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| St. Teresa of Avila Life of St. Teresa of Jesus IntraText - Concordances (Hapax - words occurring once) |
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2504 Life, XX | now speak of it when it is sharpest; for I shall speak later
2505 Life, VII | permitted Satan to tempt me as sharply herein as he tempted me
2506 Life, XXXVI | Provincial had rebuked me sharply—though not with the severity
2507 Life, XXXV | us, and he sent back two sheets by way of reply, full of
2508 Life, XXXVIII | but wings formed of small shells shining brightly. It was
2509 Life, XXXIII | because I had no place to shelter Me!490 I was alarmed, and
2510 Life, IV | like a companion, and a shield whereon to receive the blows
2511 Life, XX | comes, in general, as a shock, quick and sharp, before
2512 Life, XX | later on274 of the great shocks I used to feel when our
2513 Pref | from God, Whose arm is not shortened that He cannot do now what
2514 Life, XXXVIII | grace for me. But as to the shortness of the time, it might have
2515 Life, XX | persecutions fall upon it as a shower. People consider it wanting
2516 Life, V | that my sinews began to shrink. The pains I had were unendurable,
2517 Life, XI | in liberty of spirit, but shrinking like cowards from the assault.~
2518 Life, IV | who by my evil deeds have shrouded in darkness Thy great graces,
2519 Life, V | and all my nerves were shrunk. Certainly, if I had not
2520 Pref | undesired still they should be shunned as much as possible, yet
2521 Ind | 22, 23.~Contempt, Satan shuns, xxxi. 10; the Saint directed
2522 Life, XXII | constitution—or perhaps sickness—will not permit us always
2523 Life, XXXVI | all those who were on our side—more than at my own—that
2524 Life, XL | a mirror, clear behind, sideways, upwards, and downwards;
2525 Rel, VII(687) | native of Bonilli de la Sierra, and Vicar-General of the
2526 Life, II(94) | contract for the dowry was signed January 11, 1531 (Reforma
2527 Life, XXXIII | day the papers were to be signed—then it was that the Father
2528 Rel, I(622) | herself all the littleness and silliness of women; she is singularly
2529 Rel, III | sorrows. From the time that Simeon spoke to her, My Father
2530 Int | work. Father Bede of St. Simon Stock (Walter Joseph Travers),
2531 Ind | xxviii. 13; Satan tried to simulate, xxviii. 15; effects of,
2532 Life, VII | seek this deliberately by simulating devotion; for in all that
2533 Rel, IV(663) | c. v.) that she was the singer, being then a novice in
2534 Life, XXVIII | it walks in humility and singleness of heart. He who shall have
2535 Life, IX | also because he had been a sinner—for I used to find great
2536 Life, XX(292) | Spanish, "Otra voluntad, sino hacer la de nuestro Señ
2537 Life, XXII | it: all its joys were but sips; and when it had come forth
2538 Pref | thirty years afterwards, Sir Tobias Matthew, S.J., dissatisfied,
2539 Life, XXXIII(489) | One day, she went with her sister—she was staying in her
2540 Pref | took charge of her younger sisters—they were two—and was
2541 Life, XXXVI(534) | for St. Peter died in the sixty-third year of his age, Oct. 18,
2542 Life, VI | curiosity and vanity, I was very skilful and active therein. Our
2543 Life, XXXVI | us, exerted himself most skilfully on our behalf. Though not
2544 Life, XIII | the intellect, if it be skilled in its work, or furnished
2545 Life, V | out of fear. He might have slain thee a thousand times, and
2546 Rel, I | the least temptation or slander of the world. It suggests
2547 Life, VIII | Life of all lives, Thou slayest none that put their trust
2548 Life, XXI | attending to the body by sleeping and eating!302 All is wearisome;
2549 Int | too incomplete, not to say slovenly, to be of much use.~Finally,
2550 Life, IV | purpose: my imagination is so sluggish,113 that even if I would
2551 Life, XIX | who roused me from this slumber. He made me—I think I
2552 Life, XXXI | perceived a most offensive smell, like that of brimstone.
2553 Rel, VII | most commonly as filth smelling foully.~23. That her sins
2554 Life, XXXI | like that of brimstone. I smelt nothing myself; but the
2555 Life, XXXVII | mercy that ./. even the smoke is visible, showing that
2556 Life, XXV | for another—and then I snap my fingers at all the devils,
2557 Life, XXIX | This prayer is like the sobbing of little children, who
2558 Int | the original. In 1873 the Sociedad Foto-Tipografica-Catolica
2559 Life, XXXIII | that was not dazzling, but soft. I did not see St.~ ./.
2560 Life, VI(127) | the Jesuits, its peaceful sojourns in dark Egypt."~
2561 Rel, XI(738) | La soledad que me hace pensar no se
2562 Life, XXXII | said that it all proceeded solely from our obstinacy. That
2563 Life, V | place, performed funeral solemnities. But it pleased our Lord
2564 Rel, I | solicitude—I mean, the solicitude of care. And since I have
2565 Rel, I | labour on my part, but merely solicitude—I mean, the solicitude
2566 Int | men, who were leading a solitary life, spending their time
2567 Life, IV | months in the practice of solitude—our Lord began to comfort
2568 Ind2, Ref | Ecclesiastes~9:1 ~Song of Solomon~5:1 5:1 6:4 ~Daniel~
2569 Int | Luke's Priory,~Wincanton, Somerset.~16th July, 1904.~
2570 Life, XI | have drawn it this ./. way sometimes—it is a less troublesome
2571 Life, I(86) | Maria de Cepeda, and two sons. After the death of Catalina,
2572 Life, XXXIII | to say, are a daubing of soot. This beauty, which I saw
2573 Ind | i. 6, vi. 5, Rel. i. 6.~Sorcery, v. 10.~Soto, de, the Inquisitor,
2574 Int | Constitutions of Blessed John Soreth, drawn up in 1462, which
2575 Life, I(87) | the army, and, serving in South America, was drowned in
2576 Rel, VII(689) | used to say of herself, "Yo soy la Dominica in passione,"
2577 Life, XXXI | great people, and when they spake well of me. I have suffered,
2578 Int | wrong. No labour has been spared in the correction of these,
2579 Life, XX(277) | watched, and become as a sparrow alone on the house-top."~
2580 Life, XXXIII | some time unable to move or speak—being, as it were, beside
2581 Life, XXIX | I saw in his hand a long spear of gold, and at the iron'
2582 Int | Constitutions of the Order specified twelve days on which all
2583 Life, XX | great faults, but also the specks of dirt, however slight
2584 Int | sound, the name should be spelt with T only. But the present
2585 Rel, VIII | God.~11. The flight of the spirit—I know not how to call
2586 Life, XXXIII | throw around my neck a most splendid necklace of gold, from which
2587 Life, XX | pain; but very often there springs up a desire unexpectedly,
2588 Life, XXXI | They brought me some, and sprinkled me with it; but I was no
2589 Life, XXX | all the heresies that had sprung up. This is but a false
2590 Life, XIX | the pillar, and threw the staff away which supported me,
2591 Rel, III | multitude of angels to the stall of the prioress, where the
2592 Rel, III | above the canopies of the stalls, and on the desks in front
2593 Life, XVI(228) | Cross, Spirit. Canticle, stanza xvii. vol. ii. p. 98, Engl.
2594 Life, XVI | any preparation, certain stanzas, full of feeling, most expressive
2595 Life, XXXII | the monastery would be a star shining in great splendour;
2596 Int | transcript reveals the startling fact that nearly a thousand
2597 Life, XXIX | large, but small of ./. stature, and most beautiful—his
2598 Int, 0(6) | Lettres de Ste. Thérèse, edit. P. Gré
2599 Life, XXIX | to him who stood in His stead, and not to lay the blame
2600 Life, XV | in the understanding nor steadiness in the truth.220~16. Here
2601 Life, X | I have, as it were, to steal the time, and that with
2602 Rel, V | about him, because of the stench of his many sins.675~11.
2603 Life, XXXIX | making them retrace their steps, so that they may proceed
2604 Life, XXII | people will remain dry as a stick. Others, also, there are
2605 Rel, VIII | become cold, and sometimes stiff and straight as pieces of
2606 Life, XI | The poor soul must not be stifled. Let those who thus suffer
2607 Life, XXXII | sense of oppression, of stifling, and of pain so keen, accompanied
2608 Life, XXII | way. St. Francis with the stigmata proves it, St. Antony of
2609 Life, XXX | came upon me—they come still—in another form; and then
2610 Life, XVII | pours the water without stint; and what the poor soul,
2611 Int | Father Bede of St. Simon Stock (Walter Joseph Travers),
2612 Life, XXVII | had been received into the stomach which had not first been
2613 Life, XXV | thought on this point, or stopping to say to itself, If God
2614 Life, XXXVI | the great sufferings in store for me, though they never
2615 Life, II | alive,—listened to the stories of their affections and
2616 Life, XIII | the midst of these violent storms which now disturb the Church?
2617 Life, VIII | nearly twenty years on this stormy sea, falling and rising,
2618 Life, XXXII | that I was now in a great strait; and when I saw that I was
2619 Life, III(100) | their lives they were in straitened circumstances (De la Fuente).
2620 Life, XIV | binds our love in bonds so straitly, that it is not in its power
2621 Life, XXIV | caused, I believe, by the strangeness of the visitation,—remained
2622 Life, XX | grandeurs at times in the strangest way conceivable. That way
2623 Life, XXXI | least, of some of them: the straws which I said469 I threw
2624 Life, XXII | great weariness—scourged, streaming with blood, faint by the
2625 Life, XL | says that neither in the streets of the city, nor in pleasures,
2626 Life, XXIII | The devil must lay much stress on this in the beginning
2627 Life, VII | for it was He only Who stretched out His hand to me. May
2628 Life, VII | that he had been one in the Strictest Order that is. I have a
2629 Life, VIII | more than eighteen in that strife and contention which arose
2630 Int | canonisation took place before the stringent laws of Urban VIII. came
2631 Rel, IX | great thing is to follow Me stripped of everything, as I was
2632 Life, XX | created things. God then so strips it of everything, that,
2633 Life, XXXI | so, by His help, I have striven to do from that time till
2634 Life, XXIX | and, more than that, even strove—to give up thinking of
2635 Life, XX(272) | Cross. Spiritual Canticle, sts. 14, 15, vol. ii p. 83,
2636 Life, XXVII | learn to read, and without studying any subject whatever, should
2637 Life, XXVII | wore a cloak of the same stuff. He told me that, in the
2638 Life, XXXV | deep hollow, into which one stumbles, and on the other a precipice,
2639 Life, XIX | the light, to be for ever stumbling! What a proud humility was
2640 Life, XXXVII | mercies; but my soul was so stupefied, and occupied with I know
2641 Life, XI | be amused when you see my stupidity. I think, now, I have either
2642 Int | subject matter, the involved style, and the total absence of
2643 Pref, 0(70) | xxxiv. § 4: "Relaciones de su espiritu."~
2644 Life, XIII | cross, without voluntarily subjecting the understanding to one
2645 Life, XXII | His mercy upon us, with a submissive spirit, yet trusting in
2646 Life, XXVII(400) | is one of the additions subsequently made.~
2647 Life, XXXIX | moment.~4. When my fears had subsided, and that was immediately,
2648 Life, XXX | this pain and joy could subsist together. I knew it was
2649 Rel, V | Ghost? No; for They are one substance, and where One is there
2650 Life, XXXIV(501) | the printed text, has been substituted by some one for the words "
2651 Ind | woman of, xxx. 24.~Satan, subtlety of, iv. 14; an artifice
2652 Life, XXXIII(485) | in Avila in 1561, therein succeeding Vasquez (Bollandists, ibid.).~
2653 Ind | xxxii. 20; confident of success, xxxiii. 5; departs from
2654 Life, VIII | took some pains, and that successfully, not to offend Him. I speak
2655 Rel, VII(687) | Seville, and Toledo; Bishop, successively, of Albarracin, Segorve,
2656 Life, XXXIII | in that extremity had not succoured me with His great compassion.
2657 Rel, I | things of importance; and such—glory be to God!—only
2658 Life, XXXIX | must also, as they say, sue God for His own money?~22.
2659 Life, XXX | affliction, because the interior suffering—whence it comes, it knows
2660 Pref | the imagination: let it suffice that the imagination may
2661 Life, V | offended God, which might have sufficed for my salvation—unless,
2662 Life, XXXI | evil spirits would have suffocated me one night, and when the
2663 Life, XXIX | on the point of causing suffocation, and are beyond control.
2664 Life, XV | heaven? or words of love that suggest themselves now, firmly grounded
2665 Life, XIII | are not spiritual, are not suited for persons given to prayer.
2666 Pref | intended only for a general summary of her most childish conduct:~"
2667 Int | countries, has been ably summed up and disposed of by P.
2668 Life, XXXVI | him. When he came, I was summoned to judgment, rejoicing greatly
2669 Life, XX | like those of the needle of sun-dials, which is never at rest;
2670 Life, XIX | in a room into which the sunlight enters strongly, not a cobweb
2671 Life, XI | even here, in this life, so superabundantly rewarded!~9. I shall have
2672 Life, XXIV | much so, that if I had any superfluity about me, I could not recollect
2673 Life, XI | necessary, but of what is superfluous: yea, and to make for ourselves
2674 Life, XXXV | lay on me the burden of superiorship. The very thought of this
2675 Life, XIV | it is now touching on the supernatural—for it never could by any
2676 Life, VI | that they were unseemly and superstitious; and I took for my patron
2677 Rel, IV | letting Him go so far for supper; and I used to picture Him
2678 Life, XXII | thought of this comparison: supposing grace given to those who
2679 Life, XXVIII | ground whatever for the supposition; for the very beauty and
2680 Life, VII | Satan himself—and other suppositions of that kind. For all this,
2681 Life, XL | those deep truths which far surpass all that is spoken of here
2682 Life, XXXV | pleasure to that person surpasses any pleasure I have in that
2683 Int | wished to induce him to surrender himself more perfectly to
2684 Life, XL | myself, as it seemed to me, surrounded by angels, and was close
2685 Int | not agree with the ./. surrounding circumstances as described
2686 Life, XXIII(336) | founded by 5t. Teresa, whom he survived, dying Nov. 24, 1592. He
2687 Pref | on your road, but always suspecting robbers, and asking for
2688 Life, XVIII | because the senses are in suspense; but I think that at any
2689 Life, XVII | our Lord, may derive its sustenance from its garden. But He
2690 Rel, IX | Eliseus728 there, not at all swarthy, but in strange beauty:
2691 Life, XV | itself through that joy and sweetness—and here, in all things
2692 Life, XXXIII | heavy; nevertheless, I never swerved from the commandment he
2693 Rel, XI | comfort; but my will never swerves—not even in its first movements—
2694 Rel, VIII | something so subtile and so swift, seems to issue from it,
2695 Rel, V | or learnt, that men can swim, will think, when he sees
2696 Life, XXX | upon everything fire and sword; it dwells upon His justice;
2697 Int | name should be spelt with T only. But the present fashion
2698 Life, XXXIV(497) | Arias was nephew of Cardinal Tabera, Archbishop of Toledo (De
2699 Rel, III | dolors, and only on Mount Tabor hast thou heard of Me in
2700 Life, XV | that they do not hide their talent; for it may be that God
2701 Life, XXI(301) | Farsa de esta vida tan mal concertada."~
2702 Life, XXXVI(540) | a Ines and Doña Ana de Tapia, cousins of the Saint. There
2703 Life, XXV | sweetness. Any one who has ever tasted of the Spirit of God will,
2704 Life, XXI | kingdom, if the soul but tastes it, renders the things of
2705 Life, XVII | to waste it in the mere tasting of it,—giving to Him none
2706 Life, XXXV | are possible: so that thou teachest clearly there is no need
2707 Pref | learn something from the teachings it contains: and praised
2708 Life, XX | sicut passer solitarius in tecto."277 These words presented
2709 Life, XV(224) | Fiel temor." In the previous editions
2710 Life, XVIII | were no winter, but an ever temperate season, fruits and flowers
2711 Life, XXIX | and that the arrow seems tempered with some herb which makes
2712 Life, XXV | recollect how our Lord, when the tempest arose, commanded the winds
2713 Int | of lukewarmness which was temporally interrupted by the illness
2714 Life, XIII | importance.~14. There is another temptation—we ought to be aware of
2715 Life, XIII | death; some persons, if tender-hearted, are greatly fatigued by
2716 Life, XXI | come by ecstasies, all tending to make the soul humble
2717 Life, XXXVI(558) | sint sumantur." That is the tenth section of the rule.~
2718 Life, XXIX(441) | Brev. Rom. in fest. S. Teresiae, Oct. 15, Lect. v.: "Tanto
2719 Int | others understand by this term Palm Sunday, but Don Vicente
2720 Life, XXXVIII | Thy great power may not terrify us, so that we dare not,
2721 Life, I(91) | The last will and testament of Doña Beatriz de Ahumada
2722 Life, XXXI | there are witnesses to testify to it, particularly my present
2723 Int | do not admit the use of Th; in English, likewise, where
2724 Life, XX | different from—yea, higher than—the other graces, which
2725 Life, XV | soul love greatly, and is thankful naturally, the remembrance
2726 Life, XL | sick man to abstain from thanking and loving the physician
2727 Life, VIII | ours, vicious, sensual, and thankless; and you cannot therefore,
2728 Life, XIII | to render Him unceasing thanks—because there are persons
2729 Life, XI | soul is determined to love Thee—doing all it can, by forsaking
2730 Life, XV | should be doing mischief to themselves—and God grant it be to
2731 Int | Magnetism and similar obscure theories had already been exploded
2732 Int | noble Spanish lady, St. Therasia, who became the wife of
2733 Life, IV | this, at the end of my stay there—I spent nearly nine months
2734 Life, XI | what harm will befall him thereby—he will lose not only that
2735 Int | the name from the Hebrew Thersa can no longer be defended (
2736 Ind2, Ref | Philippians~3:20 4:13 ~1 Thessalonians~5:19 5:19-22 ~Titus~2:
2737 Life, XXXI | praising God. I did so till they—I know not how—found
2738 Life, VIII | in a company so good as Thine—for at first they can do
2739 Life, XVIII | that I was ignorant of one thing—I did not know that God
2740 Int | her and makes her lose the thirst for things of this world
2741 Life, XXXI | in great heat, and very thirsty, drinking a cup of cold
2742 Rel, V(672) | §§ 6, 7, and 8 are the thirteenth letter of the second volume,
2743 Rel, V(674) | is anxious to save the Thomist doctrine that one of the
2744 Ann | chivalry, and is misled by a thoughtless cousin.~1531. ~Her sister
2745 Life, XXXV(511) | and some went so far as to threaten to have her publicly whipped.
2746 Ind | xiv. 16.~Inquisition, the, threats of denouncing the Saint
2747 Life, I | for, though she was only three-and-thirty years of age when she died,
2748 Life, XXXVI | urged this upon me twice or thrice in that letter, and said
2749 Life, XV | good; the flowers have so thriven, that they are on the point
2750 Rel, VIII | soul as if an arrow were thrust through the heart, or through
2751 Life, XXIX | He appeared to me to be thrusting it at times into my heart,439
2752 Life, XXXII | asked him not to oppose nor thwart me in the matter.~15. So
2753 Ind | efforts of, to deceive, how thwarted, xv. 16; tempted the Saint
2754 Rel, VIII | suddenly hears most painful tidings of which he knew not before,
2755 Rel, III | could, they would like to tie My hands."~11. One day after
2756 Life, XXVII | sackcloth, and that was as tight as it could be, with nothing
2757 Life, XV | understanding, which is simply tiresome.~10. And if the will wishes
2758 Life, XXXVI(554) | algunas Religiones es cierto titulo de grado que es respeto
2759 Life, XIII | not teach us to crawl like toads, nor one who may be satisfied
2760 Pref | thirty years afterwards, Sir Tobias Matthew, S.J., dissatisfied,
2761 Pref, 0(66) | Como hombre criado toda mi vida en leer y disputar" (
2762 Life, XXII | whom the understanding has toiled to know; and it loves what
2763 Life, XIV | 1. Having spoken of the toilsome efforts and of the strength
2764 Life, XV | God gives to a soul, in token of His having chosen it
2765 Life, VI | I knew it.~7. All these tokens of the fear of God came
2766 Life, XVII | you, my father, have been told—to abandon itself into
2767 Life, XXXVI | they resolved they would tolerate us if we were endowed, and
2768 Life, XXXI | good except this, that it tolerates no faults in good people,
2769 Life, XXVIII | things for the purpose of tormenting myself.~7. But our Lord
2770 Life, XXXVI(537) | her native place, Ciudad Toro.~
2771 Life, IV | it suffering most cruel tortures—effects of the violent
2772 Life, XXXVIII | of devils, who seemed to toss it to and fro, and also
2773 Int | involved style, and the total absence of punctuation tend
2774 Life, XX | the fort to the highest tower of it, there to raise up
2775 Life, XXXIII | who lived out of the town, should buy a house, and
2776 Rel, III | were to be founded in small towns should be like this; that
2777 Life, XXX | seems to stifle the soul and trammel the body, so as to make
2778 Life, XXVII | of another age, and so he trampled on the world. If men do
2779 Rel, I(622) | was once timid; now she tramples on all the evil spirits.
2780 Rel, I(622) | many, she bears with equal tranquillity of mind, without losing
2781 Rel, XI(735) | reference in § 4 to certain transactions in which she was engaged.
2782 Int | difficulty arising from the transcendental nature of the subject matter,
2783 Life, XXVIII | have just said,416 it far transcends anything we can comprehend
2784 Rel, XI(738) | corresponding English words. [Transcriber's note: The Spanish quoted
2785 Life, XX | of union,287 this utter transformation of the soul in God continues
2786 Pref | not have said that Satan transforms himself into an angel of
2787 Life, XIII | highly meritorious, dares not transgress the commandments it receives.
2788 Life, XVI | in which I seem to have transgressed all bounds; for no reason
2789 Ind | es, Fr. Dom., xxxvi. 15; transmits the Saint's writings to
2790 Ann | Alvarez for her confessor. The transpiercing of her heart79. Vision of
2791 Rel, IX(716) | la Clausura," § 16: "De tratar con deudos se desvien lo
2792 Life, XXV | into great temptations and travail of soul in diverse ways;
2793 Int | Simon Stock (Walter Joseph Travers), a Discalced Carmelite,
2794 Life, XIX | Thee some recompense for treachery so great as mine, in that
2795 Life, XIX | unworthy of the earth it treads on. It has recourse to the
2796 Life, XII | in my opinion, is a great treasury in the matter of this exercise,
2797 Life, V | of undergoing the medical treatment—they took me away with
2798 Rel, I(622) | say so, she is in fear and trembling before the visions occur;
2799 Int | Communion" (i.e., Miss Maria Trench), London, 1875.~The Life
2800 Life, XXXVIII(573)| This father died Prior of Trianos," is written on the margin
2801 Rel, VI | knees, and, to render this tribute ./. of service to the Holy
2802 Life, XXXIV | not to go, that it was a trick of Satan to bring some evil
2803 Life, XXXIII | a doubt—though I often tried—that the vision came from
2804 Life, XXX | occasionally, by means of things so trivial that I should laugh at them
2805 Life, XXXI | water about I saw a great troop of them rush away as if
2806 Life, XV | understanding, with all the tropes of its rhetoric. In a word,
2807 Int | bring this insignificant trousseau with her; accordingly the
2808 Life, VII | himself, though strong, yet trusteth not in himself, and believeth
2809 Life, XL | to take care of one who trusts her soul to your keeping.
2810 Life, VII | falling and rising till I tumbled into hell. I had many friends
2811 Life, XXXI | of them rush away as if tumbling over a precipice. These
2812 Life, XXXI | the whole music is out of tune. It is a thing which hurts
2813 Life, XXVII | hour and a half out of the twenty-four, and that the most laborious
2814 Life, XIX | remember now, it is more than twenty-one years ago. I do not think
2815 Life, X | who admit that, in the twenty-seven years only during which
2816 Life, XXIII(331) | between that and this—the twenty-third—are a treatise on mystical
2817 Rel, VII | In this she spent about two-and-twenty years in great aridities,
2818 Pref | younger sisters—they were two—and was as a second mother
2819 Life, XXIX | say to them that this was tyranny. He gave me reasons for
2820 Life, V | disorder, for there were open ulcers in her body, caused by certain
2821 Pref | good man will not speak unadvisedly, neither will God; so, considering
2822 Life, XXXVII | honour. I was worn out in unceasingly giving satisfaction to people;
2823 Int | Lewis's translation the uncertainty about the date of St. Teresa'
2824 Life, I(89) | were met by one of their uncles, who brought them back to
2825 Life, II | quickly as I could. I was very uncomfortable; but within eight days,
2826 Life, XXIX | devotional sensations, not uncommon, which seem on the point
2827 Life, XXXIX | no sense, that I might be unconscious of the great evil that is
2828 Life, XIII | strive to be cheerful and unconstrained; for there are people who
2829 Life, VIII | one preach well and with unction, I felt, without my seeking
2830 Life, XX | nor can it refrain from undeceiving those it loves, and whom
2831 Int | and Father Bañez wrote underneath: "This date refers to the
2832 Life, XXXIV | understand that which he understandeth not; neither let him quench
2833 Life, XVIII | does not understand how it understands—at least, it can comprehend
2834 Pref | revelations. I do not, however, undervalue her visions, revelations,
2835 Life, XVIII | it becomes a ground for undervaluing them, when Thou puttest
2836 Life, X | and poor, and so utterly undeserving, as mine is,—for whom
2837 Pref | desired, and if they come undesired still they should be shunned
2838 Life, V | venial sin. But I think that undoubtedly my salvation was in great
2839 Life, VII | namely, a monastery of women unenclosed—yea, more, I think it is,
2840 Life, XXXIX | ever in a house that is unendowed, as persons who make no
2841 Life, VII | be who regard them with unfavourable eyes. But if any one begins
2842 Life, XIX | it be an ungrateful soil, unfitted for so great a grace,—
2843 Life, XIX | does not see itself to be unfledged. It can go forth out of
2844 Int | Curzon (Paris, 1902) is, unfortunately, too incomplete, not to
2845 Life, XI | His delight, but in a soil unfruitful, and abounding in weeds.
2846 Life, XV | is become a man, does not ungrow, nor does his body lessen
2847 Rel, I | my sins, that He has left unheeded so many prayers of so many
2848 Rel, VIII | upon within itself, and unhindered by the body. It then comprehends
2849 Int | direct from the Spanish but "uniformly with the Italian edition."~
2850 Ind | 2, xxix. 2, xxxvii. 5; unimaginable, xxviii. 7.~Beginners, must
2851 Life, XXXVI | prayers which had been almost uninterrupted for more than two years,
2852 Life, XXXIII | understand mine, that it was in unison with it, and yet, as I have
2853 Life, XXV | For then the evil spirits, uniting themselves with us,—we
2854 Pref | give him light. That is the universal remedy to be had recourse
2855 Int | by two graduates of the University of Cambridge, converts to
2856 | unlike
2857 Life, XXIX | efforts can neither make nor unmake them. Our Lord would have
2858 Life, XIII | helps much to make them unmanageable. When he sees us a little
2859 Rel, III | arms, that she had that joy unmixed with heavy sorrows. From
2860 Life, XXXI | imperfections, and the result of my unmortified life; for a soul left in
2861 Life, XII | blameless, it is not left unpunished—it is labour thrown away,
2862 Life, XXXVI | most difficult of all to unravel. Our Lord was my helper
2863 Life, XX | with great sweetness, if unresisted, the senses are not lost;
2864 Life, XXX | which, being more or less unsubstantial, inconsistent, and disconnected,
2865 Life, XXXI | own reputation and credit untouched? We cannot succeed, for
2866 Life, XXX | advisedly, nor tell them an untruth;454 but everything made
2867 Pref | especially if they are unusual, or bid you do something
2868 Life, XVI | rejoicing in this agony with unutterable joy; to me it seems to be
2869 Life, XXXVIII | Soul.~1. One night I was so unwell that I thought I might be
2870 Life, XI | dislike, and so great an unwillingness to go to the well for water,
2871 Life, XXXVIII | this most Holy Sacrament unworthily, and how great is the devil'
2872 Life, XIX | looks upon itself as most unworthy—for in a room into which
2873 Life, XXII | and not sit down on the upper seats.326 As I have sometimes
2874 Life, XII | pass out of this state, and upraise his spirit, in order to
2875 Life, XX | as the impulse and the upraising of the spirit were vehement,
2876 Int | before the stringent laws of Urban VIII. came into force. Consequently,
2877 Life, VII | enemies as well as friends, to urge them the wrong way, that
2878 Rel, IV | your occupations are most urgent,—I was for some time in
2879 Life, XXX | inward stirring of my love urges me to do something for the
2880 Life, X | them forth and employ them usefully for himself and others.
2881 Int | book,29 but the decisive utterances must be sought for elsewhere,
2882 Life, II | failing in many other ways. In vainly seeking after it I was extremely
2883 Rel, I(622) | most wonderfully strong and valiant spirit: she was once timid;
2884 Pref | granted to make the marriage valid on the 16th of October,
2885 Life, XXXV | perish; he travels in the valley of humility. I cannot understand
2886 Life, XXXVIII | particularly a diamond, which she valued very much. She thought this
2887 Life, XXVI | How the Fears of the Saint Vanished. How She Was Assured That
2888 Life, XXXI | could, and then the form vanished—but it reappeared instantly.
2889 Life, VII | in body, owing to my many vanities—though not, so far as I
2890 Life, XII | virtue in me, but only about vanity—God gave me to understand
2891 Life, XL | becomes clouded with a thick vapour, and utterly obscured, so
2892 Int | creep in. Most of these variants are immaterial, but there
2893 Life, XXV | it proceeds, because this varying is so clear a sign of the
2894 Int, 0(4) | and to migrate thither (Vatican Archives, Dataria, Leo X.,
2895 Rel, X | more or less, my spirit was vehemently stirred and grew hot within
2896 Pref, 0(57) | Seville that they need not be veiled in his presence, though
2897 Life, I(86) | profession. Her godfather was Vela Nuñez, and her godmother
2898 Rel, III(656) | Maria de Velasco y Aragon, Countess of Osorno (
2899 Life, XXXVIII | and therefore have a great veneration for this Order; for I have
2900 Rel, I | to offend God, not even venially. I would rather die a thousand
2901 Int, 0(8) | of the printed edition (Venice, 1499) shows that they held
2902 Life, VI | I have not done amiss in venturing to speak about St. Joseph;
2903 Pref | there may still remain some verbal errors for future editors
2904 Int, 0(19) | first nine chapters (perhaps verbatim) and an account of the visions,
2905 Life, XXXVII | brought my soul to the very verge of destruction.~5. But ever
2906 Int | Vincent McNabb, O.P., for the verification of a quotation from St.
2907 Int | to reading the proofs and verifying the quotations. This translation
2908 Life, X | require nothing more than the verities of the faith, in order to
2909 Life, XXXII | and covered with loathsome vermin. At the end was a hollow
2910 Rel, IX | me then understand that verse of the Magnificat, "Et exultavit
2911 Life, XXXVIII | assist her in singing the versicle, when, in the middle of
2912 Pref | times past, and that in weak vessels, for His own glory.~"12.
2913 Life, XXIX | Many reproaches and many vexations have I borne while telling
2914 Life, XXXI | tested it by its opposing vice: we must always be suspicious
2915 Life, VIII | absolutely perfect; ours, vicious, sensual, and thankless;
2916 Life, XXXI | —but, in his own case, viciously,—and he pronounces it
2917 Life, XXXVI | build up what we had in view—great perfection and prayer—
2918 Life, XXX | was on the day before the vigil of Corpus Christi,—a feast
2919 Life, XX | feel it more deeply,—"Vigilavi, et factus sum sicut passer
2920 Rel, VI | Holy Ghost, on one of the vigils of His feast,681 and a great
2921 Rel, XI | desires do not seem to be so vigorous as they used to be, for,
2922 Life, III | her house in the country village where she dwelt. Her love
2923 Life, XXXI | body, head, and arms were violently shaken; I could not help
2924 Life, XVIII | occasionally this fire increases violently—the flame ascends high
2925 Life, XIV | of the little flowers of virtues—which were beginning, as
2926 Life, VII | that I had imagined the vision—that it might be Satan
2927 Rel, IX(731) | the brief which made him Visitor-Apostolic to the unreformed Carmelites,
2928 Pref | which they who have been visitors of them, as the Dominican
2929 Life, XX(293) | Vincent. Ferrer, Instruct. de Vit. Spirit. c. xiv. p. 14: "
2930 Life, XXXI | where I was, and I heard voices myself, as of persons in
2931 Life, XXXV | friends and asked them not to vote for me.~9. When I was rejoicing
2932 Life, XXXII | nothing undone. May our Lord vouchsafe to give us His grace for
2933 Int, Arg | revelations His Majesty vouchsafed to grant her; she speaks
2934 Int | as several passages where Vuestra Merced—you, my Father—
2935 Pref | English out of Spanish. By W. M., of the Society of Jesus.~"
2936 Rel, III | penances; besides, they waged serious war ./. with the
2937 Life, XXXIX | vineyard received the same wages.593~24. I have sat down
2938 Life, VIII | comfortest and endurest, and also waitest for them to make themselves
2939 Life, XXX | evil, but following in the wake of others, as they say,
2940 Life, XXVIII(406) | natural ignorance to the wakefulness of the supernatural understanding,
2941 Life, XXXII | hole in the wall; and those walls, terrible to look on of
2942 Int | Bede of St. Simon Stock (Walter Joseph Travers), a Discalced
2943 Life, XIV | father, must forgive me for wandering from the subject; and, as
2944 Life, XIX | please our Lord that my wanderings may be of this kind, and
2945 Life, XXXVI | remained here as long as we wanted him, and on going away he
2946 Rel, IX(725) | is a proof—if any were wanting—that the Saint wrote this
2947 Rel, IV | moment. I thought It was warm, and the sweetness I then
2948 Rel, I(622) | that speaks to this soul warns her to be open with learned
2949 Pref | always safer to be afraid and wary; for if she is confident
2950 Life, XXI | having ascended to this watchtower, from which the truth may
2951 Life, XI | irrigated by these four waters—though the last of them
2952 Life, XXV | at any time find itself wavering even in thought on this
2953 Life, V | found afterwards drops of wax on my eyelids. My father,
2954 Int | quotations may be found, somewhat weakened, in the final version of
2955 Pref | given to one because he is weaker; and as they do not make
2956 Life, III | of myself, and of my own weakness—for I might go back. So,
2957 Life, XXII | not see Him in His great weariness—scourged, streaming with
2958 Pref | Teresa was born in Avila on Wednesday, March 28, 1515. Her father
2959 Life, XIV | Then is the time really for weeding and rooting out every plant,
2960 Life, XXXIV | was little more than a week since she had been to her
2961 Life, I | and carefulness for my welfare. Then, growing up, I began
2962 Int | similar to St. Teresa's well-known comparison. Mr. Lewis's
2963 Life, XXIII | still greater danger, and is well-nigh drowned. This is a very
2964 Life, XI | the water up out of the well—a process which, as I have
2965 Life, XXX | earth, but is continually welling upwards. So is the soul,
2966 Life, XXX | It is like those little wells I have seen flowing, wherein
2967 Life, VI(127) | it took its rise in the West, in a confraternity in Avignon. "
2968 Int | preface by the Archbishop of Westminster (Cardinal Manning), London,
2969 Fron | Franciscus~Archiepiscopus Westmonast.~Die 27 Sept., 1904.~
2970 Rel, IX | for Me, and sleep for Me. Whatsoever thou doest, let it be done
2971 Int | twenty-five measures, partly wheat, partly barley, or, in lieu
2972 Life, XVIII | to these states of prayer whereunto our Lord in His mercy has
2973 | whereupon
2974 | wherever
2975 Life, XXVII | or of the senses, out of which—so seems to me—the devil
2976 Life, VII | appearance of virtue. Yet all the while—I was so vain—I knew
2977 Life, XX | absolutely irresistible; whilst union, inasmuch as we are
2978 Life, XXXV(511) | threaten to have her publicly whipped. Doña Leonor de Mascareñ
2979 Life, XXXIX | speaking, as it were, in a whisper.588 My whole body trembled,
2980 | whoever
2981 Life, XX | occasionally to lose them wholly—seldom, however, and then
2982 Life, VIII | long with me, who was so wicked—and it is plain that it
2983 Life, XXXII | discuss the matter with that widowed lady who was my companion,
2984 Life, III | most excellent man, then a widower. Him too our Lord was preparing
2985 Life, XXII | God will lead it into the wilderness.328~20. You, then, my father,
2986 Ind | dislikes contempt, xxxi. 10; wiles of, Rel. i. 29.~Scandal,
2987 Life, XL | grant—and He can if He will—that I may attain to the
2988 Life, XXII | in a thousand ways. Its willingness to rise is of no service
2989 Int | C.D.~St. Luke's Priory,~Wincanton, Somerset.~16th July, 1904.~
2990 Life, XXX | sailing with a very gentle wind, when one makes much way
2991 Life, XXXVIII | had been wrapped in the winding-sheet, I saw it laid hold of by
2992 Life, IV | drawn me through so many windings to a state so secure, to
2993 Life, XXII | little asses who drive the windlass I spoke of:325 these, though
2994 Life, XI | and buckets, drawn by a windlass—I have drawn it this ./.
2995 Life, XXV | tempest arose, commanded the winds to be still over the sea.371
2996 Life, XVIII | the taste of this divine wine, they give themselves up
2997 Rel, V | very often are means of winning souls, even if they are
2998 Life, IX | it had been possible, to wipe away that painful sweat
2999 Life, V | father so Catholic and so wise—he was very much so, and
3000 Rel, VIII | presence is withdrawn, that withdrawal is felt. How it is, I know
3001 Life, XXV | persecution these flowers wither,—I do not call devotion,
3002 Life, XIV | O my Lord, but be as the withered flowers ./. of the garden;
3003 Pref | the like cases you must withhold your belief in them, and