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St. Teresa of Avila
Autobiography
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General Introduction to the Works of St. Teresa
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General
Introduction
to the
Works
of
St
.
Teresa
Nearly
four
centuries
have
passed
since
St
.
Teresa
began
to
write
, and, both in her own
country
and
abroad
, her
fame
is still
widespread
and still
growing
. Her
purely
human
qualities
and
gifts
, the
saintliness
of her
life
by which they were
illumined
and
overshadowed
, the
naturalness
and
candour
of her
manner
and
style
-- these are some of the
reasons
why her
name
is not only
graven
upon the
enduring
marble
of
history
but
taken
on the
lips
of
generation
after
generation
with
reverence
and
love
.
She is a
mystic
-- and more than a
mystic
. Her
works
, it is
true
, are well
known
in the
cloister
and have
served
as
nourishment
to many who are
far
advanced
on the
Way
of
Perfection
, and who, without her
aid
, would still be
beginners
in the
life
of
prayer
. Yet they have also
entered
the
homes
of
millions
living
in the
world
and have
brought
consolation
,
assurance
,
hope
and
strength
to
souls
who, in the
technical
sense
,
know
nothing of the
life
of
contemplation
.
Devoting
herself as she did, with the most
wonderful
persistence
and
tenacity
, to the
sublimest
task
given
to
man
-- the
attempt
to
guide
others toward
perfection
-- she
succeeded
so well in that
task
that she is
respected
everywhere as an
incredibly
gifted
teacher
, who has
revealed
, more perhaps than any who
came
before her, the
nature
and
extent
of those
gifts
which the
Lord
has
laid
up in this
life
for those who
love
Him. In
past
ages
, of
course
, there had been many
writers
kindled
with
Divine
love
to whom He had
manifested
His
ineffable
secrets
, but for the most
part
these
secrets
had
gone
down with them to the
grave
. To
St
.
Teresa
it was
given
to
speak
to the
world
, in her
diaphanous
,
colloquial
language
and her
simple
,
unaffected
style
, of the
work
of the
Holy
Spirit
in the
enamoured
soul
, of the
interior
strife
and the
continual
purgation
through which such a
soul
must
pass
in its
ascent
of
Mount
Carmel
and of the
wonders
which
await
it on the
mountain
's
summit
.
So she
leads
the
soul
from the most
rudimentary
stages
of the
Purgative
Way
to the very
heights
of
Union
,
bringing
it into the
innermost
mansion
of the
Interior
Castle
, where,
undisturbed
by the
foes
that
rage
without, it can have
fruition
of
union
with the
Lord
of that
Castle
and
experience
a
foretaste
of the
Beatific
Vision
of the
life
to
come
. But,
despite
the
loftiness
and
sublimity
of these
themes
, she is
able
to
develop
them without ever
losing
the most
attractive
of her
qualities
as a
writer
--
simplicity
.
Continually
she
finds
ready
to
hand
apt
and
graphic
comparisons
,
intelligible
even to the
unlearned
. No
mystical
writer
before her
day
, from the
pseudo-Dionysius
to
Ruysbroeck
, nor any who has
written
since, has
described
such
high
matters
in a
way
so
apt
, so
natural
and to such a
large
extent
within the
reach
of all. The
publication
of her
treatises
inaugurated
for the
mystics
an
epoch
of what
may
almost be
termed
popularity
. Those who
love
the
pages
of the
Gospels
, and whose
aim
in
life
is to
attain
the
Gospel
ideal
of
Christian
perfection
, have found in her
works
other
pages
in which, without any
great
effort
of the
intellect
, they
may
learn
much
concerning
the
way
. Her
practical
insistence
upon the
virtuous
life
, her
faithfulness
to the
Evangelical
counsels
and the
soundness
of her
doctrine
even in the most
obscure
and
recondite
details
-- all these will
commend
her to them. Many, indeed, are the
fervent
lovers
of Our
Lord
who have
gone
to the
school
of
love
kept
by the
Foundress
of
Avila
.
As a
result
, her
works
are
read
and
re-read
by
Spaniards
to this
day
and
translated
again and again into
foreign
languages
.
Probably
no other
book
by a
Spanish
author
is as
widely
known
in
Spain
as the
Life
or the
Interior
Castle
of
St
.
Teresa
, with the
single
exception
of
Cervantes
'
immortal
Don
Quixote
. It is
surely
amazing
that a
woman
who
lived
in the
sixteenth
century
, who never
studied
in the
Schools
or
pored
over
tomes
of
profound
learning
, still less
aspired
to any
kind
or
degree
of
renown
, should have
won
such a
reputation
, both among
scholars
and among the
people
. We cannot
expect
to
find
the
reason
for this in the
purely
scientific
or
literary
merits
of her
writings
: we must
look
for it by
going
deeper
.
Essentially
, her
popularity
has been
due
to
Divine
grace
, which first
inspired
her to
lay
aside
every
aim
but the
quest
for
God
and then
enabled
her to
attain
a
degree
of
purity
in her
love
for Him which
sustained
and
impelled
her. Before everything else it is the
intense
fervour
of this
love
which
speaks
to
lovers
everywhere,
just
as it is the
determination
and
courage
of her
virile
soul
which
inspires
those who
long
to be more
determined
and
courageous
than they are. But next to this, it is the
purely
human
quality
of her
writings
which makes so
wide
an
appeal
. Her
methods
of
exposition
are not
rigidly
logical
-- but neither are the
workings
of the
human
heart
. Her
books
have a
gracioso
desorden
[
Herrick
's "
sweet
disorder
"] which the
ordinary
reader
finds
attractive
, even
illuminating
. Her
disconnected
observations
, her
revealing
parentheses
, her
transpositions
,
ellipses
and
sudden
suspensions
of
thought
make her, in one
sense
,
easier
to
read
, even if, in another, they sometimes make her more
difficult
to
interpret
. Even
setting
aside
her
lack
of
technical
training
as a
writer
, her
robust
and
highly
individual
temperament
would have
led
her into
rebellion
against
academic
mechanism
of
conventionality
and
style
in
language
, had any
attempt
ever been made to
force
these upon her. Where she
uses
or
imitates
the
phraseology
of
Holy
Scripture
she does so
unconsciously
. Often she never even
re-read
what she
wrote
; who that is not a
professional
writer
, but
just
a
man
in the
street
, or a
woman
in the
kitchen
, can
help
loving
her?
Her
books
were
written
at the
command
of her
confessors
-- that is to
say
, under
obedience
. It seemed
ridiculous
to her that a
person
so
imperfect
and
devoid
of
talent
as herself -- and a
woman
into the
bargains
-- could
possibly
write
anything that would
edify
others. She was much
better
employed
, she herself
thought
, at the
spinning-wheel
, and it
irked
her to
leave
such a
profitable
occupation
as
spinning
to
take
up her
pen
. "For the
love
of
God
," she once
exclaimed
, when
importuned
to
write
, "let me
work
at my
spinning
wheel
and
go
to
choir
and
perform
the
duties
of the
religious
life
, like the other
sisters
. I am not
meant
to
write
: I have neither the
health
nor the
intelligence
for it."
45
The
following
passage
gives
as
vivid
an
idea
as any of the
spirit
in which she
wrote
:
The
authority
of
persons
so
learned
and
serious
as my
confessors
suffices
for the
approval
of any
good
thing
that I
may
say
, if the
Lord
gives
me
grace
to
say
it, in which
case
it will not be
mine
but His; for I have no
learning
, nor have I
led
a
good
life
, nor do I
get
my
information
from a
learned
man
or from any other
person
whatsoever
. Only those who have
commanded
me to
write
this
know
that I am
doing
so, and at the
moment
they are not here. I am almost
stealing
the
time
for
writing
, and that with
great
difficulty
, for it
hinders
me from
spinning
and I am
living
in a
poor
house
and have
numerous
things
to do.
46
But, even had she
left
no such
personal
testimony
, her
writings
would have
shown
how
little
she
trusted
for
inspiration
to her
reading
and how
completely
devoid
she was of any
constructional
instinct
or
sense
of
literary
proportion
. Her
ideas
and
sentiments
spring
spontaneously
to her
mind
and
spirit
. Her
pen
runs
freely
-- sometimes too
freely
for her
mind
to
keep
pace
with it. Her
memory
, as she
frequently
confesses
, is
poor
and her few
quotations
are
seldom
entirely
accurate
. But she is, without the
slightest
doubt
, a
born
writer
; and, when a
person
belonging
to that
rare
and
fortunate
class
knows
nothing of
artifice
,
casts
aside
convention
, and
writes
as the
spirit
dictates
, the
result
can never be
disappointing
.
Mysticism
,
furthermore
, is in
part
an
experimental
science
; and he who has the
profoundest
and most
continuous
experiences
of
Divine
grace
is the
best
qualified
to
speak
of them.
St
.
Teresa
is
remarkable
both for the
intensity
and for the
continuity
of her
mystical
experiences
, and she had a
quickness
of
mind
, a
readiness
of
expression
and a
wealth
of
imagination
which
particularly
well
fitted
her for
describing
them. Her
descriptions
are
incomparably
more
vivid
and
intelligible
than those of many
professed
students
of
mystical
theology
who have
grown
grey
in the
study
of it. This
superiority
much more than
compensates
for any of her
stylistic
idiosyncrasies
which
may
scandalize
the
literary
preceptist
. Had she not
boldly
snapped
asunder
the
bonds
of
logic
and
literary
rule
, she would have been
powerless
to
take
wing
and
give
us those
finest
of
passages
which
describe
the
summit
of
Mount
Carmel
. We should have
gained
one more
methodical
writer
aspiring
to a "
golden
mediocrity
" -- but we should have
lost
work
of a
sublime
beauty
bearing
the
ineffaceable
hallmark
of
genius
.
But in any
case
she could never have
written
impeccable
manuals
or
methodically
ordered
"
guides
" to the
ascetic
or the
mystical
life
: her
genius
resembles
the
rushing
torrent
, not the
scientifically
constructed
canal
. She cannot even be
said
to
separate
asceticism
from
mysticism
: the
Way
of
perfection
is an
ascetic
treatise
which
mystical
ideas
are
constantly
invading
; while the
Interior
Castle
, though
fundamentally
mystical
, does not
hesitate
to
lay
down and
develop
ascetic
principles
. Here, again, she
conforms
, not so much to what is
logical
as to what is
natural
and
human
. Any
divisions
which she makes and
adheres
to are those made by
nature
and
observable
in
life
. By any and every
test
, she is a
writer
to be
read
by the many, by the
people
.
If
obedience
was
St
.
Teresa
's
primary
motive
for
writing
, a
secondary
motive
was to
give
an
accurate
and
detailed
account
of her
spiritual
progress
, as in the
Life
, or, as in most of her other
books
, to
guide
her
spiritual
daughters
.
The
seventeenth-century
Carmelite
,
Fray
Jer-nimo
de
San
Josˇ
, a
historian
of the
Discalced
Reform
and
author
of one of the
earliest
biographies
of
St
.
John
of the
Cross
, makes the
following
enumeration
of her
writings
:
Our
Mother
St
.
Teresa
wrote
five
books
and
seven
opuscules
. The
books
are: The
Book
of her
Life
, The
Way
of
perfection
, The
Mansions
,
47
The
Foundations
and
Meditations
on the
Songs
. The
opuscules
are:
Method
for the
visitation
of her
convents
,
Exclamations
,
Spiritual
Maxims
,
Relations
of her
spirit
,
Favours
granted
her by the
Lord
,
Devout
verses
which she
composed
,
Letters
to
different
persons
. So that, between
books
,
opuscules
and
treatises
, the
number
of
books
written
by the
Saint
amounts
in all to
twelve
.
48
In
addition
to these
works
, several more have been
credited
to
St
.
Teresa
, though
hardly
on
sufficient
evidence
. From a
reference
in the
Foundations
to "a
tiny
little
book
" in which she "
believed
she
said
something about"
melancholy
,
49
it has been
inferred
that a
book
of hers on this
subject
has been
lost
: the
reference
, however, might well be to the
Way
of
Perfection
, which
says
a
good
deal
about this, and, though the
Way
of
perfection
might
hardly
be
thought
"
tiny
", she
refers
to it elsewhere as "
little
" by
contrast
with her
considerably
larger
Life
.
Another
book
, which
certainly
exists
, was
thought
to be the
work
of
St
.
Teresa
as
long
ago
as
1630
, when it was
included
by
Baltasar
Moreto
in an
edition
of her
works
published
in that
year
at
Antwerp
. The only
reason
for its
inclusion
appears
to have been that it was found among some
papers
which had
belonged
to her, and afterwards became the
property
of
Do-a
Isabel
de
Avellaneda
,
wife
of
Don
I-igo
de
C
‡
rdenas
,
President
of the
Council
of
Castile
. Its
title
is
Seven
Meditations
on the
Paternoster
. It is a
pious
commentary
on the
Lord
's
Prayer
, the
seven
petitions
of which are
treated
as
meditations
, each
intended
to be
read
on a
different
day
of the
week
, under the
headings
:
Father
,
King
,
Spouse
,
Shepherd
,
Redeemer
,
Physician
,
Judge
. The
author
was both a
learned
and a
spiritually-minded
person
, well
versed
in
Holy
Scripture
and with a
decided
literary
bent
. The most
superficial
examination
reveals
it to be
clearly
non-Teresian
. Its
style
is
quite
unlike that of the
Saint
and it
bears
the
marks
of a
careful
revision
entirely
foreign
to her
habits
and
character
. Her
earliest
biographers
make no
mention
of it and her
Order
has never
believed
it to be hers. "I
consider
it
quite
certain
that the
treatise
is not by our
Holy
Mother
,"
says
P
.
Jer-nimo
de
San
Josˇ
, and
gives
the
fullest
reasons
for his
opinion
.
50
"All who
read
it
carefully
," he
adds
, "and even those who
read
it without
great
care
, will
think
likewise
."
P
.
Ribera
,
St
.
Teresa
's first
biographer
, and a
particularly
conscientious
one,
tells
us that, when very
young
, in
collaboration
with her
brother
Rodrigo
, she
wrote
a
book
on
chivalry
. "She had so
excellent
a
wit
, and had so well
absorbed
the
language
and
style
of
chivalry
, that in the
space
of a few
months
she and her
brother
Rodrigo
composed
a
book
of
adventures
and
fictions
on that
subject
, which was such that it
attracted
a
great
deal
of
comment
."
51
This
story
is
confirmed
by
Graci
‡
n
in his
notes
to
Ribera
's
book
and has been
frequently
repeated
and
taken
as
accurate
by later
writers
. There would be nothing
intrinsically
improbable
in the
idea
that a
writer
with the
initiative
and
imagination
of
St
.
Teresa
, who, we
know
(for she
tells
us herself in
great
detail
),
52
was
attracted
in her
youth
by
romances
of the
Amadis
type
, should
try
to
produce
something of the
sort
herself by
way
of
recreation
, and we
may
be
sure
that, if she did so, the
book
in
question
would be well
worth
reading
.
P
.
Andrˇs
de
la
Encarnaci-n
, an
eighteenth-century
editor
and
critic
of
St
.
John
of the
Cross
,
53
took
the
suggestion
very
seriously
, and
debated
where the
book
was to be found, and whether or no,
supposing
it were found, it
ought
to be
published
.
54
For ourselves, we
suspect
that, if it was ever
written
at all, it was
soon
destroyed
by its own
authors
, either because of the
nature
of its
contents
or for
fear
that it would
fall
into the
hands
of their
father
, the
austere
Don
Alonso
, who for such an
indiscretion
would no
doubt
have
meted
out anything but a
reward
.
By
great
good
fortune
, the
originals
of
nearly
all
St
.
Teresa
's
principal
works
have
come
down to us, together with those of a
fair
number
of her
letters
and some
account
books
bearing
her
signature
. This
fortune
we
owe
to the
great
esteem
shown
for
St
.
Teresa
and her
Reform
by
King
Philip
II
, who, when
collecting
books
and
manuscripts
for the
library
which he
proposed
to
establish
in his
newly
built
palace-monastery
at
El
Escorial
,
asked
P
.
Doria
(
Fray
Nicol
‡s
de
Jesœs
Mar
'a),
55
at that
time
Vicar-General
of the
Discalced
Carmelites
, if he could
obtain
for him any of
St
.
Teresa
's
autographs
. As a
result
,
four
of these are now to be found in the
Escorial
Library
: namely, the
Life
, the
Way
of
perfection
, the
Foundations
and the
Method
for the
visitation
of her
convents
. The
autograph
of the
Interior
Castle
is
preserved
in the
Discalced
Carmelite
convent
at
Seville
, and a
second
autograph
of the
Way
of
perfection
, to be
referred
to later, has
long
been in the
possession
of the
convent
of the
Discalced
nuns
at
Valladolid
. As a
considerable
number
of
facsimile
reproductions
of these
manuscripts
have been
published
, the
careful
study
of the
Teresian
writings
in their
original
state
has been
brought
within the
reach
of all who are
qualified
to
undertake
it.
Needless
to
say
, a
great
many
copies
of the
Saint
's
writings
were made very
soon
after her
death
, and,
needless
to
say
, too, these
copies
contained
numerous
errors
. To
put
an end to this
circulation
of
defective
versions
of their
Mother
Foundress
'
works
, the
Discalced
Carmelites
took
steps
towards the
preparation
of a
complete
edition
. A beginning had been made with their
publication
even in her own
lifetime
. A
great
friend
of hers,
Don
Teutonio
de
Braganza
,
Archbishop
of
Évora
,
undertook
to
bring
out an
edition
of the
Maxims
and
Way
of
perfection
,
based
upon a
corrected
manuscript
(still
extant
) which she herself
sent
him, in
1579
: this was
approved
by the
ecclesiastical
censor
in
1580
and
published
at
Évora
in
1583
. At
Salamanca
, in
1585
,
P
.
Graci
‡
n
(
Fray
Jer-nimo
de
la
Madre
de
Dios
)
56
at that
time
Provincial
of the
Reform
,
republished
the
Way
of
perfection
, which no
doubt
was
given
precedence
over the other
works
on
account
of its
practical
utility
in the
training
of
religious
. An
impetus
must have been
given
to these
activities
by
St
.
John
of the
Cross
, who,
just
about this
time
,
wrote
as
follows
in the
commentary
to his
Spiritual
Canticle
:
But since my
intent
is but to
expound
these
stanzas
briefly
, as I
promised
in the
prologue
, these other
things
must
remain
for such as can
treat
them
better
than I. And I
pass
over the
subject
likewise
because the
Blessed
Teresa
of
Jesus
, our
mother
,
left
notes
admirably
written
upon these
things
of the
spirit
, the which
notes
I
hope
in
God
will
speedily
be
printed
and
brought
to
light
.
57
St
.
John
of the
Cross
was in
fact
present
at the
meeting
of the
General
Chapter
in
1586
which
decided
to
publish
the
Saint
's
complete
works
. The
editorship
was
entrusted
, not to a
Carmelite
, but to an
Augustinian
-- one of the
leading
men
of
letters
in
Spain
, the
Salamancan
professor
Fray
Luis
de
Le-n
. The
volume
, of over a
thousand
octavo
pages
, was
published
at
Salamanca
in
1588
, and
includes
the
following
works
,
printed
in the
order
here
given
:
Book
of her
life
; some of the
Relations
;
Way
of
perfection
;
Maxims
;
Interior
Castle
;
Exclamations
. The
principal
omission
, it will be
observed
, is the
Foundations
: so many of the
people
mentioned
in it were still
living
that its
publication
was
thought
to be
premature
.
On the whole, as one would
expect
of an
editor
who, besides
being
himself an
author
, had had a
lifetime
of
academic
experience
,
Fray
Luis
de
Le-n
acquitted
himself
remarkably
well. The
edition
has some
omissions
and
variant
readings
of such
length
or
importance
that they can
hardly
have been
due
to
accident
, besides a
considerable
number
of
errata
,
notably
in
punctuation
-- and,
owing
to
St
.
Teresa
's often
compressed
and
elliptical
style
, a
misplaced
comma
is sometimes enough to
alter
the
sense
of an
entire
passage
. None the less,
judged
by the
standards
of its
day
, the
edition
is a
distinctly
good
one.
It was
reprinted
, at the same
press
, in the
following
year
, after which
date
further
editions
came
quickly
. The
works
, in a more or less
complete
state
, were
published
at
Saragossa
in
1592
; at
Madrid
, in
1597
and
1615
; at
Naples
, in
1604
; at
Brussels
, in
1604
; at
Brussels
, in
1610
; at
Valencia
, in
1613
and
1623
. The
Brussels
edition
was the first to
include
the
Foundations
. The
editio
princeps
was
reprinted
at
Madrid
in
1622
and
1627
and at
Saragossa
in
1623
. In
1630
, at
Antwerp
,
Baltasar
Moreto
published
an
edition
already
referred
to as
including
the
apocryphal
Seven
Meditations
. A
single-volume
edition
, in
1635
, and a
two-volume
edition
, in
1636
,
came
out in
Madrid
.
This
rapidly
increasing
circulation
of
St
.
Teresa
's
works
, however, was not
altogether
welcomed
by her
Order
, for the
printers
'
errors
in each
edition
were
handed
down to the next, often with
considerable
additions
, while
undue
liberties
were sometimes
taken
with the
text
by
editors
less
conscientious
than
Fray
Luis
de
Le-n
. It was in about
1645
that
P
.
Francisco
de
Santa
Mar
'a, the
historian
of the
Discalced
Reform
,
obtained
permission
from his
superiors
for a
new
collation
of the
printed
works
and the
autographs
, with a
view
to the
preparation
of a more
reliable
edition
than any yet
published
. The
collation
was
entrusted
to a
number
of
friars
and the
new
edition
-- the
second
which
may
be
described
as "
official
" -- was
eventually
published
in
Madrid
in
1661
.
We
need
not
follow
through the
centuries
the
long
tale
of
editions
of the
Saint
's
works
-- still less
enumerate
the
editions
of
individual
works
which will be
referred
to later in the
introductions
to each. It must
suffice
, in this
brief
survey
, to
remark
on the
continuity
with which
St
.
Teresa
was
read
even during the
eighteenth
and
early
nineteenth
centuries
, when
mysticism
was
little
in
favour
, and to
mention
a few of the
editions
which
may
be
considered
of
outstanding
interest
.
In the
mid-eighteenth
century
, the
Order
determined
upon still another "
official
"
edition
and
entrusted
the
work
of
preparing
one to that
excellent
critic
already
referred
to,
P
.
Andrˇs
de
la
Encarnaci-n
, who
enlisted
the
aid
of a
competent
palaeographer
, a
companion
worthy
of himself,
P
.
Manuel
de
Santa
Mar
'a. The
results
of their
researches
, both on
St
.
Teresa
and on
St
.
John
of the
Cross
,
remained
in
manuscript
; and the
three
volumes
of
Memorias
historiales
, in the
National
Library
of
Spain
, at
Madrid
, are a
major
source
for
critical
work
on the
Reformers
of
Carmel
. As many of the
archives
which the
two
Fathers
used are no
longer
in
existence
, their
work
has
preserved
much that would otherwise have been
irretrievably
lost
,
including
part
of the
magnificent
collection
which we have of
Teresian
letters
. In their
work
upon the
texts
, they
detected
more than
seven
hundred
errors
in the
Life
of
1627
and
twelve
hundred
in
Moreto
's
edition
of the
Foundations
. It is a
pity
that the
Order
found the
task
of
publishing
a
new
edition
too much for it and was
content
to
reprint
, in
1778
, an
edition
of
1752
,
adding
to it a
volume
containing
eighty-two
previously
unpublished
letters
. In
1793
appeared
another
edition
, which
included
a further
volume
of
letters
and
eighty-seven
fragments
, and was the last to be
published
by the
Order
for a
hundred
and
twenty
years
. Not until
1851
, when the
religious
persecutions
of the
early
years
of the
nineteenth
century
were over, was this
edition
reprinted
, and
ten
years
later
came
the
edition
of
Don
Vicente
de
la
Fuente
, which
forms
part
of the
monumental
series
of
Spanish
classics
known
as the "
Biblioteca
de
Autores
Espa-oles
."
The
strides
made in
Spain
, during the last
half
century
, by
Teresian
criticism
, and indeed by
Spanish
criticism
in
general
, make it
possible
for
Spaniards
to
look
back
from a
great
distance
at the
work
of
La
Fuente
, both here and in his later
six
volume
edition
of
1881
, and
find
in it
faults
of many
kinds
:
innumerable
textual
errors
,
frequent
inaccuracies
of
fact
,
exaggerations
in
judgment
and an
undue
dogmatism
of
tone
. This
Aragonese
editor
, though
learned
and
devout
in a
high
degree
, had the
temperamental
bluntness
and
stubbornness
traditionally
associated
with
Aragon
, and from this his
work
frequently
suffered
. None the less, his
edition
remained
unsuperseded
for over
half
a
century
-- until, in
fact
, in the
year
of the
quatercentenary
of
St
.
Teresa
's
birth
,
appeared
the first
volume
of the
definitive
Carmelite
edition
[which we
owe
to the
indefatigable
P
.
Silverio
de
Santa
Teresa
.]
[This
edition
,
consisting
of nine
volumes
(
1915
-
24
) of which the last
three
comprise
the
largest
collection
yet made of the
Saint
's
letters
--
four
hundred
and
fifty
in all --
concentrated
upon the
preparation
of as
correct
as
possible
a
text
, using the
autographs
, or
photostats
of them, where
previous
editors
had
relied
on
copies
. The
notes
to the
text
, which are not the
strongest
point
of the
edition
, are
brief
and in the
main
factual
, though
occasionally
they
sin
through the
discursiveness
which
P
.
Silverio
seldom
for
long
avoids
. A
welcome
feature
was the
inclusion
of many
newly
discovered
letters
-- for, while the
sacking
of
religious
houses
during the
nineteenth
century
had
led
to much
destruction
, it had also
brought
to
light
a
good
deal
that had
previously
been
unknown
.
P
.
Silverio
's
appendices
contain
numerous
hitherto
unpublished
documents
, many of them of
capital
importance
for an
intimate
knowledge
of
St
.
Teresa
's
life
.]
[The
foregoing
notes
bear
witness
of the most
practical
kind
to the
continuous
popularity
which
St
.
Teresa
has
enjoyed
in her own
country
since the
time
of her
death
. In our own
country
it was her
Life
which at first
chiefly
attracted
translators
: the
Antwerp
translations
of the
Jesuit
William
Malone
appeared
as
early
as
1611
;
twelve
years
later,
Sir
Tobias
Mathew
's
version
,
known
as The
Flaming
Hart
, was
published
in
London
, a
second
edition
appearing
at
Antwerp
in
1642
; while the
Life
and
Foundations
were
published
by
Abraham
Woodhead
in
1669
-
71
, and a
third
volume
,
containing
nearly
all the
remaining
works
,
came
out in
1675
. After this
nearly
two
centuries
elapsed
before the
Saint
began
to be
widely
read
once more, but since
Dalton
, with his
new
translation
of the
Life
(
1851
),
led
the
revival
,
interest
in her has never
ceased
.
Dalton
's
Way
of
perfection
and
Interior
Castle
(
1852
),
Foundations
(
1853
) and
small
selection
of
Letters
(
1853
) were
followed
by the
Life
(
1870
) and
Foundations
(
1871
) in the
translation
of
David
Lewis
: the
Life
, still
leading
the other
works
in
popularity
,
went
into
four
editions
. The
mantle
of
Lewis
fell
upon the
shoulders
of a
Benedictine
nun
of
Stanbrook
Abbey
, and the
editions
of the
Benedictines
of
Stanbrook
, already
referred
to, and
notably
their
versions
of the
Way
of
perfection
and the
Interior
Castle
and their
four-volume
edition
of the
Letters
(
1919
-
24
), have perhaps done more than any others to
give
St
.
Teresa
a
place
in our
spiritual
life
comparable
to that which she
holds
in
Spain
.
Finally
we must not
forget
the
valuable
contributions
made to our
knowledge
of the
Saint
and her
times
by the
learned
Carmelite
,
Father
Zimmerman
, whose
revisions
of, and
introductions
to, the
Lewis
and
Stanbrook
translations
have so much
enhanced
their
value
.
England
, it will be
seen
, is not now
behindhand
in her
appreciation
of a
Saint
on whom one of her
seventeenth-century
poets
wrote
what is perhaps the
finest
panegyric
in
verse
upon her in
existence
.
O
thou
undanted
daughter
of
desires
!
By all thy
dowr
of
Lights
and
Fires
;
By all the
eagle
in thee, all the
dove
;
By all thy
lives
and
deaths
of
love
;
By thy
larg
draughts
of
intellectuall
day
,
And by thy
thirsts
of
love
more
large
then they;
By all thy
brim-fill
'
d
Bowles
of
feirce
desire
;
By thy last
Morning
's
draught
of
liquid
fire
;
By the
full
kingdome
of that
finall
kisse
That
seiz
'
d
thy
parting
Soul
, and
sealed
thee his;
By all the
heavn
's thou hast in him
(
Fair
sister
of the
Seraphim
!);
By all of Him we have in Thee;
Leave
nothing of my
Self
in me.
Let me so
read
thy
life
, that I
Unto all
life
of
mine
may
dy
.
58
]
The
translator
, who, in the
main
, has
followed
P
.
Silverio
in the
order
in which he has
arranged
St
.
Teresa
's
works
,
begs
leave
to
append
a
note
,
adapted
from
P
.
Silverio
, upon the
principles
underlying
this
arrangement
.
He
begins
with the
Saint
's
earliest
and
fundamental
work
, her
Life
(
1562
-
5
), which is
followed
by a
shorter
work
closely
connected
with it in
spirit
, and hence
forming
a
natural
complement
to it -- the
Relations
. It might be
thought
that the
Life
should rather have been
followed
by the
autobiographical
Foundations
, but it must be
remembered
that the
Life
is an
autobiography
primarily
in the
spiritual
sense
-- a
history
of the
manifestations
of
Divine
grace
in the
writer
's
soul
-- whereas the
Foundations
is
mainly
a
record
of
practical
achievements
and is
related
as
closely
with the
history
of the
Order
as with the
life
of the
Saint
.
After the
Life
and the
Relations
comes
the
Way
of
Perfection
(
c
.
1565
),
written
under
obedience
, as we have
seen
, for the
edification
of the
nuns
of the
Saint
's first
foundation
--
St
.
Joseph
's,
Avila
-- and
based
upon her own
meditations
on the
Lord
's
Prayer
. Since the
Life
contained
so much
intimate
detail
it was
thought
unsuitable
for
publication
until after its
author
's
death
, and the
Way
of
perfection
was
written
, in one
sense
, to
supply
its
place
. Next
comes
the
Interior
Castle
(
1577
), more
mature
and more
intensely
mystical
than its
two
predecessors
. These
three
works
,
taken
together,
may
be
thought
of as a
complete
exposition
of the
ascetic
and
mystical
system
of
St
.
Teresa
. As
closely
connected
with the
Interior
Castle
in its
nature
and
spirit
as are the
Relations
with the
Life
are the
Conceptions
of the
Love
of
God
, and the
Exclamations
of the
Soul
to
God
, the
two
loveliest
of
St
.
Teresa
's
opuscules
, both of them from beginning to end
aglow
with
mystical
love
.
Following
these, as
standing
outside
their
sphere
and (
despite
some
fine
and
noble
passages
) on a
lower
plane
,
comes
the
Foundations
(
1573
ff
.), the last of the
four
major
works
, and,
following
these, we
give
the
minor
works
, with the
poems
appropriately
coming
last, as it is in
verse
that
St
.
Teresa
is least
noteworthy
.
45
Jer-nimo
Graci
‡
n
:
Lucidario
del
verdadero
esp
'
ritu
,
Chap
.
V
. She did, however,
eventually
write
the
book
she was
asked
for: it was the
Interior
Castle
.
46
Life
,
Chap
.
X
(
p
.
123
).
47
[This is the
title
nearly
always
given
in
Spanish
to the
Interior
Castle
.]
48
Historia
del
Carmen
Descalzo
,
Bk
.
V
,
Chap
.
XIII
.
49
Foundations
,
Chap
.
VII
(
Vol
.
III
,
p
.
36
,
n
.
2
).
50
Quoted
in
full
by
P
.
Silverio
, I,
lxix
.
51
Ribera
,
Bk
. I,
Chap
.
V
.
52
Life
,
Chap
.
II
(
p
.
68
).
53
[
St
.
John
of the
Cross
, I,
liv
ff
.,
et
passim
.]
54
B
.
Nac
.
MS
.
3180
Adiciones
E
.,
Nos
.
13
,
14
.
55
[
Cf
. S.
S.M.
,
II
,
155
-
6
.]
56
[
S.S
M
.,
II
,
151
-
89
.]
57
[
St
.
John
of the
Cross
,
II
,
72
.]
58
["The
Flaming
Hart
" ("Upon the
book
and
picture
of the
seraphicall
St
.
Teresa
").]
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