CHAPTER III CATHERINE FIESCA ADORNA’S LIFE, UP TO HER CONVERSION; AND THE CHIEF PECULIARITIES PREDOMINANT THROUGHOUT HER CONVERT YEARS
CHAPTER V CATHERINE’S LAST FOUR YEARS, 1506 TO 1510—SKETCH OF HER CHARACTER, DOCTRINE, AND SPIRIT
CHAPTER VII CATHERINE’S REMAINS AND CULTUS; THE FATE OF HER TWO PRIEST FRIENDS AND OF HER DOMESTICS; AND THE REMAINING HISTORY OF ETTORE VERNAZZA
APPENDIX TO PART II CHRONOLOGICAL ACCOUNT AND CRITICAL ANALYSIS OF THE MATERIALS FOR THE RE-CONSTITUTION OF SAINT CATHERINE’S LIFE AND TEACHING.
PREFACE
The
following work embodies well-nigh all that the writer has been able
to learn and to test, in the matter of religion, during now some
thirty years of adult life; and even the actual composition of the
book has occupied a large part of his time, for seven years and more.The
precise object of the book naturally grew in range, depth and
clearness, under the stress of the labour of its production. This
object will perhaps be best explained by means of a short description
of the undertaking’s origin and successive stages.Born
as I was in Italy, certain early impressions have never left me; a
vivid consciousness has been with me, almost from the first, of the
massively virile personalities, the spacious, trustful times of the
early, as yet truly Christian, Renaissance there, from Dante on to
the Florentine Platonists. And when, on growing up, I acquired strong
and definite religious convictions, it was that ampler
pre-Protestant, as yet neither Protestant nor anti-Protestant, but
deeply positive and Catholic, world, with its already
characteristically modern outlook and its hopeful and spontaneous
application of religion to the pressing problems of life and thought,
which helped to strengthen and sustain me, when depressed and hemmed
in by the types of devotion prevalent since then in Western
Christendom. For those early modern times presented me with men of
the same general instincts and outlook as my own, but environed by
the priceless boon and starting-point of a still undivided Western
Christendom; Protestantism, as such, continued to be felt as ever
more or less unjust and sectarian; and the specifically
post-Tridentine type of Catholicism, with its regimental Seminarism,
its predominantly controversial spirit, its suspiciousness and
timidity, persisted, however inevitable some of it may be, in its
failure to win my love. Hence I had to continue the seeking and the
finding elsewhere, yet ever well within the great Roman Church,
things more intrinsically lovable. The wish some day to portray one
of those large-souled pre-Protestant, post-Mediaeval Catholics, was
thus early and has been long at work within me.And
then came John Henry Newman’s influence with his
Dream of Gerontius,
and a deep attraction to St. Catherine of Genoa’s doctrine of the
soul’s self-chosen, intrinsic purification; and much lingering
about the scenes of Caterinetta’s life and labours, during more
than twenty stays in her terraced city that looks away so proudly to
the sea. Such a delicately psychological, soaring, yet sober-minded
Eschatology, with its striking penetration and unfolding of the
soul’s central life and alternatives as they are already here and
now, seemed to demand an ampler study than it had yet received, and
to require a vivid presentation of the noble, strikingly original
personality from whom it sprang.And
later still came the discovery of the apparently hopeless
complication of the records of Catherine’s life and doctrine, and
how these had never been seriously analyzed by any trained scholar,
since their constitution into a book in 1552. Much critical work at
Classical and Scriptural texts and documentary problems had, by now,
whetted my appetite to try whether I could not at last bring stately
order out of this bewildering chaos, by perhaps discovering the
authors, dates and intentions of the various texts and glosses thus
dovetailed and pieced together into a very Joseph’s coat of many
colours, and by showing the successive stages of this, most original
and difficult, Saint’s life and legend. All this labour would, in
any case, help to train my own mind; and it would, if even moderately
successful, offer one more detailed example of the laws that govern
such growths, and of the critical method necessary for the tracing
out of their operation.But
the strongest motive revealed itself, in its full force, later than
all those other motives, and ended by permeating them all. The wish
arose to utilize, as fully as possible, this long, close contact with
a soul of most rare spiritual depth,—a soul that presents, with an
extraordinary, provocative vividness, the greatness, helps, problems
and dangers of the mystical spirit. I now wanted to try and get down
to the driving forces of this kind of religion, and to discover in
what way such a keen sense of, and absorption in, the Infinite can
still find room for the Historical and Institutional elements of
Religion, and, at the same time, for that noble concentration upon
not directly religious contingent facts and happenings, and upon laws
of causation or of growth, which constitutes the scientific temper of
mind and its specific, irreplaceable duties and virtues. Thus, having
begun to write a biography of St. Catherine, with some philosophical
elucidations, I have finished by writing an essay on the philosophy
of Mysticism, illustrated by the life of Caterinetta Fiesca Adorna
and her friends.The
book’s chief peculiarities seem to spring inevitably from its
fundamental standpoint: hence their frank enumeration may help
towards the more ready comprehension of the work.The
book has, throughout, a treble interest and spirit;
historico-critical, philosophical, religious. The historico-critical
constituent may attract critical specialists; but will such
specialists care for the philosophy? The philosopher may be attracted
by the psychological and speculative sections; but will the
historical analysis interest him at all? And the soul that is seeking
spiritual food and stimulation, will it not readily be wearied by the
apparent pettiness of all that criticism, and by the seemingly cold
aloofness of all that speculation?—And yet it is the most certain
of facts that the human soul is so made as to be unable to part,
completely and finally, with any one of these three great interests.
Hence, I may surely hope that this trinity of levels of truth and of
life, which has so much helped on the growth of my own mind and the
constitution of my own character, may, in however different a manner
and degree, be found to help others also. This alternation and
interstimulation between those three forces and interests within the
same soul, and within this soul’s ever-deepening life, is, in any
case, too fundamental a feature of this whole outlook for any attempt
at its elimination here.Then
there is a look of repetition and of illogical anticipation about the
very structure of the book. For the philosophical First Part says, in
general, what the biographical Second Part says in detail; this
detail is, in reality, based upon the critical conclusions arrived at
in the Appendix, which follows the precise descriptions of the
biography; and then the Third, once more a philosophical, Part
returns, now fortified by the intervening close occupation with
concrete contingent matters, to the renewed consideration, and deeper
penetration and enforcement, of the general positions with which the
whole work began.—Yet is not this circular method simply a frank
application, to the problems in hand, of the process actually lived
through by us all in real life, wherever such life is truly fruitful?
For, in real life, we ever start with certain general
intellectual-emotive schemes and critical principles, as so many
draw-nets and receptacles for the capture and sorting out of reality
and of our experience of it. We next are brought, by choice or by
necessity, into close contact with a certain limited number of
concrete facts and experiences. And we then use these facts and
experiences to fill in, to confirm or to modify that, more or less
tentative and predominantly inherited, indeed ever largely
conventional, scheme with which we began our quest. In all these
cases of actual life, this apparently long and roundabout, indeed
back-before, process is, in reality, the short, because the only
fully sincere and humble, specifically human way in which to proceed.
The order so often followed in “learned” and “scientific”
books is, in spite of its appearance of greater logic and
conciseness, far longer; for the road thus covered has to be
travelled all over again, according to the circular method just
described, if we would gain, not wind and shadow, but substance and
spiritual food.Then
again, there is everywhere a strong insistence upon History as a
Science, yet as a Science possessing throughout a method, type and
aim quite special to itself and deeply different from those of
Physical Science; and an even greater stress upon the important,
indeed irreplaceable function of both these kinds of Science, or of
their equivalents, in the fullest spiritual life. Here the insistence
upon History, as a Science, is still unusual in England; and the
stress upon the spiritually purifying power of these Sciences will
still appear somewhat fantastic everywhere.—Yet that conception of
two branches of ordered human apprehension, research and knowledge,
each (in its delicate and clear contrastedness of method, test, end
and result) legitimate and inevitable, so that either of them is
ruined if forced into the categories of the other, has most certainly
come to stay. And the attempt to discover the precise function and
meaning of these several mental activities and of their ethical
pre-requisites, within the full and spiritual life of the soul, and
in view of this life’s consolidation and growth, will, I believe,
turn out to be of genuine religious utility. For I hope to show how
only one particular manner of conceiving and of practising those
scientific activities and this spiritual life and consolidation
allows, indeed requires, the religious passion,—the noblest and
deepest passion given to man,—to be itself enlisted on the side of
that other noble, indestructible thing, severe scientific sincerity.
This very sincerity would thus not empty or distract, but would, on
the contrary, purify and deepen the soul’s spirituality; and hence
this spirituality would continuously turn to that sincerity for help
in purifying and deepening the soul. And, surely, until we have
somehow attained to some such interaction, the soul must perforce
remain timid and weak; for without sincerity everywhere, we cannot
possibly develop to their fullest the passion for truth and
righteousness even in religion itself.And
then again a Catholic, one who would be a proudly devoted and
grateful son of the Roman Church, speaks and thinks throughout the
following pages. Yet it is his very Catholicism which makes him feel,
with a spontaneous and continuous keenness, that only if there are
fragments, earlier stages and glimpses of truth and goodness extant
wheresoever some little sincerity exists, can the Catholic Church
even conceivably be right. For though Christianity and Catholicism be
the culmination and fullest norm of all religion, yet to be such they
must find something thus to crown and measure: various degrees of, or
preparations for, their truth have existed long before they came, and
exist still, far and wide, now that they have come. Otherwise,
Marcion would have been right, when he denied that the Old Testament
proceeds from the same God as does the New; and three-fourths or more
of the human race would not, to this very moment, be bereft, without
fault of their own, of all knowledge of the Historic Christ and of
every opportunity for definite incorporation into the Christian
Church, since we dare not think that God has left this large majority
of His children without any and every glimpse and opportunity of
religious truth, moral goodness, and eternal hope. Yet such a
recognition of some light and love everywhere involves no trace of
levelling down, or even of levelling up; it is, in itself, without a
trace of Indifferentism. For if some kinds or degrees of light are
thus found everywhere, yet this light is held to vary immensely in
different times and places, from soul to soul, and from one religious
stage, group or body to another; the measure and culmination of this
light is found in the deepest Christian and Catholic light and
holiness; and, over and above the involuntary, sincere differences in
degree, stage and kind, there are held to exist, also more or less
everywhere, the differences caused by cowardice and opposition to the
light,—cowardices and oppositions which are as certainly at work
within the Christian and Catholic Church as they are amongst the most
barbarous of Polytheists. I may well have failed adequately to
combine these twin truths; yet only in some such, though more
adequate apprehension and combination resides the hope for the future
of our poor storm-tossed human race,—in a deep fervour without
fanaticism, and a generous sympathy without indifference.And
lastly, a lay lover of religion speaks throughout, a man to whom the
very suspicion that such subjects should or could, on that account,
be foreign to him has ever been impossible. A deep interest in
religion is evidently part of our very manhood, a thing previous to
the Church, and which the Church now comes to develop and to save.
Yet such an interest is, in the long run, impossible, if the heart
and will alone are allowed to be active in a matter so supremely
great and which claims the entire man. “Where my heart lies, let my
brain lie also”: man is not, however much we may try and behave as
though he were, a mere sum-total of so many separable water-tight
compartments; he can no more fruitfully delegate his brains and his
interest in the intellectual analysis and synthesis of religion, than
he can commission others to do his religious feeling and willing, his
spiritual growth and combat, for him.—But this does not of itself
imply an individualistic, hence one-sided, religion. For only in
close union with the accumulated and accumulating experiences,
analyses and syntheses of the human race in general, and with the
supreme life and teaching of the Christian and Catholic Church in
particular, will such growth in spiritual personality be possible on
any large and fruitful scale: since nowhere, and nowhere less than in
religion, does man achieve anything by himself alone, or for his own
exclusive use and profit.And
such a layman’s views, even when thus acquired and expressed with a
constant endeavour to be, and ever increasingly to become, a unit and
part and parcel of that larger, Christian and Catholic whole, will
ever remain, in themselves and in his valuation of them, unofficial,
and, at best, but so much material and stimulation for the kindly
criticism and discriminating attention of his fellow-creatures and
fellow-Christians and (should these views stand such informal,
preliminary tests) for the eventual utilization of the official
Church. To this officiality ever remains the exclusive right and duty
to formulate successively, for the Church’s successive periods,
according as these become ripe for such formulations, the corporate,
normative forms and expressions of the Church’s deepest
consciousness and mind. Yet this officiality cannot and does not
operate in vacuo,
or by a direct recourse to extra-human sources of information. It
sorts out, eliminates what is false and pernicious, or sanctions and
proclaims what is true and fruitful, and a development of her own
life, teaching and commission, in the volunteer, tentative and
preliminary work put forth by the Church’s unofficial members.And
just because both these movements are within, and necessary to, one
and the same complete Church, they can be and are different from each
other. Hence the following book would condemn itself to pompous
unreality were it to mimic official caution and emphasis, whilst ever
unable to achieve official authority. It prefers to aim at a layman’s
special virtues and function: complete candour, courage,
sensitiveness to the present and future, in their obscurer strivings
towards the good and true, as these have been in their substance
already tested in the past, and in so far as such strivings can be
forecasted by sympathy and hope. And I thus trust that the book may
turn out to be as truly Catholic in fact, as it has been Catholic in
intention; I have striven hard to furnish so continuous and copious a
stream of actions and teachings of Christian saints and sages as
everywhere to give the reader means of correcting or completing my
own inferences; and I sincerely submit these my own conclusions to
the test and judgment of my fellow-Christians and of the Catholic
Church.My
obligations to scholars, thinkers and great spiritual souls are far
too numerous and great for any exhaustive recognition. Yet there are
certain works and persons to whom I am especially indebted; and these
shall here be mentioned with most grateful thanks.In
my Biographical and Critical Part Second, I have had, in Genoa
itself, the help of various scholars and friends. Signor Dottore
Ridolfo de Andreis first made me realize the importance of
Vallebona’s booklet. Padre Giovanni Semeria, the Barnabite, put me
in touch with the right persons and documents. The Cavallière L. A.
Cervetto, of the Biblioteca Civica, referred me to many useful works.
The Librarian of the Biblioteca della Missione Urbana copied out for
me the inventory of St. Catherine’s effects. And Signor Dottore
Augusto Ferretto, of the Archivio di Stato, made admirably careful,
explicitated copies for me, from the originals, so full of difficult
abbreviations, of the long series of legal documents which are the
rock-bed on which my biography is built.The
courteous help of the Head Librarian of the Genoese University
Library extended to beyond Genoa. For it was owing to his action, in
conjunction with that of the Italian Ministry, of the English Embassy
in Rome, and of the British Museum Authorities, that the three most
important of the manuscripts of St. Catherine’s life were most
generously deposited for my use at the latter institution. I was thus
enabled to study my chief sources at full leisure in London.The
Rev. Padre Calvino, Canon Regular of the Lateran, made many kind
attempts to trace any possible compositions concerning St. Catherine
among the Venerable Battista Vernazza’s manuscripts, preserved by
the spiritual descendants of Battista’s Augustinian Canonesses in
Genoa; it was not his fault that nothing could be found.The
Society of Bollandists lent me, for a liberal length of time, various
rare books. I shall indeed be proud if my Appendix wins their
approbation, since it deals with subject-matters and methods in which
they are past-masters. Father Sticker’s pages on St. Catherine, in
their Acta Sanctorum
(1752), are certainly not satisfactory; they are, however, quite
untypical of the Bollandists’ best work, or even of their average
performances.My
obligations in my Psychological and Philosophical Parts First and
Third are still more numerous and far more difficult to trace. Indeed
it is precisely where these obligations are the most far-reaching
that I can least measure them, since the influence of the books and
persons concerned has become part of the texture of my own mind.But
among the great religious spirits or stimulating thinkers of
Classical and Patristic times, I am conscious of profound obligations
to Plato generally; to Aristotle on two points; to St. Paul; to
Plotinus; to Clement of Alexandria; and to St. Augustine. And the
Areopagite Literature has necessarily been continuously in my mind.
Among Mediaeval writers St. Thomas Aquinas has helped me greatly, in
ways both direct and indirect; Eckhart has, with the help of Father
H. S. Denifle’s investigations, furnished much food for reflection
by his most instructive doctrinal excesses; and the extraordinarily
deep and daring spirituality of Jacopone da Todi’s poetry has been
studied with the greatest care.The
Renaissance times have given me Cardinal Nicolas of Coes, whose great
Dialogue de Idiota
has helped me in various ways. And in the early post-Reformation
period I have carefully studied, and have been much influenced by,
that many-sided, shrewdly wise book, St. Teresa’s Autobiography.
Yet it is St. John of the Cross, that massively virile Contemplative,
who has most deeply influenced me throughout this work. St. Catherine
is, I think, more like him, in her ultimate spirit, than any other
Saint or spiritual writer known to me; she is certainly far more like
him than is St. Teresa.Later
on, I have learnt much from Fénelon’s Latin writings concerning
Pure Love, of 1710 and 1712; together with Abbé Gosselin’s
admirably lucid
Analyse de la Controverse du Quiétisme,
1820, and the Jesuit Father Deharbe’s solid and sober
die vollkommene Liebe Gottes,
1856.Among
modern philosophers I have been especially occupied with, and
variously stimulated or warned by, Spinoza, with his deep religious
intuition and aspiration, and his determinist system, so destructive
because taken by him as ultimate; Leibniz, with his admirably
continuous sense of the multiplicity in every living unity, of the
organic character, the
inside of
everything that fully exists, and of the depth and range of our
subconscious mental and emotional life; Kant, with his keen
criticisms and searching analyses, his profound ethical instincts,
and his curious want of the specifically religious sense and insight;
Schopenhauer, with his remarkable recognition of the truth and
greatness of the Ascetic element and ideal; Trendelenburg, with his
continuous requirement of an operative knowledge of the chief stages
which any principle or category has passed through in human history,
if we would judge this principle with any fruit; Kierkegaard, that
certainly one-sided, yet impressively tenacious re-discoverer and
proclaimer of the poignant sense of the Transcendent essential to all
deep religion, and especially to Christianity, religion’s flower
and crown; and Fechner, in his little-known book, so delightfully
convincing in its rich simplicity,
die drei Motive und Gründe des Glaubens,
1863.Of
quite recent or still living writers, two have been used by me on a
scale which would be unpardonable, had the matters treated by them
been the direct subjects of my book. In Part First whole pages of
mine are marked by me as little but a
précis of passages
in Dr. Eduard Zeller’s standard
Philosophy of the Greeks.
I have myself much studied Heracleitus, Parmenides, Plato and
Plotinus; and I have, also in the case of the other philosophers,
always followed up and tested such passages of Zeller as I have here
transcribed. But I did not, for by far the most part, think it worth
while, on these largely quite general and practically uncontested
matters, to construct fresh appreciations of my own, rather than to
reproduce, with due consideration and acknowledgments, the
conclusions of such an accepted authority. And already in Part First,
but especially in Part Third, I have utilized as largely, although
here with still more of personal knowledge and of careful
re-examination, considerable sections of Professor H. J. Holtzmann’s
Lehrbuch der Neutestamentlichen Theologie,
1897—sections which happen to be, upon the whole, the deepest and
most solid in that great but often daring work. The same Professor
Holtzmann is, besides, a most suggestive religious philosopher; and
his penetrating though very difficult book
Richard Rothe’s Speculatives System,
1899, has also been of considerable use.Other
recent or contemporary German writers to whom I owe much, are Erwin
Rhode, in his exquisite great book,
Psyche, 2nd ed.,
1898; Professor Johannes Volkelt, in his penetratingly critical
Kant’s Erkenntnisstheorie,
1879; Professor Hugo Münsterberg, in his largely planned although
too absolute
Grundzüge der Psychologie,
Vol. I., 1900; Professor Heinrich Rickert, in his admirably
discriminating
Grenzen der naturwissenschaftlichen Begriffsbildung,
1902; and also two friends whose keen care for religion never
flags—Professors Rudolf Eucken of Jena and Ernst Troeltsch of
Heidelberg. Eucken’s
Lebensanschauungen der grossen Denker,
1st ed., 1890; der
Kampf um einen geistigen Lebensinhalt,
1896; and the earlier sections of
der Wahrheitsgehalt der Religion,
1902, have greatly helped me. And Troeltsch’s
Grund-probleme der Ethik,
1902, has considerably influenced certain central conceptions of my
book, notwithstanding the involuntary, rough injustice manifested by
him, especially elsewhere, towards the Roman Church.Among
present-day French writers, my book owes most to Professor Maurice
Blondel’s, partly obscure yet intensely alive and religiously deep,
work L’Action,
1893; to Dr. Pierre Janet’s carefully first-hand observations, as
chronicled in his
Etat Mental des Hystériques,
1894; to Monsieur Emil Boutroux’s very suggestive paper
Psychologie du Mysticisme,
1902; to various pregnant articles of the Abbé L. Laberthonnière in
the Annales de
Philosophie Chrétienne,
1898-1906; and to M. Henri Bergson’s delicately penetrating
Essai sur les Données Immédiates de la Conscience,
2nd ed., 1898.And
amongst living Englishmen, the work is most indebted to Professor A.
S. Pringle-Pattison, especially to his eminently sane
Hegelianism and Personality,
2nd ed., 1893; to Professor James Ward, in his strenuous
Naturalism and Agnosticism,
1st ed., 1899; to the Reverend George Tyrrell’s
Hard Sayings, 1898,
and The Faith of the
Millions, 2 vols.,
1901, so full of insight into Mysticism; and, very especially, to Dr.
Edward Caird, in his admirably wide and balanced survey,
The Evolution of Theology in the Greek Philosophers,
1904.But
further back than all the living writers and friends lies the
stimulation and help of him who was later on to become Cardinal
Newman. It was he who first taught me to glory in my appurtenance to
the Catholic and Roman Church, and to conceive this my inheritance in
a large and historical manner, as a slow growth across the centuries,
with an innate affinity to, and eventual incorporation of, all the
good and true to be found mixed up with error and with evil in this
chequered, difficult but rich world and life in which this living
organism moves and expands. Yet the use to which all these helps have
here been put, has inevitably been my own doing: nowhere except in
direct quotations have I simply copied, and nowhere are these helpers
responsible for what here appears.And
then there have been great souls, whom I cannot well name here, but
whom I would nevertheless refer to in reverent gratitude; souls that
have taught me that deepest of facts and of lessons,—the
persistence, across the centuries, within the wide range of the
visible and indeed also of the invisible Church, of that vivid sense
of the finite and the Infinite, of that spacious joy and expansive
freedom in self-donation to God, the prevenient, all-encompassing
Spirit, of that massively spontaneous, elemental religion, of which
Catherine is so noble an example. Thus a world-renouncing,
world-conquering, virile piety, humble and daring, humane, tender and
creatively strong, is at no time simply dead, but it merely sleepeth;
indeed it ever can be found, alive, open-eyed irresistible, hidden
away here and there, throughout our earthly space and time.In
matters directly connected with the publication of the work I have
especially to thank Messrs. Sciutto of Genoa, the photographers to
whom I owe the very successful photographs from which the plates that
stand at the head of my volumes have been taken; Mr. Sidney E. Mayle,
publisher, of Hampstead, for permission to use the photogravure of
St. Catherine’s portrait which appeared as an illustration to a
paper of mine, in his scholarly
Hampstead Annual,
1898; Miss Maude Petre, who helped me much towards achieving greater
lucidity of style, by carefully reading and criticizing all my
proofs; and my publisher, who has not shrunk from undertaking the
publication of so long a work on so very serious, abstruse-seeming a
subject. Even so, I have had to suppress the notes to my chapter on
“Catherine’s Teaching,” which throughout showed the critical
reasons that had determined my choice of the particular sayings, and
the particular text of the sayings, adopted by me in the text; and
have had to excise quite a third of my Appendix, which furnished the
analysis of further, critically instructive texts of the
Vita e Dottrina,
the Dicchiarazione
and the Dialogo.
If a new edition is ever called for, this further material might be
added, and would greatly increase the cogency of my argument.The
work that now at last I thus submit to the reader, is doubtless full
of defects; and I shall welcome any thoughtful criticism of any of
its parts as a true kindness. Yet I would point out that all these
parts aim at being but so many constituents of a whole, within which
alone they gain their true significance and worth. Hence only by one
who has studied and pondered the book as a whole, will any of its
parts be criticized with fairness to that part’s intention. To gain
even but a dozen of such readers would amply repay the labour of
these many years.I
take it that the most original parts are Chapter Eight, with its
analysis of Battista Vernazza’s interesting Diary; the Appendix,
with its attempts at fixing the successive authors and intentions
that have built up the
Vita e Dottrina;
Chapter Nine, which attempts to assign to psycho-physical matters, as
we now know them, their precise place and function within the vast
life-system, and according to the practical tests, of the great
Mystical Saints; and Chapter Fifteen, with its endeavour to picture
that large Asceticism which alone can effect, within the same soul, a
fruitful co-habitation of, and interaction between, Social Religion,
the Scientific Habit of Mind, and the Mystical Element of Religion.Kirkegaard
used to claim that he ever wrote
existentially,
pricked on by the exigencies of actual life, to attempt their
expression in terms of that life, and in view of its further
spiritual development. More than ever the spiritual life appears now
as supremely worth the having, and yet it seems to raise, or to find,
the most formidable difficulties or even deadlocks. I can but hope
that these pages may have so largely sprung from the exigencies of
that life itself,—that they may have caught so much of the spirit
of the chief livers of the spiritual life, especially of St.
Catherine of Genoa and of St. John of the Cross, and, above all, of
the One Master and Measure of Christianity and of the Church,—as to
stimulate such life, its practice, love and study, in their readers,
and may point them, spur them on, through and beyond all that here
has been attempted, missed or obscured, to fuller religious insight,
force and fruitfulness.
“Grant
unto men, O God, to perceive in little things the indications,
common-seeming though they be, of things both small and great.”St.
Augustine,
Confessions, Bk.
XI, ch. xxiii, 1.
“He
is not far from every one of us; for in Him we live, and move, and
have our being.”—Acts xvii, 27, 28.
“Where
the Spirit of the Lord is, there is liberty.”—2 Corinthians iii,
17.