works
  • may glorify your Father Who is in heaven." And S. Gregory says: "Neither
  • is it greatly praiseworthy to be good with the good, but to be good with
  • the evil; for even as it is of more heinous guilt not to be good among
  • the good, so is it of unwearied honour to have stood for the good among
  • the evil."
  • Keep well thine eyes when thou art come to harbour, from all things that
  • may kindle sin and make thine eyes forward, as Job did, who said "I make
  • a covenant with mine eyes lest I should think upon a maid." After sight,
  • comes thought, and thereafter deed, and therefore said the prophet
  • Jeremiah, "Mine eye hath laid waste my soul." When so holy a prophet
  • lamented him of his eyesight, sorely may another complain who oft sins
  • therewith. Augustine: "Shameless eye is the messenger of shameless
  • heart." Gregory: "It is not lawful to look after that which it is not
  • lawful to desire." David: "Turn away mine eyes that they may not see
  • vanity." Look also that thou hearest nothing that may stir thee to sin,
  • as unclean words, backbiting, false judgments, great oaths, controversy,
  • striving and other such vices. Also at thy meat, bear thyself orderly,
  • and hold thee in measure, and seek after no dainties, but be pleased
  • with common meats. Consider in speaking, to whom, what, when, how, of
  • whom, and where: and have thyself so orderly that thou beest not like
  • other worldly men, but fulfil the Apostle's words; "Be not conformed to
  • this world, because your conversation is in heaven."
  • Though our body be in this world as a clot of earth, it is needful that
  • our spirit which was bought with the dear-worthy blood of GOD Almighty
  • be with mind and will in heaven, not soil itself here with sin, as swine
  • do in a ditch. And whatsoever thou doest, and wheresoever thou comest,
  • do as the Apostle teaches: "Shew thyself to all men as an example of
  • good works," for through a good example GOD is worshipped and praised,
  • men are helped and taught and strengthened in their belief. Bear thee so
  • that men who dwell with you may say of you as was said of the Apostles
  • Paul and Barnabas, "The gods are made like men, and have come down to
  • us." _DEO gracias._
  • FOOTNOTES:
  • [5] Rolle's free rendering of the Latin is added here from the _Thornton
  • MS._ It does not occur in the Arundel MS.
  • [6] The MS. is defective.
  • [7] On the 18th leaf of the MS. containing _Our Daily Work_ begins
  • Richard Rolle's _Meditations on the Passion_. A rendering of this is
  • given in Fr. R. H. Benson's _A Book of the Love of JESUS_.
  • [8] A meat-time between sunrise and noon, or between noon and sunset.
  • On Grace.
  • On Grace.
  • Three degrees of grace there are. The first GOD gives to all creatures,
  • to uphold them with; and this is called GOD'S help freely given to all
  • creatures; and without this gift of grace, creatures cannot do, nor last
  • in their kind; for as water is made hot through fire and becomes cold
  • again if the fire be withdrawn, so, as S. Austin says, "All creatures
  • that are made of naught, so are they worth naught in a little time,
  • unless GOD upholds them with His grace." Therefore says the Apostle
  • "Through the grace of GOD, I am what I am." As if he said, "That I live,
  • that I feel, that I speak or hear or see, and all that I am: all this I
  • have only through GOD'S grace." The second degree of grace is more
  • special: that GOD gives freely to every man who is a good and reasonable
  • creature: and this grace stands ever at the gates of our hearts, and
  • knocks on our free-will, and bids it let it in. This, GOD says that He
  • does: "Behold, I stand at the door knocking," that is, "I stand at the
  • door of thine heart and knock; let Me in." And this grace is given
  • freely to man before he deserves it. Then let every man make himself
  • worthy and ready to receive His gift of the Holy Ghost, Who ever stirs
  • man's free-will to good, and calls it from evil. Two things are needful
  • to the health of man's soul. The first is this grace that I speak of:
  • the second, is man's free-will according thereto. And without these two,
  • no man can do thoroughly what he ought, that should help him to health
  • of his soul; for neither free-will, without this grace stirring, nor
  • this grace without free-will assenting, can do aught that pleases GOD.
  • Therefore, says S. Austin, "He Who made thee without thee, will not
  • justify thee without thee"; that is, "He Who made thee without thee,
  • will not make thee righteous, save thou helpest thereunto." And though
  • the free-will of man cannot make the grace of GOD in man, nevertheless,
  • let man do what is in him, and prepare himself, that he may be ready and
  • able to receive the grace, when it comes. If thou wert in a mirk house
  • one day, and doors and windows shut: if thou wouldest not let the sun
  • come in, who was to blame if the house were mirk. Also blame none save
  • thyself, if thy grace be less. For S. Anselm says, "Man lacks not this
  • grace, for GOD gives it to him; but he has it not, because he does not
  • make himself ready to receive this grace as he should." GOD is not
  • stingy of His grace, for He has enough thereof; for though He deal it
  • out never so far, and to so many, He never has the less; for He only
  • wants clean vessels, to put His grace in. Therefore says S. Austin; "GOD
  • by vast freedom and abundance fills all creatures according to their
  • capacity": that is, "GOD through His great freedom of His great grace
  • fulfils all creatures according as they are able to receive His grace."
  • If man opened his heart to this grace when GOD sends it to him, he would
  • shew it in works; for the Apostle, when he had won it, said, "His grace
  • in me was not in vain," that is "the grace that GOD has given me, is not
  • useless in me"; for he enjoyed it ever in work. We unite with GOD in His
  • grace, as merchants do together: for GOD sets His grace against our
  • work; but for His grace and His death, He wills (to have) naught but our
  • praising and thanking, and He wills that man should have all the profit
  • that may arise thereof. But they try to reave from GOD, His part, who
  • would be praised of men for good deeds. Against them, GOD says, "I will
  • not give My glory to another"; that is, "Praising and worship that
  • belong to Me, I will give to no other." Thou shalt understand, that
  • free-will of man is to turn freely to good or ill. Three states there
  • are of man; before sin, after man's sin, and after man is confirmed,
  • that is, after man is departed out of this deadly life, and come to that
  • joy that shall never end. In the first place, before man sinned, was
  • man's will so free, that he could sin or not sin: in his free-will it
  • was, to do good or ill. In the last state, that is confirmed, shall man
  • sin no more. In the second state, in which he may sin, and may not but
  • sin, man's will is free to ill, till it be strengthened with grace: and
  • when grace leads the will, then it is free to work the good. Before man
  • sinned, no hindering had he from doing good, nor no need to do ill: but
  • now has sin joined with our flesh, and bred what S. Paul calls the "law
  • of the flesh," so that it is master of the flesh, and withstands GOD'S
  • law in all that it can. This hinders our will from assenting to good;
  • and stirs it to ill so that it may not work good, unless grace helps and
  • accustoms him away from sin. Every man before he sins, has a free will
  • to do good or ill, but when he is bound to the fiend, through works of
  • sin, he may through no power of himself come out of his bonds: and then
  • he fares like a ship that in a tempest has lost all that could help it,
  • and is cast from wave to wave whither the tempest drives it. Right so, a
  • man who lacks GOD'S grace, because he be fallen into deadly sin, he does
  • not what he would, but aye wavers from hand to hand, at the fiend's
  • will, and unless GOD give him grace to rise out of his sin, he shall be
  • in sin to his life's end, and after, be lost body and soul, and damned
  • to endless pain. If the folk or the common people choose them a king,
  • and he be confirmed in his kingdom, he be never so ill to them, they can
  • do naught to him, unless it be through some other, who has more power
  • than he: and so, it behoves them suffer, do he them never so much ill.
  • Right so, man before he sins, has a free will to choose whether he will
  • be under GOD or the fiend; and when, with his will, he chooses to serve
  • the fiend, he cannot after, when he would, come out of his bonds. And
  • therefore, worldly men who are bound in sin say to them who counsel them
  • to amend their lives, "fain would we rise, but we cannot." No, they
  • cannot through might of themselves, but through GOD'S grace helping them
  • they can. The third grace is most special; for it is given only to those
  • who receive the second grace; and with their free-will fulfil it in
  • deed, and can say as S. Paul said, "The grace of GOD was not in vain in
  • me." And S. Austin says; "GOD, working with us, fulfils that which He,
  • through grace stirring, began in us." For neither without His helping
  • can we do good to ourselves, nor please Him: as GOD says Himself
  • "without Me, thou canst no nothing." GOD'S grace stirring, goes before
  • good will, and stirs it to do the good and leave the ill.
  • Grace, when it comes first to visit man's soul, wakens him as out of a
  • slumbering and inquires of him with those sharp words: "Where art thou?
  • Whence comest thou? Whither shalt thou?" First he says, "Where art
  • thou?" as if he said, "Bethink thee, unhappy wretch, how foul thou art
  • cast down, and what peril thou art in. For, for thy sin thou art fallen
  • into the enemy's hands, who above all things dost covet to work thy woe;
  • and naught may deliver thee out of the foe's hands, but Almighty GOD,
  • thy good Lord, Whom thou hast forsaken." After he says: "Whence comest
  • thou?" as if he said, "thou wretch, behold how thou hast wasted thy life
  • in sin; thou comest from the fiend's tavern--Where are all the goods
  • that GOD has given thee to help thee with, and to worship Him? Sorrily
  • hast thou lost them. Thy Lord made thee rich, and thou art become a poor
  • wretch." After, he inquires, "Whither wendest thou?" "Woeful wretch thou
  • wendest to the woeful doom, that GOD dooms men to; for as thou hast
  • served so shalt thou be judged. So awful shalt thou see GOD there, that
  • thou shalt for fear be out of thy wits; and to the mountains and hills
  • thou shalt cry with a grisly noise, and pray them to fall on thee and
  • hide thee, that thou see Him not. Woeful wretch, thou wendest to hell,
  • if thou dost forth as thou hast begun, where thou shalt find fire so hot
  • and so raging, that all the water in the sea, though it ran through it,
  • should not slake a spark thereof. And because thou stinkest here to GOD,
  • for thy foul sin, there thou shalt feel everlasting stink: and because
  • thou lovedst mirkness here, for aye to be in sin, there shalt thou feel
  • such thick mirkness that thou canst grip it; and because here thou didst
  • rest thyself in sin against GOD'S will, there shalt thou shed more tears
  • than there are motes in a sunbeam. Thou shalt suffer pain ever after
  • pain, ever to renew thy woe."
  • When GOD'S grace has stirred man and wakened him with these three, and
  • has made him to know the peril he is in, then he conceives a terror of
  • GOD'S awful doom: and therethrough, he begins to repent whatever he did
  • ill, and covets to amend himself through GOD'S grace, that stirs him to
  • flee ill and give himself to good: and then comes grace following, to
  • help the goodwill of man to fulfil it in deed. For though man have a
  • good will to do the good, through grace before stirring the good will,
  • yet can he not do indeed without GOD'S grace following and helping: and
  • this the Apostle affirms of himself when he says; "But not I, but the
  • grace of GOD in me"; that is, "the good which I do is naught, but GOD'S
  • grace does it with me"; as if he had said, "I can do no good, unless
  • GOD'S grace help me." GOD'S will is also a handmaiden to grace, to work
  • all her will. GOD'S grace, wherever it be, will not be useless, but ever
  • working and growing more and more, to increase thy reward. Therefore do
  • we as the Apostle counsels us, "We exhort you, brethren, that ye receive
  • not the grace of GOD in vain"; that is, "I pray you and bid you, my
  • brothers in GOD, that ye receive not GOD'S grace in vain." He receives
  • GOD'S grace in vain, that enjoys it not in good, when GOD sends it to
  • him; and therefore perhaps, he shall never after win thereto. Isidore
  • tells of a little fly that is called _Saura_, and this fly betokens
  • grace stirring beforehand. This kind of fly is said to be the enemy of
  • all venomous worms, so that when he sees any worm (going) toward man to
  • sting him when he sleeps in the wilderness; he flies before to the man,
  • and lights upon his face, and bites him a little; and therethrough he
  • wakes before the beast comes to sting him. By this _Saura_ is understood
  • grace that GOD sends to man against the temptations of the fiend, who
  • often stings venomously: it cries unto thee, as the Apostle says;
  • "Awake, thou that sleepest, and rise from the dead, and Christ shall
  • give thee light." But the unthankful act against this grace, and ruin
  • it: as Virgil did with this little fly that saved him from death. He lay
  • asleep, and an adder came toward him: but this fly Saura flew before,
  • and lighted on his forehead, and pricked him a little, and therewith he
  • wakened; also the adder came; but this Virgil, in his waking, felt his
  • forehead smart, and smote himself on the face; and so he slew the fly,
  • and so repaid him for his service, who saved his life. Therefore do thou
  • not ruin GOD'S grace when it comes to thee, to warn thee of harm and
  • stir thee to good. Glad ought man to be of GOD'S grace, when GOD sends
  • it to him, and to take care full warily of so rich a gift: for grace is
  • earnest-money of that lasting joy which is to come, as the Apostle says:
  • "the grace of GOD is eternal life"; that is, "GOD'S grace is like a help
  • and way to everlasting life." Therefore, He sets grace before us as the
  • way that leads to everlasting joy: and also a pledge, if we keep it
  • well, to make in us certainty of endless joy; as the Apostle says, "Who
  • gave us His Spirit as a pledge in our bodies," that is "GOD has given us
  • the Holy Ghost as pledge of endless joy." Hold we then this heavenly
  • pledge; and enjoy we it well in work; for it is well for us in this
  • life, if GOD'S grace lead us; and when grace leaves us, we fail of that
  • welfare. Therefore, through help of grace let us destroy in ourselves
  • everything that is against grace, be it less or more, that our reason
  • says is against GOD'S will, that is, all that is sin, or may stir to
  • sin: and let us have repentance in our heart, shrift in mouth, and
  • withstanding, with will never to turn again.
  • An Epistle on Charity.
  • On Charity.
  • _By what tokens thou shalt know if thou lovest thine enemy:
  • and what example thou shalt take from Christ to love him_.
  • And if thou beest not stirred against the person by anger or fell
  • outward cheer, and have no privy hate in thine heart for to despise him,
  • or judge him, or for to set him at naught: and the more shame and
  • villany he does to thee in word or in deed, the more pity and compassion
  • thou hast of him as thou wouldest have of a man who was out of his mind,
  • and thou thinkest thou canst not find in thine heart to hate him, for
  • love is so good in itself, but prayest for him, and helpest him, and
  • desirest his amending, not only with thy mouth as hypocrites do, but
  • with thy affection of love in thine heart, then hast thou perfect
  • charity to thy fellow-Christian. This charity had S. Stephen, perfectly,
  • when he prayed for them who stoned him to death. This charity, Christ
  • counselled to all who would be His perfect followers, when He said thus:
  • "Love your enemies, do good to them that hate you, pray for those who
  • persecute and calumniate you." And therefore, if thou wilt follow
  • Christ, be like Him in power. Learn to love thine enemies, and sinful
  • men, for all those are thy fellow-Christians. Look and bethink thee how
  • Christ loved Judas, who was both His bodily enemy and a sinful caitiff:
  • how goodly Christ was to him; how benign; how courteous; how humble to
  • him whom He knew to be damnable; and nevertheless, He chose him for His
  • Apostle, and sent him to preach with the other Apostles; He gave him
  • power to work miracles: He shewed to him the same good cheer in word and
  • deed; also with His precious Body; and preached to him as He did to the
  • other Apostles: He condemned him not openly, nor abused, nor despised
  • him, nor ever spake evil of him: and yet even though He had done all
  • that, He would but have said the truth! And above all, when Judas took
  • Him, He kissed him and called him His friend. All this charity, Christ
  • shewed to Judas whom He knew to be damnable. In no manner of feigning or
  • flattering, but in soothfastness of good love and clean charity. For
  • though it were truth that Judas was unworthy to have any gift of GOD, or
  • any sign of love, because of his wickedness; nevertheless, it was worthy
  • and reasonable that our Lord should appear as He is.
  • He is love and goodness, and therefore it belongs to Him to shew love
  • and goodness to all His creatures, as He did to Judas. Follow after,
  • somewhat if thou canst; for though thou beest shut in a house with thy
  • body, nevertheless in thine heart, where the place of love is, thou
  • shalt be able to have part of such a love to thy fellow Christians as I
  • speak of. Whoso deems himself to be a perfect follower of JESUS Christ's
  • teaching and living, as some men deem that they be, inasmuch as one
  • teaches and preaches, and is poor in worldly goods as Christ was, and
  • cannot follow Christ in His love and charity, to love his
  • fellow-Christians, every man, good and ill, friends and foes, without
  • feigning, flattering, despising in heart, angriness and melancholious
  • reproving, soothly, he beguiles himself: the dearer he deems himself to
  • be, the further he is. For Christ said to those who would be His
  • followers, thus: "This is My commandment, that ye love mutually as I
  • have loved you."
  • "This is My bidding, that ye love together as I love you, for if ye love
  • as I loved, then are ye My disciples." He that is meek soothfastly, or
  • would be meek, can love his fellow-Christians: and none save he.
  • Contrition.
  • Richard Hermit rehearses a ... tale of perfect contrition that the same
  • clerk Cesarius tells. He tells that a scholar at Paris had done full
  • many sins of which he was ashamed to shrive him. At the last, great
  • sorrow of heart overcame his shame, and when he was ready to shrive him
  • to the Prior of the Abbey of S. Victor, so great contrition was in his
  • heart, sighing in his breast, sobbing in his throat that he could not
  • bring one word forth. Then the Prior said to him, "Go and write thy
  • sins." He did so and came again to the Prior, and gave him what he had
  • written, for still he could not shrive himself with his mouth. The Prior
  • saw the sins were so great, that with the scholar's leave, he shewed
  • them to the Abbot to have his counsel. The Abbot took the writing
  • wherein they were written, and looked thereon. He found nothing written,
  • and said to the Prior, "What can here be read where naught is written?"
  • Then saw the Prior and wondered greatly, and said "Wit ye that his sins
  • were here written, and I read them: but now I see that GOD has seen his
  • contrition and has forgiven him all his sins." This the Abbot and the
  • Prior told the scholar, and he, with great Joy, thanked GOD.
  • Scraps from the Arundel MS.
  • Sinful man look up and see, how
  • ruefully I hung on rood;
  • And of my penance have pity with sorrowful
  • heart and dreary mood:
  • All this, man, I suffered for thee: My flesh
  • was riven, all spilt My blood;
  • Lift up thine heart, call thou on Me, forsake
  • thy sin: have mercy, GOD.
  • * * * * *
  • Think oft with sore heart of thy foul sins,
  • Think oft of hell-woe, of heaven-kingdom's
  • wins;[9]
  • Think of thine own death, of GOD'S death
  • on rood,
  • The grim doom of Doom's-day have thou oft
  • in mood:
  • Think how false is this world, and what its
  • reward,
  • Think what, for His good death, thou owest
  • thy Lord.
  • RICHARD ROLLE.
  • FOOTNOTES:
  • [9] Wins = joys.
  • +--------------------------------------------------------------+
  • | Transcriber's Notes: |
  • | |
  • | Page 16: The speech that starts on this page with |
  • | "Thou wot'st...." has no closing quotes (_sic_) |
  • | Page 59: The speech that starts on this page with "For |
  • | not many...." has no closing quotes (_sic_) |
  • | Page 115: Closing quotes following "idle speech" removed. |
  • | Page 124: The speech that starts on this page with "Why |
  • | lieth this blood...." has no closing quotes (_sic_) |
  • | Page 141: Closing quote added after "... serve GOD |
  • | better." |
  • | Page 155: The speech that starts on this page with "to tell |
  • | thereof...." has no closing quotes (_sic_) |
  • | Page 177: Single closing quote following "wretch" amended |
  • | to double quotes |
  • | |
  • | Unless noted above, punctuation has been retained as it is |
  • | in the original book. Inconsistent spelling and hyphenation |
  • | has been retained. |
  • +--------------------------------------------------------------+
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