Life of St Teresa of Jesus - Teresa of Avila (classic books for 11 year olds TXT) 📗
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had written it, when your reverence sent for it. Some things in
it may not be very clearly explained, and there may be some
repetitions; for the time I could give to it was so short, that I
could not stop to see what I was writing. I entreat your
reverence to correct it and have it copied, if it is to be sent
on to the Father-Master, Avila, [18] for perhaps some one may
recognise the handwriting. I wish very much you would order it
so that he might see it, for I began to write it with a view to
that I shall be greatly comforted if he shall think that I am on
a safe road, now that, so far as it concerns me, there is nothing
more to be done.
Your reverence will do in all things that which to you shall seem
good, and you will look upon yourself as under an obligation to
take care of one who trusts her soul to your keeping. I will
pray for the soul of your reverence to our Lord, so long as I
live. You will, therefore, be diligent in His service, in order
that you may be able to help me; for your reverence will see by
what I have written how profitable it is to give oneself, as your
reverence has begun to do, wholly unto Him who gives Himself to
us so utterly without measure.
Blessed be His Majesty for ever! I hope of His mercy we shall
see one another one day, when we, your reverence and myself,
shall see more clearly the great mercies He has shown us, and
when we shall praise Him for ever and ever. Amen. This book was
finished in June, 1562.
“This date refers to the first account which the holy Mother
Teresa of Jesus wrote of her life; it was not then divided into
chapters. Afterwards she made this copy, and inserted in it many
things which had taken place subsequent to this date, such as the
foundation of the monastery of St. Joseph of Avila, as in
169. [19]—Fray Do Bañes.”
1. Ch. xxxii. § 1.
2. Ch. xxviii. § 14.
3. St. Matt. v. 18: “Iota unum aut unus apex non præteribit
a lege.”
4. Ch. iv. § 10.
5. “Ecce quantum spatiatus sum in memoria mea quærens Te, Domine;
et non Te inveni extra eam. . . . Ex quo didici Te, manes in
memoria mea, et illic Te invenio cum reminiscor Tui et delector
in Te” (Confess. x. 24). See Inner Fortress, Sixth Mansion,
ch. iv.
6. Ch. xx. § 26.
7. Ch. xxv. § 18, ch. xxvi. § 4. See St. John of the Cross,
Mount Carmel, bk. ii. ch. xxii.
8. § 8.
9. Yepez says that the Order here spoken of is the Carmelite, and
Ribera understands the Saint to refer to that of St. Dominic.
The Bollandists, n. 1638-1646, on the whole, prefer the authority
of Ribera to that of Yepez and give good reasons for their
preference, setting aside as insufficient the testimony of Fray
Luis of the Assumption, who says he heard himself from the
Venerable Anne of St. Bartholomew that the Order in question is
the Order of our Lady of Mount Carmel. Don Vicente, the Spanish
editor, rejects the opinion of Ribera, on the ground that it
could not have been truly said of the Dominicans in the sixteenth
century that the Order was in “some degree fallen,” for it was in
a most flourishing state. He therefore was inclined to believe
that the Saint referred to the Augustinians or to the
Franciscans. But, after he had printed this part of his book, he
discovered among the MSS. in the public library of Madrid a
letter of Anne of St. Bartholomew, addressed to Fray Luis of the
Assumption, in which the saintly companion of St. Teresa says
that the “Order was ours.” Don Vicente has published the letter
in the Appendix, p. 566.
10. Job xiv. 2: “Nunquam in eodem statu permanet.”
11. See ch. xxxvii. §§ 4, 6.
12. See ch. vii. § 18.
13. Ch. xxx. § 10.
14. Ch. xxxi. §§ 16, 17.
15. Ch. xxviii. § 6.
16. See ch. xiv. § 12.
17. This letter, which seems to have accompanied the “Life,” is
printed among the other letters of the Saint, and is addressed to
her confessor, the Dominican friar, Pedro Ibañez. It is the
fifteenth letter in the first volume of the edition of Madrid;
but it is not dated there.
18. Juan de Avila, commonly called the Apostle of Andalusia.
19. I.e. of the MS. See p. 337 [Transcriber’s note:
ch. xxxvi. § 15] of this translation.
The
Relations or Manifestations
of Her
Spiritual State
Which
St. Teresa Submitted to Her Confessors.
The Relations.
Relation 1.
Sent to St. Peter of Alcantara in 1560 from the Monastery of the
Incarnation, Avila. [1]
1. The method of prayer I observe at present is this: when I am
in prayer, it is very rarely that I can use the understanding,
because the soul becomes at once recollected, remains in repose,
or falls into a trance, so that I cannot in any way have the use
of the faculties and the senses,—so much so, that the hearing
alone is left; but then it does not help me to
understand anything.
2. It often happens, when I am not even thinking of the things of
God, but engaged in other matters, and when prayer seems to be
beyond my power, whatever efforts I might make, because of the
great aridity I am in, bodily pains contributing thereto, that
this recollection or elevation of spirit comes upon me so
suddenly that I cannot withstand it, and the fruits and blessings
it brings with it are in a moment mine: and this, without my
having had a vision, or heard anything, or knowing where I am,
except that when the soul seems to be lost I see it make great
progress, which I could not have made if I had laboured for a
whole year, so great is my gain.
3. At other times certain excessive impetuosities occur,
accompanied with a certain fainting away of the soul for God, so
that I have no control over myself; [2] my life seems to have
come to an end, and so it makes me cry out and call upon God; and
this comes upon me with great vehemence. Sometimes I cannot
remain sitting, so great is the oppression of the heart; and this
pain comes on without my doing anything to cause it, and the
nature of it is such that my soul would be glad never to be
without it while I live. And the longings I have are longings
not to live; and they come on because it seems as if I must live
on without being able to find any relief, for relief comes from
the vision of God, which comes by death, and death is what I
cannot take; and with all this my soul thinks that all except
itself are filled with consolations, and that all find help in
their troubles, but not itself. The distress thus occasioned is
so intense that, if our Lord did not relieve it by throwing it
into a trance, whereby all is made calm, and the soul rests in
great quiet and is satisfied, now by seeing something of that
which it desires, now by hearing other things, it would seem to
be impossible for it to be delivered from this pain.
4. At other times there come upon me certain desires to serve
God, with a vehemence so great that I cannot describe it, and
accompanied with a certain pain at seeing how unprofitable I am.
It seems to me then that there is nothing in the world, neither
death, nor martyrdom, that I could not easily endure.
This conviction, too, is not the result of any reflection, but
comes in a moment. I am wholly changed, and I know not whence
cometh such great courage. I think I should live to raise my
voice, and publish to all the world how important it is for men
not to be satisfied with the common way, and how great the good
is that God will give us if we prepare ourselves to receive it.
I say it again, these desires are such that I am melted away in
myself, for I seem to desire what I cannot have. The body seems
to me to hold me in prison, through its inability to serve God
and my state [3] in anything; for if it were not for the body, I
might do very great things, so far as my strength would allow;
and thus, because I see myself without any power whatever to
serve God, I feel this pain in a way wholly indescribable; the
issue is delight, recollection, and the consolation of God.
5. Again, it has happened, when these longings to serve Him come
upon me, that I wish to do penance, but I am not able. It would
be a great relief to me, and it does relieve and cheer me, though
what I do is almost nothing, because of my bodily weakness; and
yet, if I were to give way to these my longings, I believe I
should observe no moderation.
6. Sometimes, if I have to speak to any one, I am greatly
distressed, and I suffer so much that it makes me weep
abundantly; for my whole desire is to be alone, and solitude
comforts me, though at times I neither pray nor read, and
conversation—particularly of kindred and connections—seems
oppressive, and myself to be as a slave, except when I speak to
those whose conversation is of prayer and matters of the
soul,—in these I find comfort and joy; [4] yet these
occasionally are too much for me, and I would rather not see
them, but go where I might be alone: though this is not often the
case, for those especially who direct my conscience always
console me.
7. At other times it gives me much pain that I must eat and
sleep, and that I see I cannot forego these things, being less
able to do so than any one. I submit that I may serve God, and
thus I offer up those actions to him. Time seems to me too
short, and that I have not enough for my prayer, for I should
never be tired of being alone. I am always wishing I had time
for reading, for I have been always fond of reading. I read very
little, for when I take up a book I become recollected through
the pleasure it gives me, and thus my reading is turned into
prayer: and it is but rarely, for I have many occupations; and
though they are good, they do not give me the pleasure which
reading would give. And thus I am always wishing for more time,
and everything becomes disagreeable, so I believe, because I see
I cannot do what I wish and desire.
8. All these desires, with an increase in virtue, have been given
me by our Lord since He raised me to this prayer of quiet, and
sent these raptures. I find myself so improved that I look on
myself as being a mass of perdition before this. These raptures
and visions leave me in possession of the blessings I shall now
speak of; and I maintain that, if there be any good in me, they
are the occasions of it.
9. I have made a very strong resolution never to offend God, not
even venially. I would rather die
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