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Book XII
CONTAINING CERTAIN COUNSELS FOR THE PROGRESS OF THE SOUL IN HOLY LOVE.
CHAPTER III. THAT TO HAVE THE DESIRE OF SACRED LOVE WE ARE TO CUT OFF ALL OTHER DESIRES.
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Why do hounds, think you, Theotimus, more ordinarily lose the scent or
strain of their quarry in the spring-time than at other times? It is, as
hunters and philosophers say, because the grass and flowers are then in
their vigour, so that the variety of smells which they send out so fills the
hounds' sense of smelling that they can neither take nor follow the scent of
their game, among so many scents which the earth exhales. In sooth those
souls that ever abound in desires, designs and projects, never desire holy
celestial love as they ought, nor can perceive the delightful strain and
scent of the divine beloved, who is compared to the roe, and to the little
fawn of the doe. [588]
Lilies have no season, but flower soon or late, as they are deeper or less
deep set in the ground: for if they be thrust three fingers only into the
earth they will presently blossom, but if they be put six or nine, they come
up proportionately later. If the heart that aims after Divine love be deeply
engaged in terrene and temporal affairs, it will bud late and with
difficulty; but if it have only so much to do with the world as its
condition requires, you shall see it bloom timely in love, and send out a
delicious odour.
For this cause the Saints betook themselves to deserts, that being freed
from worldly cares they might more ardently apply to heavenly love. For this
the spouse shut one of her eyes, [589] to the end that she might keep the
sight of the other alone more fixedly, and thereby take better aim at the
very midst of her beloved's heart, which she desires to wound with love. And
for this same reason she keeps her hair so plaited and gathered up in a
tress that she seems to have one only hair which she makes use of as a
chain, to bind and bear away her spouse's heart, whom she makes a slave to
her love.
They who desire for good and all to love God, shut up their understanding
from discoursing of worldly things, to employ it more earnestly in the
meditation of divine things, and gather up all their pretensions under the
sole intention which they have of loving only God. Whosoever desires
something which he desires not for God that much less desires God.
A religious man demanded of the Blessed Giles what he could do most grateful
to God; and he answered him by singing: "One to one, one to one;" that is,
one only soul to one only God. So many desires and loves in a heart are like
many children at one breast, who, as they cannot all suck at once, struggle
each one for his turn, so that at last the fount dries up. He who aspires to
heavenly love, must sedulously reserve for it his leisure, his spirit and
his affections.
[588] Cant. ii. 9.
[589] Cant. iv. 9
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