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Book VI
OF THE EXERCISES OF HOLY LOVE IN PRAYER.
CHAPTER XIII. OF THE WOUND OF LOVE.
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All these terms of love are drawn from the resemblance there is between the
affections of the mind and the passions of the body. Grief, fear, hope,
hatred, and the rest of the affections of the soul, only enter the heart
when love draws them after it. We do not hate evil except because it is
contrary to the good which we love: we fear future evil because it will
deprive us of the good we love. Though an evil be extreme yet we never hate
it except in so far as we love the good to which it is opposed. He who does
not much love the commonwealth is not much troubled to see it ruined: he who
scarcely loves God, scarcely also hates sin. Love is the first, yea the
principle and origin, of all the passions, and therefore it is love that
first enters the heart; and because it penetrates and pierces down to the
very bottom of the will where its seat is, we say it wounds the heart. "It
is sharp," says the apostle of France, [304] "and enters into the spirit
most deeply." The other affections enter indeed, but by the agency of love,
for it is this which piercing the heart makes a passage for them. It is only
the point of the dart that wounds, the rest only increases the wound and the
pain.
Now, if it wound, it consequently gives pain. Pomegranates, by their
vermilion colour, by the multitude of their seeds, so close set and ranked,
and by their fair crowns, vividly represent, as S. Gregory says, most holy
charity, all red by reason of its ardour towards God, loaded with all the
variety of virtues, and alone bearing away the crown of eternal rewards: but
the juice of pomegranates, which as we know is so agreeable both to the
healthy and to the sick, is so mingled of sweet and sour that one can hardly
discern whether it delights the taste more because it has a sweet tartness
or because it has a tart sweetness. Verily, Theotimus, love is thus
bitter-sweet, and while we live in this world it never has a sweetness
perfectly sweet, because it is not perfect, nor ever purely satiated and
satisfied: and yet it fails not to be of very agreeable taste, its tartness
correcting the lusciousness of its sweetness, as its sweetness heightens the
relish of its tartness. But how can this be? You shall see a young man enter
into a company, free, hearty, and in the best of spirits, who, being off his
guard, feels, before he goes away, that love, making use of the glances, the
gestures, the words, yea even of the hair of a silly and weak creature, as
of so many darts, has smitten and wounded his poor heart, so that there he
is, all sad, gloomy and depressed. Why I pray you is he sad? Without doubt
because he is wounded. And what has wounded him? Love. But love being the
child of complacency, how can it wound and give pain? Sometimes the beloved
object is absent, and then, my dear Theotimus, love wounds the heart by the
desire which it excites; this it is which, being unable to satiate itself,
grievously torments the spirit.
If a bee had stung a child, it were to poor purpose to say to him: Ah! my
child, the bee that stung you is the very same that makes the honey you are
so fond of. For he might say: it is true, that its honey is very pleasant to
my taste, but its sting is very painful, and while its sting remains in my
cheek I cannot be at peace, and do you not see that my face is all swollen
with it? Theotimus, love is indeed a complacency, and consequently very
delightful, provided that it does not leave in our heart the sting of
desire; for when it leaves this, it leaves therewith a great pain. True it
is this pain proceeds from love, and therefore is a loveable and beloved
pain. Hear the painful yet love-full ejaculations of a royal lover. My soul
hath thirsted after the strong living God; when shall I come and appear
before the face of God? My tears have been my bread day and night, whilst it
is said to me daily: where is thy God? [305] And the sacred Sulamitess,
wholly steeped in her dolorous loves, speaking to the daughters of
Jerusalem: Ah! says she, I adjure you, O daughters of Jerusalem, if you find
my beloved, that you tell him that I languish with love. [306] Hope that is
deferred afflicteth the soul. [307]
Now the painful wounds of love are of many sorts. 1. The first strokes we
receive from love are called wounds, because the heart which appeared sound,
entire and all its own before it loved, being struck with love begins to
separate and divide itself from itself, to give itself to the beloved
object. Now this separation cannot be made without pain, seeing that pain is
nothing but the division of living things which belong to one another. 2.
Desire incessantly stings and wounds the heart in which it is, as we have
said. 3. But, Theotimus, speaking of heavenly love, there is in the
practice of it a kind of wound given by God himself to the soul which he
would highly perfect. For he gives her admirable sentiments of and
incomparable attractions for his sovereign goodness, as if pressing and
soliciting her to love him; and then she forcibly lifts herself up as if to
soar higher towards her divine object; but stopping short, because she
cannot love as much as she desires:—O God! she feels a pain which has no
equal. At the same time that she is powerfully drawn to fly towards her dear
well-beloved, she is also powerfully kept back and cannot fly, being chained
to the base miseries of this mortal life and of her own powerlessness: she
desires the wings of a dove that she may fly away and be at rest, [308] and
she finds not. There then she is, rudely tormented between the violence of
her desires and her own powerlessness. Unhappy man that I am, said one of
those who had experienced this torture, who shall deliver me from the body
of this death? [309] In this case, if you notice, Theotimus, it is not the
desire of a thing absent that wounds the heart, for the soul feels that her
God is present; he has already led her into his wine-cellar, he has planted
upon her heart the banner of love: but still, though already he sees her
wholly his, he urges her, and from time to time casts a thousand thousand
darts of his love, showing her in new ways, how much more he is lovable than
loved. And she, who has not so much force to love as love to force herself,
seeing her forces so weak in respect of the desire she has to love worthily
him whom no force of love can love enough,—Ah! she feels herself tortured
with an incomparable pain; for, as many efforts as she makes to fly higher
in her desiring love, so many thrills of pain does she receive.
This heart in love with its God, desiring infinitely to love, sees
notwithstanding that it can neither love nor desire sufficiently. And this
desire which cannot come to effect is as a dart in the side of a noble
spirit; yet the pain which proceeds from it is welcome, because whosoever
desires earnestly to love, loves also earnestly to desire, and would esteem
himself the most miserable man in the universe, if he did not continually
desire to love that which is so sovereignly worthy of love. Desiring to
love, he receives pain; but loving to desire, he receives sweetness.
My God! Theotimus, what am I going to say? The blessed in heaven seeing that
God is still more lovable than they are loving, would fail and eternally
perish with a desire to love him still more, if the most holy will of God
did not impose upon theirs the admirable repose which it enjoys: for they so
sovereignly love this sovereign will, that its willing stays theirs, and the
divine contentment contents them, they acquiescing to be limited in their
love even by that will whose goodness is the object of their love. If this
were not so, their love would be equally delicious and dolorous, delicious
by the possession of so great a good, dolorous through an extreme desire of
a greater love. God therefore continually drawing arrows, if we may say so,
out of the quiver of his infinite beauty, wounds the hearts of his lovers,
making them clearly see that they do not love him nearly as much as he is
worthy to be beloved. That mortal who does not desire to love the divine
goodness more, loves him not enough; sufficiency in this divine exercise is
not sufficient, when a man would stay in it as though it sufficed him.
[304] S. Denis (Tr.)
[305] Ps. xli. 3.
[306] Cant. v. 8.
[307] Prov. xiii. 12.
[308] Ps. liv. 7.
[309] Rom. vii. 24.
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