THE ADORNMENT OF THE SPIRITUAL MARRIAGE

 HERE BEGINS THE FIRST BOOK

 PROLOGUE

 CHAPTER I OF THE ACTIVE LIFE

 CHAPTER II SHOWING HOW WE SHALL CONSIDER THE COMING OF CHRIST IN THREE WAYS

 CHAPTER III OF HUMILITY

 CHAPTER IV OF CHARITY

 CHAPTER VOF PATIENT ENDURANCE

 CHAPTER VI OF THE SECOND COMING OF CHRIST

 CHAPTER VII OF THE BLESSED SACRAMENTS

 CHAPTER VIII OF THE THIRD COMING OF CHRIST

 CHAPTER IX

 CHAPTER X OF THE FIVE KINDS OF MEN WHO SHALL APPEAR AT THE JUDGMENT

 CHAPTER XI OF A SPIRITUAL GOING OUT WITH ALL VIRTUES

 CHAPTER XII HOW HUMILITY IS THE FOUNDATION OF ALL OTHER VIRTUES

 CHAPTER XIII OF OBEDIENCE

 CHAPTER XIV OF THE RENUNCIATION OF SELF WILL

 CHAPTER XV OF PATIENCE

 CHAPTER XVI OF MEEKNESS

 CHAPTER XVII OF KINDLINESS

 CHAPTER XVIIIOF COMPASSION

 CHAPTER XIX OF GENEROSITY

 CHAPTER XX OF ZEAL AND DILIGENCE

 CHAPTER XXI OF TEMPERANCE AND SOBRIETY

 CHAPTER XXII OF PURITY

 CHAPTER XXIII OF THREE ENEMIES TO BE OVERCOME BY RIGHTEOUSNESS

 CHAPTER XXIV OF THE KINGDOM OF THE SOUL

 CHAPTER XXV OF A SPIRITUAL MEETING OF GOD AND OURSELVES

 CHAPTER XXVI OF THE DESIRE TO KNOW THE BRIDEGROOM IN HIS NATURE

 HERE BEGINS THE SECOND BOOK

 CHAPTER I HOW WE ACHIEVE SUPERNATURAL SIGHT IN OUR INWARD WORKINGS

 CHAPTER II OF A THREE-FOLD UNITY WHICH IS IN US BY NATURE

 CHAPTER III OF THE INFLOW OF THE GRACE OF GOD INTO OUR SPIRIT

 CHAPTER IV SHOWING HOW WE SHOULD FOUND OUR INWARD LIFE ON A FREEDOM FROM IMAGES

 CHAPTER V OF A THREE-FOLD COMING OF OUR LORD IN THE INWARD MAN

 CHAPTER VI OF THE SECOND COMING OF OUR LORD IN THE INWARD MAN

 CHAPTER VII OF THE THIRD COMING OF OUR LORD

 CHAPTER VIII HOW THE FIRST COMING HAS FOUR DEGREES

 CHAPTER IX OF UNITY OF HEART

 CHAPTER X OF INWARDNESS

 CHAPTER XI OF SENSIBLE LOVE

 CHAPTER XII OF DEVOTION

 CHAPTER XIII OF GRATITUDE

 CHAPTER XIV OF TWO GRIEFS WHICH ARISE FROM INWARD GRATITUDE

 CHAPTER XV A SIMILITUDE HOW WE SHOULD PERFORM THE FIRST DEGREE OF OUR INWARD EXERCISE

 CHAPTER XVI ANOTHER SIMILITUDE CONCERNING THE SAME EXERCISE

 CHAPTER XVII OF THE SECOND DEGREE OF OUR INWARD EXERCISE, WHICH INCREASES INWARDNESS BY HUMILITY

 CHAPTER XVIII OF THE PURE DELIGHT OF THE HEART AND THE SENSIBLE POWERS

 CHAPTER XIX OF SPIRITUAL INEBRIATION

 CHAPTER XX WHAT MAY HINDER A MAN IN THIS INEBRIATION

 CHAPTER XXI A SIMILITUDE HOW A MAN SHOULD ACT AND BEAR HIMSELF IN THIS CASE

 CHAPTER XXII OF THE THIRD DEGREE OF THE SPIRITUAL COMING OF CHRIST

 CHAPTER XXIII OF THE PAIN AND RESTLESSNESS OF LOVE

 CHAPTER XXIV OF ECSTACIES AND DIVINE REVELATIONS

 CHAPTER XXV AN EXAMPLE SHOWING HOW ONE IS HINDERED IN THIS EXERCISE

 CHAPTER XXVI ANOTHER EXAMPLE

 CHAPTER XXVII A PARABLE OF THE ANT

 CHAPTER XXVIII OF THE FOURTH DEGREE OF THE COMING OF CHRIST

 CHAPTER XXIX SHOWING WHAT THE FORSAKEN MAN SHOULD DO

 CHAPTER XXX A PARABLE: HOW ONE MAY BE HINDERED IN THIS FOURTH DEGREE

 CHAPTER XXXI OF ANOTHER HINDRANCE

 CHAPTER XXXIIOF FOUR KINDS OF FEVER WHEREWITH A MAN MAY BE TORMENTED

 CHAPTER XXXIIISHOWING HOW THESE FOUR DEGREES IN THEIR PERFECTION ARE FOUND IN CHRIST

 CHAPTER XXXIVSHOWING HOW A MAN SHOULD LIVE IF HE WOULD BE ENLIGHTENED

 CHAPTER XXXVOF THE SECOND COMING OF CHRIST, OR, THE FOUNTAIN WITH THREE RILLS

 XXXVICHAPTER XXXVITHE FIRST RILL ADORNS THE MEMORY[1]

 CHAPTER XXXVIITHE SECOND RILL ENLIGHTENS THE UNDERSTANDING

 CHAPTER XXXVIIITHE THIRD RILL ESTABLISHES THE WILL TO EVERY PERFECTION

 CHAPTER XXXIXSHOWING HOW THE ESTABLISHED MAN SHALL GO OUT IN FOUR WAYS

 CHAPTER XLHE SHALL GO OUT TOWARDS GOD AND TOWARDS ALL SAINTS

 CHAPTER XLIHE SHALL GO OUT TOWARDS ALL SINNERS

 CHAPTER XLIIHE SHALL GO OUT TOWARDS HIS FRIENDS IN PURGATORY

 CHAPTER XLIIIHE SHALL GO OUT TOWARDS HIMSELF AND TOWARDS ALL GOOD MEN

 CHAPTER XLIVSHOWING HOW WE MAY RECOGNISE THOSE MEN WHO FAIL IN CHARITY TO ALL

 CHAPTER XLVHOW CHRIST WAS, IS, AND EVER WILL BE THE LOVER OF ALL

 CHAPTER XLVIREPROVING ALL THOSE WHO LIVE ON SPIRITUAL GOODS IN AN INORDINATE MANNER

 CHAPTER XLVIISHOWING HOW CHRIST HAS GIVEN HIMSELF TO ALL IN COMMON IN THE SACRAMENT OF THE ALTAR

 CHAPTER XLVIIIOF THE UNITY OF THE DIVINE NATURE IN THE TRINITY OF THE PERSONS

 CHAPTER XLIXSHOWING HOW GOD POSSESSES AND MOVES THE SOUL BOTH IN A NATURAL AND A SUPERNATURAL WAY

 CHAPTER LSHOWING HOW A MAN SHOULD BE ADORNED IF HE IS TO RECEIVE THE MOST INWARD EXERCISE

 CHAPTER LIOF THE THIRD COMING OF CHRIST

 CHAPTER LIISHOWING HOW THE SPIRIT GOES OUT THROUGH THE DIVINE STIRRING

 CHAPTER LIIIOF AN ETERNAL HUNGER FOR GOD

 CHAPTER LIVOF A LOVING STRIFE BETWEEN THE SPIRIT OF GOD AND OUR SPIRIT

 CHAPTER LVOF THE FRUITFUL WORKS OF THE SPIRIT, THE WHICH ARE ETERNAL

 CHAPTER LVISHOWING THE WAY IN WHICH WE SHALL MEET GOD IN A GHOSTLY MANNER BOTH WITH AND WITHOUT MEANS[1]

 CHAPTER LVIIOF THE ESSENTIAL MEETING WITH GOD WITHOUT MEANS IN THE NAKEDNESS OF OUR NATURE

 CHAPTER LVIIISHOWING HOW ONE IS LIKE UNTO GOD THROUGH GRACE AND UNLIKE UNTO GOD THROUGH MORTAL SIN

 CHAPTER LIXSHOWING HOW ONE POSSESSES GOD IN UNION AND REST, ABOVE ALL LIKENESS THROUGH GRACE

 CHAPTER LXSHOWING HOW WE HAVE NEED OF THE GRACE OF GOD, WHICH MAKES US LIKE UNTO GOD AND LEADS US TO GOD WITHOUT MEANS

 CHAPTER LXIOF HOW GOD AND OUR SPIRIT VISIT EACH OTHER IN THE UNITY AND IN THE LIKENESS

 CHAPTER LXIISHOWING HOW WE SHOULD GO OUT TO MEET GOD

 CHAPTER LXIIIOF THE ORDERING OF ALL THE VIRTUES THROUGH THE SEVEN GIFTS OF THE HOLY GHOST

 CHAPTER LXIVOF THE HIGHEST DEGREE OF THE MOST INTERIOR LIFE

 CHAPTER LXVOF THREE KINDS OF MOST INWARD PRACTICES

 CHAPTER LXVISHOWING HOW SOME MEN LIVE CONTRARY TO THESE EXERCISES

 CHAPTER LXVIIOF ANOTHER KIND OF PERVERTED MEN

 CHAPTER I SHOWING THE THREE WAYS BY WHICH ONE ENTERS INTO THE GOD-SEEING LIFE

 CHAPTER II HOW THE ETERNAL BIRTH OF GOD IS RENEWED WITHOUT INTERRUPTION IN THE NOBILITY OF THE SPIRIT

 CHAPTER III HOW OUR SPIRIT IS CALLED TO GO OUT IN CONTEMPLATION AND FRUITION

 CHAPTER IV OF A DIVINE MEETING WHICH TAKES PLACE IN THE HIDDENNESS OF OUR SPIRIT

CHAPTER XXXIIOF FOUR KINDS OF FEVER WHEREWITH A MAN MAY BE TORMENTED

Those men who are full of noxious humours, that is to say, full of inordinate inclination towards bodily comfort and towards foreign and creaturely consolations, can fall into four kinds of fever.

The first kind is called the quotidian fever. It is a multiplicity of the heart; for these men wish to know all things, and to speak of all things, and to criticise and to judge all things, and meanwhile they often fail to observe themselves. They are weighed down by many strange cares; they must often hear what they do not like; and the least thing troubles them. Their thoughts are restless; first this, then that, first here, then there; they are like to the winds. This is a daily fever; for they are troubled, and busied, and in multiplicity, from morning until evening, and sometimes in the night also, whether they sleep or wake. Though this may exist in a state of grace and without mortal sin, yet it hinders inwardness and inward practices and takes away the taste of God and of all virtues. And this is an eternal loss.

The second kind of fever comes on alternate days. It is called fickleness. If it lasts long it is often dangerous. This fever is of two kinds: sometimes it comes from intemperate heat, and sometimes from cold. The one which comes from intemperate heat befalls certain good men; for when they are, or have been, touched by God, and then are forsaken of Him, they sometimes fall into fickleness. To-day they choose one way of life, and to-morrow another; at one time they wish to be silent, and another time they wish continually to speak. First they wish to enter into this order, then into that. First they wish to give all their goods to God, then they wish to keep them. At one time they wish to wander abroad, at another to be enclosed in a cell. At one time they long to go often to the Sacrament, and shortly afterwards they value this but little. At one time they wish to pray much in a loud voice, and another time but shortly after, they would keep silence. And this is both a vain curiosity and a fickleness, which hinder and impede a man from comprehending inward truth, and destroy in him both the source and the practice of all inwardness. Now mark whence this unstable condition comes in some good men. When a man sets his thoughts and his inward active endeavour on the virtues and on outward behaviour more than on God and on union with God: though he remains in the grace of God (for in the virtues he aims at God), yet none the less his life is unstable, for he does not feel himself to rest in God above all virtues. And therefore he possesses something that he does not know; for, Him Whom he seeks in the virtues and in the multiplicity of acts, he possesses within himself, above intention, above virtues, and above all ways and means. And therefore, if this man would overcome his fickleness, he must learn to rest above all virtues in God and in the most high Unity of God.

The other fever of fickleness, which comes from cold, all those men have who love God indeed, but at the same time seek and inordinately love some other thing. This fever comes from cold, for the heat of charity is poor indeed where not God alone, but foreign things besides and with God, urge and excite us towards the works of virtue. Such men are fickle of heart; for in all the things which they do, nature is secretly seeking its own, often without their knowledge, for they know not themselves. Such men choose and abandon, first one way of life, then another. To-day they choose one priest, to whom they would go for confession and for counsel their whole life long; and to-morrow they will choose another. On all things they will ask advice, but hardly ever do they act upon it. All things for which they are blamed and rebuked they like to excuse and to justify. Of fine words they have plenty, but little is in them. They like well to have a reputation for virtue, but without great effort. They wish their virtues to be known, and these are therefore empty, and have no savour either of God nor of themselves. Others they teach, but will themselves hardly be taught or reproved. A natural self-love and a hidden pride make them thus fickle. Such people walk on the verge of hell: one false step, and into it they fall.

In some men this fever of fickleness may produce the quartan fever; that is, an estrangement from God and from themselves and from truth and from all virtues. And then they fall into such confusion that they are at their wit’s end and know not what to do. This illness is more dangerous than either of the others.

Through this estrangement a man sometimes falls into a fever which is called the double quartan, which means indifference. Then the fourth day is doubled, and he can hardly recover, for he becomes indifferent and heedless of all that is needful to eternal life. So he may fall into sin, like one who never knew anything of God. If this may befall those men who govern themselves ill in this state of abandonment, then it behoves those to beware who never knew ought of God, nor of the inward life, nor of that sweet savour which good men find in their exercises.