written by me which I read when I cannot for some indisposition in body or mind otherwise think vpon thee and when I am ouerwhelmed in any misery it becometh most tolerable by hauing thus conference with thee who neuer disdainest me for which all Glory be giuen to thee who art my Lord and my God blessed for all eternity Amen Alleluia THE XI CONFESSION O My Lord to whom I will speak and before whom my hart shall not be silent while thus it stands with me least the heauy weight of sinnes and my disordered passions do oppresse my soul and seperate it from thee the only desire and beloued of my hart It behooueth me indeed to be silent and that all created things be likwise silent to me to the end â may hear the sweet whispering of thy voiââ and attend in most quiet repose of soul to thy Diuine Maiesty speaking to my hart But this must be when my soul is drawn and sweetly attracted by thee to attend to what it shall please thee to work in me But now in these my sinnes which passions and inordinat affections caus in me My soul doth cry out in the bottom thereof and call vpon thee who art my refuge helper and deliuerer in all these my afflictions and miseries and this my prayer is not reiected by thee becaus thou art a bottome less Sea of mercy O when shall my soul see all impediments remoued that it may be vnited to thee and retorn to thee from whom it had her being to this end that it might by pure Loue become capable of enioying thee for all eternity What are all things to me without thee Verily nothing but a shadow neither can any of them no nor all of them together satisfy or comfort me By Louing Pleasing and Praising thee as thou wouldst haue me shall I become truly content and happy and by no gifts or graces or fauours besids how great soeuer they be Return retârn my soul to him that only can satiat thee and without whom all things as thou seest are most bitter and vnpleasing to thee Only by Humility and Obedience can this be accomplished in thee Humble despise and subiect thy self in all without exceptions that he may take pitty on thee Indeed my Lord I desire thus to become for thee For I may truly say I was brought to nothing and I knew it not and I am as a beast before thee and yet allso I may say that I am allways with thee and thou with me by thy preuenting mercy It is a poore way âo think to become honourable by standing vpon our points and yet this is that which now is most in practise in these dayes O how far is this from the practise of thy Saints and seruants who thought it their greatest honour to be despised neglected reuiled and contemned by all this world to the end they might become honourable in thy eyes my Lord who hath said that blessed are we when we are spoken ill of by men and persecuted by them Giue me this true humility I beseech thee which maketh soules capable of receauing this thy blessing promised to the humbleâ and those which serue thee for Loue whose ioy thou thy self art and who follow thee by the way of the Crosse which seemeth indeed contemptible in their eyes who do not discern nor discouer the hidden treasure that lyeth in the confusion receaued and embraced with the armes of Loue by a faithfull soul who seeketh nothing but to imitate her beloued who died the ignominious death of the Crosse to purchace her loue and to make her of an enemy to become an intimate and inward friend of this our heauenly Bride-groome This pouerty and contempt I say which thy little ones do vndergo in this life my Lord God seemeth to the louers of this world to be an intolerable burthen but those that truly walk this way of Humility do find that in it lyeth the greatest comfort and sweetnes that can be found and enioyed in this world For thou bearest thy-self the burthen of the humble and what toucheth them toucheâh the apple of thyne eye Nothing dost thou think to deare for them seeing all thy gifts graces fauours and comforts which thy goodnes imparteth to them they vse only to thy praise and to the abasing of themselues vnder the feet of all thy creatures as most vnworthy of this thy mercy of all of them O what power hath an humble soul with thee while she becometh totally subiect to thee euen as if no power of willing or choosing were giuen her by thee which while she doth well it goes with her before thee and great is the liberty of such an one while she only desireth and seeketh thee For in doing so we do become capable in an extraordinary maner of enioying thee who though thou art not to be seene in this life as thou art yet an humble soul is not ignorant of thee For her faith is wonderfully cleered and great is the knowledg of a soul which by loue obtaineth the heauenly wisedome of thee which thou hast hidden from the wise and prudent of the world and reuealed it to thy little ones who sigh and long without ceasing to become vnited to thy Diuine Maiesty that thy Praise may be perfected in them to thy eternall Glory O how frequently and confidently do these soules fly vnto thee and how often are they euen amazed to see thy infinit sweetnes and most amiable beawty Nothing is so present to them as is this their Lord God yea my God such a knowledg of thee doth Loue caus in an humble soul that it maketh her for a tyme neither to see feele yea nor to think of any thing besides thee but this in this vale of teares is not of long continuance and hath many interruptions by âeason of the strife between our spirit and our three enemies the world the flesh and the diuel but yet thy grace is in all occasions neere to our soul and nothing shall blemish the purity thereof if we humbly adhere vnto thee and wholy mistrust our own forces as we well may and be confident in thee who art so mercifull and pittifull to those who presume not to haue any strength but thee This humble loue is able to go through all difficulties and to bear all burthens and to sustain all paines and disgraces becaus it seeketh only thee for her wittnes who art her glory her honour and her crown most neer and deare to her yea euen more present then she is to herself and more hers then she is her own and consequently being wholy forgetfull of herself she only seeketh and intendeth thy praise and glory my Lord God the peace of her hart and the comfort of her soul. It seemeth to a soul at first that by denying forsaking neglecting and despising herself she shall vndergo a most grieuous Martyrdom but by approaching to thee my God and conuersing with thee in a
this was not the practise of Saints who yet sound often great opposition and mortification by meanes of Supeâiors which they bearing patiently and obeying stil out of an internalâegard âegard of thee in their souls al turned to their greater aduancement in âhy loue and their Superiors at last ây thy help concurred to that which âhey desired so far as it was thy wil who hast disposed of al things in order and iustice and nothing can be wel done but that we do out of an internal light from thee and out of obedience to thee to whom obedience is due in al things whatsoeuer Thou hast set an order in al things and euery thing as it is ordained by thee wil concur to a most heauenly harmony but corrupting thy meaning al things are out of order and peace on al sides is disturbed O how happy are they whose souls are in a right way to hear and follow thy wil and who do nothing without consulting with thee in their soul giuing that to God which is only Gods own and to Caesar that which is due to Caesar for God for both these obediences are necessary to make a true spiritual life For in vaine do we giue to thee if we deny Obedience to them who are set ouer vs by thee and also in vaine is it to please and haue the fauour of our Superiors if we internally neglecâ to haue in al things relation to thee from both these errors deliuer me I beseech thee that my soul may be a peaceful habitation for thee Let me humbly behaue my-self towards al and let me not measure my case before thee by the opinion my Superiors and Sisters haue of me for they may applaud me and yet it may stand il with me before thee and they may take al in another worser sense then thou knowst I meant it and that iustly and yet it may go wel between thy goodnes and me through thy abound Mercy THE XLIV CONFESSION O How happy are those souls who loue nothing but thee Verily there is so little stability in al things but in thee that it is a strange thing that we should liue so miserable liues thou offering vs a most peaceful and quiet life if we would but seek thee alone who art more present to vs then we are to our selues and by thee our soul doth liue more then our body doth by our soul Those that posses thee haue al things and those who want thee if they had al the world can afford do yet indeed posses nothing If we desire to loue where our loue may not be lost what shall we loue but thee whâ hast said Sicut dilexit me Pater ego dilexi vos As my Father loued me so haue I loued you Do we not therefor wel deserue to liue in al perplexity and misery if we do not leaue to loue al other things to set our whole loues vpon thee âho hast made vs such sweet promises yea let vs hear what thou dost further add Qui maneâ in me ego in eo hic fert fructum multum Who remaineth in me and I in him bringeth forth much frâict O let me be remain in thee and then let al the world be against me I desir not my God by any particular fauours in this life to be more certain of thee But I do beg of thee that by true Humility Obedience and Patience I may be more confirmed in thee by true loue only in simple faith in al desolations crosses pains disgraces miseries adhering to thee the only desire of my soul and not resting in any gift or grace of thine whatsoeuer that I may at last for thy oân sake find fauour in the eyes of thy Diuine Maiesty notwirhstanding my sins and ignorances in which I haue hetherto liued for whieh thy mercy oâ forgiuing them me be thou for euer blessed and praised by al thy creatures Amen Amen THE XLV CONFESSION O Lord my God to whom vpon al occasions I most vnworthy with thy leaue presume to speak and ask questions in my simple maner Open the eyes of my soul that I may know and vnderstand thy Wil and Law and Grace to perform them to thine honour Thou my God who art more mine then I am mine own do not reiect me speaking and writing to thee For what do I desir or wish but thee Or what are al things to me without thee Surely nothing For thou hast shewed me through thy sweet mercyâ and grace without any desert of mine own that al things are vanity but to loue and please thee which I beseech thee that I may do with al the forces of my hart and soul. For truly there is no true peace or comfort out of thee Let me therefor know my-self and know thee that in al I may praise and please thee Amen THE XLVI CONFESSION LORD it is read to day of thee that Saint Mary Magdalen approaching to kis thy feet it would not be admitted her by thee If it may please thee I wil humbly aske of thee the meaning of this For I am somewhat amazed at it For when she came to thy feet loaden with many and greiuous sins thou admittedââ her most easily and when she had a long time been trained vp in thy happy school of Perfection and had accompanied thee in thy Passion and mourned for thee at thy tomb taking no rest til thou her beloued returned to her again and besids she offered to haue taken thee away from al the world if they would haue but told her where they had laid thee and yet dost thou now deny her to touch and kis thy blessed feet What shal we think she loued thee less now then when she first desired to loue thee Or shal we think that as her loue grew more and more to thee thine grew less and less to her No God forbid I should euer admit of such a thought But O my Lord thou being âisedom it-self intendedst to bring this great and ardent louer to a loue more spiritual then that with which she loued thee when tâou conuersedst with her before thy death and Passion For it is thy custom with great mildnes to receaue sinners and when they grow more strong in loue thou seemest to treat them with more seuerity that they at first may hope in thee and go forward in thy loue and seruice and that after being a litle strengthned with light and comfort from thee thou mayst try them many ways least they should attribut that which they haue done to their own forces and that fauour which they haue receaed to their own labours and deserts which thou knowst we are very apt to do if thou didst not through permitting vs to fal into temptation shew vs our own frailty But this blessed Saint whose intercession I most humbly implore for thy sake whom now none can depriue her of did not think that by denying her to touch tây feet she receaued wrong
of my death obtain for me wretched sinner confidence in his Mercies which are as thou knowst aboue al his works I am not worthy to loue but he is worthy of al loue and Adoration I cannot without great ioy remember these following words of the Prophet I saie hoping his Goodnes wil for his own sake giue me leaue to apply them to me poor and sinful soul though I desetuâ nothing of my-self neuer hauing done him any faithful seruice in al my life Chap 43. v. 1. And now thus saith our Lord that created thee and formed thee Feare not because I haue redeemed thee and called thee by thy name Thou art mine 2. When thou shalt passe through the waters I wil be with thee and the flouds shal not couer thee when thou shalt walke in fire thou shalt not be âuâned and the flame shal not âurn inâ thee O blessed Saint make intercession for me that I may be confident in him who thus aboundeth with Mercy Amen 3. Because I am the Lord thy God the Holy one of Israel thy Sauiour 4. Since thou becamest honourable in mine eyes and glorious I haue loued thee 5. Feare not becaus I am with thee 6. And euery one that inuocateth my name for my glory I haue created him formed him and made him 8. Bring forth the blind people and hauing eyes the deaf and he that âath eares 9. Let them giue their witnes be iustified 10. In very deed you are my witnes saith our Lord and my seruants whom I haue chosen that you may know and beleeve me and vnderstand that I my self am 11. I am I am the Lord and there is no Sauiour beside me and there is not that can deliuer out of my hand 16. Thou saith our Lord that gaue away in the Sea and a paâh in the vâhâmenâ waters 18. Remember not former things and looke not on things of old I am he that takes cleane away thine iniquities for mine own sake and I wil not remember thy sins 26. Bring me into remembrance and let vs be iudged together Tel me if thou âaue any thing that maiest be iustified Hethertho the words of the Prophet I saie S. Iohn 2. v. 12. I writ to you litle children becaus your sins are forgiuen you for his name And now my children abid in him that when he shal appeare we may haue confidence and not be confounded of him in his coming My dearest beleeue not euery spirit and euery spirit that dissolueth Iesus is not of God Feare is not Charity but perfect Charity casteth out feare Let vs therefore loue God becaus God loued vs. This is the Charity of God that we keep his Commandments and his Commandments are not beauty O infinit Goodnes who art Charity it-self powre thy Grace aboundantly into my poor foul I inuoke thee my God by the merits and intercession of al thy Saints in Heauen and seruants on earth to haue mercy on me now in this my last extreamity Al I desire is that in life and death I may be disposed of according to the multitude of tây most aboundant Mercies a fountain neuer drawn dryâ Al my ioy is in that thou art my God and that I am at thy disposing Though I am poor in al vertnes yet I am confident to be partaker of thy Merits ó sweet Iesus which thou liberally bestowest according to thy wil and pleasure O be thou blessed in al thou disposest O my God who art al I desire Into thy hands I commend my spirit who art blessed for euer Amen The most learned of D. S. Augustin saith Aiâ eruditissimus Doctorum Augustinus O eternal Truth and true Charity and O aeterna veritas vera Charitas Deare Eternity Thou art my God to thee chara Eteruitas Tu es Deus meus I suspire day and night This is that subliue Tibi suspiro die ac nocte Hic est sublimis ille Contemplatiue Augustine Contemplator Augustinus Cuius cor Charitas Christi vulneraueraâ whose hart the Charity of Christ had wounded O my deare Saânt whose great Humility I can neuer to much praise and admire pray for her to whom thou hast been in her greatest afflictions and miâeries euen as a Father and Mother for which be exhibited honouur to thee by the most sweet hart of IESVS our Sauior the Son of the liuing God by which and from which doth most aboundant sweetnes flow to al the elect In the power that he gaue thee being one by whom he bound and loosed sinners giue an aboundant benediction to thy poore seruant and beg of my God that I may neuer seek or intend any thing for time or eternity but his honour and Glory and that I may so humble and subiect myself vnder his mighty hand thaâ for his loue I may willângly submit my-self in what maner he pleases to al creatures Let me commit and commend my-self to thy protection who art a careful receauer of al my petitions and who art one who in a most particular maner Godâ hath giuen me confidence in in al âhe necessities wherein my soul doth stand need of an Aduocat and friend O happy change to leaue al friends on earth to find the more certaiu assured friends and Intercessors in Heauen who are neuer absent neuer vncertain nor euer do they fail as those in this world are subiect to do Be therefor mindful of me I beseech thee in my life also in my last extremity and remember that when affrighted with the multitude and greiuoushes of my sinnes and imperfections I durst scarsely cast vp mine eyes to Heauen or cal vpon God and his Blessed Mother who might iustly disdain so vngrateful and contemptible a creature Yet by thy meanes and being incouradged by thy example and reading thy life and books so ful of Conâidence and sweetnesâ I found my hart lightned and my spiâit refreshed and my soul exceedingly comforted finding in thee and by thee expressed what a good God we haue and that as his Mercies are aboue al his works so he is able to forgiue more then we can offend Thou knowest thy very name when I am sad and afflicted doth refresh me to behold it and seemeth to smile vpon me in my miseries assuring me of âhy helpe in al my soul standeth need of thee in this my pilgrimage and ban shment from my God who is my only loue life desire and al my happines Tâ whom for euer be al Glory Honour anâ Adoâation by al as wel on earth as in Heaâenâ and whom by his sweet Mercy and thy intercession I desire and hope to loue and sârue for euer and euer Amen Omnes qui habebant infirâos ducebant illes ad Iesum sanabaââur Al that had diseased brought thâm to Iesus and they were curedâ To whom therefor should I fly in my manifold infirmities but to thee my Iesus my Goâ and my Sauiour Who is worthy oâ our loues our thoughts our harts and our souls but
Religious of the English Conuent of Cambray of the holy Order of Sâ Bennet pious fspring of that Noble and Glorious Martyr sir Thomas More Chancellor of England contayning nothing but a true practise of that diuine Booke of the Imitation of Christ restored of late to the true Author Iohn Gerson Venerable Abbot of the same Order approoued by al for the mirrour of Christian and Religious perfection needs no Approbation but a serious recommendation to al such as desire a true pattern to attain to the perfect loue of God by affectiue prayer and practise thereof Sic censeo ego Parisiis 1. Aprilis 1658. Fr. VVALGRAVIVS Doct. Theol. Monachus Prior Benedictinus CONFESSIONES AMANTIS THE CONFESSIONS OF A louingâ pious soule to allmighty God THE FIRST CONFESSION MY Lord we often read in our office of the Breuiary that those that forsake all for thy sake shall receaue a hundred folde in this life and life euerlasting in the next This we read and heare this was spoken by thy owne mouth and therefor of the truth thereof we cannot doubt nor in the hope âhereof can we be deceiued presupâosing we on our part be not wanting of that which is necessary to the perâormance of that which thou exactest But tell me I beseech thee my Godâ tell me I say for thy owne sake what iâ itâ that thou exactest of them who shalâ obtaine this thy promise for I see maâny leaue their parents friends acâquaintance their fortunes their ricâ possessions contrey and all and yeâ is it plaine that they finde not this hundred folde in this life that is the forerunner of the euerlasting in the next For I see their state is a burthen to them and the obligations of Obedience and religious obseruance is esteemed by them a great seruitude and burthen What is the meaning of this my Lordâ Shall I doubt that those who resolutly and willingly forsaâe all the world for for thee would sticke at forsaking themselues also seeing that by forsaking and denying themselues they should find thee in a most particular maner in their soules Is such forsaking of ourselues to be accounted a loosing of our selues O no! but it is a most sweetâ and happy exchange to leaue oââ ownâ wills for to performe thine to be subiect for thee to euery liuing creature is not a burthen but the greatest âiberty in this world But alas my God the reason why we finde thy yoke a burthen is because we beare it not with thee by which only it is to be made an easy yoke If soules who haue actually forsaken the world and in desire themselues also which most comming into ReligioÌ are desirous to do were but putt into some course between thee and their soules by those who had the care of them or authority ouer them they would not as thây doe fly backe from their first intention but would euery day more and more by conuersing with thee get more light to know thy will strength to performe it But being ignorant how to conuerse with thee and how in all things to haue relation to thee thy yoke becomes more and more burthensome to them and euery day they fall into new difficulties and inconueniencies and are in danger at last to fall into open rebellion against their lawfull Superiors and some of them into strange friendships a thing which is worthy to be bewailed with blouddy teares that harts capable of thy loue and by profession consecrated therevnto should so miserably loose themselues in powring out themselues where and from whom no true comfort can be found or had O Lord remoue these impediments from those who are thine by so many titles lett them know thee and of thee that they may loue nothing but thee and lett them loue thee that they may know themselues and their owne weaknesâ and also thy power and Maiesty O my Lord how infinitly is my soule bound to praise and loue thee since by meanes of a faithfull seruant of thine I haue been instructed in thy law and taught how to haue in all things relation to thee my only beloued by which means all Crosses miseries paines disgraces temptations are most tolerable to me I hauing thee so present to whom I may speake or write and by whom though I am contemptible in the eyes as I iustly deserue to be of all the world I am not yet despised or âeglected for which infinite mercy âll praise and honour be giuen to theâ O when shall I be gratefulâ to thee Or âhat shaâl I render for all thou bestoâest on me I haue nothing but a hart desirous to loue and praise thee but for ability to do either alas my God it is wanting to me O that all loues might be wholy conuerred to thee At least lett those who haue dedicated themselues to thee cease to desire any thing out of thee Send them meanes to know how sweet it is to haue no friend but thee and to be neglected by all but thy sweet mercy O can that soule that loues her God For very shame complaine To any other then himselfe Of what she doth sustaine No way to her was euer sound Nor euer shall there be But taking vp thy Crosse my Lord Thereby to follow thee This is the Way the Truth the Life Which leadeth vnto heauen None is secure but only this Though seeming nere so euen Those that do walke this happyâ path IESVS doth company But those who go another way Will erre most miserably And in this way do not think much That thou dost much endure No though it be from holy men For God doth this procure That thou maist seeke himselfe alone And putt thy trust in him And not in any creatures liuing How good so ere they seeme For suffring by the meanes of th' ill Will little thee aduance But to be sensur'd by the good Goes neere to thee perchanceâ Alas we shew but little âoue If we must choose which way Our Lord must try our Loue to him And not in all obey We must submitt our selues to him And be of cheerefull hart For he expecteth much of them Who be of Maries part For she must beare a censure hard From all without exception But thou O Lord wilt her excuse Who art her soules election If she will patiently sustaine And be to thee attent Thou fauourably willt iudge of her Who know'st her harts intent For all but thou as well she sees May erre concerning her They only iudge as they conceiue But thou canst neuer erre Complaine not therefor louing soule If thou willt be of those Who loue their God more then themselus and Maries part haue chose If all thou dost be taken ill By those of high perfection And further if thou be accus'd To be of some great faction Our Lord will answere all for thee If thou willt hold thy peace And from contentions and complaints Willt patiently surcease Leauing all care vnto thy God And only him
most louing and tender maner and beseeching thy assistance in all her streightnesses and necessities she findeth this way of Abnegation sweet aboue all the delights of the world For by rectifying our will and conforming it in all to thyne we walk an easy way and find a âast of the ioy which they feele who are in heauen vnited to thee for all eternity with whom lett vs praise thee for euer and euer Amen Amen I beseech thee THE XII CONFESSION SI dedexit homo omnem substantiam domus sâae pro Dilectione quasinihil despiciet eam If any Man shall giue aâ the substance of his how 's for Loue as if it were nothing He shall dispise it O my Lord and my God to whom only all Loue is due Behold I desire with all my hart to giue all for this thy Loue. But alas what hath thy poore seruant to giue thee Verily nothing that may deserue this thy Loue as a requitall it being aboue all I am or can suffer or do What can I giue thee seeing I haue nothing but what I haue receaued of thee If I giue thee my body and soul what is that in comparison of what I owe vnto thee them indeed I haue consecrated to thee but as due to thee by right not as before appertaining to me vnlesse I âould vsurp that which I was to restore to thee What then shall I giue âhee for this thy loue so much desired and sighed after by me If I reflect vpon my selfe I haue nothing to giue to thee But shall I in this my extream âouerty and nothing despair of gaining and obtaining this most desirable Loue of thee which reioyceth my soul euen to name and speak of to thee No No I will not feare to obtain it of thee For if that which I haue and am be as indeed it is short of deseruing this fauour from thee which is of being indeed one of those who seek desire and loue only thy selfe and all others meerly for thee yet I will giue thy-self to thee who art all my ioy and the only desire and treasure of my hart By thy-self I will praise thee and in thee I wilâ hope to be transformed into that loue which shall be swallowed vp in thee for all eternity Only to loue thee was my soul created and only by being turned wholy into loue can my soul be truly happy What can my soul desire out of âhee seeing thou art only Good and the most incomprehensible beawty which the Angells are neuer satisfyed with beholding being infinitly delighted while they are wholy turned into the pure loue and Praise of thee We heer in this vale of teares do sigh with teares in our eyes longing to enioy thee and to be freed from the occasions of offending thy sweet Mercy We I say sigh and make our moane to thee while it is dayly said to our soul where is thy God Yea euen I say so speaking to thee where art thou my Lord and when shall I without all mean be vnited to thee that my loue may be intierly bestowed vpon thee and nothing but thy selfe liue and raign in me that without ceasing I might Praise and Adore thee the most glorious and amiable Maiesty to whom all knees ought to bow and prostrat we ought to acknowledg our meere dependance of thee O how plaine dost thou sometimes shew it me that I am nothing and lesse then nothing while I stand before thee neither can any thing be by iustice due to me otherwais then by thy meere mercy if I should neuer so faithfully serue and praise thee For what can they challenge of thee who were not able so much as to moue or be without thee much lesse do any good or suffer any thing purely for the loue of thee Giue me therefor that I may haue to giue vnto thee seeing by my selfe I am not able according to my desire to loue and praise thee by thy-self without ceasing I will praise and loue thee and in thy mercy and grace shall my soul hope to become truly pleasing to thee heere I will by faith adhere to thee and by loue my soul shall both day and night aspire vnto thee till at last by the merits of thy death Passion death shall be swallowed vp in victory In the meane time lett the loue of true Charity instruct me which is more strong then death that I may faithfully serue thee though it be not yet admitted me to enioy thee Lett me rest in nothing but thee and lett thy name be my defence and comfort which to hear and behold doth aboue all earthly things delight and refresh me amidst the stormes of temptations which daily assault me O my God indeed thou art that vnchangeable light which I euer come to consult with in all my afflictions and necessities and beholdâ to my vnspeakeable comfort and strength I heare thee giuing answers by saying this and commanding that and this I do by resorting to thee often This is that which delighteth me and I fly as speedily to this pleasure as I iustly may from all the actions which are imposed vpon me euen by necessity it self and it exceedingly âeioiceth me to sitt down and sigh after thee and by speaking and writing to and of thee to become at least for that short time forgettful of all things besids thee This is that which maketh the grieuous but then of flesh and bloud tolerable to me in which liuing my soul by sin cometh often to my grief aboue all other miseries wounded to thee crauing and beseeching for thy own-sake that I may neuer faile to beg and find mercy of thee whom to offend is the only misery that can in this life befal me and no pain or difficulty is feared by me saue so farr as it may considering my extreame frailty be a meanes to make me offend thee O Lord do not reiect me though I haue neuer done any good and am so farr from truly louing thee I will now take the aduiâe giuen me to fly be silent and quiet and I will howerly come to learn the song of Loue and Praise of thee teach me to know my self and to know thee I desir that wisdome which despiseth all for loue of thee and only that knowledg do I wish for that securely guideth a soul towards thee and into thee Those that loue thee and seek only to please thee are those which haue a sight in part of what in heauen we shall enioy cleerely for all eternity O what knowledge doth a truly louing soul obtain of thee and how much is her faith confirmed in the greatnes beawty and infinitnes of thy Maiesty but alas they are drawn down by the weight of their corruptible flesh and sometimes euen forgett what they haue with the eyes of their soul seen and learnt of thee and sometimes foolishly think they are something till they feele the effect of this their misery and offend thee
XXII CONFESSION O My Lord let all things praise thee Let thy iust will be our law Let subiects humbly obey in and for thee For inferiors contending and withstanding their Superiors in that thou wouldst haue them obey in is most odious in thine eyes and nothing they can do will please thee vnles they will heare thy voice as well by others as from thy self For it is not so much the greatnes of the action that thou regardest as the being don by vs in that maner thou wouldst haue it don by vs and in nothing can wee obey thee as wee ought to do vnles wee first regard and intend thee in that which by vs is accomplished and a Superior reflecting on his owne authority rather then on what in thy behalf he ought to exact in that case or cases and rather on what by his power he can command then on what according to thy pleasure were best to be done rathâr gouerneth in his owne power then in thine and the effect vnles it be very streight and right betweene his subiectâ harts and thee will consequently be more human then diuine and the Superiors while sensible of their honour abusing the power giuen by thee doe yet loose what they would haue For their subiects often looking vpon rather what is defectiue in the Superior then vpon their owne duty both of them faile in their duties to thy dishonour who so sweetly hast disposed of all things if we did not peruert thine order with seeking not thee and thine honour but our own and our selues from which misery blesse vs I beseech thee for thine own sake that thou maisâ be glorified both in the Commaunders and the Obeyers THE XXIII CONFESSION O How happy are those thou instructest in thy Law and in whom it goeth streight between their soules and thet For their only care is to please and praise thee in all things These humbly obey for thee and see how dangerous it is to resist thy will in any thing how little soeuer But very much must we striue to humble our selues if we desire to know and stand vnto the things that are exacted of vs by thee For nothing is able to inlighten our blindnes but thy Grace shining in an humble soul. If we knew neuer so much and could do wonders if we had neuer so great guifs of nature and grace yet could we not thereby become pleasing to thee vnles withall we were diligent in the exercise of true Humility O giue me this Guift For none of himsef is able to attain to it My God make me truly humble that I may be wholy thine Let me by Loue adhere to thee that all impediments may be remoued between my soul and thee Let all created things be to me as if they were not as to their becoming any impediment between my poor soul and thy Godnes that so I may not be hindred by any thing from being vnited to thee For this thou maidst our souls that by thy Grace we might return to thee whom by sinne we had straied from and that humbly seeking to Loue thee and vsing all things created only to this end that we may at last find and possesse âhee who only art able to satiate vs and therefor miserable are we when we seek any things beside thee from which doing I beseech thee defend vs. Amen THE XXIV CONFESSION NOn in solo pane viuit homo sed in omni verbo quod procedit de ore Dei These are thine oââ wordes my Lord âhich I rehears beâore thee to whomâ powre out my hart and my soul âith vnspeakable ioy hoping that âhy word shall be a light vnto my feete that I may auoid the ginnes and snares which the world the ââesh and the diuell doe lay to catch ând intrap my sinful and weak âoul Thy words indeed are sweet because thou speakest Peace to the hart and giuest by them strength âo the soul. It is well known to thee why I do thus dilate my self in speaking and writing to thee my Lord and my God rehearsing to thee to whom all things are manifest the desires intentions and afflictions or comforts of my hart For as thâuâell âell knowst if I should not when â enioy some more interior light set down in writing some thiugs which I may peruse at other times that âre of obsurity I should be apt to forget to praise thee yea and eueâ wither away with the grief and anguish which by thy sweet permission ouerwhelmeth my soul be thââ blessed for all who take away ãâã beseech thee or giue as it best pleaâseth thee from thy poore seruantâ only depriue me not of Graceâ So I may Loue thee I care not whaâ happeneth to me Let thy will be done for time and eternity Rooâ out of my soul that pride whicâ maketh me so far from being thaâ thou wouldst haue mee to be My desire is great to Praise loue honour and truly serue thee but my power is so little that none hath been lesse faithfull to thee then I But where doth the liberality of thy infinite mercâ extend it self more willingly theâ where there is greatest pouerty anâ misery Though I be poor yet mâ Lord is rich though I be in al blindnesse as to the discerning of trutâ yet my Lord is light it selfe To him therefore I will approach that in his light I may see light I will begge of thee that I may become capable of gloriyng in thy riches and then nothing shall be wanting to me seeâng my Lord possesseth in himsâlfe all good things Be thou my Lord what âhou art and I a miserable sinner casting mine eyes vpon the earth doe cry to thee to bee mercifull to my sinnes I sitting heere in the âhadowe of death morne and lament that I haue made no more hast to conclude an euerlasting âeague and peace with my Lord God to whom now my soul doth aspire day and night without ceasing O my Lord when I remember what âhou hast done for me I faint and faile to see how vngratefull for it I haue been and am to thee What didst thou meane to helpe me and âecall me from my sinnes when I least thought of thee And not content with that thou didst also by means of a faithfull seruant of thine make my state which was so heauy â burthen to me through my fault and ignorance to become so delightfull to me that I may and do truly acknowledg that thy yoke of Religion is sweet aboue all the deâlights and pleasures of the world and thy burthen so light that crosses paines afflictions internal and exâternal born as thy burthen are most light and easie and cause more true peace to my hart then I can expres which be it said to thy honour and grant me to humble my self in al that I may grow stil more and more pleasing to thee who art the only desire of my hart and comfort of my soul. Let his instructions of whom
sake as also thine owne who art Blessed for euer Amen THE XXVIII CONFESSION INCINA cor meum Deus in testimonia tua Ecce concupui mandata tua in aequitate tua viuifica me-Incline my God my hart to thy testimonies and in thy truth quicken my soul. For behold my soul doth exceedingly couet to performe thy law For thy law is truth and the effect thereof is Iustice and Peace and Ioy in the holy Ghost When I remember how I haue strayed from thee by sin I become ashamed before thâe But when I consider thy Mercy I hope stil notwithstanding what is past to become through thy grace which so sweetly preuented me pleasing to thy Diuine Maiesty O Lord inlighten my soul obscuredâ by sin and ill customes inlighten it that I may walk the way of Iustice and Truth which is the way wherof thou speakest by Esaie the Prophet in which a foole cannot err as he affirmethâ O let me by true Humility become a fool according to his meaning let me become as a bittle child that I may be capable of entring into the Kingdom of Heauen Certeinly we ought to liue so subiect to thee that we haue no election of any thing as pretending our selues for time or eternity And also we ought to haue in our soul such a relation to thee that in thy ligât in thy truth and wholy according to thy will we perform all we do and out of that respect omit what we omit O my God let me I say walk this way of Loue which knoweth not how to seck it-self in any tâing whatsoeuer Let this Loue wholy posses my soul and hart which I beseech thee may liue and moue only in and out of a pure and sincere loue to thee who aboue all ought to be loued and desired Let this fire which thou camst into this world to send and willedst it should burn consume me wholy into it self that forgetful of my self and al created things I may be mindfull of thee my Lord and my God It is thy pâomise that where sin âath abounded graâe shall superbound that the riches of thy Merây may appear and shew it-self to the Glory of thy holy Name which Mercy I beseech thee extend itself âo me that I may praise thee for euer and euer O that thy pure loue were âo grounded and established in my hart that I might sigh and pant âithout ceasing after thee and be âble in the strength of this thy Loue âo live without alâ comfort and conâolation human or diuine therby âo become the more conformable to âhee the beloued of my soul O how âappy are they that truly loue tâee âertainly whatsoeuer they suffer it ââ very tolerable to them beâaus he or whose loue they suffer is thâir helâer Indeed my Lord thou art a hiden God but yet not so hidden from âur soul but that in some sort we âaue therin according to our poor âapacities not only a tast but also sight of thee for as euen thou thy self hast said Blessed are the cleane of hart for they shall see God O sight to be wished desired and longed forâ becaus once to haue seen thee is to haue learnt al things Nothing can bring vs to this sight but loue But what loue must it be Not a sensible loue only a childish loue a loue which seeketh it-self more then the beloued No but it must bâ an ardent loue a pure loue a couradgious loue a loue of Charity anâ humble loue and a constant loue not worn out with labours noâ daunted with any difficulties O Lord giue this loue vnto my soul that â may neuer more liue nor breath buâ out of a most pure loue of thee my All and only Good let me loue thee foâ thy self and nothing els but in anâ for thee Let me loue nothing in steeâ of thee For to giue al for loue is ââ most sweet bargain for Loue is as stronâ as death O that this thy loue might floâ in such aboundance into the harâ of al capable therof that the sonâ of thy loue and Praise might contiânually be heard through out al the earth O what do we do louing vanity and seeking a lye What do ââe abusing the most noble capacity of our souls by desiring that which passeth away like smoak What do ââe louing that which is more changeable then the Moon Can any âhing satiate our harts but our God Can we find true repose out of him âs any thing worthy of our loue but âhat Goodnes which is loue it-self and âhom the more we loue the more we âre able to loue becaus for loue he made vs capable of loue But alas my God my soul was in honour ând I knew not it I was compared âo beasts and by sin became like to âhem or worse then they Is this my equital for al thy loue Is this exâusable that my soul made by theeâo âo be delighted with the food of ângels which is loue should delight ââ-self with the bread of swine O is ây hart able to rehears this before ââee and not through excessiue grief âreak in sunder Could I in my nature not abide to be diâloyall to one whom I found to be a faithful friend to me and can I endure to remember my disloyalty to my God Could I with ioy vndergo for my friend disgrace and difficulty and can I endure nothing for my God Was the absence of a deare friend intolerable to me and can I abide to see my self cease at any time to sigh and long after my God O no my God let that be far from me I heere renounce before heauen and earth al inordinate affections to creâtures Place with thy own hands tââ loue in their roomâ that it expelling thence al âhat now is therein dââpleasing to tâine eyes thou maââ thy selâ wholy posses me giuing and distributing my affections and disposing the passions of my haââ according to thy sweet will which only is iust only holy and true iâ it-self C how sinceare then are oâ affections when we loue our neigââbour only in and for thee Theââ we pitty not one and are hard harted to another according to the inclination of our peruerse nature but behold thee in al and consequently willingly serue and assist al for thy loue then we do not shew our seues meek only to our friends but also to those by whom we suffer most contradiction and gladly vpon all occasions extend our charity For there is no true friendship but that which is founded vpon thee and which is maintained without impediment to thy loue This is only the loue of Charity which Charity knoweth not how to repine to be angry to be exceptious to be inconstant to be troublesom to be suspicious or iealous for it regardeth thee in al and desireth thee aboue al It taketh al in good part it wondreth not to see men exceed in words finding it-self so often to offend in
euer Amen THE XXXII CONFESSION MAy I aske thy Maiesty this question being not worthy so much as to name or think vpon thee May I I say aske thee how it is possible that thou canst find in thy hart thus to heap benefits vpon the most vnworthy vngreatful and contemptible of al thy creatures Is there any sin that I haue not comitted at least by my wil Yea verily so great and numberles do my âins and imperfections appeare to me that I neuer read or heard of any whose sinnes for one reason or other could be compared to mine Shal not therefor my soul praise my God Can any wonder to see me in al occasions fly to thee and speak to thee whâ hast without any the least desert on my part thus sweetly with thy Grace prâuented me and not only auerted my wil from al that displeaseth thee but also drawn me so forcible to desire only thee that my soul euen loatheth al that may any way hinder it from truly adhering to thee and such an inclination hath my wil continually towards thâe that it cannot endure to rest in any thing but thee alone I would haue thee alone I desir to loue and seeke thee esteeming al gifts and graces so much and no more as they may and do enable me to rest only in theâ which grant I may euer do for thy owne sake who art Godnes it self and who be euer blessed Amen THE XXXIII CONFESSION O Thou who despisest not any in greif and misery flying to thee hear and help me in that which is sustained by me to whom should I fly but to thee If I had or desired to haue any friends besids thee thou mightst bid me go vnto them and speak to them to help me But as it is al hauing forsaken me and I al for thâe behold I come vnto thee not as one who thinketh herself any way to deserue to be beheld or heard of thee but as one who hath no other refuge besids thee Thy mercy which infinity surpasses my sinns inuiteth me howrly to come confidently to thee These therefor are thy words with which thou art most willing to be challenged by thy poor seruants who by reason of their great frailty and weaknes may alleadg them in their necessities and want of help in whicâ they are to thee I say who speakeââ them for our help and comfort Noâ vos relinquam orphaâos Petite acâpietis vt gaudium vestrum sit plenuâ Paraclitus docebit vos omnia Si quis âiâligit me sermonem meum seruabit âatâr meus diliget eum ad cum vâniemus mansionem apud eum facâmus I wil not leaue you orphans Aâ and you shal receiue that your joy may âful The Holy Ghost wil teach you â things If any loue me he wil keep mâ word and my Father wil loue him and â wil come to him and wil make our mansion with him If thou wilt be our Father what cause haue we to complain though we be despised and forsaken yea and traoden down by the whole world But as for me I shal neuer be weary of saying it is good to adhere to my Lord God This I wil ask this I wil beg euen for thy own Jake that thou wilt be my helper defender and refuge in al my necessities and do not for euer âorsak her who is so poor and frail of her-sef that she hath nothing of her own doing or suffering wherein she can glory or confide If thou wilt not forsake me I shal be saâe If thou leaue me to my-self nothing can I expect but vtterly to perish Let me obserue al thou exacteth of me out of pure and sincere loue neither desiring no nor so much as reflecting vpon other reward then that I may be so happy as in al things to be conformable to thy holy wil. It is a sufficient comfort euen of it-self to be tyed and bound to thee by the obligation of vows and to serue thee for loue and to endeauourin al to be so subiect to thee as if it were not in our power to wil or desire any thing whatsoeuer In this lyeth hidden a most sweet and peaceable life euen amidst the various changes and alterations which this our banishment daily experienceth which is truly tearmed a warfare in which sometimes we ouercome by thy assisting grace and sometimes we are vaÌquished by our enemies the worldâ the flesh and the diuel the which giues vs occasion to acknowledg iustly before thee daily our exceeding great frailty But this in my daily combats is my comforâ that my Lord and loue my only beloued and most dearly desired Lord my God aâter whom I thirst and languish seeth and beholdeth me and is neeâ to be called vpon in this my necessity For as he loueth those that fight with great couradg and strength so he despiseth not his litle children to whom gnats and flyes seeme so great enemies for so I may tearm my litle sufferings if I compare them to those of his strong and faihful seruants which without changing their countenance they most couradgiously endure yea euen before my face that we weep and hide our faces in his boosom to auoid the biting and stinging of so smal aduersities This my God is my case help and assist me that I may be daily more strengthened and confirmed in thee that at last I may be that in al things thou wouldst haue me âo be Amen THE XXXIV CONFESSION BEatus homo quem tu erudieris Domine de lege tua docueris eum Nisi quia Dominus adiuuit me paulo minus habitasset in inferno anima mea Blessed is the man whom thou shalt teach O Lord and shalt instruct him in thy law Vnles God had helped me within very little my soul had dwelt in hel This is my solace in sorrows and my refreshment in labours to cal vpon my God and to write vnto him so that when my soul groweth more heauy and dul I may in that case read in my own writingâ as in a book the mercies of my Lord shewed vnto me therby to raise vp my soul to a sweeter remembrance of him whom my hart desire thin al and aboue al to loue and enioy We may I confes being taught this my lesson by thee that if thou hadst not most powerfully holpen and deliuered me my soul had dwelt in helâ where it might most iustly haue noâ been if thy meere Mercy had not hetherto deliuered me which continue to do my Lord I most humbly beseech thee For as it is said in the Psalme vnles thou O Lord keep my soul in vain is my labour in defending it Who therfor can blame me flying vnto thee or for hauing in al things relation to my God my mercy so that if I at any time grow slack in flying to him or in calling vpon hiâ in my doubts and miseries this which I now write lying by me and often being
mind in which I languish are much more grieuous then those of the body For these make vs but vngratful to men but the other make vs displeasing in thine eyes But thy goodnes as it is seene in this example together with the cure of the one did also vse to grant pardon for the other For thou didst say to him Thy sins are foâgiuen thee by wâich he became cured in body and soul. This thy mercy I remember with great ioy and comfort and falling down at thy feet my Lord I beg of thee that thou wilt be merciful to me a sinner for thy own sake and say vnto my soul Thy sinnes are forgiuen tâee and grant that I may now begin to liue to thee that so by thy grace al impediments may be remoued which hinder me from louing thee as thou wouldst be loued by me whicâ is al I wish or desire To this end I fly to thee to this end I sigh after thee only wishing and desiirng that in al things thy holy wil may be perfectlyâ accomplished in me for time and eternity If I should not howrly approach to thee who art the only true light darknes and the shadow of death would ouerwhelm me and make me vncapable of this thy light which leadeth to the true loue of thee O how happy were I if I could truly say Anima mea in manibus meis semper My soul in my hands always that so my soul might truly hear and follow what my Lord speaketh to my hart For thy words ate works O giue me a true contempt of myâsef that I may dy to al that the world esteemeth or desireth For I find where I seek my self there I am caught as it were in a snare and where I forâake my self there I become more and more capable of that true liberty of spirit which carrieth the soul aboue it self and al created things that iâ may more perfectly be vnited to thee For this is thy wil that by true Abnegation in al things both external and internal and by a total subiection to thee both as concerning our selues and al others in any thing that can be wished by vs we should enioy a certain diuine heauenly peace amidst the crosses passiôs contradictions andmutabilities which are incident to our life in this warfare of ours For the more sound a soul is in the practise of this doctrin of thine of denying herself in al and following thee by proposing no other end to her self in any thing but thy self alone the more she getteth as I may say her soul into her hands and the lesse she is moued in al things that happen either without her or within her For she seeth and knoweth that such haue euer been thy practise and permissions about crosses and difficulties falling vpon souls which was and is with and for this intention of thine that they of necessity must suffer and therby become disposed and in some sort worthy for to enter into thy Kingdom Neither doth the soul that attendeth to thee wonder at crosse accidents nor at the wayes or meanes by which they fal vpon her but in al of them she confideth in thee that they shal al turn to her greatest good And as for the faults which she comitteth she humbleth herself hoping stil more and more in thy merciâful forgiuenes and assistance It is not strange to her to see so many and different opinions of al men concerning the vse of matters and things that of themselues are indifferent but remembring that as S. Paul saith Euery man aboundeth in his own sense she adhereth to thee who art stil the same and hath relation to thee in al she doth or omitteth By which meanes thou teachest her seeking simply thine honour in al things where when in what maner and of whom she shal ask in doubtful cases For it is al one to her O my God If thou require it to be resolued by another or by thyâself But indeed in the way of Abnegation questions are rare and to go forth questioning without thy sending is but a meere immortification and doth intangle the soul and bring her into inconueniences incomprehensible and for such doing when we so do we cannot passe without a bitter check for it in our intârior by thy diuine Maiesty as thou knowst my good Lord my soul hath experienced For those souls that thou leadest by the way of loue of them I say thou exactest that they should make their moane only to thee thou hauing as it were giuen them a pledge that thou wilt become al in al and aboue al to them if they wil but remain faithâul to thee Also they so litle desire or esteem any graces comforts or fauours which can be granted or bestowed vpon them but only so far as they are meerly necessary to maintain them in grace and fauour in thee and only as they are thought fit for them by thee whom they deâire to be gratful to for al thy benefits that they neuer desire them but wish rather to adhere to thee by pure faith that they may become therby the more deare and pleasing to thee For a as my Lord God what is al thou canst giue to a louing soul who sigheth and panteth after thee alone and esteemeth al things as dung that she may gain thee What is al I say whilst thou giuest not thy-fâlf who art that one thing which is only necessary and which alone can satisfy our souls Was it any comfort to St Mary Magdalen when she sought theâ to find two Angels which presented themselues insteed of tbee verily I cannot think it was any ioy vnto her For that soul that hath set her whole loue and desire on thee can neuer find any true satisfaction but only in thee Yea comforts granted by thee make the soul become affraid least thât by them she should the less âa thfully serue thee and so far as it may stand with thy wil considering my extraordinary frailty I had rather serue thee without consolation then to find or feel that which may make me esteeme any thing of my self or hinder me from resting only in thee who arâ my God and al my desire for euer Amen THE XXXVII CONFESSION THis day my Lârd it is read in the Gospel of our Office that thou didst send thy seruants into the lanes for the poor lame blind and deformed to coÌpel them to enâter and tast of thy supper the which thy Mercy did so particularly extend it self to me that with great ioy and comfort I heare it read and with exceeding desire of gratitude I recount it heer in the sight of thy diuine Maiesty For first who could be more deformed in body and soul then I and yet thou didst not despise me and Secondly who could haue less desir to enter into holy Religion which is the place where we may most aboundantly tast and see how sweet our Lord is then my frozen and stupid soul
dust and ashes which is blown awây with euery wind and hath no stability in it but so far as it is holpen by thy meere Mercy What flesh dareâh glory in itself or presume it is able to do any good Verily my God if I had most couragiously vndergon al the temptations miseries and afflictions that haue been or euer shal be by al thy seruants together I ought not to think my-self able to suffer the least that can be imagined as of my-self but iustly ought to feare mine own frailty Let them that glory therefor glory in thee and not in themselues O that some little spark of that true light which true Humility causeth would enter into my soul and neuer depart out of it til I were wholy trasformed into that loue which giueth thee al and it-self nothing sauing its own defectuousnes Thou only art Iust thou only Holy and I the most vile and contemptible of al thy creatutes in thine eyes who discerneth most cleerly how it stands with me for my pride and other my abominable sinnes Wash me in thy Bloud and I shal yet become whiter then snow What would it auaile me if I were neuer so great in the eyes of men yea euen as great as I most vnworthy am in mine own Could they saue me or iustify me in thy sight Is it not affirmed by the Spirit of al Truth Vanitas omnis homo viuens Al liuing man is vanity without any exception of persons Verily my God we are indeed but as we are in thy sight who iudgest according to the Humility of our hart which is hidden from the sense of man Man may iudg that to be Humility which indeed is pride and there is no pride so great as that which clotheth it-self vnder he colour of Humility but thou canst not be deceaued by any O happy soul that only desireth thee to be a witnes of her desirs endeauours and intentions Happy they that are approued by thee my God though heâr they be despised neglected and contemned by the whole world With what face can my soul tel my God I desire to loue him if I do it not more willingly then I do vndergo the hard censures of men Shal I desire that which I do or say may be wel thought of by others since my God him-self was thought to do al he did in the power of Beelzebub Shal she who hath done nothing that is good be in esteeme when as her beloued who is goodnes and Iustice it-self was despised and contemned O my God far be this disloyalty from my hart Let me suffer for my sinnes that I may become pleasing in thy sight which is al my soul desireth O my God when shal I find and possesse thee in the bottom of my soul When shal the eyes of my body be so closed from beholding al vanity that the eyes of my soul may be cleered by thee to the discerning of truth Truly thou art a hidden God and none can walk in thy light but the peaceful Humble patient and clean of hart O if we did but once see in thy light of truth how little we are able to do or suffer of our selues we would tremble to think we were able to do any thing that were good or to attribute any thing to our own endeauours Nisi Dominus aedificauerit domum in vanum laborauerunt qui aedificant eam Nisi Dominus custodierit ciuitaetem fruâtra vigilat qui custodit eam Vnles God build the house in vaine do they laâour who build it Vnles God guard the City in vaine do they watch who guard it It is in vaine for you to rise before light O light shine in my soul and let not the darknes of mine own ignorance ouerwhelme me any longer Let my soul loue that it may liue in and to thee alone my Lord God VVhen wilt thou giue me the graâe of true Humility which is so much spoken of and so hard to be known what it is indeed O we can neuer while we lâue in this world be secure from falling into the cursed sin of pride which maketh souls more odious to thee then any oâher sin whatsoeuer O my God helpe me out of this snare which laieth open the way to al other sinnes O who dare though hee had been rapt into the third Heauens with S. Paul attribute any gift or grace to his owne desert What haue we that we haue not receaued and if we haue âeceaued it wherof should we glory O how soone do we loose the the labour of many years in one moment by pride God protecteth vs and directeth vs if we remain humble but in our pride he leaueth vs to our selues til we see and feele to our cost our own weaknes and misery O how plaine doth it appeare to those who are now secure for al eternity in thy Heauenly Kingdom that if thou hadst with drawn thy grace from them while they liued heer their case would haue been most miserable O how far are they from attributing any thing to their own metits saue so far as they were meerly enabled therto by thy grace And how far short do they esteeme their deserts to be of the Glory and Honour they receaue from thy Merciful and bountiful hand What pains what labours what suffering of disgraces can deserue to enioy thee and see theeâace âace to face âor euer and euer Certainly those who enioy this happines haue receaued it by the merits of thy most bitter death and Passion which God graunt may bring me wretch also to Saluation Amen O Loue loue loue when shall nothing els liue in me but thy true loue my God how long shal I remaine deuided from thee When shal I by pure and perfect loue be vnited to my God al impediments being remoued When shal no created thing be able to diuert my soul from attending to my Lord God When shal I be able to suffer without offending my God or being weary thereof O how little true peace doth that soul enioy who careth for the praises of men or feareth their dispraises Nothing more slippery nothing more vnconstant nothing more vncertain then the fauour or friendship of man who to day wil be thy friend and extol thee to the skies to morrow none wil haue thee lesse in esteeme then he and what a misery then is it to place happines or security in the fauour of man And this ô my soul thy God permits thee to see to the end thou shouldst adhere to him alone and not to that which is subiect to fail Desire the friendship of God alone and then his friends both in Heauen and earth shal be ready to serue thee for thy aduancement in his loue and seruice What can any man diminish of thy good by his speaking or thinking il of thee Or what can he add to thee indeed by highly esteeming of thee Remember that al Praise is due vnto God but to thee confusion of face
THE SPIRITVAL EXERCISES OF THE MOST VERTVOVS and Religious D. GERTRVDE MORE of the holy Order of S. Bennet and English Congregation of our Ladies of Comfort in Cambray she called them Amor ordinem nescit And Ideots Deuotions Her only Spiritual Father and Directour the Ven. Fa. Baker stiled them Confessiones Amantis A Louers Confessions Amans Deum anima sub Deo despicit vniuersa A soul that loueth God despiseth al things that be inferiour vnto God Imit l. 2. c. 5. Printed at Paris by LEWIS DE LA FOSSE in the Carme street at the signe of the Looking Glasse M. DC L VIII VVith Approbation REnowned More whose bloody Fate England neer yet could expiate Such was thy constant Faith so much Thy Hope thy Charity was such As made thee twise a Martyr proue Of Faith in Death in Life of Loue View heer thy Grandchilds broken Harâ Wounded with a Seraphick Dart. Who while she liu'd mortals among Thus to her Spouse Diuine she sung Mirrour of Beauty in whose Face The essence liues of euery Grace True lustre dwels in thy sole spheare Those glimmerings that sometimes appearâ In this dark vayl this gloomy night Are shadows tipt with glow worm lightâ Shew me thy radiant parts aboue VVbere Angels vnconsumed moue VVhere amourous fire maintaines their liââ As man by breathing Air suruiâes But if perâhance the mortal eye That views thy dazling looks mnst dye VVith blind faith heer I le kis them desiâ To feele the heat before I see the fire D. GERTRVDE MORE MAGNES AMORIS AMOR. R. Lochâm sculpâit TO THE R. MOTHER The R. Mother Bridgit More of Saint Peter and Saint Paul most vvorthy Prioresse of the English Benedictin Nunns of our Lady of Hope in Paris REVEREND MOTHER This deuout Book comes to you of right being your natural sisters excellent Goods and there is no other heire left to it but your desâruing self besids I know few or none do any way âretend to it but you and your Religious ââock who exactly trace by true practice âô Practice diuine practice the only âeans the same holy paths this booke âreats of Take and acccept of it therfore R. MOTHER I guesse I need not much inuite you for I dare say it wil be most deare to you and most highly esteemed by you and yours If it chance to fal into the hands of any such as may reiect or cry it down as some few did the Ideots Deuotions of the same Spirit lately set forth it wil as that did but receiue the greater luster thereby and be more highly prised by how much it may be misprised by such sensual persons as relish not the Spirit of God or whose vain and flashing wits as it were spurn at the Diuine and true heauenly Vvisedom That it hath some hands set in thâ margin and diuers characters in many places to point out certain matter and make them more remarakable is noâ but that in a maner euery line and syllable is most remarkable and worthy tâ be obserued And that some places oâ Scripture are quoted in the margin anâ not al is becaus those be the more cleaâ plain and vnmingled texts though thâ whole Book hath nothing in it almost buâ Scripture And if there be somewhat in the latter end the very same with what is said in the preface it wil not much annoy since good aduise cannot be too often rtpeated I will say nothing of the admirable graces and guifts of the Authour let the Book speak them becaus I should seeme thereby to praise and extol you her natural Sister and imbued with the same natural and supernatural guifts then which nothing would be more vngrateful and distastful vnto you Howsoeuer R. MOTHER giue me leaue to inuite and incite you and your Holy Company to go on cheerefully and couradgiously in these sacred and secret Paths of Diuine Loue. VVith your Beauty and Fairnes intend proceed prosperiously and reign Let the wisemen or rather wits of the world laugh at you They senseless think your life Madnes and your vvaies dishonourable Be not I say dismayed For your Truth Mildnes Iustice and your Right hand which is is your Spiritual Praier vvil marueillously conduct you So desirous to be partaker of yeur holy Prayers and committing you to the Diuine Protection I rest euer R. MOTHER Your most humble seruant and faithful friend in our Lord. F. G. THIS DEVOVT SOVLS ADVERTISEMENT to the Reader VVith an Apology for herself and her spiritual Guide and Director the V. F. Augustin Baker VVherein is excellently described a true interne contemplatiue Spiritual life and the maner how to liue happily in it with right and true Obedience to God an man IT may seeme very strange and that very iustly that I should write what heere I haue written But when I haue heer declared my reason for it I may perhaps pas with thâ censure only of being a little presumptuous Yet God who is my witnes in al and my âesire aboue al knoweth vpon what grounds I haue done it And that it is but for mine own priuate comfort and helpe and to be seene by no other but against my wil my superiors only excepted from whom as they shal require I wil not conceale the very secrets of my hart much lesse this which I haue written to lye by me wherein there may be what they may mislike and correct to which I shal most willingly submit my-self Yea and though it seeme to me to be a great help to me to haue that which I haue writ in more light to read when I am either in obscurity of temptation or other bodily indisposition to which I may be often incident Yet I wil suppresse it at their command and good pleasure and put the want thereof willingly to the hazard out of confidence in the assistance of God who is a louer and rewarder of Obedience VVhich vertue howsoeuer it may be otherwise thought I honour from my hart and beleeue verily that notââng that I do which doth not pertake of that is of any regard at al with God This I haue thus affirmed becaus he who hath been my Maister and Father in a spiritual life and hath brought me into a course which much satisfieth my soul and conscience between me and God It tending to nothing but to loue God by seeking him aboue al Graces and Guifts And by withdrawing all inordinate affection from al created things to become fâee to loue and praise God in as pure and perfect a manet as this life wil admit And also to true submission and subiection of myself for God to whomsoeuer he puts ouer me in this life with as great a contempt of my-self as my frailty can reach vnto Is notwithstanding taxed now by the same words in a manner which were alleaged against our blessed Sauiour VVe haue found this man subuerting the people and forbidding to giue tribute to Caesar. VVhich though none can iustly
do if they haue not in al things relation to thee the only true wisedom and in whose light is true light only to be seen By louing thee and dying to them-selues in al things they would become maisters of themselues and al the world Then nothing would moue them nothing would affright them becaus thou wouldst be their coÌfort and stay in al things Certainly there is a wonderful difference between the Obedience which a soul that liueth an internal life giueth to a Superior and that which we giue out of custom The fomer is slow at first and seemeth very defectiue therin the other so violent many times at first that it coÌtinueth not longt he former groweth more strong and firme euery day then other and the later groweth oftentimes a greather burthen euery day then other Certainly a soul that pretendeth to liue an internal spiritual life and yet hath not a great esteeme of Obedience is much to be feared and in great peril of errors yet that which in these days is tearmed Obedience I do not mean for I knew one who hauing a Confessor that had much difficulty with her though he aââirmed that it was a great breach of Obedience to haue relation while he bore that place to any other yet she made vse in cases of difficulây with leaue of an higher Superior of another whom she thought more able to iudge in that which concerned her and yet she hopeth this was no breach of Obedience for if she had thought that God in this case had exacted of her not âo haue gon to another she would what difficulty soeuer she had endured haue made vse of no other But this she thought was not his pleaâure becaus she was in a probability to fal into great inconueniences if she treated with him in an inward maner VVho professed by his deeds and words to take aduantage of any thing she could that might serue his turn as far as he could in conscience beside the dâfficulty he had with her in his nature made him incapable of iudging aright in that which belonged to her for that difficulây of his made him misapprehend al she did or said If she held her peace she neglected him if she spoke she did it to sound him âo serue her own turn if she was compassionate towards him in his infirmities she flattered him if she offered him not that which he stood need of she was auerted from him And thus it passed between them which made her haue as little to do with him as Obedience to higher powrs would permit her for by their ordeâ she was to confesse weekly to him which was no smal difficulty âo her but she knowing it to be Gods wil did it out of Obedience to him to whom if we do as we ought we must be subiect in al things without exceptions And this is the benefit of an internal life that makes one capable of seeing and knowing of Gods wil and also most ready to performe it which way soeuer he signifies it to them and makes them obey as readily and willingly a simple impertinent Superâor as they would an Angel or the wisest creaâure in the World Yea if a worm or any creature weâe ordaâned by God to rule ouer them they would see and embrace with al their harts his wil by them for without this total subiection to God it is impossible to become truly spiritual for if we resist his wil in our Superiors in vain do we pretend to please him We must learn therefor this vertue of him that true Humility and Obedience may be out stay in al vvhich tvvo vertues together vvith the diuine vertue of Discâeâion he vvil teach vs if vve labour to become more and more humble for seeing that it is his wil vve should obey and become truly humble Hovv can vve doubâ but he vvil giue vs the Gracé if vve âumbly and peâseuerantly beg it of him and practise them vpon occasion as vvel as vve can for he him-self saith VVhen we aske our father bread he doth not giue vs a stone nor if we asko him a fiâh he doth not giue vs a serpent much les wil he deny vs vvhat is necessary to make vs pleasing to him if we seekâ or desire nothing but by true loue to be faithful to him O Prayer Prayer able to obtain al things O hovv cometh it to passe my Lord that this Omnipotent prayer as some of thy deare seruants stile it should be so vnknovvn yea euen by them vvhom thââ tearmest the salt of the earth contemned at least as to the practise of poore simple vvomen for vvom they hold it aboue al things most dangerous euen to mine ovvn knovvledg as I hauâ knovvn affirmed by Superiors of seueral Orders O misery to be lamented most hartily by those that haue a tast in Praier and by the effect therof knovv how sweet a thing it is to attend only and wholy to the prayse and loue of God Surely the vvant of the wisedom vvhich by praier the Saints did gain is the teason vvhy custome in al things doth take place for the most part in the world of true reason The vvorld surely vvas neuer râformed of sins and errors but by the wisedom vvhich cometh from God and is far different from that vvhich is accounted vvisedom by the vvorld vvhich is as S. Paul saith foolishnes with God for the vvisedom of God proceedeth out of humility and perfect Charity This vvisedom did Saint Fâancis enioy vvhen yet by the vvorld he vvas desirous to be accounted a foole vvhich opinion thongh many had of him yer the effâct of his vvisedom vvas euidently seen by the great reformation he made in the vvorld It vvil neuer go vvel and peaceably in the vvorld as long as they are only imployed and haue the spiritual gouârnment of souls vvho take policy for their cheif ground next to Faith vvhich in the order and maner of their vvritings in these days me thinks they seeme in al to pretend for they prize that most which may serue their turn and suppres al orders but their ovvn though not in plain tearmes as far inferior to them in al things And that indeed it is not so to me seems euident for I know none but may be compared to them in aâ things but policy This is my simple opinion If the soul hath not so much vvit or discretion vvhen she knoweth for certainty or els doubteth of the certainty of a thing that cocerns her or knovving the certainty vvil go and aske it as a doubt or taking it as a doubt seâing need to aske vvil not puâ her-self to aske I may vvarrant her from euer coming to contemplation VVhosoeuer are lead by the spirit of God they are the children of God As S. Paul said If vve vvere the perfect children of God his spirit vvould liue and reigne in vs. But for as much as yet vve are not vve are seriously to labouâ to be and that
his owâ Prays in which and by which we are infinitly happy though of our-selues we aââ able to prays and loue him but in a very poor maner Who can say that desires nothing but to loue and prays him that thây âe poors seeing hâ ãâã ho is more theirs then âey are there own is so rich and to whomâothing âothing is wanting that should make himâ infinit happines In this let vs ioy in this ât vs glory without intermission VVhen âe are not able actually to attend to him ând prays him let vs commend our hart ââd soul to the saints in Heauen who withâuâ ceasing prais our Lord. Let vs by them do ââat which we are not able to do by ourselues âea let vs desir him who is his own prays âo is only able to do as he deserueth to âpply what he desirs we should wish him Let vs rest in him alone and not in anyâhing that is or can be created Let vs not âeek the guift but the giuer Let vs seek no oâher coÌfort but to be able with out al comâort to be true to him O how little is al the âoue we can giue him in coÌparison of that heâeserueth âeserueth from vs. VVhere therefor is their ââome in our souls for any created thing Let vs wish and desire and as far as it lies ãâã vs procure that al loue be giuen to him Let him haue al Glory al Honour prays âet vs desire the fauour of none but himâlone âlone to whose free disposition let vs stand for time and eternity as absolutly by our âil as if we had neuer had beeing Noâhing we do or suffer let vs esteeme great for our sins deserue we should endure much more Let our whole care tend to the magnifying of him Let his Honour be ours ãâã Glory ours let vs seek nothing but to ãâã wholy his who is most worthy to be thââ He is It is his delight to be with the childrââ of men VVhat should comfort vs but tâ prays and loue him Those that seek him shaâ find him if they seeke him withal their haââ O who would seek any thing instead of hiâ or any thing besids him being he is not morâ willing to giue vs any thing then him-selfâ heere by Grace and in Heauen by Gloryâ Let vs adore him in Spirit and Truth al wâ can giue him is nothing vnles we entirely giue him our selues and that also cannoâ adde to his Greatnes and Glory yet if we do this so much doth Maiestyâ esteeme of this guift it being al we can giue him that for it and in requital of it hâ wil giue vs him-self Al his guifts and graces are as means to the preparing vs for thiâ end if we vse them rightly with humility according to the iust wil of Godâ Let vs extend our wil to serue loue prays please and magnify our Lord to the vttermost we are able yea without al limits or bounds let vs desire his Honour til sucâ time as we may be swallowed vp in the bottomles ocean of al loue prais God iâ him-self in whom and by whom only we can prays him as we ought Let vs loue hiâ here as far as we are possibly able withoââ âegard of our selues either for time or eterâity This is the humble loue that feeleth âo burden This is the true loue that knowâth not how to attribute any thing it doth âr suffereth to it-self It chooseth not wherân God should make vse of her but accommodateth its-self to his pleasure in al things âf it were his wil to haue it so she would âather for euer be picking of chips or straws âhen out of her own election be doing that âhich is most admired or might seeme to âer to procure her the greatest reward O âou souls on whom God bestoweth this loueâhink âhink it not much to beare the burden not only of your-selues but of al you liue with âor God beareth you vp in al more then you âan conceiue or imagin Beware aboue al âhings of pride for that cast even Angels âut of Heauen A soul of prayer as long as âhe keeps humility is in little or no peril of going out of her way Giue to Caesar that is Caesars and that to God that is Gods If there be not somââhing due to God which cannot be giuen to men or if it were so confused that there âere no certainty what were due to the one âo wit God and what were due for Godâo âo the other to wit man a soul would be so confused as to teaching and leading the way of Perfection that she would neuer know where to begin and where to endâ or when she did wel or il For certainâ when the soul doth that by men whâ ought to be done by God and can be dâ by none but him It goeth not wel with hââ as for walking in a true coÌtemplatiue coââ She also doth not wel when she would haâ God do that by himself which he would dâ by means of Superiors or directors Aââ certainly if a soul be a capable soul of coââtemplatiue instructions and be wel grounââed in them by help of one experienced aââ walk the way of entire abnegation seekiââ God and not his guifts and be diligent ãâã obseruing what God wil do by himself ãâã her soul and wherin he referreth her tâ others and walk with that indifferency thââ it is al one to her which way or by whoâ God wil manifest his wil to her She shal ãâã easily see what and how to do in al thingâ to please God best as she may discerne thâ Sun from the Moon And this is to giue thââ to God that is Gods and that to Caesar that iâ Caesars FINIS Deuout spiritual Reader I Desire none other should cast their eye on this true interne spiritual Booke And I doubt not but your patience wil beare with âhe many faults escaped by a strangers presâe And your Charity correct them by taâing your pen in your hand and adding âhat is wanting a whole word a letter or letters and taking away what is superââous One great one I wil particularly duise you of to wit page the 19. l. 22. in âhe preface there wants a not So that you must read wanting not those in steed of wanting those For so it is in the original in her own hand The others the sense wil direct you how to correct Adieâ The Approbation HAuing read ouer this smal Treatise enâtituled The Spiritual Exercises of thâ most Religious and verruous Dame Gertrudâ More c. with much comfort and edification seeing the feruent expressions oâ diuine loue in her pious soul. And finding nothing in it iarring with the vniuersal Belief or Christian Morality of our Catholike Church I haue willingly approued it as such and set my hand heervnto at Paris the 26. of March 1658. Hen. HOLDEN The Approbation THese Confessions or Soliloques writen by the late deceased Dame Gertrude More
intend Yet what is ill reforme in thee And this will all amend As farre as he doth thinke it good Who is most iust and wise He will thee by afflictions purge From what displease his eyes Willt thou of all that loue thy God From suffring be exempt O no but blisse as others do thy God and liue content Amidst the various accidents That do to thee befall Committ thy selfe and all to God Who seekes our good in all Thy selfe art blind and cannot iudge What is the best for thee But he doth pearce into all things How hâdd so ere thây be My hart shall only this desire That thou my Lord dispose Euen as thou pleasest in all things Till these myne eys thou close By death which I so much desire Because it will procure Me to enioy my God my all Where I shall be secure That none from me can take my Lord But for eternity I shall enioy my only good And to him euer be Vnited by a knott of Loue Which nothing shall vnity But will remayne as permanent As his Diuinity O happy houre when willt thou come And set my Spirit free That I may loue and prayse my God For perpetuity Contemplating his glorious face With all that him adore Singing with them his sweetest prayse For eâer and euer more In this is such and so great comfort and peace that well may the soule be tearmed to receaue a hundred folde in this life who despiseth it-selfe and all other things that it may finde thee O how free is such a soule to fly with the wings of Loue to the throne of thy Diuine Maiesty Neuer was there or can be imagined such a Loue as is betweene an humble soule and thee Who can expresse what passeth between such a soule and thee Verily neither man nor Angell is able to do it sufficiently and the more such a soule knowes of thee the more sound becometh her humility the which thy selfe only can teach one perfectly and it is impossible to gett it in verity and perfection but by conuersing with thee O my God bestow this heauenly gift on me which only findeth fauour before thee Those that possesse it are able in and by thee to beare all things to vnderstand all things as farre as it is necessary for them For one learneth more in Prayer of thee in one hower then all creatures in the world could teach one in fifty yeares for that which thou teachest is sound solid and secure because it tends to nothing but to loue thee neglect it selfe Thy words bring force strength in themselues thy words are words of peace to the soule thy words are not like the words of men which passe as a sound through the ayr buâ thyne pearse the very bottome of our soules Lett me hearken therefore to thee who speaketh loue and most certaine truth The wisedome of the world is foolishnes before thee But thy wisedome is much to be desired and for it willingly ought we to giue all our substance to it we ought to be espowsed and by it if we will be happy all our actions ought to be gouerned Allthough thou didst say that vnlesse we become as litle children we could not enter into the kingdome of heauen yet withall thou hast said that we ought to be wise as serpents and simple as doues where thou puttest that we should be wise before we be simple and not simplicity before wisedome whereof I aske thee the reason O my Lord with all the humility I am possibly able For it seems to meâ that thereinâ as in all thy words there is a hidden Mystery tell me I say my God of whom in all cases and doubts I aske solution and many times by it thou dost make many things manifest to my simplicity tell me â say what was the reason Verily it seemeth to me that thou biddest vs be wise before we become simple becaus that is only true Simplicity which followeth true Wisedome For we cannot become truly simplified in our soule but by thy heauenly gift of true wisedome For there is a simplicity which is without wisedome and discretion which litle auayleth to perfection This vertue of Simplicity becometh more and more perfect in the soule as she increaseth in humility and charity yet at the very first of our conuersion this is in some sort practised by vs if we do as we ought to do As for example to become pleasing to thee it is absolutly necessary that a soule walke simply and sincerly before thy selfe and all men and read and heare obey and perâforme all in a simple and humble maner not searching into that which belongeth not vnto her this I say thou dost exact for nothing is more odious to thee then the contrary practise But yet this doth not diminish our naturall reason but maketh it more cleere and able to comprehend what is necessary for vs. This vertue also therefor bestow vpon me who euen in my nature as thou well knowest did euer aboue all things hate dissembling and dissimulation O Lord poore as I am and most sinnefull thus thou âeest how I presume to speake vnto âhâe but easily shall I obtayn pardon of thee becaus thou ouerflowest with âhe aboundance of thy mercy for whâch Glory Prayse Adoration be to thee who art my Lord and my God and only desired by me I haue no friend to speake or treat with but thee and some of thy Saints to whom thou hast giuen charge of me and to whom I fly when my sinnes affright me amongst whom next after thy Deare Mother the Queene of mercy is my beloued S. Augustine O Glorious Saint whose hart did burne And flame with Loue Diuine Remember me most sinnefull wretch Who hunger staru'd doth pine For want of that which thou enioyest In such aboundant measure It is my God that I doe meane My ioy and all my treasure Thy words O Saint are truly sweet Becaus thou dost addresse Them vnto him who 's only meet Our mis'ries to redresse At whose intorcession much hast thou done for me Honour them my Lord for me who am so poore thatâ haue nothing to present them or thee only a desire of being gratefull to thee who be by all eternally prayâsed Amen It was S. Augustine the Doctor and amorous seruant of God that she heere meant THE SECOND CONFESSION Omnis ex vobis qui non renunti at omnibus quae possident non potest meus esse discipulus Qui habet aures audiendi audiat All you who renounce not all you possesse cannot be my disciple who hath eares of hearing let him heare THESE are thy words my Lord which though they seeme hard at first yet being explicated to our soules by thee they become most easy and sweet to performe Teach me therefor my God I beseech thee for thy mercies sake teach me I say how I âhall perform this to the glory of thyâoly âoly name Thou hast inflamed my âart as thou
are thy Lawes The more perfectly we performe them the more delightfull is thy yoke They were made by thee out of thy loue to vs and if we loue they will be most easy and pleasant to vs. For indeed where thou biddest vs leaue and forskae all that we may find rest in our soules thou speakest to vs as being sensuall For when we leaue our freinds riches honours pleasures yea and euen which is most of all our very selues whaâ haue we left or forsaken Some thinâ indeed as it seemes to vs these thing are when through blindnes and ignoârance we esteeme them as benefit and comforts but doing it vpon ãâã word we find we haue left nothing ââ find thee who art all things We haue left our friends who are incident to leaue vs when we stand in most need of them We haue left honour which being had proueth nothing ells butâ meere burthen to vs. And so in fine nothing is there to be left which if ãâã did but loue our owne peace and quiââ without all further respect we would choose as the very best what thou doââ exact For vertue is amiable in it selfâ and those that had but a very shew of it as to what it is indeed euen among the HeatheÌs were honoured for Godâ Who therefor would not follow the my God in whom alone is to be founâ true good Thou teachest the milde and humble thy wayes and thou restâ willingly in a peacefull hart What caâ bring true peace to our soule but tââ âoue Giue this Loue therefor to me âho wisheth and deâireth only that ân all I may be true to thee THE FOVRTH CONFESSION O My Lord and my God to whom I dust and ashes am not worthy to speak Yet heare me my Lord recounting heere before thee thy owne âords spoaken by thy seruant in thy name who art truth it selfe Venife filij âââite me timorem Domini docebo vos Proâibe lingâam tuam è malo labia tua ne âjuantur dolum Diuerte à malo fac ânam inquire pacem persequere eam Conte ô Sonns Hearâ mee I will âeach you the âeare of our Lord. Forbid thy tongue from euil â thy lips that they speake not guile turne ârom euil and do good seeke peace proâecute itt Heere thou biddest me as thy child come to thee and thou willt teach âe thy feare as that thou art my Lord. âeere thou biddest me refrain my tonâue from guile and my lippes that they speaâk not guile and also hate euill and do good inquire afteâ peace and follow it these last words inâdeed comprehending all But of whoâ shall I inquire peace my Lord my Goâ of whom I say shall I inquire to leaâ it Truely of thy selfe who in teachinâ me the way of peaoe canst giue me graâce to follow it Of thee therefor I desiâre to learn whose words are workâ Speak to my hart speak so that I may heare and follow it Giue me the Humility which knoweth no guile Giue me the Loue that accompanieth it Lââ thou knowest that there was neuer more necessity of begging in this kind thy helpe because humble Loue is now of the world allmost vnknown yea euen of them who should teach it the resââ the wisedome of thy truth is sett a sideâ and that which is the wisedome of the world beareth sway ouer all out of which it groweth that euen Humility Obedience and Charity the most noble vertues that are or can be are exacted and practised euen by way of humaine policy which maketh so litle vnion in the world beâweene them âhose whole study ought to bâ how they might loue and draw most forciâly all the harts and soules in the âorld to the pure loue of thee O Lord how farr haue our sinns cast vs from âhee In lighten my soule O Lord I âumbly beseech thee while heere to my greif I do in the bitternes of my soule rehearse these things befor âhee whom I most contemptible and ânworthy find in all so willing to âear and help me If we would loue we should aboundantly partake of âhee For nothing is held by thee too deare for them who alone aboue all creatures and comforts seek the pure âoue of thee Out of this true loue betâeen a soul and thee there ariseth such a knowledg in the soul that it âoatheth all that is an impediment to âer further proceeding in the Loue of thee O Loue Loue euen by naming âhee my soul looseth it self in âhee Nothing can satiat my soul my Lord as it is well known to thee but âo be swallowed vp in thee for all eternity No knowledg which heer we can haue of thee can satisfy my soul seeking and longing without ceasing after thee By faith we are certain of thee and by Loue we in some sort experience in our soules thy greatnes and goodnes thy beawty and sweetnes which more confirmeth vs in the hope of thee O what knowledg is to be compared to that which is taught the humble by thee which tendeth yet only to thy making her vnderstand her owne nothing and meer dependance of thee Thy words as my deare S. Augustin sayth speaking in his wonted maner to thee do-ââeâ smile vpon those that neither seek oâ desire any thing but thee What cansâ thou deny to such as thus loue thee Verily thou seemest so enamoured of them as if thou wert forgettfull of the infinitnes of thy Maiesty The more they become humble the more they are regarded by thee and the more in thy light do they perceaue their vnworthines to be thus aduanced to loue thee which the more short it is of that which in will they desir by more and more humility to become before thee the more they endeaâour to become gratefull to thy infinit mercy O who can expresse the ioy that an humble soule takes in being despised for thee Verily nothing doth she esteeme so great a burthen as to be fauoured honoured esteemed or applauded by men whose opinion she feareth may deceaue her through her great frailty O how little is the opinion of men to be esteemed seeing they are so ââekle inconstant and easily deceaued but thy iudgments my Lord God are true and iustified in themselues be thou my witnes and defender who âânst not be deceaued and then lett all the world censure me as they please a good conscience is better then a thousand wittnesses giue me this then and I shall easily passe through all things Speak my Lord peace to my hart that I may attend to thee alone my only beloued Shall I after all thy benefits desir any thing beside thee O no my Godâ farr farr farr be this misery from me after my soul hath been thus vrged by thee to sigh long and thirst without ceasing after being vnited with thee THE FIFT CONFESSION TELL me my Lord I beseech thee what can my soul pretend if it seek any thing with thee which is an impediment
thee but if she presume any thing of herself what perillsâ and danger she is subiect vnto and she apt to fall into none can conceaue much lesse expresse And to this effect of shewing a soul how to walk securely writeth thy great seruant the Author of the following of Christ in his 21. Chapter of his third book whose words with great ioy I read and before thee speaking too I will heere bring them in beseeching thee to instruct me in the true practise of them For they contayn the way in which a foole cannot erre and without the practise of this our soules lye open to all the snares of the Diuell thine and our enemy No instruction did she so much regard so frequently reflectâon or more volue and âââolve in her mind nor more delighted in âhen this that followeth being meerly of âer own finding and obsâruing in the said âook which she was familiar in and no âaruaile considering the excellency and âecessity of it for the purpose which she hath mentioned being the securing of one in a Spirituall course thus therefor doth he say âpeaking to her soule Super omnia in omnibus requiesces ââima mea in Domino semper quia ipse est âanctorum aeterna requies Da mihi dulâsâme amantissime Iesu in Te super âmnem Salutem Pulchritudinem super omnem Gloriam honorem super omnem ââtentiam DignitateÌ super omnem ScieÌtiam Subtilitatem super omnes Diuitias Artes super omnem LaetitiaÌ Exultationem superomnem famam Laudem super omnem Suauitatem ConsolationeÌ super omnem Spem Promissionem super omne Meritum Desiderium super omnia dona munera quae potes dare infundere super omne Gaudium iubilationem quam potest mens capere âântire Denique super Angelos Archangelos super omnem Exercitum Coeli super omnia visibilia inuisibilia super omne quod Tu Dâus meus non esâ Quia Tu Domine Deus meus super omnia optimus es Tu solus Altissimus Tu solus Potentissimus Tu solus Sufficientissimus Plenissimus Tu solus Suauissimus Solatiosissimus Tu solus Pulcherrimus Amantissimus Tu solus Nobilissimus Gloriosissimus super omnia in quo cunctââ bona simul perfecte sunt semper fuârunt erunt Atque ideo minus est insâfficiâns quiâquid prâter Teipsum mihi donas aut de teipso reuelas vel promittââ Te non viso nec plene adepto Quoniam quidem non potest cor meum veraciter requiescere nec totaliter contentari nisiin Te requiesâat omnia dona omnemque Creaturam transcendat Aboue all things in all things my soule thou shalt euer rest in God for hee is the eternall rest of the Saints Grante Mee most sweet and louing Iesus to Rest in Thee aboue all Creatures aboue all Health and Beauty aboue all Glory and Honour aboue all I owre and Dignity aboue all Knowledge and Subtility aboue all riches and Arts Aboue all ioy and âladnesse aboue all fame and Praise âboue all sweetnesse and Comfort aboue âll Hope and Promâse aboue all meritt ând Desyre aboue all Guifts and prefents âhat Thou canst giue and impart aboue all ioy and Iubilee that the Mind can reâeiue feele lastly aboue Angells and Archangells aboue all the heauenly Host aboue all things visible and inuisible and aboue All that Thou art not my God For Thou my Lord God art good aboue all goods Thou alone most high Thou alone âost powrefull Thou alone most full and sufficient Thou alone most sweet and comfortable thou alone most beautifull and louing Thou alone most noble and Glorious aboue all Things in whom all âoods together are most perfectly haue beene and euer shall be And therefore it ãâã too little and not sufficient whatsoeuer Thou bestowest on Mee besides thy selfe or reuealest of tây selfe or promisest whilst Thou art not seene nor fully obtayned For surely my Hart cannot rest nor be fully contented vnlesse itt rest in Thee and transcend all guifts and Creatures whatsoeuer All things desires and loues are vainâ But only that which tends To God alone our cheifest good And all things ells transcends My soul therefor by this sweet Loue shall day and night aspire And rest in God all things aboue My Loue and lifes desire And while I liue I le neuer cease To languish for his Loue Breathing and sighing after him Till he my life remoue For since â am not where I loue How can I comfort find But only in the song of Loue By Loue to me assign'd And where so ere âhis word is ãâã loue It yeilds a siluer sound But if that word I misse in it Me thinks I want my ground Nothing so simple can be pennd If it but treat of Loue But that it serueth in some sort My sadnes to remoue And shall my soul by senselesse loue Which yet is neuer true Bestow more loue where it is lost Then where 't is only due â no my God but rather lett Such folly be to me A meanes to vrge my sinnefull soul To Loue more fernently And henceforth lett me draw no breath But to aspire by Loue To thee my God and all my good By whom I liue and moue No Stagge in chace so thirsty is Or greedy of sweet spring As is my soul of thee my God While I heere sighing sing My soul where is thy Loue and Lord Since him thou canst not find O cheere vp hart be comforted For he is in thy mind To him relation thou maist haue As often as thou goes Unto the closett of thy hart Thy griefs for to disclose As silly Lambes from rauening Woolues For help to Sheapheards fly So shall my soul in euery case For help and councell hye To thee my God by humble Prayer In hope and confidence That thou my Lord willt succour me And be my soules defence And seeing that my God is rich How can I say I 'm poore And hee more myne then I myne owne What can I wish for I more And in his Maiesty and power Much more I will reioice Thân if of all in heauen and earth I had commaund and choice My God one thing alone thou know'st I feare and apprehend Which is my Lord for to displease Whose mercies haue no end From all that doth displease thyne eyeââ Be pleas'd to sett me free For nothing ells in heauen or earth Do I dâsire but thee And lett me rather death embrace Then thee my God offend Or in my hart to giue thy place To any other freind Nothing would greiue my soul so much As in me to perceaue Any affection in the world That thine would me bereaue I know thou must possesse alone Or els we are not thine In such good plight as we should be If light to vs did shine As thou desirest it should do By grace our soules within For which
are all the helps we haue Intended and haue been Imparted and bestowed by thee That we might liue alone To thee who satiat'st pure soules With ioyes that are vnknown And wo to them a thousand times Who interest haue in any Or haue deuided harts to thee After thy gifts so many For thou hast purchased our loue At too too deare a rate To haue a partner in our hart Which iustly thou dost hate O this thy wrong makes Angells blush O make it farre from me Since that I am both body and soul All conseerate to thee And I also will greiue with them To see thee haue such wrong From soules selected by thy self To sing with them the song Of Loue and praise to thee O God And euen in this place To Contemplate thee as we may O sweet and happy grace If we would dy vnto our selues And all things ells but thee It would be naturall to our soules For to ascend and be Vnited to our Center deare To which our soules would hy Being as proper then to vs As fire to vpwards fly O lett vs therefor loue my God For Loue pertaines to him And lett our soules seek nothing ells But in this Loue to swimme Till we absorpt by his sweet Loue Return from whom we came Where we shall melt into that Loue Which ioyeth me to name And neuer can I it too much Speak of or it desire Since that my God who 's Loue it selfe Doth only Loue require Come therefor all and lett vs loue And with a pure aspect Regard our God in all we do And he will vs protect O that all things vpon the earth Re-ecchoed with thy praise My euerlasting glorious God The Ancient of dayes And it I wish with all my soul Incessantly to sing But seeing this I cannot do My sighes to heauen shall ring Yea if I writ out all the sea Yet could I not expresse The ioy and comfort I do feele In what thou dost possesse No gifts or grace nor comforts heere How great so ere they be Can satiat my longing soul While I possesse not thee For thou art all my harts desire Yea all that I do craue In earth or heauen now and euer Thou art all that I would haue And I do wish with all my soul That to thee I could pray With all my hart and all my strength Ten thowsand times a day Lett peoples tribes and tongues confesse Vnto thy Maiesty And lett vs neuer cease to sing Sanctus Sanctus to thee These are his words my Lord God which whosoeuer practiseth shall find a Spirituall internall life so easy sweet secure and void of all questions that they will walk euen in this bannishment where our life is tearmed and that most iustly a continuall warrefare with a heauenly peace and security For to that soul who proposeth nothing to herself but thy selfe alone aboue all gifts and creatures what can interpose it selfe for to harm her while she remaineth thus confident and humble between Maiestyâ and her soul. Certainly so subiect doth such an one liue to thee and to all others in that maner as shall be exacted by thee that there can nothing carry her away while thus it stands with her to any errour of vanity and her loue is so founded in true Charity and practised with such Humility and so in her very soul that nothing can interrupt her conuersation with thee Besides in a soul who walketh vpon this secure ground of only seeking thee and only resting in thee such a diuine light doth shine that she iudgeth according to the iustice of thy Diuine will and not according to sense or custome which in these blind days takes place allmost in all things of true reason and this for want of hauing recourse to thee my Lord who art the only true light and of this defect it proceeds that the diuine ways of Loue are now held so perillous and insecure in which my God thou hast an infinit wrong seeing that we were made only to Loue and attend to the praise of thee our Lord. It is true those who will pretend to lead a Spiriâuall life and yet seek not in all to deny themselues but desire this gift or this grace this fauour or that comfort lett them pretend for their excuse in it whatsoeuer they please do oâten times miserably deceiue not only themselues but also many others and bring an internal life wholy into a scorne and contempt to the preiudice of their owne soules and also of many others But I wish that those that do this simply by being for a Spirituall life vnapt might giue themselues to that which by Superiors should be found most fitting for them and noâ be a cause that thy sweet mercy anâ goodnes should haue such wrong as that other soules who were fit should be hindred from hauing relation to thee by which their soules would be turned wholy into Loue by a vehement desire and longing after thee that one thing that is only necessary and from this house To witt of the Benedictine Nunnâ ãâã Cambray The same she meanes for Paâââ issued thence and where her natural Sister of the same Spirit Gouernes at present I beseech thee for thy own sake keepe this misery which of all other is the greatest that I can comprehend oâ imagin THE EIGTH CONFESSION BLESSED is that Simplicity saith my foremencioned Author in his fourth book of the Following of Christ that forsaketh the difficullt way of many questions Those are his words in his said diuine Booke where he proueth the way of Loue to be so easy and secure as I haue before signified O how happy are they who follow thee in Humility and Simplicity of hart for these haue few doubts which are the cause of questions The more a soul is void of doubts the more capable is she speaking ordinarily of these secret wayes of the Diuine Loue For commonly her way must be to resign herself to thy will What roome is there left then for questions Yet when it is thy will that in a reall doubt she ask thou teachest her how to proceed in it that it may be a help to her soul and no hindrance which seldome happens when without thy leaue and sending she presumeth to endanger herself to be intangled by falling out of one doubt and question into fiue hundred others Lett it be with my soul O Lord as it is said of Anna the Mother of thy Prophet Samuel that she turned her countenance no more towards seuerall waies For hauing been taught and instructed by thy sweet mercy that One thing is to me only necessary lett me not loose my selfe by following or trying those seuerall waies of which she speaketh I haue as thou knowst my God had sufficient triall of them to the great misery and difficulty of my poore soul for that time lett me now sing and that from the bottom of my soul that it is good for me to
for vaine is the help of man I will therefor confide in thee my God my mercy who be Adored Praised and Exalted for tyme and eternity Amen THE NINTH CONFESSION LEX Domini immaculata conuertens animas testimonium Domini fidele sapientiam praestans paruulis Iustitiae Domini rectae laerificantes corda praeceptum Domini lucidum illuminans oculos The Law of our Lord is immaculate correcting soules the Testimony of our Lord is faithfull giuing Wisedome to little Ones The Iustices of our Lord be right making harts ioyfull the precept of our Lord light some illuminating the eyes These my God are the words of thy Royall Prophet which are as it followeth in the same Psalme to be desired aboue gold and rich pretious stones yea they are more sweet to a louing soul then the honny or the honny combe Lett this Law of thine conuert my soul that it may become one of thy little ones to whom the grace of true Wisedome is oâten promised by thee Lett thy Iustice make my hart ioyfull For in the perâormance thereof is true Peace only to be found They that liue according to this thy Iustice do enioy such a diuìne tranquillity that it cannot be expressed by any pen whatsoeuer None can walk in this path of true Iustice in perfection but the humble Those find out in thy light what is thy best will and pleasure in all things as farr as humane flesh will admitt and perform thy iust will as well as human frailty will reach When we do perform any thing by this iust rule of thy holy will we find an admirable effect theâeof in our soul. This is that which by performing in all things we become truly subiect to thee and haue the merit of Obedience which maketh all our actions so noble before thee and of which vertue of Obedience how much or how little our actions partake so much and no more do they deserue reward Worthyly may Obedience be preferred before Sacrifice For it is that which gouerneth heauen and earth and which only deserueth reward in thy sight Happy are they who walk this way For they haue a âast euen of the ioyes of heauen For as they there obey thy will so these thy humble soules do also endeauour to do the same This Obedience to thee maketh the Angells as âell content with their degree of Glory as to be of the Seraphins who are yet in a farr higher degree in thy Kingdome This maketh the Saints content with theirs this maketh soules on earth who aspire to thee with all their harts to limit their desires with thy good will and pleasure and by this meanes they desire neither life nor death but in it conforme themselues to thy most iust will this maketh them desyre disgrace nor Glory neither paine nor health neither Crosses nor comforts This Obedience to thee and to Superiors for thee made some soules pleasing to thee by liuing in the wildernes and others by liuing in a Community some by liuing to the profit of their neighbour and others by liuing and attending only to thee in their soules some by liuing in high and eminent degree and hauing commaund ouer many others and some by being esteemed abiect and the very scumme of the world and these if they had of their own choice and election chosen the contrary state would neuer haue arriued to true Sanctity Some also by many paines Crosses come to thee some only by an internall affectioÌ to thee hauing that in affection which others suffer in act they also are respected by thee By which it appeares how great a subiection is exacted by thee of those who desire to become vnited to thee and neuer can we prosper in a Spirituall life vnlesse we hearken to thee and obserue euen in the least things what thou wouldst haue vs do and go that way thou wouldst haue vs in all things whatsoeuer For we may be sure thou willt lead vs by the way of Abnegation which is the way of the Crosse which if we will walk with humility and simplicity we shall with security arriue at the port of eternall Glory and enioy thee our only beloued in that degree thou hadst ordained for vs from all eternity liue we long or dy we soone For only in thee can we be happy and by thy meere grace can we deserue to enioy thee What we ouercome is so done in thy strength that the glory is wholy due to thee alone and this I find dayly seeing that when I presume of my own strength though it be in a thing which I haue often ouercome and many times farr greater it seemes to me yet I faile in that euen often to the offending thee my Lord in an extraordinary maner From this errour therefor my God heerafter deliuer thy poore contemptible seruant that I may praisâ thee who art my only strength and hopeâ Lead me which way thou willt soââ may blesse thee in all and rest in thee aboue all From thee the strong receaue their strength and in thee sinners that haue nothing of our owne haue wherewith to supply all our want thou flyest vp with them who by an ardent loue haue surmounted all created things and are firmely vnited to thee in Spirit and thou also lendest thy sweet hand to thy little and imperfect ones who are of a good will to help them out of the mire and durt of passions and inordinate affections In this mercy my soul doth hope and reioice and I do in my pouerty congratulate the perfections of others beseeching thee to make me partaker of their merits And aboue all out of the aboundance of thy owne store giue me whereâith to retorn to thee for all the merâies thou hast shewed to my sinnefull âoul Lett me please thee and praise âhee and desire no more but that thou do with me whatsoeuer thou knowst most to thy honour O that soules would conuert their hart wholy to thee the most desirable beawty to whom if we compare all that is fair which thou hast made they will seeme âo be without all beawty and light O if by humility soules would dispose themselues for the Diuine Loue what a reformation would there quickly be in the whole world When I remember how many soules seperate themselues by sinfull sinning from thee it pearceth my very soul seeing they forsak him who is an infinit good and a most amiable beawty Remember O Lord for thy own sake our extreame frailty and giue graâe that we may all conuert and return by Loue to thy Diuine Maiesty whose mercies are aboue all thy works for which Glory be euer to thee by all for time and eternity Amen THE X. CONFESSION ACCEDITE ad Deum illuminamini facies vestrae non confundentur Come to Him and be illuminated and your faces shall not be confounded These words in our diuine Office are spoken not only by him who by thy owne testimony was a man
through their pride and forgettfullnes of their own nothing and of the greatnes of thy Maiesty which pride aboue all things deliuer me from I beseech thee becaus it makes soules so odious before thy self and all that loue thee Lett me giue all Glory to thee who without any desert of myne hast thus sweetly with Grace preuented me for which be thou euer by all Praised and Adored Amen THE XIII CONFESSION O Lord whose Power Maiesty and Wisedome haue no end haue mercy on me sinner and giue me leaue to speak vnto thee my God and aske thee whither men are pleasing to thee becaus they abound with human knowledg And behold thou affirmest no but vnhappy are they who can pearce into all things if they be ignorant of thee Lett me therefor loue and then I shall not be ignorant of that knowledg which maketh soules so pleasing in thyne eyes to wit knowledge of thee and my self O Loue which in lightnest soules and inflamest harts wâth chast loue flow into my soul This loue is honourable wisedome and though the enioyers thereof be accounted fooles by the wise of this world yet thou hast another opinion of them and their humble soules find much fauour in thy pure eyes my God! With this Loue did those abound of whom S. Paul speaketh that they went vp and down in goats skinnes needy despised hidden in dennes and caues of whom the world was not worthy yet some of thy Saints became very honourable and glorious euen in the eyes of the world the which was forced to acknowledge thee great in and by them and there was no resisting of thy wisedome speaking by them amongst which of these thy seruants was the great S. Augustin Doctor and light of thy Church a most ardent louer of thee my God Hee in those books of his that I haue seene turneth his speaches so to thy Maiesty that his words thereby become sweeter then ordinary and while he declareth his own misery he giueth to vnderstand to vs thy most aboundant mercy that all that desire to loue thee my Godâ may being inuited by him praise thee with him and for the fauour shewed by thee to him O that all to whom thou offrest the fauour of bestowing on them thy diuine Loue if they would after sinning by true Humility dispose themselues for it would become by his example gratefull to thee and loue thee as thou wouldst by them be beloued O how soon dost thou by thy Grace wipe out the sinnââ of such who now detesting their former il liues do striue by humble loue to become grateâull to thee for thy preuenting Mercy O Lord my God though thou hast forgiuen me much yet I am farr from louing thee much Those who now enioy thee that haue heertofor beene sinners as I be they Intercessors to thee for meâ and be thou euer praised for thy infinit mercy by all thy Maiesties creatures for euer anâ euer Amen THE XIV CONFESSIONâ O Lord my God who sweetly disposest all things giue thy poore contemptible creature leaue to speake vnto thee who art the only desire of my soul and my hope from my youth and entierly beloued of my hart To thee I will speak and write not as to one a far of but to stirr vp my soul to Loue thee alone and to draw occasions out of all things to praise and exalt thee whose mercies are aboue all thy works To whom should I make my moane in all my miseries but to thy self who art my God and All and who art neerer to me then I am to my self To whom should I go to be instructed but to the fountain of all wisedome Behold men change their mindes and almost euery man differeth in opinion from another in matters that are indifferent and so great is my ignoranâe and blindnes naturally that vnâesse thou instruct me I shall all waies âauer and neuer come to any true âerfection of knowledg They stand at âoo great a hazard who confide in âhemselues and cast not their hope âholy vpon thee All creatures are vnstable and those that seeke not âhee aboue all creatures but putt their trust more in men then in thee will find no true peace in their soules O that I did truly Loue for by Loue only my soul shall becom capable of vnderstanding truth Loue is humble âeaceable subiect to thee in all things The soul that loueth thee is more conuersant in heauen then on earth and what heere she of necessity must admit of serues to her rather as a cessation then any consolation The soul that Loues findeth occasion in all and by all things to praise thee my God and to humble it self Such are willingly subiect for thee and do see how odious it is to thee to see that subiects should contemn contradict or withstand thâ power in Superiors and make theiâ imperfection a colour for our sinneâ If it be right between our soules anâ thee we shall gladly obey thee speaâke thou or ordain thou by whom thoââ pleasest Teach me therefor to obey for thou only canst instruct me whâ true humble Obedience is If thou dâ not teach me I may perhaps giue to Caesar what is tâyne and deny to giue Caesar what is due to him by thy will Let me obey therefor for theeâ and in order to thy will and with an internall regard of thee whose due is all the subiection and loue that can be giuen by my poor soul. Open the eyes of my soul that I may see what thou exactest in all things Instruct me by whom and in what maner thoâ pleasest So I may but know what thy will and pleasure is it suffizeth thy poore seruant Giue me grace to obey thee my God with all that Loue thee for euer Amen THE XV. CONFESSION O Lord my God what soul that truly loues thee can complain what difficulties soeuer she endures or how great a desolation soeuer obscures her soul or how great paines soeuer she sustaines seeing thou whom she loueth more then her life and self art always the same beholding with an amorous and louing eye the louing soul afflicted by thee or by thy permission rather to try her fidelity then to oppresse her with such a burthen that might separate her from her only beloued for seeing nothing is dreaded by her but to be seperated from her God she holding humility and confidence thou O Lord wilt neuer permit her to be ouercome For thou makest the quarrel thyne own thus fought by vs and the victory ours though indeed gained by thee not by our own selues O how happy am I in thy Power and Glory Verily though I were to return to my own nothing yet I could not account my self void of an infinit happines seeing my God who is more mine then â am my own would remain and be the same in all Wisedome and Maiesty Thâs is the repose of my labour and the crown of my glory in which I will exult in my greatest
calamities and miseries O Loue lett me liue in and to thee and dy to all created things whatsoeuer O Loue Loue liue raign and wholy possesse my soul Consider not O my God so much what I am and haue beene as what I desire to be O Lord my God and all my Good THE XVI CONFESSION O Lord my God Father of the poor and true comforter of all afflicted soules be mercifull to my desolate hart and stirre it vp to perfect loue of thee that I may simply seek thee and sigh after thee my beloued absent and not for the sorrow I feele at the present Lett me long to embrace thee with the armes of my soul and think it litle to endure any misery in body or soul to be at last admitted into the boosom of my Loue fairest and choicest of thousands Lett all fall down and adore my God the glory of my hart Lett the sound of his Praise be heard to sound and resound ouer all the earth O when shall my soul hauing transcended it self and all created things be firmely vnited to thee the beloued of my hart resting in thee not in thy gifts or graces and neither desiring nor taking any satisfaction in any work or exercise whatsoeuer but in all paines temptations contempts deâolations pouerties and miseries either of body or mind conforming my self to thy sweet will for time and eternity who as iustly as euer thou didst any thing mayst condemne my soul eternally to hell from which nothing but thy meere mercy were able to saue and deliuer me and dayly I should incurr this sentence if thou didst not out of thy goodnes euer help and protect me thy sinfull seruantâ This only I desiâ this only I ask that I may in all things praise thee and that I may desire no comfort but to be able without all comfort human or diuine to be true to thee and not offend thy Haâosty THE XVII CONFESSION TO whom but to thee my Lord should I fly in all temptations and Crosses whose armes are open to embrace all repentant sinners and whose hands are lifted vp to giue a sweet benediction to all in misery If I either had or desired to haue any friend or comforter but thee I could not with confidence fly into thy bosâome for succour in this which is now faln on me Iâ euer thou hadst reiected any that hoped iu thee I might feare but as it is I will sing in my affliction with teaâes in myne eyes to thee and neuer leaue to hope in thine aboundant mercy Is it much that I serue thee whom all creatures are bound to serue and we are so happy in being subiect to thee that no libârây is to be compared to the happines of depending of thee THE XVIII CONFESSION WHEN thou art present O my God then my hart reioiceth and in peaâe singeth thy praises but when thou hidest thy beawtifull face my soul becometh exceedingly obscured and troubled yea euen ouerwhelmed in darknes and misery in which case long remaining which is most iustly permitted by thee for my humiliation what shall I do to lift vp my soul to thee but as one sick with loue of her absent beloued to speak with him it is impossible the distance of place is so great but yet she may hear others who speak of him which a little mitigateth her misery though while he is absent al is irksome to her becaus the delay afflicteth her hart But yet is she without all comfort No for she may write to and of him and if none will carry it to her deare beloued it shall remain by her that he may see at his return how she languished for loue and could take comfort in nothing that all creatures could offer or propose to her soul while she possessed not what she only desired her life by loue being more with her beloued then where she liued for which caus she heareth and yet mindeth not what is said vnles perhaps they treat feelingly of her absent loue and speak in his praise She seeth and yet cannot take comfort in what she beholdeth She sleepeth but her hart waketh and in fine while she cannot enioy her beloued nothing can satisfy her vnquiet hart Thus my God euen sensual and vnreasonable loue transporteth a reasonable soul But if naturall loue be of that force what doth that soul feel whom thou hast wounded with thy pure Loue And of what power is that loue that is seconded by thee who art the fountain of all true Loue and sweetnes What shall I say of a soul that hath tasted how sweet our Lord is Verily she yet liuing dieth a thousand deaths becaus she seeth herself so far from possessing thee my God whom none can see and liue nor none enioy as thou art in thy self till thou free her of the heauy and sinful burthen of flesh and bloudâ And allthough thou dost admitt her longing and sighing after thee alone to I know not what nor can I expres the vnspeakable ioy and delights which I say thou some times admittest her to therein not like to the louers in this world who oftimes reiect where they are most beloued yet out of thy care of her thou suddainly turnest away thy face at which till she loue thee for thy self she will become troubled and too too impatient in the delay which thou makest of returning to her again the which if she bear with a resigned mind making thy will her law aboue all the desires of her hart and sitt solitary like the turtle doue thou willt in good time assuredly return and being absent wilt be present to hear her prayers and see her teares shed for the sorrow she conceiueth to offend thee her desired beloued whom she would loue withall her hart with all her soul and all her strength and praise thee day and night without ceasing as it beseemes a soul languishing with thy loue THE XIX CONFESSION REMEMBER O my God that thou madst me for to loue thee Why therefor dost thou permit me to offend so sweet a Goodnes Although none do find thee in an extraordinary maner in the bottome of their soules but those that serue thee my God for Loue and walk by the way of the Crosse yet I do confidently affirm that thy yoke and burthen thy Law and thy Crosse are not by far so heauy greeuous and burthen âome as be the painâul wayes of âin which seeme âo be sweetned with some delightsâ but in the hart it proueth more bitter then gall whereas thy yoke being born by a truly louing soul is many times heauy when thou leauest her thereby to shew her how little she can do or suffer of her self and that she may glory in thee and not in her own power and humble herself and not preferre herâelf before others when I say thou pleasest to leaue her thus as it were forlorne she feeleth indeed a great burthen and nothing can comfort her till thou her desired and only beloued
I speak to thee according to his desire still more and more inflame my loue vnto thee Be thou all in all and aboue all vnto me If thou teach not my soul to loue in vain is the endeauour of man speaking and preaching to me Let me âeare thee by him and let me not so harken to him without that I grow deaf to thee who art within Thy words are works Either speak by others for our good or by tây self in the most interior of our soul. O happines that there should be such a capacity in vs of hauing relation to thee in all things Al things created may faile vs but thou who only canst fatiat our harts canst neuer change or alter but art stil the same and thy yeares shall not faile Thou teachest a soul true Humility and solid vertue In thee nothing is neglected thou art the Maiester of Perfection Thou teachest the simple humble and louing soul thy wayes and giuest her hidden Manna in the strength of which she may walk euen to the hous of her God where she shall praise him for euer and euer Qui ambulat simpliciter ambulat confidenter who walketh simply walketh confidently if we loue thee all will cooperat to good which graunt to thy own Praise Amen THE XXV CONFESSION OMnis populus venit ad Iesum sedens docebat eos All the people came Iesus and hee sitting taught them Can I heare and consider these words written by thy best beloued Disciple and not euen melt into tears of ioy If indeed any had been by thee my Lord reiected I might haue feared and that most iustly remembring my past and present sinnes But to put me out of feare and doubt thy holy Euangelist saith Omnis all To thee therefor I will fly and of thee I will learn how I may Please Praise and loue thee and how by true Humility I may dye to my self and all created things Hereby wholy to liue to thee my all and onely good Thou knowst that my soul without ceasing doth long after thee and to see it-self free from all that which is a hindrance to my perfectly louing thee Oâ Loue of my Lord God how forcible art thou in a pure soul O who will giue thee to me that my hart may be purged and purified thereby to becom a pleasing habitation for my God O Lord who art Goodnes it self can there be found any ioy comfort or true content in any thing but thee Can there I say for as for me far hath it been from thee to permit any thing but thy self to be sweet to mee O all ye that think it a burthen to be obliged by your Profession to tend to great Perfection and fear the punishment of our doing the contrary raise vp your harts and remember what it is that our Lord exacteth of you by this your Profession and this as it may seeme at first a seuere exaction so remember wel and consider I say what it is and your harts will rejoyce that feare our Lord. It is O it is to loue without bounds or measure It is to leaue your self that you may find God It is to fly from the world that you may hear our Lord speaking peace to your soul It is to submit and subiect your self wholy to him whose will none can resist but as they are permitted by him It is to be subiect to euery liuing creature for him who submitted himsef to the death of the Cross that we might become capable of enioying him This is that he exacteth of vs who haue dedicated our souls wholy to him This is that he requireth which though at first it seeme a burthen to perform yet that which seemeth so is indeed quite otherwise as we shal find in effect if we perform that out of loue which out of his loue to vs he exacteth of vs. For what is sweeter then to loue Yea and to loue him whom the more we loue the more it becometh delightful to vs to loue the more strict our obligation is to him the lighter is our burthen we haue to beare For he doing all that he hath done for vs to bring vs into this state to oblige vs to loue doth also if we be not the hindrance oblige himself to giue vs this Diuine loue of his which is able to vnite a poor contemptible creature to his Diuine Maiesty whom we are not worthy to name O sweet and most desirable yoke well maist thou be said to be sweet thou bringing true and perfect liberty For loue maketh light all burthens and sweetneth al labours and to them that loue it is easy to suffer any aduersities for their loueds sake O let me being obliged by thee to loue let me I say through thy mercy obtain this loue of thre which maketh a soul in all things grateful and faithful to thee Let me not offend thee in my miseries and then come as many as pleases thee for I account that only a misery to wit to offend thee Let all things praise thee and let me in all praise thy Diuine Maiesty with them that loue thee Behold Fire Sea Snow Thunder Lightning Hail and âhe Spirits of storms do thy will and yet I in all contradict it who am capable of thy loue and am inuited to loue so many ways by thee my God O let this thy loue wholy posses my soul that all that is within me may blesse thy holy Name I renounce into thy hands all that is in me contrary to this thy loue Let it wholy consume me that I may be wholy turned into loue and that nothing els may be desired by me Let me be drowned and swallowed vp in that of Diuine loue in which my soul may swim for all eternity neuer more by sin to be separated from thee O when wil this day come that I may return to thee my beginning When will thy Glory appeare When shal death be swalowed vp in victory that I may without ceasing Praise thee my God whose name I write with no smal comfort though otherwise I be so drie that I can scarce think vpon thee To heare thâe named or to write to or of thee refresheth my soul in al her misery and to it I flye from the thoughts feares and cares which as thou knowst often oppres me for my humiliation who for my pride deserue iustly to be reiected for euer by thee But in such case I hope both liuing and dying that thou my Lord art my God my Mercy and what is wanting to me I shal aboundantly posses if I confide only in thee which grant that I may not faile to do who only art to be Adored for all eternity Amen THE XXVI CONFESSION ERant appropinquantes ad Iesum Publicani peccatores vt audirent illum There were sinners and Publicans approaching to Iesus that they might hear him This is writ in the Gospel of this day my Lord which doth much comfort my sinfull
verily I may and must confesse and acknowledge to thee most particularly in this that thou hast so particularly and plainly as thou hast done for my humiliation discouered my sinnes vnto me wherby I might know and confesse myâ obligation to thee and âith al compassion on the sinnes and imperfections of others which they also are permitted to fal into that rising vp their loue may be the greatâr when they remember it before thee And this I may add to thy greater glory that thou didst reserue this knoâledg of my sinâul and miserable state from me till by meanes of thy said seruant I was put into the way of loue and aspiring to thee for els it would haue wholy deiected and ouerwhelmed me be thou by al glorified and Praised for thy Mercies to me Amen THE XXX CONFESSION O My Lord God to and before whom only I deâire to powre out my hart and the desires affecâtions and afflictions therof For thy owne sake forsake not me who desireth to leaue al for thee If thou wilt thou canât saue me Though I haue neuer to my knowledg done any thing that deserueth any grace or fauour before thee yet meerly out of thine owne goodnes forgiue me my sinnes and haue mercy on me Let thy Mercy which withouâ any desert of mine preuented me bring me to thee Let nothing for time or eternity but thy felf be desired by me Let not my soul loose it-self by resting in any thing but thee Let me take comâort in hearing of thee and let al inordinate loue to creatures be rooted out of my hart by thee Thou knowst for that which is past I am hartily sorry and it often draweth teares from mine eyes to think that their loue should haue been more strong and powerfull in me then that sweet loue of thine is now which challengeth so ful and whole possession of my hart and soul by so many titles which none can deny to thee Take it now therfore wholy to thy-self and ler me rather cease to be then to giue any part to any but as it shall be distributed by thine own sef thy friends only shall be mine that in fine I may haue only thee for my friend aboue all friends take from me of them thou giuest me as it best pleases thee For so I shal come to loue al in thee and yet they wil be as if they were not as to any impediment to my being vnited to thee Let me without ceasing aspire by loue vnto thee that I may be lifted aboue my self and all created things so to be pure and free vnto thee Amen THE XXXI CONFESSION O My Lord when I remember my innumerable sinnes it seemeth not much to me that I sustain these things both without and within But yet my deare God I may speak to thee in the bitternes of my soul who art my only refuge and comfort in affliction and say that thou seemest to me to shut vp al hope of meanes to help my self by some things which I already do and more am like heerafter to sustain Of whom should I beg help but of thee or strength to beare this to thy honour with conâormity to thy blessed wil Who can bestow this on me but thy-self Thou knowst that since I gaue my-sef to a serious tending to thee I neuer desired the friendship or fauour of any creature liuing Nay to thy honour I speak it thou many times and seueral ways shewed me so plainly the vncertainây instability and changeablenes of al created things that my soul euen loatheth the fauour of any how good soeuer neither do I wonder to see those whom to day vpon occasion I am resolute I may be confident in to morrow be in an humor of interpreting al I haue done or said in another sense then indeed I meant it This indeed thou permittest to the end we may trust in thee alone adhere to thee alone and for to purge our souls of the interest which nature getteth euen in the actions which we do with best intention Thou knowât I neiâher desire nor pretend any thing but do wish with al my soul that thy Wil be perfectly accomplished and take this answer from thee which I shal anone recite when I am too âolicitous of my own good or too much troubled with the preiudice or affliction of those thy sernants with whom I most vnâorthy âinner liue who are in thee al without exception most dearly beloued by me with this answer following of thine I am I say put in mind of my dury where thou saiest Quid ad âe tu me sequere What is that to thee do thou follow me And I answer thee my Lord that as for me it is good for me to adhere to thee who art that One thing which is only necessary Thou alone suffisest me and al things buâ thy-self shal be to me as if they were not that I may âind and enioy thee aâter whom my soul doth pant and sigh without ceasing longing after tâee with all my forces who art my al and only good No rhirst in any though neuer so weary and tired can be so great for want of that which naturally quencheth our thirst when we pant and are dry with heat and thirst as is the thirst which my soul doth sustain sighing and panting after thee the liuing fountain which yet I cannot enioy til my soul be set free from this corruptible flesh but the more I sigh the more I am delighted to sigh after whomâ I would so fain enioy The more I loue the more I am yet able farther to loue thee the more I deny my-self the morâ sweet it be cometh to me to suffer for thee the only beloued of my soul. Wo is me that euer I offended such a goodânes as art thou my God! Certainly my sinns deserue to be punished in an extraordinary maner becaus I committed them more wilfully then ordinary Such was the carefulnes of thy seruant my natural father who was so careful that I should be kept out of al occasions of sin that I might considering the nature also which thou gauest me haue liued very innocently But what through my greater fault and negligence is due to me for my sinns be it supplyed by the superaboundance of thy Mercy which I will from henceâorth with all my forces extol and I beseech thee remember thy true seruant my said Father who through his care preuented my further euil and also I offer to âhee him whose happy instructions hath made thy yoke sâ sâeet and thy burthen so light to me who as thou knowst found it so greiuous and heauy before I took my instructions from him that I was weary of the yoke and despaired euer to beare thy burthen with any comfort or quiet whereas afterward being put into a course of Praier and MortificatioÌ by hâm my greatest obligations seemed to be most most desirable burthens for al thy benefits be thou by al praised for
And yet thy Goodnes compelled me to enter O who wil giue me power and ability sufficiently to extol thy most a boundant Mercy which in this and al other things thy sweet Goodnes hath shewed towards me Blessed infinitly be my Lord by al his creatures My only study shal be to praise thee and my only desir that I may be faithful in al crosses and miseries to thee my only beloued Let thy Grace flow I beseech thee vpon thy seruant who with so much care paines and solicitud for thy sake endeauoured to win my hart wholy to thee Remember him vnto good according to al he hath done for me He hath truly made me to see and feel though through my great fault and ignoraÌce I before thought otherwise that thy yoke is sweet and thy burthen light which now I shal alâo being conuinced by experience acknowledge before heauen and earth to thine honour and my confusion who durst presume to think otherwise Pardon I beseech thee therefor for thinâ own sake this my sinne among the rest which are innumerable and let me heerafter be a true seruant and child of thine âho be blessed by al for euer and euer Amen THE XXXVIII CONFESSION SEmper gaudete sine intermissione orate Always reioyce Pray without ceasing O my Lord and my God They that truly loue thee may indeed iustly always rejoyce and without intermission praise thee But I that daily and âowrly offend thy diuino Maiesty ought to weep and lament my sins bitterly sitting solitary and making my moane to thee my God who art only able to help and comfort me in this misery O when shal I become truly humble Teach me Humility Obedience and Patience enlighten my soul obscured by my pride and other sins that I may loue thy Law and humbly embrace thy blessed wil in al things O let me be truly subiect to thee as thou wouldst haue me and euen to al others alsoâ as it is exacted by thee of me Wo be to my soul if daily it become not more and more obedient ro tâee and to others for thee Giue me true Discretion For no vertue hath more of vertue in it then it partaketh oâ this diuine vertue Giue me true Wisedom which maketh souls so pleasing to thee and which thou impartest to the humble and those that serue thee for loue and that seek thee aboue al gifts and created things whatsoeuer O loue loue flow into my soul that I may sigh and pant after my God alone and praise this my beloued for al eternity Amen THE XXXIX CONFESSION O Deus meus quis similis tibi O my God who is like to thee Who wil giue mâ that wiâhout ceasingâ may adhere to thee and with an amourous aspect regard thee in al things not seeking my-self nor the pleasing of any creature for it self in any thing I do or omit Desolatione desolata est omnis terra quia nullus est qui recogiter corde With desolation al the land is made desolate Because there is none who considereth in the hart O my God what wonder is it that we liue in blindnes if we come not to thee who art the only true ligât What do we with souls and harts capable of loue if we do not by them aspire to thee with al our strength and adhere to thee the only true and perfect good What is sweet what is to be desired but thee my Lord who art beawty it self What couldst thou do more then make out souls to thine own image and liknes and able âo be satisfied with nothing but thy self O misery of al miseries the greatest that thou shouldst be offended and forgotten by vs and that any thing should posses our souls besids thy loue which only can make vs happy and pleasing in thine eyes Wo is me who haue straied from the fountain of liuing water by which my âoul is dryed vp and euen withereth away in thirst after transitory things Change this my thirst by thyâweet âweet grace and Mercy to a thirsting after thee my God the glory of my hart and the peace and comfort of my soul. O let me loue or not liue and let me in al by al and aboue al praise thee who art bleâsed for al eternity Amen THE XL. CONFESSION MY soul blesse thou our Lord and al things within me his holy name Al spirits praise my God for euer and euer magnify him I wil declare to thee my God in al things how it stands with me that I may hope and be strengthened in and by thee I wil beg what is neceâsary for me to please and serue thee For what canst thou deny to them who haue no hope or comfort but only in thee He who giueth himself giueth al and when thou deniest what we ask it is that thou mayst giue tââ own self more fully to vs thy poor seruants and that impediments may be the more truly remoued between our souls and thee Simplify my soul that it may return to thee adorn me with ââine own merits that I may not appeare naked of good befâre thee and supply my defect in praising and louâng thee To thee my God al my interior powers shal aspire day and night without ceasing Let me draw no breath but therby to sigh and pant after thee the liuing fountain Let al actions which by Obedience or necessity be imposed on me be vndertaken and done by me with an inâerior regard of thee that I may truly in them obey and seek thee the most amiable beloued of my hart and soul let them be as a cessation or pausing for the time that I may afterward with the more force and sauour at times conuenient attend to thee in the bottom of my soul and therein praise thee Amen THE XLI CONFESSION COme al ye that haue vowed your bodies and souls to our Lord Come let vs loue Let vs giue al not only once but euery moment to him that made vs to bestow on vs himself Let vs not only loue but be wholy transformed into the âiuine loue Let vs liue to him âlone leauing al others for his sake only Let vs charitably interpret the words and deeds of those with whom we liue and if any faâl in that which he ought to perform giue vs grace my God to remembeâ how weak human nature is for good and how great is our frailty as to a sin and how soon we also if thou didst not protect vs might fail in a more shameful maner O my God thou hast commaunded vs to loue our neighbour as our self and behold we either loue them inordinatly to our impediment of louing thee or els we are short towards them of ârue Charity From both these errours deliuer the soul of thy poor seruant and grant me to loue al as tâou wouldst haue me Let no difficulties they cause to me make me in them the less to behold and consider thee Verily if there were no other reward to be
giuen to those who for thy sake requite euil with good then the true peace which they find in their souls by it it were most worthy our labour But thou my Lord reseruest great reward in the next life for those who for bitternes caused to them by others do return sweetnes vnto âhem yea nothing is more pleasing and acceptable to thee then that we by humility and patience do pacify those who are offended with vs. But alas my God I wil speak and wil not be silent in the eares of my Lord and with teares in mine eyes wil bewail my sins and offences I ânow there is no more true loue in our souls to our neighbours then we are dead to our selues and liue vnto thee What therefor can I think of my poor soul so barrein of al true vertue If I loue thy very-self so little as indeed I do where wilt thouâind âind in me that Charity which by thy law I owe for thee towards them Verily when I consider how destitute I am of al that might make me pleasing in thine eyes I cannot but tremble and fear Yet again taking hart remembring thy Mercy towards me I find I haue cause of hope thou being goodnes itself whose nature is to desir to impart it-self which if thou wilt be pleased to do to my poor soul I shal notwithstanding al my sins become yet in thee and by thee most happy towards which I beseech thee grant me grace to dispose my-self for thy only honour who be Blessed for euer Amen THE XLII CONFESSION O Lord my God what Mercy art thou pleased to shew to my sinful soul Is it possible after so many abominable offeÌces that thou shoudst thus particularly fauour me If it were euer possible to be lawful for thy creatures to exclaim against thee and taxe thee oâ iniustice it might be admitted them in this thou hast done and doest âor me the most sinnful and most contemptible of al thy Maiesties creatures If â had euer donâ any good they perhaps would not wonder at theâ but as it is theâ cannot but at least admire thy infinit sweetnes and Mercy For what sin is there I haue not comitted at least by my wil. But the greater thy Mercâ the more I hope the honouâ and praise wil be which thy seruanâ wil yeild to tâee for itâ and do thââ thy self I beseech theâ supply ouâ defect in this and al other things so that perfect praise may be yeilded to thee in al and by al for euer and euer Amen THE XLIII CONFESSION LOrd with great ioy I desir to celebrat this diuine Solemnity of thy Resurrection Thou hast shewed thy-self in al formes so that the weakest capacities might in some sort apprehend thee who art incomprehensible Thou appearedst a child that thy little ones might conceiue more easily some things that might moue them to loue thee and being as it is were astonished at tây loue towards vs and at thy infinit humility we might thirst after thy example and loue only thee For al thou hast done or said is for our comfort and instruction What hast thou left vndone which might any way further our good if we would but concur with thy Grace But we streying from thee how can we choose but be blind For only in thy light can we see and discern that which only importeth vs to see and know to wit to know thee therby to loue thee and to know our-selues therby to humâble vs in al things before thy Diuine Maiesty For nothing but true Humility can make vs gracious in thine eyes So much as we truly humble our selues so much and no more do we encrease in our loue to thee O how peaceful amidst al storms is the souls of the humble how fauoured by thee though they be dispised by the whole world They are indeed often neglected by men but most conuersant with thee and thine Angels and Saints in heauen Neuer was there euer such acquaintance loue and friendship between any in this world as there is between thy Goodnes and an humble soul that seeketh thee aboue al graces and gifts whatsoeuer and transcendeth al created things that she may adhere to thee in the bottom of her soul. Verily it is so strange that it puttetâ the heauently Court into admiration that we that haue dedicated our souls wholy to thee should loue seeke or desir any thing besids thee But alas human frailty as they wel know is very great and therefor they also cannot choos but pitty and pray for vs and especially we women silly to all things that this âorld admires and therefor most contemptible of al creatures if we do not labour for the loue of thee â the which to do thou dost as willingly enable vs as thou dost the wise of the world if we hinder not thy grace who despisest not any thing thou hast made How much are we to be therefor blamed and condemned if we labour not I say for thy loue Yea to shew thy power thou hast been pleased many times to bring a silly woman louing thee to that wisedom that no creature by wit or industry could attain to the same But where my Lord haue these thy Spouses in these dayes placed there harts Where I say seeing they seek and desir so much the âauour and praise of the world to haue the friendship of men and by letters and toâens to draw their harts from thee vnto them notwithstanding as good reason it prospereth not with vs in such doing for they by this meanes seeing our defect in louing thee cannot confide in them who are not true to thee but coÌtrary compare vs to those who profer loue to al and yet as we ought for thee loue none O Lord remoue these scandals from thy Church Let vs though we cannot serue thee in great matters yet let vs I say haue no âarts but to loue thee no tongues but to praise thee nor eyes but to behold thy creatures as things inuiting our souls to loueâ sigh pant and âuen languish after tâee No eares but to heare what is thy will and in fine not to liue but in and for tâee and for thy loue to be subiect to euery human creature as far as it is exacted of vs by thee Giue that humilityâ which by thy blessed Apostle Saint Paul thou requirest in vs that I may willingly submit my-self to the power of Superiors set ouer me by âhee It is true I see and hear daily âhat scandals what discorders and âhat confusions arise in Communities for want oâ due submission in subiects to their Superiors but alas my God certeinly a chief cause therof is at least in many who haue good wils becaus thy are not taught to obey tâee interiorly in their souls out of which it would proue easy to them to obey exteriorly wheras now it semes a burthen intolerable and forsooth vnder pretence of greater perfection we often fal inâ to open rebellion Surely
For her humble soul thought it-self too vnworthy of such a fauour when thou didst put her in mind that she was to conuers with thee in a more spiritual maner then before neither did she reflect on the labour pain and grief she had sustained For as thou knowst loue feeleth no labour nor complaineth of any burthen For only to haue seen thee aliue again was sufficient to make her forget al former afflictions For her sake and for al their sakes that loue thee be merciful to my sins and bring me by true loue to be vnited to thee with them where for euer without ceasing I may praise thee my only beloued Amen THE XLVII CONFESSION O LORD my God I wil speak to thee again and again I wil cal vpon thee the entierly beloued of my hart I wil melt away in thy praises and I wil inuite al thy spouses to to seek thee alone aboue al thy giâts and aboue al creatures For in thee alone is true peaee and comfort to be found and enjoyed O how happy should I esteem my self if I were able to praise thee without ceasing or be any cause that any should more and more languish with thy loue What should I do being born down with the weight of mortal flesh and diuers internal afflictions so that I can many times scarsly think on thee What should I do I sayâ but liât vp my hart with my hands as it were by main force sometimes by words and sometimes by writing vnto thee which I do not do as to one that is farr of from me but as to one who is more neere to me then I am to my-self and of whose Goodnes whose Wisedom whâse Beawty whose Mercy and most absolut and incomparable greatnes I am more assured of then I am of any thing I see with my corporal eyes O who would not loue this Goânes this Maiesty and submit them-selues âo this most amiable beloued oâ our souls If any comfort or happines were to be found out of him we were somthing excusable in negâecting and forgetting our chief good âut seeing we cannot euen in this mortal liâe find any content but by louing praising and truly seeking and seruing him we are too miserable and too blame for loosing our-selues by resting with loue and inordinat affection in transitory and visible things O far be it from thy spouses to set their affection vpon any thing bââ thee or to bereaue thee of the affection which from al is to thee only due Al that we are and haue is too little for thee Let vs not therefor of that little we haue take from thee O let vs loue thee aboue al and al others in and âor thee I do bemoan this misery aboue al miseries that those who haue dedicated themselues to thee should seek the loue and fauour of others to their own and the others impediment in thy loue and seruice Oâtentimes we comply and correspond vnder pretence to get temporal means the while neglecting thee who feedest the birds and clothest the beasts of the earth who neither sow not reap neither are they solicitous of any thing but depend of thy meere prouidence and yet thou prouidest for them Can we think thou wilt haue less care of vs that haue left al the world for thee then of the vnreasonnable creatues made only for our seruices Hast not thou said by the Spirit of al truth that first seek for the Kingdom of God and his iustice al things els sâal be added to you O let vs therefor leaue al things truly that we may confide in thee casting our care vpon thee who wilt nourisâ our souls and bodies if we wil but faithfully and constantly adhere vnto thee our supreame and only Good Let vs leaue pretending any thing but thee For often euen vnder the pretence of getting praiers of others we poure out our-selues in the meane time neglecting to haue relation to thee who wouldst more willingly giue then we could ask if we would but truly and faithfully adhere to thee and not stray out of our selues hindering both our selues and others from adhering to thee to whom we owe al we are and can do and and therefor are greatly to blame when we do not endeauour to loue thee with al our soul with al our mind and al our strength which grant for thy own sake we may endeauour to do to thy honour and glory who be praised loued and adored for al eternity Amen THE XLVIII CONFESSION SHAL not my soul be subiect to God O my Lord far be it from me to wil or desire any thing but according to thy diuine wil which is only holy Let me neuer resist thy wil signified to me by any means whatsoeuer Let my soul be wholy turned into a flame of diuine loue that I may aspire and tend to nothing els but thy-self alone Blot out my sins that my soul may return to thee by loue from whom by sin it hath strayed O let nothing but this desir of thee my God posses my hart Let that be my solace in labours pains temptations desolations and al afflictions of body or mind Let not my hart drawn by thee to seek after nothing but loue be so base as to couet desir and rest in any thing but thee Thou art my life my choice and my only beloued When I hear theâ but named my Lord God it forcible draweth me into my-self that I may attend vnto thee forgetting my-self and whatsoeuer els besids thee for which benefit be thou inâinitly praisâd Amen THE XLIX CONFESSION OMNIS âpiritus lâudet Dominum Bonedicite omnia opera Domini Domino laudate super exaltate eum in saeoula Let euery spirit praise our Lordâ Blesse our Lord al the works of oââ Lord praise and exalt him for euer O my God that I were able with a pure soul and louing hart to extol thy praise But alas thy praise is not seemly in the mouth of a sinner But shal I for this hold my peace If I do yet permit me this comfort for thine own sake that I may inuite others more worthy to sing and set forth the praise of thy diuine Maiesty with whom yet as the last and least my soul shal ioin in the praise of thee our deare Creator and in that which is so worthily possessed by thy sweet Goodnesâ I wil rejoice with al the forces of my hart and soul O my holy and deare delight what a most harmonious melody would refound ouer al the earth if thy wil and iust disposition took place in al things Behold al thy works praise thee euery one in their kind only man for whose help and comfort al other things on âarth were created â peruerteth the order of thy Iustice by miâuâing that noble free wil which thou gauest him to choose and loue thee with O what couldst thou haue done more then with such a noble gift to haue endued vs Certeinly
if we would intend thee in al and haue relation to thee in al who art more present to our souls then we are to our selues we should hear thee giuing answers sometimes by others sometimes by thy self and sometimes by tâe words of holy Scriptures and ancient Fathers and subiects would be tractable to Superiors rather gouerning by thee then by themselues what thoâ wouldst commaund they would commend and in al not seeking their own glory or exaltation would glory in thee not in their own powerâ and what were done by thee they would then accompt only wel doneâ but what they did oâ themselues they would accompt little profitable as to the aduancement oâ souls Then they would be able to se whaâ were fit for euery soul vndeâ theiâ chardg and when thou permittedâ this not to be so cleer to them theâ would humble themselues acknowâledging it happened for their vnâwoâthines beseeching thee to do thaâ by thy-self which could not be done by them and if thon shouldst perhaps let another though their subiect to see and discern what were fit in that case or cases though he were but the last and lowest and of the least esteeme in the Conuent yet certeinly such Superiors would not accompt it to derogate from their authoritâ that such an one should supply their place and Offifice vpon occasions becaus they seek thy honour and not their own and though thou hadst giuen them power to command yet no otherwise would they vse it then according to such maner and in such cases as thou dost require they should In this maner gouerning with relation to thee and regard of thy wil and with indifferency what thou wilt do by them what by others and what by thy-self whose spirit breatheth where it pleases Then the sensual loue and friendship between the Superiors and their subiects would cease then sincerity and reason would take place both in the commander and in the obeyer both thinking al their loue and labour to be too little for thy Godnes then would be peace on al sids and the imperfections of al would turn to the aduancement not to the preiudice of any then as they desired the friendship or fauour of none but in al things willingly and gladly depending of thy prouidence so they would be friends with al thy friends and pitty and pray for from the bottom of their souls those that are thine enemies amongst which they âould verrly beleeue they should haue been the greatest if thou of thy sweet Mercy hadst not preuented them Also inferiors that truly liue to thee and desiring nothing els but thee though thou didst teach and instruct them about the vse of indifferent things by an internal ligât which discerneth between custome and true reason between their natural desirs and thy true Iustice which only ought to take place in al things yet they accounting themselues wholy vnworthy of being instructed by thee most willingly hear thy wil and commaunds not only from Superiors but from any creature whatsoeuer accounting it sufficient for them that it was signified to them that it was thy wil the which we ought to follow as doth a shaddow the the body or els of little worth is any thing we do For thou rewardest no works but thine own O if al creatures would serue thee according to their capacities and âtates what a resemblance would this life haue with heauen No person no state can pretend to be excused from being able to serue and pleaâe thee who hast made our hart for thy-self and it can neuer haue true rest and repose but in thee the Center oâ our souls What creature is so little or contemptible that doth not in some sort inuite vs in its kind to loue and praise thee my Lord God If we would lâue thee they would not fail to serue vs til we could serue thee without them But alas as it is affirmed and that most truly thaâ order is the life of things so man being out of order by seeking himselâ more then thee and by doing that which may redound rather to his own honour then to thine hath made al thy other creatures refuse that obedience which they owed to man if tat he were truly obedient to thee Our defect in this towards thee puts al out of order For how can subiects be pliable to the wil of Superiors if first they be not in the way of obeying thee witâ relation of their obediences to man as to thee and meerly for an according to thy âil And how can we bâ at peace with others iâ first we bâ not by true resignation in a way tâ haue peace with thee in our own soulsâ Where is the Obedience due to thee and others for âhee since oftentimeâ out of blindnes we giue Caesar thaâ which was Gods and deny to him that which was due to him by the ãâã of God As also if Superiors anâ Priests should stand vpon points vâ surping that to themselues whicâ thou hast reserued to thy self what shal become of subiects Certainly they wil not wel know what to do vnles it be very right between them and thee But alas Si sal euanuerit in quo salietur If the salt loose its vertue in what shal it be salted Happy are they that light vpon a good Superior but much more happy are they who by true light in Humility and Abnegation are instructed by thee who art the only true teacher of Humility true obedience and perfect Pryer O my Lord when shal it be said that the multitude of beleiuers are of one hart and soul When shal al be vnited in the bonds of true peace Neuer til our Charity beginning in thee do spread it self to al others for thee For there is no true friendship but that which thou knittest between such as loue al in and for thee and thee aboue al that can be imagined or desired O when shal thy Iustice and Truth in all things take place that the earth may breath forth nothing but thy Praise Then we should be in paine and not seeme to sufferâ so sweet or pleasing would the paiâ be we should liue on earth noâ as being strangers in heauen and liuing heer should more liue witâ thee our beloued then where we of necessity liued For then thy wil being done in earth as in heauen the earth would resemble heauen wherby the pain and grief of our banishment would be sweetned with â comfort almost heauenly and thaâ together with resigning our selues to thy holy wil to be contented to be denyed for a time til thy wil might thereby be wholy accomplishedâ and after that come to see thy glorious face and enjoy thee as thou anâ in thy-self who is our only happines the expectation wâerof would makâ this world tolerable to vs and wâ should then seek thy glory and thâ fulfilling of thyâustice âustice in al things and not our own comfort anâ honour Verily al thy disposition are so
or obtain they are farther from being satisfyed then they were before It is true the more we loue thee the more we desire to loue thee And the more we loue the more able we are to loue and the more easy it is to loue and loue making al pains confusions difficulties and afflictions sweet what is there left to suffer Only indeed the hiding of thy face and denying vs fully to enioy thee this only remains to pearce our harts with if we truly loue and yet thy iust wil is a consolation euen in the greatest extremity of this difficulty Who would therefor not loue thee wholy forgetting themselues and their own profit and commodity either for time or eternity Certainly the Prophets Martyrs Confessors and Virgins that loued thee more then their liues found torments bannishments imprisonments and persecutions sweeter by reason of their loue to thee and of their desiring to be faithful to thy amiable Maiesty then al the pleasures contentments riches honours and glory of the world did euer yet yeald to those that haue most abounded therewith since the beginning of the world O if we could ask Salomon for al the aboundance he liued in and S. Francis in his pouerty or S. Laurence vpon his Gridiron and certainly both by his acknowledgment and theirs their pouerty and pain through loue were sweeter then al his delights euen in this world yea euen Iob sitting vpon the Dunghil and saying God gaue and God hath taken away as it pleaseth our Lord so let it be his name be blessed for euer enioyed more comfort and true peace in soul then al the comforts and pleasures of this world could giue or haue caused to him For only submission to thee my deare God bringeth true comfort to our souls O if we did truly humble ouâ selues how greatly would thy goodnes be exalted in our souls If we did seek thee not thy gifts graces and comforts how then should we go out of our selues and therby enter into thee O if we were rruly humble how much wouldst thou be pleased to be serued by vs and how many do fare the better for thy humble ones though they be hidden and vnknown for such to the worldâ Certeinly the humble are so deare to thee that thou seemest not willing or able to do any thing without them For while vnmindful of al but thee they forget themselues thou in â the meane time enrichest them with thine own works that they may merit more grace glory and fauour before tâee in al things thou dost or permittest to which to the vttermost of their power they concurre by humble resignation if they can do no more which is sufficient to satisfy thee who needest not our works or labours but it is our harts souls and loues that thou requirest and by which thou wilt do good to vs or by vs. What thou thinkest meet for vs to do or to be able to do ought to be indifferent to vs who should haue no wil but thine nor any election but of thee Wel may it be said that where Humility is there is also Wisedom For the truly humble being guided by thy interior Truth and Iustice more then by human wisedom surpasse the weaknes of their own folly for so al wisedom may be esteemed that is not from thee and in thy light by which light only we can discern the glorious truth and not by the natural light of our weak vnderstanding that is not able without a beame of thy Grace to discouer such truth so blind is our soul of it-self without tâee and it is only true humility that maketh vs capable of this thy light And yet if a soul had been with S. Paul in the third Heauen if she should leaue the way of Humility she would return to her former blindnes and the more she by vsurping thy gifts and graces to herself did puff vp her self the more al true light and discretion would depart from her soul and the more het folly would appeare to heauen and earth to her great confusion both in this life and in the next if she did not return and come to know her own nothing For as it is truly said The corruption of the best is the worst O Lord deliuer al from this accursed sin of pride which turned Angels into most vgly diuels and hath been the caâse of the separation of so many souls created by thee to enioy eternal felicity from thee my God But especially deliuer those from this most odious vice who haue had the means by the mercy of thy sweet Goodnes to come to some true knowledg of thee and themselues For if we knew al and could discourse with al the wit and eloquence of the Philosophers Orators and Diuines of the causes and effects of al natural and supernatural things yet if we did not know thee by endeauouring truly to loue thee we might truly be said to know nothing For only by louing thee and knowing our selues is true Wisedom obtained And how can it but peruert al true Iustice that thou art by so few in comparison of the whole world sought with a pure intention If we being almost to death benumed with cold should for remedy go forth into the blustering and far colder wind or in the scortching heat of sommer should for mitigation therof to our body go to an hot flaming fire who would not iudg vs euen out of our witts for our so doing Euen so we when wanting supernatural light that is true light and necessary for the guidance of vs in the way towards thee we in lieu of seeking after that light and of taking the means to come by it do betake vs onây to our natural light the which as to the said supernatural end is but meere blindnes and darknes and thus proceeding in assuming for our means the contrary oâ that wâ should we prosper both in our practice and in our end accordingly The things which we practise as vertues being indeed no true vertues for want of the discretion that it necessary for the perfection of themâ and the which discretion is but the self same as the light had from thee wherby often-times our pretended vertues come to haue more of vices then of true vertues in them such defect proceeding out of this that indeed in our inâard and secret consciences we think that we are able to do that which is right and proâitable of our own selues and without light and ability for it from thee And when harm falleth to vs or to others by such our blind proceedings we lay the fault of it vpon thee where it is notâ and not vpon our selues where indeed it is O ler this folly also be far from vs for thou art iust O my Lord and thy iudgments are equity how hidden soeuer thy meaning in them be to our souls I for my part desire to adore thee in al thou disposest and do most gladly acknowledg that al
thou hast made is good if it be put for that vse âor which thou madst it Do not we see that euen Spiders and Serpents do draw the venom from the earth both for the purging it and also for a farther vse that man therof maks and yet these to our seeming are of the least worth as to good among thy creatures But it is our mis vsingâ abusing and mis-applying thy creatures that makes the world turn vpside down The hail thunder storms rain snow did the three Children in the furnace inuite to praise thee as good in themselues being made by thee But nothing is so good in this world but it may be peruerted and abused For if man whose soul was made by thee in such purity by sin becometh so foul how can this choose but breed disorder in the world al things therein being giuen by thee to be disposed by him and vsed by him as ââlpâ to âârue thee while we liue heer But ô my God I wil speak to thee and I wil cal vpon thee who art Wisedâm it-self If thou smile at my folly yet behold me sinner and instruct me in thy Law which is sweet aboue al delights of the world and to serue thee for loue is that which I only desire In al my miseries and afflictions of body and soul thou despisâst not any soul flying to thee and dilating my-self to thee I do comfort and strengthen my hart which aspireth to nothing as thou knowst by this my speaking to tâee but to ease my soul by begging help of thee and declaring to thee my only friend my sins and miseries For if we fly from tâee whither go we but out oâ one darknes into another Who can discouer our wounds to vs but thy-fâlf who when we acknowledge them dost also cure the languishing diseases of our very souls O in thy light let me see light that so al impâdiments may be remoued between thy Godnes and my souâ My âoul can neuer return to thee til it âe purged and purifyed by graceând ând Mercy Of my-self I can do nothing Thou therefor that madst and redeemedst me saue me who euery moment should perish if I were not assisted by thee I see nothing or hear any thing but it giueth me new cause to praise thee and to seek thee aboue al gifts graces and creatures Grant me therefor to serue thee in that maner thou wouldst be serued by meâ For I am not able to do any thing good of my self Let me by Humility and truâ obedience return to thee from whom for my sins I deserue to be separated with the diuels eternally but thy Mercy which is aboue al thy works pardon me and giue me Grace to liue better heerafter O my God me thinks some times I haue so liuely a feeling of my own nothing and see so plainly that we depend wholy of thy grace and Mercy that I wonder how it is possible I should anâ more be able to presume of my-self in any thing whatsoeuer But alas this passeth away and like dust carried away with the winde so is my soul with vanity In which my sin and misery I groan to thee from the bottom of my soul who art my helper and my deliuerer from al mine enemies wherof the greatest is my self and to thee I declare my iniquities which are without end or measure to the end I may glorify thee the more who shewest mercy to me and reiectest not the most disloyal of al thy Maiesties seruants For which let heauen and earth praise thee seeing I am not able by any thing to shew gratitude to thee For I caÌ do nothing but declare thy Mercy and beseech thysâlf to supply my defect in praising thee For thou only canst do it as I desire it should be done The very Seraphins are too short of being able according to thy worth to praise thee and al thy Angels and âaints accompt themselues as dumb in comparison of thy deserts from them For al thy sweet Mercy be thou thereâ for by al not as able but as willing to praise tâee magnifyed for euer and euer Amen THE XLII CONFESSION O My Lord and my God If none haue much forgiuen them but those that loue much what wil become of me This day we read in our Office that Saint Marie Magdalen coming to thy feet which she watered with her reares heard that comfortable answer from thee to wit Go in peace thy sinnes are forgiuen thee but it was out of this regard that she loued much This answer thou madst to her whose hart in silence spoak vnto thee doth much comfort my sinful soul. But yet when I remember how void I am of that which was the necessary disposition for her soul to hear those comfortable words thy sins are forgiuen thee go in peace it draweth teares ârom mine eyes to see how far my soul is destitute of that pure loue which preuaileth with thy diuine Maiesty What shal I say What shal I do Or wherein shal I hope I am not fit to plead for my-self my sinnes indeed are so many and so great and as for the loue which only thou desirest behold my soul is destitute of it For if I haue any towards thee my God it is but a sensible childish loue which is a loue little beseeming the bestowing vpon such a God who is al Good Beawty Wisedom yea euen Goodnes and Loue it-self to whom is due a loue which is able to suffer al things for this loue is a strong loue more strong then death it-self the which kind of loue is far from me who am blown down with the least blast of temptation and cannot endure any disgrace desolation or difficulty whatsoeuer as it beseems a true louer of his But notwithstanding my poueâty and misery yet I wil hope in him and wil approach to his feet who is Mercy itself There my Lord and my God I wil in filence sigh and weep both for my sinnes and for my defect in louing thee who art worthy of al loue and Praise whatsoeuer There I wil beg this loue so much to be desired There I wil wish and long for itâ and from thy feet I wil not depart til thou denounce to me thy sins are forgiuen thee and saiest to my soul go in peace This voice I long to hear in my hart that I may with the voice of exaltation praise thee for euer Amen THE LIII CONFESSION AMen Amen dico vobis quia receperunt mercedem suam Math. 6. Amen Amen I say ânto you they haue receiued their reward These thy words my Lord and my God come into my mind so often as my thoughts dare to think of hauing deserued any reward at tây hands and serue as a motiue to subiect my soul totally to thy diuine Maiesty before whom now I do professe and acknowledg that my desirs and endeauours are so defectiue in comparison of what is to thee due from me that I may and
but to be whoiy his who is most worthy to be that that hee is If it is his delight be to be with the children of men what should comfort vs but to praise and loue him Those that seeke him shal find him With al their heart O who would seek any thing besids him seeâng he is not more willing to giue vs any thing then his own self heer by grace and heerafter in Heauen by glory Let vs adore him in spirit and truth Al wâ can giue him is nothing vnles we entierly giue him onr selues and that also cannot add to his greatnes and glory yet if we doe this so much doth his diuine Maiesty esteem of this gift that for it and in requital of it he wil giue vs his own self al his gifts and graces are a meanes for the preparing of vs for this end if we vse theiâ rightly with Humility and according to the iust wil of Almighty God Let vs extend our wil to serue loue praise please and magnify our Lord to the vttermost we are able âea wthout al limits or bounds Leâ vs âesire his honour til such time as we may be swallowed vp in the bottomles Ocean of al loue and praise God in himself in whom and by and in whom only we can praise him as we ought Let vs loue him as far as we arâ possible able without regard of our selues either for time or eternity This is the humble loue that feeleth no burden This is the loue that knoweth not how to attribute any thing it doth or suffereth to it-self It chooseth not wherin God shâl make vse of her but accommodateth her-self in al things to his diuine pleasure If it were his wil to hauâ it so she would rather for euer be picking vp chips or straws then out of her own election to be doing that which is most admired or might seeme to her to procure her the greatest reward O you souls that God bestoweth his loue vpon think it not much to beare the burthen not only of your selues but also of al that you liue with for God beareth you vp in al more then you can coÌceaue or imagin Beware aboue al things of pride For that cast euen Angels out of heauen A soul of prayer as-long as she keeps Humility is in no peril of going out of her way It is certainly true that God giueth himself to them who forsake al I say al and not by halfs with reseruing what we please to our selues but to al that forsake al he giueth himself without exception of persons and he that pleaseth our Lord neâdeth nor feare al the diuels in hel It is a wonderful thing to see the variety of opinions that are or may be about the best vse of those things that of themselues are indifferent or at least are not euil one holding this aâd another that euery man according to his fancy and as Saint Paul saith abounding in his âwn sense No wonder then that those that liuâ and conuerse with others and namely in a Religious Community do easily fal into occasion of iars and differences with others whilst euery one pretends the truth and the best to be of her side howsoeuer it be indeed and therefor ones nâture wil easily take occasion of iarring with oâhers if it be not mortâfyed by restraint from what it is inclining to by such occasions It is only the diuiâe vertue of true discretion that is able to discern and iudg for ones own practise what is good better or best of al in the vse of those indifferent things The more truly mortifyed the âoul is the cleerer is such light of discretion in her and wil increâse in her if she be stil solicitous more and more to liue to God in her interior and to dy to her-self and to al created things by simply regarding God in al she doth oâ omitteth intending him alone in al ââângs It is a true prouerbe that it is an easier matter to corrupt the mind of one then of a great many Wherefor we must remember that it is a good and happy thing for Brethren to dwel in One or rather by true loue and charity in that One Which is truly necessary to wit in God For no loue is true but that which is in him and for him and without impediment to his loue Al other loues are false slippery peruerse and vaine as not being founded in God the ground of al true and happy loue nor being referred to him and his loue But the true loue which is the diuine wil make al others deare vnto vs for his sake and none deare but in hâm and for him It wil make vs in capable of accounting any to be our enemies how hardly soeuer they treat vs because in al things we wil regard God that permitteth such difficulties to happen to vs to the end our fidelity to him may therby be tried and so not regaâd with any auersion the party who afflicteth vs And it wil be sufficient for vs towards the pacification of our soul vpon the hard or bitter vsadge offred vs that we remember that he hath suffred it to happen to vs for our good who only knoweth what is best for the humbling of vs and the abating of our pride the which must be done if wil be pleasing to God to whom now and euer I commit my-self Amen Vnum sit mihi âoâum id est omnia in omnibus Let one be al to to me that is Al in Al. This was a Poesy bestowed on me and my Parteners by another the truth wherof I pray God may anâwerably be in the harts and loues of vs and of al other souls whatsoeuer The simple exârcâse of the wil being faithfully and perseâeraÌâ prosecâted through Gods concurring gââce remoueth in time al impediments beâween our soul and God and the soul by loue cometh so to transcend al created thiâgs yâa euen her own self that al creatures are to her as if they were not as to any hurtful distraction they cause to her or as to any other impediment between her and God the which can be only by inordinate adhering in affection to those creatures A true spiritual internal life is so priuate and secret between God and the soul that others cannot easily disâerne it no not by by the external effects of it For in her exterior cariadge âhe is common and general as hating singularity by meanes wâerof she euoideth much occasion of pride and walketh the more seâurly between God and her Those âhat liue an internal life do so wiâhdraw al natural inordinate affection from creatures that they often therfor are censured by superiors equals to neglect others out of pride But they abhorring to haue special interest in any do proceed so far as they can according to true charity and mind not what others iudg of them they desiring only in al to dischardg their duty to God âhom they
able to resist thee in them Then their iudgment would be so cleered that they would vnderstand most hidden mysteâies Then an hower of praier would instruct them more fully then fifty years study can do they hauing by the meane of such prayer in al things relation to thee the only true wisedom and in whose light only is true light to be seen By louing thee and dying to themselues in al things they would become maisters of themselues and al the world would then noâhing moue them nor would any thing affright them becaus thou wouldst be their stay and comfort in al things If we wil do as we ought and as is best for vs we must be subiect to the wil of God in al things without exception And this is the beâefit of an internal life that it makes one capable of seeing and knowing Gods wil and âlso most ready to performe it Which way soeuer he signify it to them which makes them obey as readily and willingly meerly for Gods sake and out of obedience to him a simple or imperfect Superior as they would an Angel or the Wisest creature in the world yea if it were possible that a worme or any other creature were ordained by God to rule ouer them âhey would with al their harts embrace his wil by them For without this total subiectâon to God it is impossible to become truly Spiritual For if we resist his wil in our Superiors in vaine do we pretend to please him This vertue therefor of Obedience we must learn of him the which must be grounded vpon true ' Humility that must be our stay in al things And those two vertues of Humility and Obedience together with the diuine vertue of Discretion he wil teach vs if we do our parts in seeking to become more more humble and subiect to him For seeing it is his wil we should obey and become truly Humble how can we doubt but he wil giue vs the grace if we Humbly and perseuerantly beg it of Him and practise those vertues vpon occasions as wel as we can For he himself hath saâd whân we aske our father bread he doth not giue a stone nor if we aske him fish wil he giue a serpeât much lesse wil he deny vs what is necessary to make vs pleasing to him and we seeking or desiring nothing but by true loue to be faithful to him O Praier praier able to obtaine al things O how cometh it to passe my Lord that this Oââipotent thing âas some of thy deare seruaÌts tearme it praier should be so vnknown yea and euen to them whom thou tearmest the Salt of the earth contemned I meane Mental praier at least for the practise of poore simple women for whom they hold it aboue al things most dangerous euen to my own knowledg as I haue known affirmed by Superiors of seueral Orders O misery to be truly lamented by al that haue or may haue tast iâ praier and by the effect thereof know how sweet a thing it is to attend only and wholy to the praise and loue of Goâ Surely the want of the wisedom which by praier the Saints did gaine is the cause why cústome and opinion do take place for the most part in this world of true reason Surely neuer was the world reformed of its sins and errours but it must be by the wisedom which cometh from God and is farre different From that which is accounted Wisedom by the world which as S. Paul saith is folly before God CERTAIN OTHER DEVOtions of the same deuot Soul D. Gertrude More which she left written in her Breuiary In the fore part of her Breuiary she had framed and written the ensuing praier for her due performance of the diuine Office viz Al you that blesse our Lord exalt him al you can for he is greater then al your praises OMNIS SPIRITVS LAVDET Dominum Let euery spirit praise the Lord. AND I âhy poore creature who am not worthy to name thee my Lord my God and al my good do heer in the preâsence of al thy Celestial Court desire ãâã peâform this my Office with al diligenââ and with an amourous affections towards thee my âoâ who hast imposâd this sweet and most to be desired obligation vpon me sinner who doth not deserue any such honour or comfort from thee as to be admitted to ioine my cold and frozen praises with al those who praise thee either on earth or in heauen where al to my comfort do without ceasinâ continually praise thee And for what is wanting in me for the performance thereof as I should and ought to do supply it out of the superaboundance of thâ merits and mercâ I desire to say it with al my hart according to the intention of our holy Mother the Catholick Church of which I desire through thy grace to liue and dy a true member be thâu according to her desir Adored Blessed Magnified and supreamly Superexalted by ât Let it be to the honour of thy al Immaculaâe Mother the Lady and Queen of Angels and Saints to these in a particular maner â viz to my good Angel our most holy Father S. Benet S. Scholastica S Ioseph S. Peter and S. Paul S. Iohn Enangelist S. Iohn Baptist S. Thomas and my deare S. Augustin S. Mary Magdalen S. Gertrude and in fine al that are in Heauen haue by it to them exhibited by thee what thou willest and desirest should be I beseech thee also that I may by it pray to thee or al afflicted pained tempted and troubled that they may please and praise thee in those their miseries and ouercome them to their comfort and thy glory I also offer to thy sweet Mercy al those souls who by deadly sin are enemies to thee which is indeâd the misery of miseries O lét them return to thee wâo art our beginning and the true Center of our souls from whom to be separated by sin âs a most greiuous hel and to whom to be vnited by grace is a most sweet Heauen Conuert therefor and recal those souls to thee for whom âhou spaâedst not âhy most pretious Bloud shedding it to the very last drop for vs finners I offer thee also my Parents who haue placed me heer in thy house where here I may euen heare and see how to serue thee and where I may night and day attend to thee and praise thee my amiable and most to be desired beloued whom to serue and to be obliged to loue is the only happines in this world and to whom to be tyed by vowes and other obligations of Religion is a most sweet seruitude and yoâe and so sweet that no liberty is to it to be compared I offer thee also our holy Congregationâ and al that euer or shal desire my poore vnworthy prayers and aboue al I offer thee al those in earth or Purgatory which thy diuine Maiesty would haue me pray for to thee beseeching thee that tây Diuine
wil and pleasure may be perfectly accomplished in al creatures and last of al though not with the least affection I offer to thee this thy Conuent wherof though very vnworthy of such a fauour as to liue in such a happy company I am a poor imperfect member beseeching thee for thy owâe sake and by the loue thou bearest to al such as truly seek to please thee alone that thou wilâ mercifully enrich their souls with the most aboundant gifts of thy grace so that their whole study may be to please praise and worship thee in spirit and truth and especially I offer thee thoâe therein that haue done do or shal heerafter by their patience in supporting the defects of their Sisters and helping them by that meanes to beare their burthen and by their giuing good example in Humility Obedience and other vertues be a meane or helpe to the maintaining of Peace in this thy house towards which thou hast shewed so much Prouidence that if we cast not our whole care both for body and soul vpon thee we shal not deserue the fauâurs thou hast shewed to vs. We are thy little flock keepe thou euer possession of vs let vs be of one mind and of one hart and let vs al and euery one with one consent according to thy grace giuen vs simply intend and regard âhee in al we do tâink speak or desire thou hast called vs and gathered vs together send vs a good life and a happy death to thy Praise Honour and Glory who art God of al things and to whom now and for euer be giuen al Laud and Praise by al creatures Amen Amen Delicta iuuentutis meae ignorantias meas ne memineris Domine Ab oâcultis meis munda me Domine ab alienis parce seruo tuo O Domine Spes mea delicta quis entelligit O my God my deare delight and al my hâppines Thou knowst I groan in spirit against my-self to think that I made no more hast to couclude an euerlasting league and peace with thee my God! O teach me to loue or let me not liue thou only canst do al things and I as tâou wel knowst can do nothing Behold I desiâe to leaue al to find thee and to dy to al created things to the end I may liue only in and to thee I desire only thee and to reâurn to thee the beginning of al creatures and the supreame beloued of al chast souls O how powerful is thy true loue in a pure soul O purify my hart and soul so that nothing but thy loue may liue in me O when shal I see my soul vnited to thee O when by true loue shal my soul languish for thee O when shal I be wholy turned into the loue of thee O that I might do in al things that which is pleasing to thee O when shal my soul by transcending al created things become capable by Charity of embracing thee in the bottom of my poor soul O loue loue loâe what wonderful effects dost tâou work in a soul Thy loue my God doth sweeten al miâeriâs aâd maketh light al burthens and labours Verily nothing in the wârld is so delightâful to them that loue it and haue as much of it as they can desire and enioy al the pleasures and contents thereof as it is to a louing soul that sincerely seeketh thee to suffer for thy loue O my God what do we loose euen in this life when we wish for loue or desire any thing besids thee It is only loue that draweth thee down to vs and eleuateth vs vp to thee O who would not suffer any thing to obâain this loue Nothing can comfort or satisfy my soul but to loue thee When wilt thou replenish my hart with thy pure loue that resteth in thee aboue thy gifts that my soul may truly adore thee in spirit and truth Thou knowst that no grasse doth so wither for want of water as doth my poor sinful soul for want of âhy loue O that without ceasing I could praise thee As the sâag or hart beiug tired with pursuit doth thirst and pant after a sweet Spring so doth my soul after thee it hauing been much more tired with streying from thee then the poor hart can be by being chaced by his enemâes by as much more as it is more greiuous to be hurt by ones self then to haue it done by others O wâen shal I in al things do thy wil that my actions may be iust and plâasing to thee O when shal I so humble my-self âhat I may be worthy in some sort to praise thee whom now for my pride I am not fit to name Iesu Son of Dauid haue mercy on me and of thy great pitty and Charity remember me among the Whelps that expect and beg vnder thy table for one crum of grace from thee Where but vnder the shaddow of thy wings shal I repose from the heat of al inordinate paââions and desires and from that mid-day Sun that parcheth and withereth away the new spriggs or leaues of my new sowen desir of louing praising and pleasing thee alone my Lord and my God Who but thy self by thy swâet grace can preserue mâ from fâlling into my old sins and sorrowes Thou therefor art my only Refâge in this day of my tribulation and amidst the storms of this world to thee I reueale my cause be thou my strength and my Glory that I may at last laying down the burthen of this mortal flesh be admitted into that place where I may Praise thee for euer and euer Amen O my God when shal that time come that I shal neuer more offend thee This is the mâsery wherein I languish and which maketh this world tedious to me This only is truly to be tearmed an affliction and misery and nothing is truly to be accounted misery but to displease thy diuine Maiesty Iesu Son of Dauid haue mercy on my sinful soul. O how happy are those that loue thee O loue loue loue of my God how far is my sinful soul from the happines of enioying thee as my soul desireth Nothing is sweet to a hart that desireth to loue her God but to sigh long and pant after him O who wil giue me the wings of a Doue that I may fly into the open wounds of my beloued O my God my oâly desire how long shal I thus be estranged from thee the God of my hart and my portion for euer O the most dearly beloued of my soul how long shal I by inordinatly adhering to created things bâ so far from louing thee as I ought to do O thou who only deserueth our loue my God and my al Lord my God who alone art good and iust shal I any longer loue uanity and seek after a lye How long shal thy dispositions and most righteous ordinances be dâspleasing to thy poore seruant How long shal I resist thy diuine wil Verily my God in this my misery I sigh
vnto thee who art my hope from my youâh and am displeased with my-self for hauing been so vngrateful to thy sweet mercy acknowledging before Heauen aâd earth that nothing is iust but that which thou disposest and nothing is wel done saue so far as it is done by thee so much as any thing I do or say is only of mine own wil and desire so far it iustly deserueth punishment to thee be al glâry In nothing is true Peace but in seekâng after God aâone and in resting ân him aboue al his giâts O my God when shal I be able to say Quis me separabit à Charitate Dei VVho shal separate me from the Charity of God O when shal I by true loue become vnited to thee the only desire of my hart and soul Vsquequo Domine obliuisceris me in finem Vsquequo auertis faciem tuam à me How long wilt thou forget me vnto the end Hâw long doth thou turn away thy face from me wilt thou for euer be angry with thy poor seruant Behold thou knowst I desire no other comfort vpon earth then to be able without offending thee to liue without al comfort human or diuine O how litâle to be esteemed is al the solaces this world can afford The wicked haue been telling me of their delights but they are not like those of thy Law What comfort can any creature lâuing afford a soul that sigheth and longeth after thee alone my God and is bannished from the beloned of her soul Verily my God it is only thy-self that can reioyce and comfort such a soul thou only art sweet and al things compared to thee are as nothing and lesse then nothing O my Lord and my God tel me is there any thing in Heauen or on Earth that can satisfy my soul besids thee No certainly Why then dost thou permit me thus to wander from thee who art only worthy to be desired and beloued by my soul O my most deare God who can comprehend the misery that soule suffereth that taketh comfort or desireth any comfort from any creature O how long shal I be subiect to this mysery of inordânatly louing thy creatures so that it is an impediment to the louing of thee my Creator who art the supreame Good To thee alone is al loue due and we do steal from thee when our affection is willingly caried to any thing els whatsoeuer O my God my Mercy let vs loue thee as thy diuine Maiesty who art Lord of al things in whose power al things do stand let me I say loue thee as thou wouldst be beloued by me O my Lord as-long as the peace of my soul dependeth of men I can neuer repose in thee or âind thee in the bottom of my soul What came I into Râligion âor but to loue and praise my God my Lord and al my good O when shal I as I desire loue thee and please thee my God and al my desire O my God how cometh it to passe that thou whose mercies are super omnia opera eius Aboue al his works shouldst be now tearmed to be terrible and hard to be pleased Verily I am a sinner and the greatest of al sinners and yet I haue found thee so good and easily pleased that nothing is more pleasant then to serue thee for loue and to beare thy yoke from our youth The yoke of sin is heauy but thine is sweet aboue a the contântments and pleasures of this world Let those that seek not thee and that desire any thing willingly but thee feare and return to theâ but let the harts of them that loue thee reioice O Lord. But can I say I loue Verily not I. But shal I for this feareâ No my God at least not so as to loose confidence which hath in it a great remuneration For seeing by thy grace I desire to loue and to leaue al for loue I wil hopâ in thy Mercâ let it assist my extreame frailty anâ pouerty Of my-self I am nothing but in thy power I shal be able to do al things Thou knowst that I desire to leaue al for thy sake and that if I knew any thing that I loued to the impediment âof my truly seruing thee it would be so greât a gâeif to my soul that nothing in Heauen or earth could comforâ me til I see my-self freed from that miserable bondage by thy aââisting Graceâ which I implore from the bottom of my soul Set me free I mosâ humbly beseech thee by the multitude oâ thy Mercies from the sinnes into which I daily fal through my frailty remoue al impedâments between my soul and thee for I am frail aboue al measure Let me liue to thee dying to al other things whatsoeuer Let me find and possesse thee in the bottom of my soul Let al creatures be âilent that thou alone maist be heard by me And I wil not trouble my-self with them without who are puffing and blowing and thereby raising vp the dust of multiplicity into their own and others eyes Let me enter into the most retired place of my soul and sing loue songs to thee my Al and only Good regarding thee with the simple eye of my soul and sighing out certaân vnspeakabe groans in this pilgrimage of mine into the eares oâ the only beloued of my hart and soul wo is me that euer I offended such a God! Be propitious O Lord vnto my sin for it is great O Mercy which hath neither end nor measure haue pitty on me and forgiue me my sins Amen God! Let thy Truth and not the blindnes of my own ignorance speak to me Speak Lord for thy seruant heareth or at least desireth to hear thee Behold I set open the eares of my soul that I mny heare my beloued speak Iustice and Peace to my hart For thy voice is sweet and thy face comely and there is none like vnto thâe in Beawty and wisedom Thou my God the repose of my labour the ioy of my soul and the comfort of my hart Be to me al in al and aboue al which can be enioyed ot desired Let me O let me rest in thee and in no created thing whatsoeuer Simplify my soul that it may be able to adhere to thee my God transcending al created things O when shal my soul forget al and only be mindful of thee the most pure spirit resting in thee aboue al thy Graces and Gifts O when shal I be by profound Humility reduced to the nothing which only makes a a soul capable of thee who art al good things who art that simple good in which nothing is wanting How long shal I glory in any created thing and seek my-self to the dishonour of him with out whom I could neither haue life nor being much lesseâ to be able without him to do any thing meriting grace and Saluation O my God when wilt thou set me free that I may glory in thee alone and not by pride exalt
defiled and deformed soul doth aspire Behold I do extol now thy deare seruice to the skie professing and protesting that there is no liberty so sweet as to be bound and obliged by vowes to serue thee for loue Thou true and most blessed God how didst thou with a most sweet and seuere kind of Mercy receaue chek and conuince me straying and flying from thee by shamefully seeking that in thy creatures which is only to be found in thee to wit comfort and peace O Lord I am thy seruant say vnto my soul I am thy Saluation and al that is within me shal say Quis similis tibi Deus meus VVho is like vnto thee my Lord God Behold I haue had an auersion from al that which thou louest and an inclination to al which thou hatest But thou hast broken my bands and I wil offer thee a Sacrifice of Praise submitting henceforth my stifneck to thine easy yoke and my shoulders to thy light but then Vnderneath a picture of B. Iohn de Cruce she writ as followeth viz. O Blessed and pure Saint pray for me sinful wretch who am not worthy to cal vpon thee yet coafiding in thine inflamed charity I commit and commend my-self to thy sweet protection now and at the dreadful howre of my death remember me I beseech thee Amen To some Collections which she drew out of S. Augustins Confessions she added as followeth Good God be merciful to mine iniquities for this deare Saints sake of thine whose Humility doth so astonish me that I cannot choose but cry with a loud voice in my hart O how admirable art thou in thy Saints What are his whole Books of Confessions but a profound acknowledgment of his sinnes whieh he doth not only confesse to thee but to al the world to the end that al may perpetually praise thy Mercy But O my God for this Humility of his thou hast highly exalted him for which be thou eternally magnified and praised by al creatures He was one of those sinners for whose conuersation There was more ioy in Heauen then vpon ninty nine Iust and not without great cause seeing he was to be a chief pillar in thy Church and one who might and did draw infinit sinners by his words and writings out of the mire and dreggs of sinne and taught them to submit themselues to thiue easy yoke and to seâue thee for loue and to glory in nothing but thee Yea what is wanting in his words that may inuite our souls to loue thee with al our harts with al our strengths and our neighbour as our selues Who can speaâe in the words of thine own Oracles more comfortably to sinners then he hath done ân fine hâs words are so amorously sweet in thy Praises that euen my frozen soul had been melted thereâ by into thy praise He for thy sake be an Aduocate and Intercessor to thee for me the most sinful and contemptible of al thâ seruants he I say to whom many sinnes wâre forgiuen because he loued much whom I desire together with al the Celestial Court to Adore and Praise thee for me who am not worthy to name thee who be euer blessed Amen In a Collection which she was making out of the Booke of Psalmes she added to some verses as followeth Psal. 23. vers 6. THis is the generation of them that seeke hâm of them that seek the face of the God of Iacob I pray God it may proue so with vs to his Honour and Glory âsâl 31. veâs â0 I wil giue thee vnderstanding and wil instruct thee in the way tâat thou shalt go I wâl fasten mine eyes vpon thee who is not wholy inflamed with a desire to seeke after God alone to heare such a promise from his own mellifluous mouth Psal. 35. vers 10. Because with thee is the fountain of life and in thy light we shal see light I beseech al those deuout souls that shal peruse this book to labour carefully for that light which the Prophet heer speaketh of which proceedeth from loue and not from human wisedom This light by which we shal discerne truth from falshood is gotten by conuerâing with Almighty God and humbling our selues vnder his mighty hand This light hath taught many their way to God that could neither write nor read Sweet Iesus make vs of the number of these little ones to whom this light is reuealed which is hidden from the wise and prudent which is bestowed vpon those that faithfully adhere to God and not on those that glory rather in themselues them in him He be Blessed and Praised by al for euer and euer Amen Psal. 86. vers 5. Reueale thy way to our Lord and hope in him and he wil do it A comfortable saying for those that God permits stil to remain do whât they can in their imperfections v. 7. Haue no emulation in him that appeareth in his way v. 6. Be subiect to our Lord and pray him Note this wel v. 11. The meeke shal inherit the land and shal be delighted in multitude of peace If we truly labour for his peace which is in much Patience the God of Peace wil be amongst vs. v. 25. When he shal fal he shal not be bruised because our Lord putteth his hand vnder O what an incouradgment is this to a poore frail soul Let vs notwithstanding our imperfections confidently and amoâously when we fail hope in his Mercy and then He wil heal and helpe vs who makes vs so many sweet promises VVho be blessed by al creatutes for euer and euer Amen v. 26. I haue been yong for I am old and I haue not seene the iust forsaken nor his seed seeking bread Why do we distruct then who haue dedicated our selues wholy to God fearing ro depend only of his diuine Prouidenâe which is the greatest happines in this world and so much to be desired if we had so much loue and couradge as we should Psal. 38 v. 8. Doubtles al things are vanity euery man liuing O my poor soul take good notice of this verse Adhere to our Lord whose years neuer fail and whose helpe is alwaies at hand Giue that to God that is Gods and that to Caesar that is Caesars marke what the Prophet faith in the same Psalme viz. And now what is my Expectation is it not our Lord and my substance is with thee Psal. 39. vers 15. But thou O Lord make not thy considerations far from me thy Mercy and thy truth haue alwayes receaued me O be thou euer blessed for it by al creatures my God and Al. Amen Psal. 40. vers 1. Blessed is the man that vnderstandeth concerning the needy and the poor in the euil day our Lord wil deliuer him O my poor soul though thou hast not where with to releeue the poor in thâ iâ huÌger thirst yet dispaire not to gaine this blessing that our Lord wil protâct thee in the euil day which thou standest so much need off For to pray for
those that afflict thee and render good for euil to those that molest thee and being a comfort in al thou canst imagin to those that are afflicted either in body or in mând without exception of persons is included in the gaining of that most to be desired promise Remember with ioy and imitate the best thou art able the happy example of the late blessed Bishop of Geneua of whom it is reported that one in his diocese exceâdinly molesting afflictâng and persecuting this holy Saint yét he vsed him with al loue gentlenes and respect yea more then any other person At which patient proceeding of his one of his subiects wondrâng at and speaking to him of it asked him how he could vse that man so mildly who neuer requited him with other then il turnes for al the grace he shewed him being as it were top ful of bitternes against him To which the Saint humbly answâered O âaâth he if he should put out one of mine eyes I woul smile vpon him wâh the other I beseech thee my God for thy own sake graÌt thy vnworthiest seruant grace to imiâate this example though to speake truly none can do her an iniury who deserueth so much in punishment for her sinnes Psal. 41. vers 6. and 7. VVby art thou sorrowful my soul and why dost thon trouble me Hope in God because yet I wil confesse to him the saluation of my counâânance and my God O my soul hope in thy God who can do al things O blessed Hope and Confidence which is able to obtain al things and ouercome al things v. 11. In the day our Lord hath commanded his Merey and in the night a song of him Dost thou not hear my soul tây Lord doth require of thee Mercy towards thy euen Christian for that he sheweth to thee And that night and day thou wâlt sing his Praise But Lord thou knowst that thy Praise is not seemly in the mouth of a sinner What then shal I do O hope in thy Mercy Certaine âomfortable sayings taken out of the holy Scripture for the encouradgment of those that desire with all their harts to Loue and please our most merciful God and first out of the Prophet Isaie Chap. the first VVASH you be cleane take away the euil of your cogitations from mine eyes Câase to do peruersly 17. Learne to do good Seek iudgment succour the oppressed iudge for pupil defend the widow And come and accuse me saith our Lord. 18. If your sins shal be as scarlet they shal be made as whit as snow and if they be as red as vermilion they shal be whit as wool 19. If you be willing and wil hear me you shal eat the good things of the earth 22. Thy siluer is turned into drosse thy wine is mingled with water But hear what followeth O my soul and therefor be not discomforted though al thou dost and sufferest be very imperfect yet behold what he promiseth who can do al things If he wil he can make thee clean If he command the wind and sea wil be stil and there wil eâsue a calme Commit thy âelf to him and he wil helpe thee when he thinketh fit O God thy wil be done therefor in me for euer and euer Amen 25. I wil turn my hand to thee and boyle out thy drâssââil it be pure and wil take away al thy tinâe 26. Aâter these things thou shalt be called the Iust a faithful City Shal I feare to be forsaken by thee my God after al these sweet promises No I wil hope in the multitude of thy Mercies Though I haue hitherto sinued against Heauen and before thee so that I am not worthy to be called thy child yet let me eat of the crumes which fal from my Maisters table that I may grow stronger heerafter in resisting that which maketh me displeasing in thy pure eyes Hear my Lord the voyce of a sinner which would faine loue tâee and with her hart and soul as greatly please the as euer she bath offended thee Let me either loue or not liâe I know thy Merciâs are so great that tâou hast admitted those to eat of the bread of Angels which hertofore fed of Huskes like swine yea S. Gertrude saith that the more base vile and contemptible the creature is to whom thou shewest mercy the more extolled art tâou by al thine Angels and Saints in Heauen I wil therefore hope in thee and beseech al tây Saints to pray for me and praise tâee for taking pitty of me who am not worthy to cast vp`mine eyes to Heauen much les to thinke vpon or praise tâee To thee O my God and al my desire be giuen perpetual Praise and Adoration for al eternity by al creatures Amen CHAP. II. COme let vs go vp to the Mount of our Lord and to the house of the Gâd of Iacob and he wil teach vs his waies aâd we shal walke in his âathes 5. Houâe of Iacob come ye and let vs walke in the light of our Lord. O my God happy are they that walke in this light In this light none walke but the Humble and cleane of hart and those that serue thee for loue whose ioy thou thy-self art and who sing with the Prophet Rennit consolari anima mea My soul refused to be comforâed These do in some sorte more or lesse as thou pleasest find how sweet and happy a thing it is to seeke and sigh after thee alone Return my soul to thy beloued return seek for no consolation but put thy hope in God Commit thy-self vnto God and let him do with thee what pleaseth him Neuer seeke thine owne glory neuer desire thy wil may be done but in al things intend loue and preferre the Glory and wil of God If any come vnto him he shal not return empty because he willngly giueth water to the thirsty In the bowels of thy Mercy my God remember me poor begger born and liuing in blindnes Grant me that I may see and walke in âhy light that my soul may become truly pleasing to thee O my Lord God whom only I desire to loue serue and praise make me in al things conformable to thy holy wil who be blessed for euer and euer Amen Amen Amenâ Scio cui credidi certus sumâ I know whom I haâe trusted and am secure saith S. Paul O glorious S. Augustin my deare Patron whom from my infancy in my poor mauer I haue honoured in a particular maner and who hast been alwaies ready to assist me in calling vpon thee I beseech thee for the loue of him by whose loue thy hart was so inflamed to assist me at the hour of my death and obtaine for me of our Lord that liuing and dying I may be wholy conformable to his Blessed wil neither desiting for time or eternity any other thing then that his diuine pleasure be perfectly accomplished in me his vnworthy vngrateful creature And in that dreadful houre
could not haue been taxed of too sleightly rewarding their labour For certainly the peace that followeth doing goodâ for euil and yeelding sweet for bitter and passing al difficulties humbly and patiently ouer is much more pleasant then by hauing ful power to do vpon such occasions the quite contrary Such is the very nature of al his exactions and ordinations that euen the very effect of them maketh theÌ worthy to be loued desired ond practised For who can consider of al vertues âad not see how great a happines lieth hid in the true practise of theÌ euen in this life As for exaÌple Iustice Patience Benigniây Longanimity Charity and true Discretion accompanied with vnfained humility who doth not see that these the like vertues make vs pleasing to Goâ and man that the not practising theÌ doth make vs troublesom to others and aboue al to ouâ selues Giue vs O my God al those vârtues which make souls so pleasing in thy diuine eyes Let not the very Infidels HeatheÌ be our accusers who practised that out of the light of nature which we omit in this happy time of Grace Shal they contemn the world and shal we desire the base pleasures and coÌtentments thereof Shal they fly into dens caues to get wisdom learning shal nor we be contented to be forgotten by al the world Shal they do good for euil we do euil for good and put vp nothing for loue of thee Shal they subdue their passions and affections to become maisters of their souls and shal not we do itâ who by it may come to haue the freer accesse to thee in our souls O no far be it from vs my Lord my Godâ but rather let our souls draw no breaââ but to aspire to thee by true loue Let vs adhere to thee and to no created thing whatsoeuer that we may for euer euer be vnited to thee who created vs for that end for wâ h be thou Blessed and Praised eternally Amen Thus wrote our pious soul D. Cârtrude More vpon these sayings and doings of those Heaâhen Philosophers FINIS LAVS DEO Sir Thom More â â F. Aug. Baker Luk. 20.23 â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â 1. Io. 2. 20.27 â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â This Sir Thomas Moâe the faââuâ Lârâ Chancellor of England Bâessed and rânovvâeâ Martyr of Christ IESVS vvas her great great grand-Father â â â â â â â â â â â â â Matt. 22.21 â Mathâ 19. 30. â V. Fa. Baker Mathâ 18. 3. Mathâ 10 16. Luk. 14. Psal. 142. â Psal. 33. 12. Psal. 33. 14. â â â Esay 35. 8. â â â Fa. ââer V. R. F. Rudesind Barlo â â â â â â â â â âob 7. 1. â â Kings 1. 19. Psal. 72.28 Psal. 7â 25 â â â â Psal. 59. 13. Psal. 18. 8. 9. â Psal. 144.9 Psal. 33. 6. â Psal. â6 1. Psal. 72. 23. Psal. 72. Math. 5. 11. â â Math. 11. 2 â âant â 7. â 1. Cor. 15.55 â â Hebr. 11. Psal. â 8.37 Pas. 187.2 â â Math. 4. 4. â R. F. Baker â Io. 8. 2 â â Luk 1 .1 Ps. 9. 19. â â â Psal. â5 â1 â Psal. 118. Esaio 35. 8. â Mat. 5. 8. â Cant. 1. 8. â â Pas. 86. 3. Luk 24. R. F. Baker â â V. F Baker â â Io 21. 22. V. F. Baker â Io 14. 18. â Psal. 93 1â 17. â â â Io. 3. 21. â Rom. 1.17 â Psal. 72. Mat. 9.3 â â Rom. 1 ââ 5. â â â â V F. Baker 1 Thes. 5. 17. Ier. 12 11. Psal. 102. 1. â â â â Io. 15. 9. Io. 15. 5. â Io. 20. â â Mat. 6.33 Psal. 150. Dan. 3.37 Eccli 15. 9. â Io. 3. 8. â Mat. 3. 15. â â â â â â â â Luk 9. â5 â Shee dyed presently heerevpon â â Rom. 4 3. â â â Wis. 10 Luk 11.12 â â 1. Cor. 3.19 The Benedictin Nouns at CaÌbray â â â Psal. 126. â Ier. 2. 13. â Psal. 35. Psal. 23. â â â Verse 16. Verse 3. Luk 4.40 â â â â â
return For she hauing forsaken all for thee and hauing tasted of thy sweetnes saieth with the Prophet Turn away myne eyes that they see not vanity least like a dog she return to her vomit and after hauing had a glimering of thy light she becaus she feared she should not be able to sustain thy chastisements and shouâd forgett and loose herself by these tribulations and desirous that she might be happily enabled to enâer the more fully into thee and fearing I say her own frailty she thus againe crieth out to thee by these other words of the Psalmist saying Domine Deus salutis meae in die clamaui nocte coram te O Lord God of my saluation day and night haue I cryed after Thee For who but thy self can comfort a soul that indeed neither seekes nor desires any thing but thee my God O when shall I spend all my strength and forces in singing thy Praises Who would sett their harts vpon any thing but thee seeing thou hast made all other things so hard to be obtained that we might seeke only thee for whom we were made and whose Loue we may more easily obtaine then any thing els whatsoâuer O lett me Loue thee who only for that end didst create me We would haue that which is worth nothing and many times greiue for the losse of that which would but cause vs perplexity and trouble to haue In the meane time neglecting that which thou so infinitly desirest to bestow vpon vs to wit thy loue then which nothâng is so good or sweet or that bringeth such true peace to the soul. THE XX. CONFESSION WITHOVT paine it is impossible O my most Amiable God to liue in loue But if the difficulties which thy true friends and seruants feele were weighed with the miseries of those who rather seek to please themselues and others then thee there would be found an infinit disâparity For thy yoke is sweet and thy burthen light to the simple and humble and to those who serue thee for loue and whose ioy thou thy self art and who nothing els but thee my God do seâk for in time or eternity These I say are despised contemned afflicted pained tempted troubled and many times sit sorrowfull with a heauy hart and sad countenance But thy will being their law and thy disposition their consolation I may boldly affirme that in all this they suffer nothing in comparison of the fondâ louers of this world becaus thou being euer more present to them then tâey to themselues dost when thou seest thy time refresh their souls with the light and comfort of thy grace yea seeming to be euen prodigall of thy sweetnes to such as abide faithfull to thee in their tribulations and hope confide and glory in thee and not in themselues and who take occasion in all they see heare suffer ouercome to humble themselues vnder thy mighty hand and blesse and praise thy Iustice and Mercy in all things whatsoeuer Amongst which number admit me poor and contemptible sinner to thy greater glory for this thy Mercy from all creatures for euer and euer Amen THE XXI CONFESSION O My Lord and my God remoue al impediments between thy Goodnes and my poor soul that I may loue thee who only deseruest all loue and honour Giue me an humble and peacefull hart that thou maist inhabit therein as thou desirest Suppres in me by thy sweet Grace the sin of pride which maketh me as yet so odious to thy Diuine Maiesty O if we did but by true Humility abase our selues what beames of true light would shine in the bottome of our souls O what amity is there between thy Diuine Maiesty and an humble soul Nothing but Humility could haue drawn thee down to the earth and only Humility can make vs capable of being drawn by âhee vp to heauen The truly humble conuers familiarly with thee and thy Saints They presuming nothing of themselues can do all things in thee who strengthnest them And thou art so chary and tender of the humble that what concerneth them thou esteemest to concern thy owne self and euen thy own hart And they thinking they do nothing do by thee do all things Many vnknown to the worldâ and of no esteem wiâh it shall before thee haue the honour and merât in the next world of that which noâ other men boast of and attribute to themselues For the humble liuing stil in their own nothing giue all glory to thee by whom only all good is performed in the mean while thou enriching them of thy meere Mercy with thy Merits O happy exchange thinâ for ours durt for the most pure gold What is all we can do Verily nothing Enrich me therefor poor begger with some-what of thyne At thâ feet I lay whatsoeuer thou giuest oâ hast giuen me Giue or take away ãâã thou pleasest so thou do not blot mâ out of the book of life Open to me knocking at the door of thy Mercy I haue been fiue and twenty yeares this signifieth her age at the writing heerof as that she was then fiue and twenty years olde in my infirmity of most loathsome sinnes behold my misery and take pitty vpon me Sonne of Dauid I defiled that âoul that was made to thy owne Image and liknes haue compassion on her who hath no other friend or comforter but thy self the only desired of my hart For thy owne sake be propitious to my sin for it is much Nothing that I haue done can I alleadg to thee which hath deserued any reward in thine eyes Onely desires of which manie burn in hell they being little without good works Giue her to drink who withers away for want of thee the fountain of al sweetnes I will powre out my soul before thee that at least I may comfort my self with relating to thee my sinnes and miseries Behold all my ennemies triumph ouer me of whom most easily in all temptations they get âhe victory Fight for me or els I know not what will become of me giue me true Humility by which all things are easily ouercome and all thou exactest most perfectly accomplâshed by vs thy Maiesties poor creatures Giue thy self to meâ who hath nothing of her own to offer thee and if thou giue me thy self I am as rich as I desire to be and if thou shouldst bestoâ vpon me all thou hast or can create it would be little to me vnles I possessed thee By thy felf I Praise thee whose name doth not be-seeme the mouth of a sinner O let me Loue or not liue I giue my self to thee whome alone I wish for and desire with all the forces of my hart and soul. O my God how neere thou art to vs ready to heare and receaue our prayers and petitions Behold thy sâeeâ prouidence sheweth it self in all things O how long shall my God be thus âorgotten by creatures When wilt thou by Loue be by all sought after as thou oughtest to be by vs THE
thy own self my Lord who made vs for this alone that by true sincerâ affection we should adhere to thee the chiefe and supreame Good O woe is me iâ for any intention or for any creatures sake whatsoeuer I should do any thing with other intention willingly then to please and become inwardly in the bottom of my souâ vnited to thee heer by grace and in Heauen for al eternity Al things and creatures fail only tây-self art constant thou art alwayeâ present alwaies willing to helpe thy poor seruants euer ready âo cure our woundsâ which through human frailty by sin we daily cause in our souls Let vs who haue been greiuous sinners and do so aboundantly experience thy Mercy giue great and continual praise to thee our God who hath sweetly redeemed vs to thy-self in the Bloud of Iesus thy Sonne the immaculate Lambe giuing vs therby hope of remission of our innumerable sins Great art thou O Lord and exceeding worthy of al Praise O let al things Adore and Exalt my God with al their soul and strength What other study what other endeauourâ or what other desire shal possesse my soul willingly day or night but that I may in al and aboue al things praise and loue my God As nothing is superior to a soul but thy self so nothing but thou can satisfy and satiat our souls in Heaueâ oâ earth nothing I say but thy-self to whom ouly let my hart âende and only in al things intend Thou being the only true and proper Center of our hart and soul what can make this miserable banishment where to my greife I daily offend thee tolerable to me but only to aspire to thee by sighs desires and vnspeakable groanes in my hart and soul O let true loue vnite me to thee who art by al Adored and Praised for al eternity in thy Heauenly contrey Amen Some speeches of heathen Consuls and Philosophers which shew Christians their duty also their happines in knowing how to make good vse of their knowledge to their Saluation in which those Heathens perished becaâs they did not beleeue and acknowledg our Lord God but vanish away in their own cogitations by seeking only fame honour and applause of the people c. which yet in their wisedom they saw to be but an vncertain vanity AND first The answer of one of the greatest and wiâest of them when he waâ offered power and honour and sacrifice according to their custome of vsing such as for wisedome nobility and couradg deserued it in their eyes The more saith he I consideâ with myself of things done boâh in old and later times the more the vncertainties and vanities of fortune in al moral affaires oâcurâe to my rememhrance and the more plainly doth their vanity appeare vnto me O my God what a deâinition is heer of a heathen which did not so much as know thee or for what end this vncertainty was in them permitted by thee What a shame is it if we who are not only Christians but religious should esteem or seek after any thing but thee in whom alone is stabiliây to be found and enioyed One hing is necessary Let chance fortun power where it is giuen by thee dâspose of al things as they wil as for me I wâl sing in al occurrences It is good for me to adhere to my Lord God thâ only desire and beloued of my soul and hart I wil hauâ no care or study but how I may in al chances spend my whole forcâs and strength in his Praise who be Adored prostrat by al creatures for euer and euer Amen Amen ANOTHER SAID Such as stand in feare are irresolute in al their determinations He spoake it of those who out of feare to displease and desire to please for human respects became âhereby a slaue to euery ones humour and keept not their freedom and liberty which was got by suppressing of natural passions Another speaking in a controuersy where one was to be iudg of two accusing on another and defending themselues before the Senate saith The truth or thing beleeued and wrested to the worst are easiây to be discerned by one iudg if he be vise vpright and iust and not interrested in neiâher side Also another said That the disloyal are odious euen to those whose instrumeÌts they are Of a little beginning comes often great incoÌuenience which might be preuented by doing as one of the Heathens dâd who excelled most of his time in Nobiâity wisedom and al moral vertues who had so great temper ouer his affections and passions that neither for honour as being offered to be made a King nor for gain would he be false to his Pâiâce who yet fauoured him âo little by reason he was so much honoured by al the common wealthâ that he gaue way to haue him poisoned at thirty years of age he being also his own father that was Caesar. He was so iust that in matâers of the greatest controuersy he alwaies did true Iustice and his enemy whom he knew sought his death he honoured as his Partner being yet in nobility much his inferior but boare rule with him at Caesars command This enemy being once at a baÌquet with him where most of the Nobility were present he vttered sâch disgraceful words and speaches of him to his face that al were amazed to see him not so much as change his counâenance at him And after this hearing he was in distresse at Sea he sent his own Conuoy to deliuer him from drowning though he knew his iourney was to accuse him to Caesar and the Senat and also to plot his death which indeed heat last achiued being both at one Bancquet not loÌg afâer which example sheweth vs how amiable vertue is euen in the very Heathens in whom it was but moral âhow much ought we to practise it in whom by Charity it becometh Diuine O how truly glorious are they my God who indeed posses thy loue which so worthily by holy Scripture is tearmed most Honourable wisedome But alas to humain frailty it is hard to put vp iniuries much more to do good for euil at least nature suggesteth to vs that it is vnpleasant and therefore vrgeth vs not to put vp this or that least those who are contrary to vs do add difficulty vpon difficulty seeing we put it vp so quietly But this pretence of nature is so fals and oft euen in humain respects so inconuenient whilst we by disputing resisting or in the like maner requiting do draw grater incoÌâeniences vpon our selues where as quietly âerting it passe it would soon come to nothing Nayfarther I wil speak add this to the honour of my Lord God whose way of vertue and the Cross is so sweet in coÌparison of the way of sin and yealding to our passionsâ that if he had neuer intended other reward for those that Humbly practise vertue and go the way of Resignation but that they receaue in this life he