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Book The First |
Wherein is described the nature of dark night and how
necessary it is to pass through it to Divine union; and in
particular this book describes the dark night of sense, and
desire, and the evils which these work in the soul.[73]
CHAPTER I |
Sets down the first stanza. Describes two different nights
through which spiritual persons pass, according to the two parts
of man, the lower and the higher. Expounds the stanza which
follows.
STANZA THE FIRST
On a dark night, Kindled in love with yearnings -- oh, happy
chance! --
I went forth without being observed, My house being now at
rest.
IN this first stanzas the soul sings of the happy fortune and
chance which it experienced in going forth from all things that
are without, and from the desires[74] and imperfections that are in
the sensual[75] part of man because of the disordered state of his
reason. For the understanding of this it must be known that, for a
soul to attain to the state of perfection, it has ordinarily first
to pass through two principal kinds of night, which spiritual
persons call purgations or purifications of the soul; and here we
call them nights, for in both of them the soul journeys, as it
were, by night, in darkness.
2. The first night or purgation is of the sensual part of the
soul, which is treated in the present stanza, and will be treated
in the first part of this book. And the second is of the spiritual
part; of this speaks the second stanza, which follows; and of this
we shall treat likewise, in the second and the third part,[76] with
respect to the activity of the soul; and in the fourth part, with
respect to its passitivity.
3. And this first night pertains to beginners, occurring at
the time when God begins to bring them into the state of
contemplation; in this night the spirit likewise has a part, as we
shall say in due course. And the second night, or purification,
pertains to those who are already proficient, occurring at the
time when God desires to bring them to the state of union with
God. And this latter night is a more obscure and dark and terrible
purgation, as we shall say afterwards.
4. Briefly, then, the soul means by this stanza that it went
forth (being led by God) for love of Him alone, enkindled in love
of Him, upon a dark night, which is the privation and purgation of
all its sensual desires, with respect to all outward things of the
world and to those which were delectable to its flesh, and
likewise with respect to the desires of its will. This all comes
to pass in this purgation of sense; for which cause the soul says
that it went forth while its house was still at rest;[77] which
house is its sensual part, the desires being at rest and asleep in
it, as it is to them.[78] For there is no going forth from the pains
and afflictions of the secret places of the desires until these be
mortified and put to sleep. And this, the soul says, was a happy
chance for it -- namely, its going forth without being observed:
that is, without any desire of its flesh or any other thing being
able to hinder it. And likewise, because it went out by night --
which signifies the privation of all these things wrought in it by
God, which privation was night for it.
5. And it was a happy chance that God should lead it into
this night, from which there came to it so much good; for of
itself the soul would not have succeeded in entering therein,
because no man of himself can succeed in voiding himself of all
his desires in order to come to God.
6. This is, in brief, the exposition of the stanza; and we
shall now have to go through it, line by line, setting down one
line after another, and expounding that which pertains to our
purpose. And the same method is followed in the other stanzas, as
I said in the Prologue[79] -- namely, that each stanza will be set
down and expounded, and afterwards each line.
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