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St. Teresa of Avila
Life of St. Teresa of Jesus

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502 Life, Pro(84) | 19, 1581, to Don Pedro de Castro, then canon of Avila, speaking 503 Life, XV | concerning our salvation, casts out servile fear at once 504 Int | too much upon a somewhat casual statement. In the first 505 Life, XIII | shows itself fit only to catch lizards. Humility must always 506 Life, XXXIX | watchful, will find itself caught in a net,—at least, all 507 Life, XXX | so I went to them, and cautioned them very earnestly to be 508 Pref | I have always proceeded cautiously in the examination of this 509 Rel, II(643) | A celebrated Dominican, professor of 510 Rel, I(622) | days on which the Church celebrates the mysteries of the faith, 511 Rel, IX | him to order the solemn celebration of that feast every year 512 Life, II(93) | that the Fathers had clean cells and table; and the Ven.  513 Ind | St., of Siena, xxii. 10.~Censoriousness of the world, xxxi. 19.~ 514 Pref | was one, were delegated censors of it by the Inquisition.62~ 515 Int | report on it. The twelve censures with the answers of the 516 Life, XL | and downwards; and in the centre of it I saw Christ our Lord, 517 Life, XL(611) | Dominicans in the sixteenth century that the Order was in "some 518 Life, IV(107) | house—Pedro Sanchez de Cepeda—in Hortigosa, and then 519 Life, XXXVII | negligence in being much more ceremonious with people than they deserve 520 Life, XXXIII | would not break the least ceremony of the Church, that I would 521 Life, XXIX(427) | menosprecio que hacemos cerrando el puño, y mostrando el 522 Life, XXXI | behind his back, for it is a chain which no file can sever; 523 Life, XXI | run away,—it sees itself chained and imprisoned; it feels 524 Life, XXXVII | ought to be a professor's chair founded, from which lectures 525 Life, XI | ascertain if they will drink the chalice,175 and help Him to carry 526 Life, XXXV(511) | Reporter of Causes in the Chancery of Granada; but his name 527 Life, XXIII(337) | became a priest, and was chaplain and confessor of the Carmelite 528 Life, XII | My aim in the foregoing chapter—though I digressed to many 529 Life, XXXIV | Provincial sent me an order, charging me in virtue of my obedience 530 Pref | Empress Maria, daughter of Charles V., and widow of Maximilian 531 Life, VII | the most pain. Thou didst chastise my sins with great consolations. 532 Life, XXXVI | that she will be heavily chastised of God, who shall be the 533 Life, XV | effectually than all the chastisements of hell it can ever picture 534 Life, XIX | given us, for the purpose of chastising us, because of our misuse 535 Rel, VII | letter; also to the Master Chaves; to the Father-Master Fra 536 Life, I | the vision of God was very cheaply purchased; and I had a great 537 Rel, I | and it does relieve and cheer me, though what I do is 538 Life, XIII | we should strive to be cheerful and unconstrained; for there 539 Life, XXIX | with, no one, but only to cherish my pain, which was to me 540 Life, I | myself, though I was the most cherished of my father. And, before 541 Life, XXIX(438) | the Escurial, the word is "cherubines;" but all the editors before 542 Life, XXXIX | like eagles, to become like chickens whose feet are tied. Let 543 Life, XX | all created things, and chiefly above itself: but it is 544 Life, XXXII | natural warmth of my body is chilled by fear even now when I 545 Life, XXV | unless he deliberately chooses to do so, can fall into 546 Life, XIII | for the power he has of choosing whom he will obey, and let 547 Life, XXXIV | companion. I knew of it on Christmas night. It caused me some 548 Pref | Ribera and Yepes, and in the Chronicle of the Order; the rest was 549 Ind2, Ref | Genesis~1:26 ~Exodus~23:15 ~2 Chronicles~20:12   20:12 ~Job~1   2: 550 Life, XX(277) | Psalm ci. 8: "I have watched, and 551 Rel, III | Host being still in the ciborium, for It had not yet been 552 Life, XXXVI(554) | en algunas Religiones es cierto titulo de grado que es respeto 553 Int, Arg(44) | Una cifra," a mere nothing.~ 554 Int | they became known to larger circles this was due to indiscretion. 555 Ind2, Cit | Index of Citations~<insertIndex type="cite" /> ~ 556 Ind2, Cit | Citations~<insertIndex type="cite" /> ~ ·        "De la Clausura," ~ 557 Life, XXX | there was no one in this city—who understood me; but 558 Life, XXXVI(537) | now in her native place, Ciudad Toro.~ 559 Life, XXXIII | sins. When I had been thus clad—I was filled with the utmost 560 Rel, I(622) | because Ribera does not claim them for any member of the 561 Life, XXXIX | sight of a person who had claims upon me, and who was almost 562 Life, II(93) | was extremely careful of cleanliness. In one of her letters to 563 Life, XXXIII | understand that I was then cleansed from my sins. When I had 564 Int | Teresa's profession has been cleared up. Yepes, the Bollandists, 565 Life, XXX | on the matter was of the clearest; for as to these visions, 566 Rel, II | detachment, and who will not cleave to anything of this world, 567 Life, XXXV | No mountain passes and no cliffs are near it: these are the 568 Rel, II | only way not to fall is to cling to the cross, and put our 569 Life, XXXI | while we live; for much evil clings to us if, as I said before,468 570 Life, IX | with myself, and how I was clogged, so that I could not resolve 571 Pref | secular people within the cloisters. She was also so humble 572 Life, XXXIV(501) | on this point has been so closely inspected as to throw any 573 Rel, IX | thy soul is incomparably closer than this." The vision has 574 Rel, VIII | away with itself; for it closes the eyes on purpose that 575 Life, XXXII | place in the wall, like a closet, and in that I saw myself 576 Life, XL | sin, this mirror becomes clouded with a thick vapour, and 577 Life, XXVIII | with most muddy water on a cloudy day, flowing on the surface 578 Int | These words contain the clue to much that otherwise would 579 Rel, VIII | pains, I make use of these clumsy expressions,—for such 580 Life, XXIV | confessor saw how much I clung to these friendships, he 581 Int | Canticle (Migne, P. L. Vol. CLXXXIII, p. 879), and in the first 582 Int | Bernard's disciples (Vol. CLXXXIV., p. 195). I am indebted 583 Life, XXXIII | lived in. Everything was coarse, and nothing more was done 584 Life, XIX | sunlight enters strongly, not a cobweb can be hid; it sees its 585 Int | ronyme-Zoe-Marie du Sacré-Coeur).~An excellent character 586 Life, XXX | dwell together; but the coexistence of a spiritual pain so excessive 587 Life, VI | was bent together like a coil of ropes—for to this was 588 Int | to 1538, which precisely coincides with her sojourn at Bezadas. 589 Life, XX | perceptibly lessened; the coldness increases, though accompanied 590 Int | Teresa, by Henry James Coleridge, S.J. Quarterly Series. 591 Rel, V(676) | Cassian, Collat. vii. cap. iv. p. 311: " 592 Pref | the original text has been collated since the previous translations 593 Rel, VIII | deprived of the power of collecting his thoughts for his own 594 Pref | and has given us now a collection of papers which form almost 595 Int, 0(8) | to convents of nuns. The colophon of the printed edition ( 596 Life, XXIX | extremely desirous to behold the colour of His eyes, or the form 597 Int | English, likewise, where this combination of letters represents a 598 Pref | when other circumstances combine as evidences of these visitations 599 Life, XXII | more than this when Thou comest to a lodging so mean as 600 Rel, III | Himself, and spoke to me most comfortable words. Among them were these, 601 Life, VIII | Thou, O my Lord! how Thou comfortest and endurest, and also waitest 602 Life, XXXVII | cost him many goings and comings, and currying favour with 603 Pref | Written by herself at the commaundement of her ghostly father, and 604 Rel, III | to this day, which is the Commemoration of St. Paul, the presence 605 Life, XXIV | pleased our Lord that I should commence a friendship with a noble 606 Life, IV | went thither when winter commenced. The intervening time I 607 Life, X | pass quickly away—certain commencements of that which I am going 608 Life, VI | special way those souls who commend themselves to him. It is 609 Int, 0(19) | xxiii.–xxxi., without comment.~ 610 Life, XXXVI(547) | Domingo Bañes, the great commentator on St. Thomas. On the margin 611 Life, XXI | to have to return to the commerce of the world, to see and 612 Rel, VII | were Father Araoz, who was Commissary of the Society, and who 613 Life, XXX | brought him here. He was the commissary-general of the custody450 of St. 614 Int | Rada, a Franciscan, were commissioned to examine the matter and 615 Rel, I(622) | visitations.~"3. She never commits a fault, nor falls into 616 Life, VII | practise mental prayer nor commune with God so much; for I 617 Life, XVIII | was present, and how He communed with us: this was a great 618 Life, VII | later; and now, since my Communions have become more frequent, 619 Life, XXIV | me—and even those in the community—said that they seemed to 620 Rel, VIII | cannot explain it except by comparing it with other pains, I make 621 Life, XXVIII | the imagination could not compass, because, as I have just 622 Life, XIII | how these things could be compatible one with the other. This 623 Life, IV | giving it to me Himself, and compelling me to possess it, as it 624 Rel, I | my life is notorious, and compels me to think over all I have 625 Life, XVII | produce, nor making any compensation for it to Him who supplies 626 Life, XX | and by speaking of it, by complaining, and distracting itself, 627 Int, Arg | third degree of prayer and completes the explanation of its effects. 628 Life, XXXVI | between the beginning and the completion of the monastery: the last 629 Int, Arg | she declares, was, besides compliance with obedience, her principal 630 Int | this request had not been complied with, and that St. Teresa 631 Life, XXXVI | the choir in prayer after Compline, I saw our Lady in exceeding 632 Life, XXII | I was in because I would comply with the directions I was 633 Int | time and talents in the composition of controversial and devotional 634 Life, XXX(450) | the Order of St. Francis, comprising a certain number of  convents.~ 635 Life, XIX | sees nor hears, unless on compulsion: no thanks to it. Its past 636 Rel, IX(716) | Clausura," § 16: "De tratar con deudos se desvien lo mas 637 Life, XIII | subject many thoughts and conceptions. As to those who, like myself, 638 Life, XXI(301) | Farsa de esta vida tan mal concertada."~ 639 Int | Visions and Revelations in the concluding portion of the work could 640 Life, XX | it be a woman. Hence its condemnation; and not without reason; 641 Rel, VIII | that it is that, but no one condemns it. The Father-Master d' 642 Life, XXXVI | yet I wished to do so only conditionally: for if I should have learnt 643 Life, XXXI | to the difference of our conditions—she being married. I was 644 Rel, VII | satisfied.~13. She also conferred particularly with Salinas, 645 Life, XXIII | of the soul consists in conferring with the friends of God. 646 Rel, VII | took place, she had been to confession—she does not say to them, 647 Life, XXXIV | speak to me in one of the confessionals. We began by asking one 648 Life, IV | had no master—I mean, no confessor—who understood me, though 649 Rel, VII | who saw it—they were my confessors—said that it was very profitable 650 Life, VII | serve God in earnest to confide to another his joys and 651 Int | earlier writings were but confidential communications to her confessors, 652 Life, XXVII | him; but I could not so confidently affirm that he was that 653 Life, XXXVIII | to certain souls. I will confine myself to a few for the 654 Int | concerning prayer which are conformable to what I have said there, 655 Life, XXXVIII | see that their lives are conformed to that which our Lord gave 656 Life, V | that I might bear it all, conforming my will to the will of God. 657 Life, VI(127) | its rise in the West, in a confraternity in Avignon. "Then it spread 658 Life, XII | myself, and covered with confusion—though not so much so as 659 Int | Inquisition, and by the congregation of the Rota in Rome. A certain 660 Rel, I | particularly of kindred and connections—seems oppressive, and myself 661 Life, XV | everlasting kingdom at the conquest of which we are aiming.~ 662 Life, IX | to those who keep their consciences in greater pureness.160~ 663 Pref | editors to correct. The most conscientious diligence is not a safeguard 664 Life, XIX | of it, or doing anything consciously: its neighbours understand 665 Life, XVII | except that the will is consenting to the graces, the fruition 666 Life, XL | is always present in the conservation of its being. In heretics, 667 Life, XL | to serve my Lord and my Consoler with all my strength; for 668 Life, XXXV(511) | but the house was formally constituted July 23, 1563, and subjected 669 Life, XXII | onwards.~ ./. 8. Then, if our constitution—or perhaps sickness—will 670 Int | Teresa's phrases should be construed, but it is not too much 671 Life, XXXI | myself, as of persons in consultation, but I did not hear what 672 Life, V | trust themselves without consulting those who are learned— 673 Life, V | up; they said I was also consumptive. This gave me little or 674 Life, XXXVIII | and miserable, to come in contact with Thy great Majesty? 675 Life, XXIX | a person may for a time contemplate that picture,—the form 676 Int | that a new translation was contemplated by two graduates of the 677 Life, XXIX | to me, and though I was contemplating His great beauty, and the 678 Life, XIII | hold the world in profound contempt—to make light of honour, 679 Life, V | which seemed to make me contemptible. I delighted in being thought 680 Life, XX | like a person who had been contending with a strong giant; at 681 Int | enquired into, the Holy See contenting itself with the approbations 682 Int | both the autograph and the context demand the wording I have 683 Life, XXXII | can be borne, such as the contraction of my sinews when I was 684 Life, XXII | explain myself! I am not contradicting them on this point, for 685 Int, Arg | taught her how to answer contradictors.~Chapter XXX.—She continues 686 Life, XXXIX | his confession with great contrition, and returned to God so 687 Life, VIII | of taking it, and of the contrivances and compassion wherewith 688 Life, XIII | should be very reserved, controlled by the discretion and authority 689 Int | talents in the composition of controversial and devotional works for 690 Rel, VI | to things relating to my convenience. In a word, his commands 691 Rel, VII(687) | learning, and extremely conversant with matters of prayer; 692 Rel, I | neither pray nor read, and conversation—particularly of kindred 693 Life, IX | frequently used to think of her conversion—especially when I went 694 Life, VI | monastery, that I had myself conveyed thither in the state I was 695 Life, XXXI | because Satan now and then convinces them that they are under 696 Int | to her for the purpose of copying and completing it. The second 697 Rel, VII(687) | of Avila; Inquisitor of Cordova, Seville, and Toledo; Bishop, 698 Life, XX | from this pain as the most corporeal thing is from the most spiritual; 699 Life, VIII | by prayer all my evil was corrected—why should any one, how 700 Int | labour has been spared in the correction of these, and I trust that 701 Int | is so free from mistakes, corrections and erasures, that we may 702 Life, XXIII(338) | vol. ii. p. 9, where he corrects himself,—having previously 703 Life, XXIII | much to blame if I did not correspond with the graces which God 704 Int | November, 1535."6 This is corroborated by various passages in the 705 Life, XX | place it provides, which costs so dear! Very often it obtains 706 Life, I | fault. I gave alms as I could—and I could but little. 707 Life, XXII | only for an hour, that Thou couldst be a hindrance to my greatest 708 Life, XXII | chamberlains and secret councillors, we must go willingly; if 709 Life, XIII | given to prayer are not fit counsellors for those who pray: that 710 Life, XXII | Humanity of Christ is not to be counted among the objects from which 711 Life, XXXIII | giving her name and her countenance, the whole of the trouble 712 Life, XXXVI | Lord has here begun and countenanced, so that it may be kept ./. 713 Life, XXIX | supernatural. Diamonds seem counterfeits and imperfect when compared 714 Life, XXX | to me, in some measure a counterpart of hell. So it is, as our 715 Life, XXXIX | then, there is danger in counting the years we have given 716 Int | France, Germany, and other countries, has been ably summed up 717 Life, XXXV(525) | loudest, and be silent. Then, covering her face and her body with 718 Pref | which the world falls, and a covert persecution of goodness, 719 Life, XXXI | therefore not humble, but a coward; for a soul which God permits 720 Ind | Covetousness, xxxiii. 14.~Cowardice, spiritual, xiii. 6.~Creator, 721 Life, XV | it may be, causes a great crackling; and if men do not quench 722 Life, XIII | receives. I have met with souls cramped and tormented, because he 723 Rel, V | sole Creator. Could the Son create an ant without the Father? 724 Rel, II | first time I hear it, it creates in me a little resistance, 725 Life, IX | them I saw traces of the Creator—I mean, that the sight 726 Int | inaccuracies have been allowed to creep in. Most of these variants 727 Pref, 0(66) | Como hombre criado toda mi vida en leer y disputar" ( 728 Life, I(89) | Gate; but when they had crossed the bridge, they were met 729 Life, XXIX | might not be so continually crossing myself, I used to hold a 730 Life, XXI | for it is kings whom the crowd must follow. To make one 731 Life, XXIX | the cross, in the Garden, crowned with thorns,—but that 732 Rel, III | a great devotion to the crowning with thorns, I was exceedingly 733 Life, XXIX | myself, I used to hold a crucifix in my hand. This I did almost 734 Ind | beside itself, xvi€“5; crucifixion of, in raptures, xx14; 735 Life, XXXI | found myself suffering so cruelly, I relieved myself by making 736 Life, XXV | it seems as if it could crush the evil spirits in defence 737 Rel, VII | also the present Rector of Cuenca, Salazar by name; the Rector 738 Pref | s side was Teresa de las Cuevas. While she remained in the 739 Life, XXI | deserved them at His hands by cultivating the garden, but because 740 Int | St. Teresa, by Gabriela Cunninghame-Graham, 2 vols, London, 1894.~ ./. 741 Life, XXV | understanding has fashioned, however cunningly it may have done so, he 742 Life, XXXI | very thirsty, drinking a cup of cold water—his whole 743 Life, V(114) | woman famous for certain cures she had wrought, but whose 744 Life, XXXVII | goings and comings, and currying favour with others, together 745 Int | Thé¨sienne, by Henry de Curzon (Paris, 1902) is, unfortunately, 746 Life, IV | who teaches it insists on cutting off the succours which reading 747 Rel, VI(680) | Psalm cxlvii. 14: "He hath made thy borders 748 Life, XIX(257) | Psalm cxviii. 137: "Thou art just, O 749 Life, XXVII(403) | Psalm cxxi. The words in the MS. are: " 750 Life, XXVII | carry his cross with the Cyrenean?397 Is it by pleasure and 751 Life, XXXIX | others swords; some had daggers, and others very long rapiers. 752 Int, Arg | should fall. She shows the damage that would result (from 753 Life, VI | extreme peril of eternal damnation—after He had raised me 754 Life, XXXVIII | did not think he would be damned. When the body had been 755 Rel, IX | precious stones; a multitude of damsels went before him with palms 756 Life, XIII(199) | Dan. xii. 3: "Qui autem docti 757 Rel, XI(738) | hace pensar no se puede dar aquel sentido à el que mama 758 Life, XXXV | are careless fall, and are dashed to pieces. He who loves 759 Life, XX(269) | The words between the dashes are in the handwriting of 760 Int, 0(4) | thither (Vatican Archives, Dataria, Leo X., anno i., vol. viii., 761 Life, XXXIII | earth, so to say, are a daubing of soot. This beauty, which 762 Int | think, in the hands of her daughter-in-law, doña Maria de Toledo. 763 Life, V | Who heard them.~19. For a day-and-a-half the grave was open in my 764 Life, XXXIII | excessive lustre that was not dazzling, but soft. I did not see 765 Life, XXVII | came the news that he was dead—or, to speak more correctly, 766 Life, XXVIII | understood that His Majesty was dealing with me according to the 767 Ind | Thomas, St., assisted at the deathbed of Fra PIbañez, xxxviii. 768 Life, XV | torture and suffer a thousand deaths—will find it necessary, 769 Life, XXIII | meditation on the Passion, and debar me the use of my understanding: 770 Life, XXXVIII | are due to me; I am the debtor, O Lord, and it is Thou 771 Life, X | consider themselves greater debtors—under greater obligations 772 Life, XXXVI | thus begun may not fall to decay, but ever grow and thrive, 773 Life, XXI | where all life is full of deceit and double-dealing. When 774 Ind | dangers of, ii. 4, v. 9; deceitfulness of, xxi. 1.~Garden, the 775 Pref | persons in our day who are deceivers with the appearance of piety, 776 Int | Carmelite convent at Caen, 14 December, 1901. Her name in religion 777 Int, Arg | give her some light on the deception to which she was subjected.~ 778 Life, XXIII | in my case; he would not decide that question, however, 779 Int | was in conformity with a decision of the general chapter of 780 Life, X | great scruples, except in declaring my sins: and in that matter 781 Life, XXIV(353) | certainly known. The Bollandists decline to give an opinion: but 782 Pref | hindered by his other labours, declined to be her director, and 783 Ind | foundation, xxxii. 16; then declines it, xxxii. 18; sends the 784 Rel, III | and, on the other hand, declining them. I order things according 785 Life, IV | thoughts, and, using it as a decoy, kept my soul in peace, 786 Life, XXXVI | church more in this city dedicated to my glorious father St. 787 Int | but for obvious reasons deemed not only the members of 788 Life, XXV | with the cross, easily defeat them altogether. So I cried 789 Life, XL | is that they are to be defenders of the faith; for at another 790 Life, VIII | at times—Thou, O Lord, defendest them against the assaults 791 Life, XIX | will have enough to do in defending itself. Defensive armour 792 Life, XIX | do in defending itself. Defensive armour is the present necessity; 793 Life, XXXIV | great devotion supplied my deficiencies. She conceived a great affection 794 Life, I | have contracted so much defilement? It distresses me even to 795 Life, XXII | himself as being within a definite space, God everywhere around, 796 Life, XXXII | confessor did not venture definitely to bid me abandon my purpose; 797 Int | after her death. In 1586 the Definitory of the province of Discalced 798 Life, VIII | those who pray, God Himself defrays the charges, seeing that 799 Pref | whom Bañes was one, were delegated censors of it by the Inquisition.62~ 800 Life, XXXVI | grand lawsuit: the city sent delegates to the court, and some must 801 Life, XXX(444) | cierta hoja de hierro muy delgada" (Cobarruvias, Tesoro, in  802 Life, VII | did was not the result of deliberation, as this would have been, 803 Life, XIV | it understands that Thou delightest to be with it, can yet fall 804 Life, XXXVI | chosen which should be more delightful. I know not whether this 805 Life, XXV | sweet, strong, impressive, delightsome, and calm refreshing. Those 806 Life, XXIX | stones. The five wounds were delineated on them with most admirable 807 Life, XXXII | our Lord, who has been my Deliverer, as it now seems to me, 808 Life, XXXIX | perfection. But as to the delivering of souls out of purgatory, 809 Rel, VII | sins, deserved to fall into delusions—our Lord would not suffer 810 Life, XX | that true honour is not delusive, but real, esteeming that 811 Int, 0(8) | communities of Beguines demanded affiliation to the Carmelite 812 Life, XXI | be so, for their vocation demands it, as well as the many 813 Rel, I | to reflect on the way I demeaned myself formerly in the things 814 Life, XL | Majesty, and that we are demeaning ourselves so irreverently 815 Life, XIV | favours, and such great demonstrations of the love Thou bearest 816 Life, XII | order to taste consolations denied him, will, in my opinion, 817 Life, XV | seems to make it here a denizen of heaven, unless it be 818 Life, XX(267) | different names; some of which denote the least, others the most, 819 Ind | Inquisition, the, threats of denouncing the Saint to, xxxiii. 6.~ 820 Life, XXXIX | surprised how any of us can deny it.~13. I am certainly convinced 821 Life, XIX | so much, and when I was departing from everything which I 822 Ind | confident of success, xxxiii5; departs from Avila, xxxiii. 7; advises 823 Int | which she never ceased to deplore, namely the vision of our 824 Life, XIV(206) | and Mary of St. Francis deposes to the same effect in the 825 Life, XXXVI(547) | es testifies thus in the depositions made in Salamanca in 1591 826 Ind | doubted of God's mercy, ix8; depreciates herself, x9; willing to 827 Int | a subject of hysterical derangements. The discussion carried 828 Int | Postel, Paris, 1864. The derivation of the name from the Hebrew 829 Rel, III | I saw the Mother of God descend with a multitude of angels 830 Life, XXX | afterwards, His mercies descended upon me in great abundance. 831 Life, XII | higher, seeing that God descends so low, when He allows us, 832 Rel, III | great in My eyes? or is it descent or virtue that is to make 833 Life, XXVIII | was no fear I should be deserted by him. He encouraged me 834 Life, XVI | hatred of this life, in the desertion of its honours, in being 835 Life, XXXIII | uneasiness; and I gave up our design with much readiness and 836 Rel, IX(728) | distinguish her friends by other designations than those by which they 837 Life, XVII | refuse to eat if he saw any desirable food. So the soul has no 838 Rel, III | of the stalls, and on the desks in front of them; but I 839 Life, XII | the soul ./. is then left desolate and in great aridity. As 840 Life, XX | despising that which is despicable; for everything is nothing, 841 Int | could not help knowing, despite the fears of over anxious 842 Life, XXXV | on the cross, so poor and destitute, I could not bear to be 843 Ind | xxxii. 9, Rel. ii. 14; destroyers of images, Rel. v. 5.~Madness, 844 Rel, IX(716) | De tratar con deudos se desvien lo mas que pudieren."~ 845 Int, Arg | commanded her to go into so many details about the graces God has 846 Life, XXXVIII | employ ourselves who are detained on earth.~5. When I was 847 Life, XXIV | used to converse, to see my determination. God be blessed for ever! 848 Life, XIX | of resolutions, of heroic determinations, of the living energy of 849 Int, Arg | God bestowed upon her in determining through her instrumentality 850 Life, XIX | troubles, by persecutions, detractions, and infirmities,—they 851 Ind | insensibility to, Rel. ii. 4.~Detractors, the Saint prays for her, 852 Rel, IX(716) | § 16: "De tratar con deudos se desvien lo mas que pudieren."~ 853 Rel, V | much adorning and curious devices—not of pictures.671 What 854 Life, XIX | humility was that which Satan devised for me, when I ceased to 855 Life, XXVIII | were to spend many years in devising how to picture to myself 856 Life, IX | might to attain to true devotion—that is, not to offend 857 Life, VII | also when he hears Mass devoutly, if he is seen of men, and 858 Life, XXIX | firmly persuaded of its diabolic nature. If I did this, the 859 Life, XXXIV | of this life. And so he did—blessed be God!—for every 860 Life, XXIX(427) | Y diese higas. "Higa es una manera 861 Life, XXVIII | ministers must be, I think, very different—it shows no traces of pure 862 Rel, IX | half. In this respect—differently from my other visions— 863 Life, XXXI | it, that I may not be too diffuse. I will speak, however, 864 Life, VII | and charity grows by being diffused; and there are a thousand 865 Life, XI | we should be willing to dig in His garden, and to be 866 Life, XXXII | that I might be able to digest other and stronger food 867 Life, XXVII | with great gravity, in a dignified way. Even in the friar, 868 Life, XXXVIII | and how hollow are all the dignities of earth; it was a great 869 Life, XIX | for to do so would be to digress from my subject, and I have 870 Life, XII | foregoing chapter—though I digressed to many other matters, because 871 Life, XXIII | made, I believe, a longer digression than I need have made, in 872 Life, XIX | and I have already made digressions enough. I scarcely know 873 Life, XI | of ourselves, and are so dilatory in giving ourselves wholly 874 Life, XXIII | me, that it made me seek diligently for spiritual persons with 875 Life, XL | diamond, which is of such dimensions as to include everything, 876 Rel, VII | was a peace that came from diminished weariness, not from the 877 Rel, VIII | the breathing gradually diminishes, so that it becomes impossible 878 Rel, II | copied, without adding or diminishing a word. He was a most spiritual 879 Life, XXXVI | myself a little after our dinner; for during the whole of 880 Life, XXXIII(484) | Dionisio Vasquez. Of him the Bollandists 881 Life, XXXII | those things which led me directly to so dreadful a place? 882 Life, XI | one hour, will by them be disabled for four. This comes most 883 Life, XXXVI | take his advice. He then disappeared. I remained in astonishment, 884 Life, XXVI | he may—will be utterly disappointed.~2. It may be so, you will 885 Rel, III | whether they were right who disapproved of my going out to make 886 Life, V(123) | and, but for the father's disbelief in her death, would have 887 Pref | They are unreasonable who disbelieve these things merely because 888 Life, XXXIII | in my soul, which I now discerned, as well as of many other 889 Life, XXXIII | grace of our Lord for the discernment of spirits. He gave me great 890 Life, XX | just now, the soul neither discerns nor considers what it sees.~ 891 Int | by one of St. Bernard's disciples (Vol. CLXXXIV., p. 195). 892 Pref | much fasting, watching, and disciplines; and, on the other hand, 893 Life, XXIV(349) | body with extreme severity, disciplining herself even unto blood ( 894 Life, XXX | from the restlessness and discomfort with which it begins, and 895 Life, XXX | unsubstantial, inconsistent, and disconnected, serve only to stifle the 896 Life, XXXV | same desire—might live in discontent. Moreover, I feared that 897 Ind | distrusted her, Rel. vii. 18.~Discouragements, xi. 15; must be resisted, 898 Life, VI | remained, and I loved to discourse and speak of God; for if 899 Pref | delight in seeing those discredited who have an appearance of 900 Life, XXIII | ways at once. He went on discreetly, by degrees showing me how 901 Pref | out in his notes all the discrepancies between the printed editions 902 Life, XXXIV(501) | observation on the alleged discrepancy between the MS. and the 903 Life, XVII | and because they are too discursive. As the understanding gives 904 Life, XXV | Chapter XXV.~Divine Locutions. Discussions on That Subject.~1. It will 905 Life, VII | distress me, more than many diseases, together with many heavy 906 Life, XXXVI | health, that I might be disengaged, and he leave the house 907 Rel, VIII | prison of this body, and now, disentangled therefrom, is able to be 908 Life, VII | every virtue to others, so disfigure the work which the spirit 909 Life, XIX | have imposed upon me in the disguise of humility.260 He filled 910 Life, XXXIX | others. They wear so many disguises, as our Lord once told me, 911 Rel, II | such a way as admits of no disguising them, unless it be by letting 912 Life, XXXIII | thought I was exceedingly disheartened; and I must have been so, 913 Life, II | departed from me, the fear of dishonour alone remained, and was 914 Life, XXXVIII | allow that person to be dishonoured, but would have the fact 915 Ind | appears to the Saint, xxxi. 2; dislikes contempt, xxxi10; wiles 916 Rel, XI | within; and my likings and dislikings have so little power to 917 Life, XX | then, do we desire it? A dismal resting place it provides, 918 Pref | life by the most complete disobedience and disregard of common 919 Rel, III | would not be as well if I disobeyed them for the future in this 920 Life, II | was the cause of all its disorders. If I were to give advice, 921 Life, XXVII | doing so, I shall either dispel his fears to whom our Lord 922 Pref | wife, as appears from the dispensation granted to make the marriage 923 Life, X | condition that our Lord dispenses His treasures; for if we 924 Life, XVI | I have trusted my soul; disperse my delusions by telling 925 Life, XXX | else but an instantaneous dispersion of the darkness that covered 926 Life, XXXVI | the Provincial would be displeased because I had placed the 927 Pref | of Eboli,—he showed his displeasure to the Saint, and told her 928 Life, XX | it is at His Majesty's disposal; for from henceforth the 929 Life, XXI | fitting disposition, He disposes it for the reception of 930 Life, XVI | wish you would prove it by disposing yourself so that God may 931 Pref, 0(66) | criado toda mi vida en leer y disputar" (De la Fuente, ii. p. 376).~ 932 Pref | himself, "in lecturing and disputing."66~That censure is as follows:~ " 933 Life, XXX | invented it for the purpose of disquieting me, and trying whether he 934 Life, XXX | the other temptations and disquietudes, but only from a certain 935 Life, II | is done in the world by disregarding this, and thinking that 936 Pref | Sir Tobias Matthew, S.J., dissatisfied, as he says, with the former 937 Life, VII | must be more cautious, and dissemble more, when they would speak 938 Life, II | love for me, and so deep my dissembling, that he never would believe 939 Life, XXXV | them out of the vanity and dissipation of the world, in which, 940 Life, XXXVIII | aside the agonies of its dissolution, of which no great ./. 941 Life, XXII(307) | words of St. Thomas, 3 Sent. dist. 22, qu. 3, art. 1, ad quintum. " 942 Int | account of her duties at the distaff;36 but the book is written 943 Life, XXXIV | more than twenty leagues distant, was a lady in great distress 944 Life, XXI | perfection,—but my soul distinguishes clearly, and afar off, between 945 Life, XX | it, by complaining, and distracting itself, causes the soul 946 Ind | Saint preferred those who distrusted her, Rel. vii. 18.~Discouragements, 947 Life, VIII | Majesty, and of not thoroughly distrusting myself. I sought for help, 948 Life, XVIII | hindrance, a torment, and a disturbance of its rest. And I say, 949 Ind | the Bull of, xxxii. 12; disused in the new monastery, xxxvi. 950 Life, XXVII(403) | Letatun sun yn is que dita sun miqui" (De la Fuente).~ 951 Life, XXXIV | come to the knowledge of divers persons; some believed, 952 Rel, IX | vision, but that failed to divert my attention; and I thought 953 Life, XXI | well that I would gladly divest myself of all the graces 954 Life, XV | of a love of God, utterly divested of all self-interest, together 955 Life, XVII | But He allows it not to divide the fruit with others, until 956 Life, XXXIII | believe that the change was divinely ordered—so it appeared 957 Life, XXXIII | little house, arranged the divisions of it, and found that it 958 Ind | the Saint consents to the divulging of her, x. 10.~Solitude, 959 Life, XX | blinded, absorbed, amazed, dizzy at the vision of so much  960 Pref, 0(57) | lett. 100, vol. ii. ed. Doblado—calls him a founder of 961 Life, XXIV | confession, my soul was so docile that, as it seems to me, 962 Life, XXIII | me to see that I was not doing—and, as I thought, could 963 Life, XIII | of which came the great dolours and the bitter anguish which 964 Rel, VII(689) | say of herself, "Yo soy la Dominica in passione," meaning thereby 965 Rel, VII(689) | that she was in her heart a Dominicaness, and a child of the Order ( 966 Life, XXXVI(554) | El Padre Presentado, Dominico. Presentado en algunas Religiones 967 Life, XXI | this, rather than for great dominions! How justice would prevail 968 Life, XIX | rather seemed as if the doors of the senses were closed 969 Pref | to be made. Fra Nicholas Doria, then Provincial, asked 970 Life, XXXIV | They are strong with a double strength who are resolved 971 Life, XXI | life is full of deceit and double-dealing. When you think you have 972 Life, XXXIII | that I could never have a doubt—though I often tried— 973 Life, XXV(362) | The Saint herself speaks doubtfully; and as she had but little 974 Life, XIV | the food the master of the dovecot gives them without any labouring 975 Life, XIV | they are at this time like doves which are not satisfied 976 Life, XXXI | leave the house, and take my dower to another monastery, where 977 Life, XL | sideways, upwards, and downwards; and in the centre of it 978 Pref | has, I believe, founded a dozen monasteries of Barefooted 979 Life, XIV | the teeth of the hideous dragon!~18. You, my father, must 980 Rel, VIII | senses, and accordingly it drags them away with itself; for 981 Life, VI | for having offended God, dreading it as a great chastisement. 982 Life, XX | who has slept long, and dreamed, and is hardly yet awake.~ 983 Rel, II | that all men are bunches of dried rosemary, and that there 984 Life, X | a woman to make my sails droop: how much more, then, when 985 Life, V | for I found afterwards drops of wax on my eyelids. My 986 Int | Adelaide-Jéronyme-Zoe-Marie du Sacré-Coeur).~An excellent 987 Life, XIX | If this ground be well dug by troubles, by persecutions, 988 Rel, XI | formerly, that my soul is dulled, and that I am doing nothing, 989 Life, XXII | the foundations were not duly laid. I fear, too, that 990 Life, X | men shall see that on a dunghill so foul and rank He has 991 Life, XXIII | bringest to those in whom thou dwellest, and to them who draw near 992 Life, XXVIII | the Lord of that little dwelling-place, that the soul seems to 993 Pref | mori aut pati:~Either to dye or else to suffer.'—Chap. 994 Life, XXXVI | is, two learned men from each—to give their opinion. 995 Life, XX | forget everything in my eagerness to see God; and this abandonment 996 Life, XXXIX | given them, are flying like eagles, to become like chickens 997 Int | Vicente remarks that the earliest edition known to him was 998 Life, XXXVIII | place which my sins had earned for me in hell, and praised 999 Life, XIII | they say, and live at our ease—may think, because we give ./. 1000 Int | Vicente shows good reason that Easter Sunday is meant, which in 1001 Life, XXX | food which is given it, and eats it without reflection. The


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