DARK NIGHT OF THE SOUL

 INTRODUCTION

 Prologue

 BOOK THE FIRST Which treats of the Night of Sense.

 Chapter I. Sets down the first line and begins to treat of the imperfections of beginners.

 Chapter II. Of certain spiritual imperfections which beginners have with respect to the habit of pride.

 Chapter III. Of some imperfections which some of these souls are apt to have, with respect to the second capital sin, which is avarice, in the spiritu

 Chapter IV. Of other imperfections which these beginners are apt to have with respect to the third sin, which is luxury.

 Chapter V. Of the imperfections into which beginners fall with respect to the sin of wrath.

 Chapter VI. Of imperfections with respect to spiritual gluttony.

 Chapter VII. Of imperfections with respect to spiritual envy and sloth.

 Chapter VIII. Wherein is expounded the first line of the first stanza, and a beginning is made of the explanation of this dark night.

 Chapter IX. Of the signs by which it will be known that the spiritual person is walking along the way of this night and purgation of sense.

 Chapter X. Of the way in which these souls are to conduct themselves in this dark night.

 Chapter XI. Wherein are expounded the three lines of the stanza.

 Chapter XII. Of the benefits which this night causes in the soul.

 Chapter XIII. Of other benefits which this night of sense causes in the soul.

 Chapter XIV. Expounds this last line of the first stanza.

 BOOK THE SECOND Of the Dark Night of the Spirit.

 Chapter I. Which begins to treat of the dark nights of the spirit and says at what time it begins.

 Chapter II. Describes other imperfections which belong to these proficients.

 Chapter III. Annotation for that which follows.

 Chapter IV. Sets down the first stanza and the exposition thereof.

 Chapter V. Sets down the first line and begins to explain how this dark contemplation is not only night for the soul but is also grief and torment.

 Chapter VI. Of other kinds of pain that the soul suffers in this night.

 Chapter VII. Continues the same matter and considers other afflictions end constraints of the will.

 Chapter VIII. Of other pains which afflict the soul in this state.

 Chapter IX. How, although this night brings darkness to the spirit, it does so in order to illumine it and give it light.

 Chapter X. Explains this purgation fully by a comparison.

 Chapter XI. Begins to explain the second line of the first stanza. Describes how, as the fruit of these rigorous constraints, the soul finds itself wi

 Chapter XII. Shows how this horrible night is purgatory, and how in it the Divine wisdom illumines men on earth with the same illumination that purges

 Chapter XIII. Of other delectable effects which are wrought in the soul by this dark night of contemplation.

 Chapter XIV. Wherein are set down and explained the last three lines of the first stanza.

 Chapter XV. Sets down the second stanza and its exposition.

 Chapter XVI. Explains how, though in darkness, the soul walks securely.

 Chapter XVII. Explains how this dark contemplation is secret.

 Chapter XVIII. Explains how this secret wisdom is likewise a ladder.

 Chapter XIX. Begins to explain the ten steps of the mystic ladder of Divine love, according to Saint Bernard and Saint Thomas. The first five are here

 Chapter XX. Wherein are treated the other five steps of love.

 Chapter XXI. Which explains the word ‘disguised,’ and describes the colours of the disguise of the soul in this night.

 Chapter XXII. Explains the third line of the second stanza.

 Chapter XXIII. Expounds the fourth line and describes the wondrous hiding place wherein the soul is set during this night. Shows how, although the dev

 Chapter XXIV. Completes the explanation of the second stanza.

 Chapter XXV. Wherein is expounded the third stanza.

Chapter XII. Shows how this horrible night is purgatory, and how in it the Divine wisdom illumines men on earth with the same illumination that purges and illumines the angels in Heaven.

Shows how this horrible night is purgatory, and how in it the Divine wisdom illumines men on earth with the same illumination that purges and illumines the angels in Heaven.

FROM what has been said we shall be able to see how this dark night of loving fire, as it purges in the darkness, so also in the darkness enkindles the soul. We shall likewise be able to see that, even as spirits are purged in the next life with dark material fire, so in this life they are purged and cleansed with the dark spiritual fire of love. The difference is that in the next life they are cleansed with fire, while here below they are cleansed and illumined with love only. It was this love that David entreated, when he said: Cor mundum crea in me, Deus, etc.[1] For cleanness of heart is nothing less than the love and grace of God. For the clean of heart are called by our Saviour ‘blessed’; which is as if He had called them ‘enkindled with love’,[1] since blessedness is given by nothing less than love.

2. And Jeremias well shows how the soul is purged when it is illumined with this fire of loving wisdom (for God never grants mystical wisdom without love, since love itself infuses it), where he says: ‘He hath sent fire into my bones, and hath taught me.’[1] And David says that the wisdom of God is silver tried in fire[1]—that is, in purgative fire of love. For this dark contemplation infuses into the soul love and wisdom jointly, to each one according to his capacity and need, enlightening the soul and purging it, in the words of the Wise Man, from its ignorances, as he said was done to himself.

3. From this we shall also infer that the very wisdom of God which purges these souls and illumines them purges the angels from their ignorances, giving them knowledge, enlightening them as to that which they knew not, and flowing down from God through the first hierarchies even to the last, and thence to men.[1] All the works, therefore, which are done by the angels, and all their inspirations, are said in the Scriptures, with truth and propriety, to be the work of God and of themselves; for ordinarily these inspirations come through the angels, and they receive them likewise one from another without any delay—as quickly as a ray of sunshine is communicated through many windows arranged in order. For although it is true that the sun’s ray itself passes through them all, still each one passes it on and infuses it into the next, in a modified form, according to the nature of the glass, and with rather more or rather less power and brightness, according as it is nearer to the sun or farther from it.

4. Hence it follows that, the nearer to God are the higher spirits and the lower, the more completely are they purged and enlightened with more general purification; and that the lowest of them will receive this illumination very much less powerfully and more remotely. Hence it follows that man, who is the lowest of all those to whom this loving contemplation flows down continually from God, will, when God desires to give it him, receive it perforce after his own manner in a very limited way and with great pain. For, when the light of God illumines an angel, it enlightens him and enkindles[1] him in love, since, being pure spirit, he is prepared for that infusion. But, when it illumines man, who is impure and weak, it illumines him, as has been said above, according to his nature. It plunges him into darkness and causes him affliction and distress, as does the sun to the eye that is weak;[1] it enkindles him with passionate yet afflictive love, until he be spiritualized and refined by this same fire of love; and it purifies him until he can receive with sweetness the union of this loving infusion after the manner of the angels, being now purged, as by the help of the Lord we shall explain later. But meanwhile he receives this contemplation and loving knowledge in the constraint and yearning of love of which we are here speaking.

5. This enkindling and yearning of love are not always perceived by the soul. For in the beginning, when this spiritual purgation commences, all this Divine fire is used in drying up and making ready the wood (which is the soul) rather than in giving it heat. But, as time goes on, the fire begins to give heat to the soul, and the soul then very commonly feels this enkindling and heat of love. Further, as the understanding is being more and more purged by means of this darkness, it sometimes comes to pass that this mystical and loving theology, as well as enkindling the will, strikes and illumines the other faculty also—that of the understanding—with a certain Divine light and knowledge, so delectably and delicately that it aids the will to conceive a marvellous fervour, and, without any action of its own, there burns in it this Divine fire of love, in living flames, so that it now appears to the soul a living fire by reason of the living understanding which is given to it. It is of this that David speaks in a Psalm, saying: ‘My heart grew hot within me, and, as I meditated, a certain fire was enkindled.’[1]

6. This enkindling of love, which accompanies the union of these two faculties, the understanding and the will, which are here united, is for the soul a thing of great richness and delight; for it is a certain touch of the Divinity and is already the beginning[1] of the perfection of the union of love for which it hopes. Now the soul attains not to this touch of so sublime a sense and love of God, save when it has passed through many trials and a great part of its purgation. But for other touches which are much lower than these, and which are of ordinary occurrence, so much purgation is not needful.

7. From what we have said it may here be inferred how in these spiritual blessings, which are passively infused by God into the soul, the will may very well love even though the understanding understand not; and similarly the understanding may understand and the will love not. For, since this dark night of contemplation consists of Divine light and love, just as fire contains light and heat, it is not unbefitting that, when this loving light is communicated, it should strike the will at times more effectively by enkindling it with love and leaving the understanding in darkness instead of striking it with light; and, at other times, by enlightening it with light, and giving it understanding, but leaving the will in aridity (as it is also true that the heat of the fire can be received without the light being seen, and also the light of it can be seen without the reception of heat); and this is wrought by the Lord, Who infuses as He wills.[1]