| Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library |
| St. Teresa of Avila Life of St. Teresa of Jesus IntraText - Concordances (Hapax - words occurring once) |
bold = Main text
Part, Chapter grey = Comment text
1 Life, VI(126) | Joseph (Bolland, n. 100, 101). The dates of the Chronicler
2 Ind | Saint's, xvi. 3–10, xviii. 10–18, xxx. 16, xxxviii. 24,
3 Rel, IX(713) | Ribera, l. iv. c. v. n. 110).~
4 Int | Nativity of our Lord (ibid., p. 115), and also in a sermon on
5 Life, XXXVI | Sabina, and given in the year 1248, in the fifth year of the
6 Life, XXV(373) | Spiritual Canticle, st. 24, p. 128, Eng. trans.~
7 Life, XIV(206) | Bollandists in the Acta, 1315—we have these words, and
8 Int, 0(3) | Obras (1881), vol. vi. p. 133.~
9 Int | of the general chapter of 1342 which said: Ingrediens ordinem
10 Ind | because well thought of, xxxi. 13–17; her singing of the
11 Life, XXXV(514) | Romani Pontificis, A.D. 1432).~
12 Int, 0(8) | When about A.D. 1452 certain communities of Beguines
13 Int, 0(8) | printed edition (Venice, 1499) shows that they held good
14 Life, XX(270) | tr. iv. d. 2, § 4, n. 150.~
15 Int | importance. The Bollandists (n. 1520), discussing the question
16 Ann | in Avila, March 28th.72~1522. ~She desires martyrdom,
17 Life, I(91) | died at the end of the year 1526, or in the beginning of
18 Life, I(91) | Ahumada was made November 24, 1528 and she may have died soon
19 Ann | Death of her mother.~1529. ~Writes romances of chivalry,
20 Int | death of her father, in 1544 or 1545, and came to an
21 Int | of her father, in 1544 or 1545, and came to an end about
22 Life, XXIII(333) | Fathers had come thither in 1553 (De la Fuente).~
23 Ann | to F. Juan de Padranos.~1556. ~Beginning of the supernatural
24 Pref | The Princess of Eboli, in 1569, obtained a copy from the
25 Rel, III(655) | A.D. 1572.~
26 Pref | became a widow in July, 1573, and insisted on becoming
27 Rel, IX(728) | written before the year 1578 (De la Fuente).~
28 Pref | published in Salamanca, A.D. 1588.~With the Life of the Saint,
29 Life, XXIII(336) | survived, dying Nov. 24, 1592. He committed the direction
30 Ann, 0(72) | 1582, and St. Philip in 1595; but they were canonised
31 Int, 0(37) | pp. 340–358 ad ann. 1604.~
32 Life, XXVIII(408) | del Alma, cap. 5. Madrid, 1616).~
33 Life, XL(611) | Dominic. The Bollandists, n. 1638–1646, on the whole, prefer
34 Pref | the year of our Lord God 1642.~'Aut mori aut pati:~Either
35 Life, XL(611) | The Bollandists, n. 1638–1646, on the whole, prefer the
36 Int | the English Mission from 1660 till 1692, was anxious to
37 Int, 0(37) | Congregationis Eliae. Romae, 1668, vol. i., pp. 340–358
38 Int | first volume to appear (1669) contained the Book of Foundations,
39 Life, XL | Joseph of Avila, as in p. 169.621—Fray Do Bañes."~
40 Int | English Mission from 1660 till 1692, was anxious to complete
41 Ind | Saint's vision of the, xxix. 16–18.~Answers to the Saint'
42 Life, XXIX(440) | discovered in Seville in 1700 ("En las internas entrañ
43 Life, II(93) | in her life (Bruxelles, 1708, p. 40), says that she changed
44 Int, 0(14) | Fuente, Obras, vol. vi., p. 174.~
45 Life, XXXVIII(576)| 2. It appears from the 179th letter of the Saint (lett.
46 Ind | penitential life of, xxvii. 17–21, xxx. 2; power of, with
47 Int | on the 12th of November, 1814, and died on January the
48 Life, XXXVIII(582)| ii. ch. xxvi. vol. i. p. 183.~
49 Life, XXVI(380) | The Bollandists, n. 185, attribute some of the severity
50 Int | Adelaide Lecornu (born 5 July, 1852, died at the Carmelite convent
51 Pref | from whose edition (Madrid, 1861, 1862) this translation
52 Int | Fuente's edition (Madrid, 1861–1862), supposed to be a
53 Int | Cardinal Manning), London, 1865. (By Miss Elizabeth Lockhart,
54 Int | transcript of the original. In 1873 the Sociedad Foto-Tipografica-Catolica
55 Int | Miss Maria Trench), London, 1875.~The Life of Saint Teresa
56 Life, XXV(357) | xxviii. and the following, p. 188.~
57 Int | Bollandistes. 2 vols, Nantes, 1882. Frequently reprinted. The
58 Int, 0(30) | Francisco Herrero Bayona, 1883 p. 4.~
59 Int | Quarterly Series. 3 vols (1881, 1887, 1888).~And, from another
60 Int | Cunninghame-Graham, 2 vols, London, 1894.~ ./. Histoire de Sainte
61 Int | died on January the 23rd, 1895. The first edition was printed
62 Life, XXVII(400) | 18th Oct. 1562. As the Saint
63 Int | Joseph (Paris, Poussielgue, 1900), which may be considered
64 Int | Henry de Curzon (Paris, 1902) is, unfortunately, too
65 Int | disciples (Vol. CLXXXIV., p. 195). I am indebted to the Very
66 Life, VI(127) | Blessed Sacrament, bk. ii. p. 199, 3rd ed.) says that it took
67 Life, XV(220) | his Medulla Mystica, p. 204, quoting this passage, has, "
68 Life, XVI(227) | Mystica, tr. iv. ch. xii. p. 208).~
69 Life, XXXIX(589) | Carmel, bk. iii. ch. i, p. 210).~
70 Ind | Saint threatened with, Boll. 211, xxix. 4.~Experience, more
71 Life, XXII(314) | Carmel, bk. iii. ch. i. p. 212.~
72 Ind | consistent with, xxxix. 21–23.~Hypocrisy, the Saint
73 Ind | 20; holy death of, vii. 22–25; seen in heaven by the
74 Int | and died on January the 23rd, 1895. The first edition
75 Int, 0(38) | Father B. Zimmerman, p. 240 sqq.~
76 Ind | useful in directors, xiii. 24–26; the Saint wishes for,
77 Pref | month of June, 1562. On the 24th of August, the feast of
78 Life, XXXV(511) | Don Vicente, vol. i. p. 255). The latter says that the
79 Life, XIII(195) | Cross, Living Flame, pp. 267, 278–284, Engl. trans.~
80 Int, 0(4) | anno iv., vol. vii., f. 274; and a charge to the Bishop
81 Int, 0(33) | Fuente, Obras, vol. vi., p. 275.~
82 Life, XIII(195) | Living Flame, pp. 267, 278–284, Engl. trans.~
83 Life, XXIX(441) | the Saint's heart on the 27th of August.~
84 Life, XIII(195) | Living Flame, pp. 267, 278–284, Engl. trans.~
85 Ann | is born in Avila, March 28th.72~1522. ~She desires martyrdom,
86 Life, XXVII(386) | place, it seems, on the 29th June. See ch. xxix. § 6.~
87 Life, XXXIII(484) | liquet, valde immiti" (n. 309).~
88 Rel, V(676) | Collat. vii. cap. iv. p. 311: "Nec enim si quis ignarus
89 Life, XXVIII(409) | iii. disp. 5, § I, n. 315: "Visio corporea est infima,
90 Life, II(93) | of the Mother of God (No. 323, Letter 28, vol. iii. ed.
91 Rel, XI(735) | engaged. The letter is the 333rd (336th in the second edition),
92 Rel, XI(735) | The letter is the 333rd (336th in the second edition),
93 Life, XL(621) | I.e. of the MS. See p. 337 of this translation.~
94 Ind | advantages of spiritual, vii. 33–37, xxx. 6; with God, xv.
95 Int, 0(37) | Romae, 1668, vol. i., pp. 340–358 ad ann. 1604.~
96 Ind | 23; death of, xxxviii. 34–36.~Purgatory, the Saint
97 Life, XV(220) | Trinitate, Theolog. Mystic. p. 354, and his Abbreviator, Anton.
98 Pref, 0(57) | one of her letters—lett. 355, but lett. 100, vol. ii.
99 Int, 0(37) | 1668, vol. i., pp. 340–358 ad ann. 1604.~
100 Life, Pro(84) | Dios. That letter is the 358th in the edition of Don Vicente
101 Int, 0(9) | cap. 47. Bollandists. no. 366.~
102 Life, XXIII(337) | letter 43, note 13: letter 368, ed. of De la Fuente).~
103 Int | Fuente, Obras, Vol. VI., p. 369 sqq.).~Benedict Zimmerman,~
104 Life, XIV(206) | la Fuente, vol. ii. pp. 389, 392).~
105 Life, XIV(206) | Fuente, vol. ii. pp. 389, 392).~
106 Rel, I(622) | teaching [note continues, p. 404.] of the Church, and most
107 Rel, I(622) | Lord [note continues, p. 405.] made use of them to bestow
108 Life, XXXIV(498) | Fragment (Letters, vol. iv. p. 408), says that it was Fr. Garcia
109 Int | the Saint's autograph in 412 pages in folio, which establishes
110 Int, 0(6) | S. Joseph, vol. iii, p. 419, note 2.~
111 Life, XXIII(337) | Letters, vol. iv. letter 43, note 13: letter 368, ed.
112 Int, 0(34) | re Anne de Jésus, i., p. 472.~
113 Life, XIV(206) | second Report of the Rota, p. 477—quoted by Benedict XIV.,
114 Life, V(115) | Schram, Theolog. Mystic., § 483. "Magni doctores scholastici,
115 Ind | intellectual visions, xxvii. 4–8; tries to counterfeit
116 Rel, IX(730) | separately (vol. i. pp. 524–526); but, as they seem
117 Rel, IX(730) | separately (vol. i. pp. 524–526); but, as they seem to form
118 Ind2, Ref | 41:2 41:4 47:14 54:7 72:22 91:6 93:20 ~
119 Life, I(86) | quoting it, vol. i. p. 549, says that this delay of
120 Life, I(91) | the Saint's writings, p. 550.~
121 Life, XL(611) | letter in the Appendix, p. 566.~
122 Life, XXXV(511) | days after (Reforma, i. c. 59; and Don Vicente, vol. i.
123 Life, XXIII(336) | of St. Joseph, founded by 5t. Teresa, whom he survived,
124 Int, 0(34) | ed. Grégoire, ii., p. 65. P. Bertholde-Ignace, Vie
125 Life, XII(180) | Mystica, tr. iv. ch. xi. n. 69).~
126 Int | which in 1539 was April the 6th. She then returned to Avila,
127 Ind | of, on the Saint, xxxii. 7–10.~Heretics, self-condemned,
128 Life, XX(272) | sts. 14, 15, vol. ii p. 83, Engl. trans.)~
129 Int | P. L. Vol. CLXXXIII, p. 879), and in the first sermon
130 Life, Pro(84) | Vicente de la Fuente, and the 8th of the fourth volume of
131 Ind2, Ref | 47:14 54:7 72:22 91:6 93:20 ~Proverbs~8:31 ~
132 Ind2, Ref | 54:7 72:22 91:6 93:20 ~Proverbs~8:31 ~Ecclesiastes~
133 Life, XV(220) | iv. disp. i. § 11, n. 94, seem also to have preferred "
134 Life, XX(268) | Mystic. tr. 4, d. i. n. 95: "Licet oratio raptus idem
135 Life, XVI(228) | stanza xvii. vol. ii. p. 98, Engl. trans.~
136 Life, XXVII | pleasure in seeing himself abased! How wise he will be who
137 Life, XIII | it—when it feels itself abashed in the presence of so great
138 Int | Lettres au R. P. Bouix, by the Abbé Postel, Paris, 1864. The
139 Int | Lockhart, afterwards first abbess of the Franciscan convent,
140 Life, XV(220) | Mystic. p. 354, and his Abbreviator, Anton. a Sp. Sancto, Direct.
141 Life, XL | majesty so great, and how abhorrent to His nature such actions
142 Int | other countries, has been ably summed up and disposed of
143 Life, XV | to wish for, but that its abode might be there, and it would
144 Life, XXXVIII | person such as I am, full of abominations, and who has spent her life
145 Life, XI | in a soil unfruitful, and abounding in weeds. His Majesty roots
146 Int, Arg | time it happened that she absented herself from this place
147 Life, XX | body, as if it were the absolute mistress; for now that the
148 Life, XX | more correctly, our Lord absorbs it in Himself; and when
149 Life, XVIII | But this state of complete absorption, together with the utter
150 Life, XXXII | pains to please God, and abstained from certain things which
151 Life, XXIX | it when we like, nor of abstaining from seeing; if we try to
152 Life, XXX | thinking of anything but the absurdities he puts before it, which,
153 Life, XX | which I am speaking, is so abundant that, were it not that the
154 Life, XXVII | everything for Him. God is not an accepter of persons.395 He loves
155 Ind | Men, great, difficult of access, xxxvii. 7.~Mercies of God,
156 Rel, VII | the subject and also the accident that happened to what she
157 Life, XXVII | of it!—what will be the accidental glory and the joy of the
158 Ind | Suarez, Juana, iii. 2; accompanies the Saint to Bezadas, iv.
159 Life, XIII | looking upon him; let him accompany Him, and make his petitions
160 Life, XVII | that the heavenly Gardener accomplishes in an instant, causing the
161 Life, I | that we found no means of accomplishing our wish. Even now, I have
162 Life, XXXIX | conviction that it was a grace accorded to me. I gave thanks to
163 Life, XXX | no power over itself; and accordingly—so it seems to me—the
164 Life, XXXIV | good will, by his means, accrue to some of his Order and
165 Life, XXXVII | mercy sent me, a great gain accrued to my soul, and that in
166 Pref | enabled her to speak with an accuracy ./. on the subject of prayer
167 Life, XIV | know how I came to speak so accurately.206 It has often happened
168 Rel, IX | foundation except that great accusations were brought against me,
169 Life, XXXI | with reproaches and falsely accused,—and, at the same time,
170 Int | simple and clear language, an achievement all the more remarkable
171 Int | degree of openness upon her achievements as she did when ./. making
172 Life, XX | rapture that true humility is acquired—humility that will never
173 Life, XX | mistress of everything, and acquires such freedom in one hour,
174 Life, XIII | trouble they have had in acquiring that which they communicate
175 | across
176 Life, XXXVI | they told me—though I was acting secretly, and taking care
177 Life, XXV | is removed, as if by the action of a hand, and even better;
178 Life, XXVIII | man, and I felt it most acutely when I saw that he did not
179 Life, I(89) | years old—through the Adaja Gate; but when they had
180 Int | delivered into those of the addressee of the letter.~Whether the
181 Life, XXXVII | with: but as to the way of addressing letters, there ought to
182 Int | reprinted. The author is Mlle. Adelaide Lecornu (born 5 July, 1852,
183 Int | Her name in religion was Adelaide-Jéronyme-Zoe-Marie du Sacré-
184 Int | improved. While faithfully adhering to her wording, the translator
185 Life, VII | truth, O my King, Thou didst administer to me the most delicate
186 Life, V | remained insensible. They administered the Sacrament of the last
187 Life, XIII | actions are which we are to admire, and what those are which
188 Life, XIII | the ./. Saints are to be admired, not to be imitated, by
189 Life, XXX | that would have been a real admission that I had no humility.~ ./.
190 Rel, VIII | it—by take it I mean the admitting of it to the knowledge of
191 Pref | so for others who might adopt them, for the special ways
192 Life, XXX | not able to do more than adorn images with boughs and flowers,
193 Rel, V | for the book spoke of much adorning and curious devices—not
194 Life, II | in vain; for I was very adroit in doing anything that was
195 Life, VII | were good might have with advantage—they not being obliged
196 Life, XXVIII | have recourse to means so adverse to his purpose as this,
197 Rel, VI | am more bound to obey. I adverted to this, that the obligation
198 Int | his own ideas about the advisability of the publication of the "
199 Life, XXX | enough that I would not do so advisedly, nor tell them an untruth;454
200 Int | confessors and spiritual advisers to guide her. Her natural
201 Rel, III | Toledo, and some people were advising me not to allow any but
202 Int, Arg | Joseph as her helper and advocate, and how much she profited
203 Life, XXI | distinguishes clearly, and afar off, between those who are
204 Life, II | communicated to me her own affairs—I was then about fourteen
205 Int, 0(8) | communities of Beguines demanded affiliation to the Carmelite Order,
206 Life, XXVII | could not so confidently affirm that he was that person,
207 Life, XXX | many ways she was able to afford it. Some of those graces
208 Life, XXXVII | law, under the penalty of affronting those who look upon these
209 Life, XIV | humility—the flowers grow afresh.~15. O my Lord and my Good!
210 Life, XXXVI | about three or four hours afterwards—Satan returned to the spiritual
211 Rel, VIII | Human Nature; and—I say it again—I can assure you that this
212 Life, II | were nearly of mine own age—a little older, perhaps.
213 Life, XXVII | it or not: but he was an aged man when I made his acquaintance;
214 Life, XL | lest the others should be aggrieved. Let every Order, or every
215 Life, XXIX | much lower order; and those agitations should be avoided by gently
216 Life, XVI(235) | fallen priest, the Doctor Agostino Cazalla, whose vanity led
217 Rel, I | and I, too, desirous of agreeing with them, they could not
218 Ann, 0(74) | biographer—with whom Fra Jerome agrees,—says that she left her
219 Life, XIII | a cowardly soul, though aided by humility, make that progress
220 Life, XXXVIII | used to. I knew not what ailed my soul, nor what it desired,
221 Life, IV | and I had also many other ailments. And thus it was I spent
222 Pref, 0(61) | Introduccion al libro de la Vida, vol. i.
223 Pref | Nor should any one cause alarm by condemning them forthwith,
224 Life, IV | Majesty gave me, to endure the alarming illnesses which I had to
225 Rel, VII(687) | Bishop, successively, of Albarracin, Segorve, and Salamanca.
226 Life, XXXVI(530) | Brief was addressed to Doña Aldonza de Guzman, and to Doña
227 Life, XXXVI(554) | Dominico. Presentado en algunas Religiones es cierto titulo
228 Life, X | for every one of us now alive—why should it not be lawful
229 Life, XXII | into heaven, without pain, all-glorious, giving strength to some
230 Pref | Reformation of the Order of the All-Immaculate Virgin Mother, our B. Lady
231 Life, XXXIX | nothing of the chief reason of all—His pure compassion. But
232 Life, III | defended myself against him by alleging the trials which Christ
233 Int | with a view to publication. Allusions to this object may be found
234 Ind | St. Peter of Alcantara.~Almsgiving of the Saint, i. 6, Rel.
235 Life, XX | standard of Christ is raised up aloft, which seems to be nothing
236 Life, XII(178) | para servir a Dios, by Fra. Alonso de Madrid (De la Fuente).~
237 Life, XXVII | trouble even to learn the alphabet. This last comparison seems
238 Int | convent. The dowry granted by Alphonso Sanchez de Cepeda to his
239 Life, I | it not been Thy pleasure also—not for my advantage, but
240 Life, XXIX(440) | entrañas"). On the high altar of the Carmelite church
241 Int | necessary to make some slight alteration in the text, and I trust
242 Life, XX(292) | seems to have been, "libre alvedrio ni guerra" (De la Fuente).~
243 Life, XXII | with all our might to have always—and please God it be always!
244 Life, XXVIII | certainly they desired my amendment—and so he would reprimand
245 Life, I(87) | army, and, serving in South America, was drowned in the river
246 Rel, IX | stone set in it like an amethyst, but of a brilliancy very
247 Life, XXXIX | He had not granted in an ampler manner than I had known
248 Life, XI | your reverence will be amused when you see my stupidity.
249 Life, XIX | up, and wasted my time in amusing myself, in great danger
250 Int | With her wonderful power of analysis, she has given us not only
251 Pref | revelations, not only in ancient, but also in modern times;
252 Life, XL(620) | commonly called the Apostle of Andalusia.~
253 Life, VII | died. He lay there like an angel—such he seemed to me, if
254 Pref | April, 1574, and then the anger of the Princess prevailed;
255 Rel, IX(725) | Andalucia it is our Lady of Anguish—"Nuestra Señora de las
256 Rel, IX(725) | Nuestra Señora de las Angustias."~
257 Int | the life of St. Teresa by animal Magnetism and similar obscure
258 Life, XXXIX | be supported by certain animals; I believe I saw the form
259 Int, 0(37) | vol. i., pp. 340–358 ad ann. 1604.~
260 Ann | Annals of the Saint's Life.~By
261 Life, XXXVI | credit and suffer so much annoyance. But as to what was said
262 Int | two hundred ducats per annum. Few among the numerous
263 Life, XXV | never mistake one thing for another—and then I snap my fingers
264 Life, Pro(84) | compassions of God"—Y ansi intitule ese libro De las
265 Life, XXXIX | everything seemed to me but an ant-hill. I communicated, and remained
266 Rel, V | revealed in one so wicked.~10. Antiochus was unendurable to himself,
267 Int | replace the quotations from antiquated editions of the Letters
268 Int | on Mystical theology by Antonius a Spiritu Sancto and Franciscus
269 Pref | of Jesus.~"Imprinted in Antwerp by Henry Jaye. Anno MDCXI."~
270 Pref | to suffer.'—Chap. xl.~"Antwerpe, printed by Joannes Meursius.
271 Life, I | of age when she died, her apparel was already that of a woman
272 Int, Arg | exterior temptations and apparitions of Satan, and how he ill-treated
273 Life, XXXI | Outward Temptations and Appearances of Satan. Of the Sufferings
274 Rel, III | Host mattered not.~20. Then appearing to me, as on other occasions,
275 Life, XL(611) | published the letter in the Appendix, p. 566.~
276 Life, XVII | requiring no food, with his appetite satisfied, so that he will
277 Pref | no external help in the applause of the many, and he had
278 Life, XX | anything, not even of a single apple in the orchard; only, if
279 Life, XI | 12. Now, then, for the application of these four ways of irrigation
280 Life, XV | spend the time in making applications of passages of the Scriptures.
281 Rel, VIII | is; for, though the soul applies itself to the understanding
282 Life, XXXVIII | the effort, to have any appreciation whatever of such things,
283 Life, XV | good in us, is perfectly apprehended—and the more perfectly,
284 Life, XIX | time. Now that it clearly apprehends that the fruit is not its
285 Life, XXV | how they may be but an apprehension of the understanding,—
286 Int | were wont to do, and by approaching the sacrament more frequently
287 Int | contenting itself with the approbations granted by the Spanish Inquisition,
288 Life, XXII | service to it; for, though an aptness for flying be more natural
289 Rel, XI(738) | hace pensar no se puede dar aquel sentido à el que mama los
290 Int | the teaching of St. Thomas Aquinas and other authorities, Diego
291 Rel, VII | among whom were Father Araoz, who was Commissary of the
292 Life, VIII | to me that those who pray arc in His presence in a very
293 Fron | Re-imprimatur.~+ Franciscus~Archiepiscopus Westmonast.~Die 27 Sept.,
294 Int, 0(4) | migrate thither (Vatican Archives, Dataria, Leo X., anno i.,
295 Life, XXX | make the most of them by arguing against myself. Thus, then,
296 Life, XXVIII | comfort.~18. I urged this argument, among others, when they
297 Life, I(87) | than the Saint, entered the army, and, serving in South America,
298 Life, XXXIX | But how the throne was arrayed, and Him who sat on it I
299 Rel, VIII(702) | Arrobamiento y arrebatamiento."~
300 Life, XIX | walk and press onwards, arrives at last, even if late. To
301 Rel, VIII(702) | Arrobamiento y arrebatamiento."~
302 Life, VII | Satan has employed this artifice—and it is of the greatest
303 Int | revived by Professor Don Arturo Perales Gutierrez of Granada,
304 Int | be mentioned that the one ascribed to Abraham Woodhead is only
305 Life, XIII | self-knowledge must never be put aside—for there is no soul so
306 Int | the time.16 Saint Teresa asks the writer to send a copy
307 Life, XXX | seems to me like a little ass, which feeds and thrives,
308 Life, XXXVI | two days on which those assemblies of which I have spoken were
309 Life, XXV | desire, that I could safely assert it.~24. Seeing, then, that
310 Life, II | could be ./. positively asserted; and, as I was so much afraid
311 Life, XXII | that we may be those little asses who drive the windlass I
312 Life, X | satisfied with the place assigned him: there being the very
313 Rel, XI(735) | not change the practice, assigning as his reason the Saint'
314 Life, XXXVIII | I was standing myself to assist her in singing the versicle,
315 Ind | xviii. 4.~Thomas, St., assisted at the deathbed of Fra P.
316 Life, XXXIX | rewards them well; most assuredly they are not sorry for what
317 Rel, VII(687) | Vicar-General of the Bishops of Astorga and Avila, and Canon of
318 Life, IV | in my body were wrenched asunder;104 for, as I had no love
319 Life, XXXIX(602) | called the Creed of St. Athanasius.~
320 Life, XXXIX | vision, so that I might attach myself to nothing, but only
321 Life, XXXVII | were afraid that I was attaching and binding myself too much
322 Rel, XI | under the sway of any strong attachment to any created thing, not
323 Life, XXX | was the cause of all these attacks. He was a holy but timid
324 Life, XXXVIII | 6. A soul in this state attains to a certain freedom, which
325 Life, XXXVII | An earthly king without attendants would be hardly acknowledged;
326 Life, XXI | ill-ordered; to waste its time in attending to the body by sleeping
327 Life, XXVII | something of his own; for he attends to what is said to him;
328 Life, XX | not to be satisfied with attracting the soul to Himself in so
329 Rel, IV | earth, I thought, had any attractions for me, I had a scruple,
330 Life, XIX | everything, and one drop of water attracts another.~7. One of the reasons
331 Rel, II | mockery to be distressed about aught else. I do nothing but pray
332 Life, XL(611) | the Saint referred to the Augustinians or to the Franciscans. But,
333 Life, XXXV(525) | soon after ran up to his aunt and thanked her for what
334 Pref | National Library in Madrid an authentic and exact transcript of
335 Life, XXXVI | our work. Neither did he authorise me to enter the house till
336 Life, XXXII | custom of the whole Order, authorised by the Bull of Mitigation.
337 Life, III | speak to him, be of any avail. The utmost I could get
338 Life, XIX | I was so wicked, that it availed me nothing; when I gave
339 Life, XXXII | my recollection, either avaricious or envious, so as to be
340 Life, VI(127) | West, in a confraternity in Avignon. "Then it spread over the
341 Life, XXX | place by day, so the soul avoids offending God: it seems
342 Life, XXI | the Subject. Pain of the Awakening. Light Against Delusions.~
343 Life, X | it used to pass quickly away—certain commencements of
344 Life, XXXVIII | dare to offend His most awful Majesty.~24. I must have
345 Rel, III | Ascension,647 having prayed for awhile after Communion in great
346 Ind | Juan of, Rel. vii. 9.~Báñes, Fr. Dom., xxxvi. 15;
347 Life, XXII | these, though their eyes are bandaged, and they do not understand
348 Life, III | eternal things, as well as to banish in some measure the great
349 Life, XXI | works—frequently feels her banishment so much, what the feelings
350 Life, XXXVIII | them in heaven with white banners in their hands, and I have
351 Pref | Monasteries of the Discalced or Bare-footed Carmelite Nunnes and Fryers
352 Life, XX | would be! how free from bargaining! How friendly all men would
353 Int | measures, partly wheat, partly barley, or, in lieu thereof, two
354 Life, XX | and I think I would not barter it for all the graces of
355 Life, II | world for which I would have bartered it, and nobody in the world
356 Int | previous to her conversion are based upon this, as will he seen
357 Life, VII | the most wicked and the basest of all who are born of women;
358 Life, XIX | tears of joy it finds itself bathed therein, without being aware
359 Life, XIX | this the devil turned his batteries against me, and I suffered
360 Life, XXXII(474) | religious; afterwards Maria Bautista, Prioress of the Carmelites
361 Int, 0(30) | by Don Francisco Herrero Bayona, 1883 p. 4.~
362 Life, XIX | what a sight that must be—a soul so highly exalted
363 Life, XXXVI | and persecution we had to bear—that he was glad the foundation
364 Life, XIV | demonstrations of the love Thou bearest it, and of which there cannot
365 Int | circumstances as described by him. Bearing in mind the hint St. Teresa
366 Life, XX | pulse ceases, as it were, to beat at all,—so the sisters
367 Pref | testifies in the process of her beatification that he was firm and sharp
368 Life, XXIX | of ./. stature, and most beautiful—his face burning, as if
369 Life, XV | speak somewhat to the point, because—setting aside the experience
370 Life, XXVIII | pellucid water running in a bed of crystal, reflecting the
371 Int | convent a receipt for her bedding, habit and discipline. This
372 Life, XV | itself, like the prudent bee; for if no bees entered
373 Life, XV | the prudent bee; for if no bees entered the hive, and each
374 Life, XXII | things together. No trial befalls me that is not easy to bear,
375 Life, XII | prayers, but rather with words befitting its desires and its needs.~
376 Life, XXIX | those who used to help me before—it was to him I confessed
377 Life, XXXI | trifles which I gave up when I began—or, at least, of some of
378 Life, XV | here gives us, and which begets a confusion of face that
379 Life, XI | present purpose.171~10. A beginner must look upon himself as
380 Life, II(93) | iii. ed. Doblado), she begs him, for the love of God,
381 Int, 0(8) | 1452 certain communities of Beguines demanded affiliation to
382 Life, I | that we might be there beheaded;89 and our Lord, I believe,
383 Life, VII | trusteth not in himself, and believeth another who in this matter
384 Life, XIV | as things are known here below—though it is always well
385 Ann | her spirit, and St. Luis Beltran encourages her to proceed
386 Life, XI(171) | Cantic. Serm. 30. n. 7, ed. Ben.~
387 Life, III | hell. Though I could not bend my will to be a nun, I saw
388 Life, XXXVI | persecutors to become great benefactors, and give alms to us. In
389 Life, XIX | rich in them. It begins to benefit its neighbours, as it were,
390 Life, XXXIV | faith, and so he has greatly benefited himself and some other souls,
391 Life, XXIII(340) | by a Franciscan friar, Bernardino de Laredo (Reforma, vol.
392 Int, 0(34) | Grégoire, ii., p. 65. P. Bertholde-Ignace, Vie de la Mère Anne de
393 Rel, VIII | offers its life to Him, beseeching Him that it may last only
394 Life, XXXIX | found myself afterwards so beset on all sides, good people
395 Pref | leave, and was refused. She besieged him through her friends,
396 Life, XX | though the other faculties bestir themselves again, the will
397 Life, XV | Moreover, the understanding bestirs itself to make its thanksgiving
398 Life, XIV | this state wherein Thou bestowest upon it the like graces
399 Life, XXXVIII | confessors occasionally; and on betaking myself to prayer for consolation,
400 Life, XXXVI(533) | is the little hospice of Bethlehem" (De la Fuente).~
401 Life, XXXVI | give it up altogether. I betook myself to God, and said, "
402 Life, VII | courageous, that I never betrayed my sorrows, concealing them
403 Life, XXVIII | love: Satan very quickly betrays himself.~16. Thus, then,
404 Life, XX | have enemies, the fewer the better—that the senses also shall
405 Life, VIII | conversion to Himself, to beware of the occasions of sin;
406 Life, XXX | greatest consolation and joy, bidding me continue my prayer with
407 Life, XXIII | should encourage them, and bide the time when our Lord will
408 Life, XXXIX | to the obligations which bind me to Thee. What imperfections
409 Life, XXXVII | that I was attaching and binding myself too much to them,
410 Life, XIV | pressing now is Thy love!201 It binds our love in bonds so straitly,
411 Ann, 0(74) | Ribera, her most accurate biographer—with whom Fra Jerome agrees,
412 Rel, IX | music also,—the singing of birds and of angels,—which filled
413 Ind | saying of, xiii. 4.~Avila, birthplace of St. Teresa, troubled
414 Rel, VII(687) | and Vicar-General of the Bishops of Astorga and Avila, and
415 Life, VI | I endured. My tongue was bitten to pieces; there was a choking
416 Life, XXIX | for this; but I felt it bitterly when I saw that my confessors
417 Life, XX | grows, so also ./. does the bitterness of that loneliness wherein
418 Ind | foundation: xxxvi. 14.~Avila, Bl., Juan of, Rel. vii. 9.~
419 Life, XXII | will not think that I was blamable, for I was very sorry for
420 Life, XXXV(511) | looking at her torn and bleeding feet, said to her, "Woman
421 Rel, III | person tied and bound and blindfold, who, though anxious to
422 Life, XIV | little knowledge of the blissfulness of glory is communicated ./.
423 Life, IX | company. I thought of the bloody sweat, and of the affliction
424 Life, XXXVII | it may lose its breath in blowing and arranging the fuel—
425 Rel, XI | have been committed a great blunder, though not a sin.737~5.
426 Life, XX(292) | who wrote them. The MS. is blurred, and the original text seems
427 Life, VII | that it seems a matter of boasting now, and the offences committed
428 Life, XXIX | not as a caldron, fiercely boiling because too much fuel has
429 Life, XXXIV | one as I am to speak so boldly before His Majesty! May
430 Ind | the Saint threatened with, Boll. 211, xxix. 4.~Experience,
431 Life, XIV | It binds our love in bonds so straitly, that it is
432 Life, IV | seemed to me as if every bone in my body were wrenched
433 Rel, VII(687) | Salazar was a native of Bonilli de la Sierra, and Vicar-General
434 Life, IV | first year I had read good books—for I would read no others,
435 Pref | the Princess desired the boon. She and her husband promised
436 Life, XXXIV | soldiers who, to acquire booty, and therewith enrich themselves,
437 Rel, VI(680) | cxlvii. 14: "He hath made thy borders peace."~
438 Life, XXXVIII | wonderful and clear way in the bosom of the Father. I cannot
439 Life, XXX | more than adorn images with boughs and flowers, clean or arrange
440 Life, XXXVI | said before541 that he had bought it, for the purpose of concealing
441 Life, XXVI | covered with wounds, and bowed down under persecutions,
442 Life, I(86) | had nine children—seven boys and two girls. The third
443 Pref | love and such a goodness breaks out into such excesses of
444 Life, XXXVIII | told me that, before he breathed his last, he said to him
445 Life, XXXV | said to me that endowments bred confusion, with other things
446 Life, XXXVII | customs and ceremonies of good breeding, and yet spend any time
447 Life, XXIX(441) | Brev. Rom. in fest. S. Teresiae,
448 Life, XXXVIII | to a few for the sake of brevity, and because they are not
449 Life, I(89) | when they had crossed the bridge, they were met by one of
450 Life, XXXV | presence. She showed me Briefs she brought from Rome, and
451 Int | Professor Don Fernando Segundo Brieva Salvatierra of Madrid, who
452 Life, XXXVIII | of small shells shining brightly. It was larger than an ordinary
453 Life, XXXI | offensive smell, like that of brimstone. I smelt nothing myself;
454 Life, XIV | understand what His presence bringeth about, and that He means
455 Life, VII | frequented; and because it is the broadest, it is also the most in
456 Life, XXXVI | monastery was that of my brother-in-law—I said before541 that he
457 Pref | contents of the book were bruited abroad, and the visions
458 Life, II(93) | Bartholomew, in her life (Bruxelles, 1708, p. 40), says that
459 Life, XI | as that of lowering the bucket into the well so often,
460 Life, XIV | beginning, as it seemed to bud—and preserve them, that
461 Life, XV | they are on the point of budding. And this the soul sees
462 Ind | exterior occupations, xxx. 18; buffeted by Satan, xxxi. 3; converts
463 Life, XXXII | monastery would be certainly built; that He would take great
464 Life, XXXIX | salt, without weight or bulk, and which a bird might
465 Life, XVIII | iron very quickly, though bulky, loses its nature altogether
466 Rel, II | understand that all men are bunches of dried rosemary, and that
467 Life, XX | seemed frequently to be buoyant, as if all weight had departed
468 Life, XXII | raise it, seeing that it is burdened with earth, and hindered
469 Life, XIII | are exempted from these burdens—who have our food put into
470 Rel, VII | Santander; the Rector of Burgos, whose name is Ripalda,—
471 Life, XXXIV | spirit I felt what great love burned within him, and became as
472 Life, XX | purified by this pain—burnished, or refined as gold in the
473 Life, XXV | refreshing. Those little, fervid bursts of tears, and other slight
474 Rel, V | imperfections, wherein we bury ourselves, is so great,
475 Life, XVIII | Accordingly, the restless little butterfly of the memory has its wings
476 Int | Benedict Zimmerman,~Prior O.C.D.~St. Luke's Priory,~Wincanton,
477 Int | the Carmelite convent at Caen, 14 December, 1901. Her
478 Int, Arg | great graces of God. This is calculated to greatly animate the spirit
479 Int | not always reliable in her calculation should have warned us not
480 Life, XXIX | under control, and not as a caldron, fiercely boiling because
481 Int | Greek, and was placed on the calendar in honour of a noble Spanish
482 Rel, XI(737) | hermitage of our Lady de la Calle, in Palencia (De la Fuente).
483 Life, XXI | and the dignity of their callings, require it of them as a
484 Life, XXX | holy friar consoled and calmed me, I did not rely so much
485 Life, XXXIX | became conscious of an inward calmness, a joy and delight, which
486 Life, XIX | wickedness was plain enough. Calumny and persecution began at
487 Life, XIX | be Thou, O Lord; for Thou camest to my help. This seems to
488 Life, XXVI | and in such a way that it cannotbe forgotten!~7. Who can look
489 Ann, 0(72) | Philip in 1595; but they were canonised on the same day, with St.
490 Life, I(88) | The Bull of the Saint's canonization, and the Lections of the
491 Rel, III | seemed to me to be above the canopies of the stalls, and on the
492 Life, XXXIX | saw an exceedingly rich canopy above their heads. I saw
493 Life, XI(171) | 2. Vide St. Bernard, in Cantic. Serm. 30. n. 7, ed. Ben.~
494 Rel, II | to effect them than the canvas does for the picture painted
495 Life, XX | to disturb it, it takes care—for if it is to have enemies,
496 Life, XXXI | left in the hands of God cares nothing about evil or good
497 Life, XXIX | should be soothed by the caresses of love, which shall draw
498 Life, XXIX | even a large one. It is a caressing of love so sweet which now
499 Life, XXXVIII | the feast in the book of a Carthusian;572 and reading of the marks
500 Rel, IX(725) | because in Avila and in Castile and Aragon the expression
501 Pref | master Fra Hernando del Castillo, and many others, speak