Chapter 38
BOOK I.
OF THE NIGHT OF SENSE.
In a dark night ,
With anxious love inflamed,
O, happy lot I
Forth unobserved I went,
My house being now at rest .
In the first stanza the soul sings of the way and manner of its going forth, as to its affections, from self and all created things, dying thereto by real mortification, that it may live the life of love, sweet and delicious in God. It went forth, from itself and from all things, in a dark night, by which is meant here purgative contemplation — as I shall hereinafter explain* — which leads the soul to deny itself and all besides. This departure, it says, it was able to accomplish in the strength and fervour which the love of the Bridegroom supplied, in the obscure con- templation for that end. The soul magnifies its own ^happiness in having journeyed Godwards in that nig*ht so successfully as to escape all hindrance on the part of its three enemies — the world, the devil, and the flesh — which are always found infesting this road ; for the night of purgative contemplation had lulled to sleep and mortified, in the house of sensuality, all passions and ^iesires, in their rebellious movements.
* Ch. viii.
Digitized by L^ooQle
OF THE SOUL.
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