Skip to main content

Full text of "The Physical Phenomena Of Mysticism"

See other formats


1 




1 967 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 



BY XHE SAME AUTHOR 

TCHCRAFT A N r> BLACK MAGIC 




Frontispiece 



DIONYSIUS AREOPAGITA 

From a painting by Sir Joshua Reynolds, 1778 



MONTAGUE UMMERS 



THE^PHYSICAL 

PHENOMENA 
OF MYSTICISM 

WITH ESPECIAL REFERENCE TO THE 
STIGMATA, DIVINE AND DIABOLIC 



Revera, ubi tuta firmaque 
infirmis securitas et requies, 
nisi in vulneribus Salvatorts? 

ST. BERNARD, Serrno Ixi in Cantica Canticorum. 



Dieu parle; il faut qu'on lui r^ponde. 

ALFRED DE MUSSET 




NEW YORK 
BARNES 8c NOBLE, INC. 



Auctoris Declaratio 

Urban VIII. Decretis 13 Martii 1625, et Julii 1634 editis, 
eorumque confirmation.! et declaration!, observantia et rever- 
entia, qua par est, insistendo, profiteor, me hand alio sensu, 
quidquid in hoc libro refero, accipere aut recipi ab ullo velle, 
quam quo ea solent, quae humana duintaxat auctoritate, 
non autem divina Catholicae Romanae Ecclesiae, aut S. Sedis 
ApostoKcae nituntur. 



COPYRIGHT 195O by 

RIDER & COMPANY, LONDON 



Made and PnnUd *w Great Britain by 

GREYCAINES 

(Taytof Garnett Evans <5- Co. Ltd.) 
Watford, Htrk. 



CONTENTS 
CHAPTER ONE 

THE QUESTION MYSTICISM ANSWERS DERIVATION OF THE WORD 
THE MYSTERIES OF ELEUSIS DIONYSOS ORPHEUS AND HIS 
MYSTERIES MYSTICAL THEOLOGY AND THE AREOPAGITE ST. 
GREGORY THE GREAT CONTEMPLATION THE CATEGORIES OF 

MYSTICISM. page 13 



CHAPTER TWO 

MYSTICISM DEFINED THE GOAL OF MYSTICISM DEIFICATION THE 
THREE WAYS THE NINETEEN PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM CATA- 
LOGUED AND CLASSIFIED. page 52 



CHAPTER THREE 

ECSTASY THE ECSTASY OF THE NEO-PLATONISTS THE DEMONIACAL 
ECSTASY OF WITCH FOLK NATURAL ECSTASY DIVINE ECSTASY 
RAPTURE THE INTERMINGLING OF THE NATURAL AND SUPERNATURAL 
WORLDS. page 85 



CHAPTER FOUR 

THE MYSTERY OF STIGMATIZATION THE FERITA, OR HEART WOUND 
STIGMATIZATION, TRUE AND FALSE HYPNOTISM AUTOSUGGESTION 
PATHOLOGICAL PHENOMENA ST. CLARA OF MONTEFALCO PASSITEA 
OF SIENA THE SERAPHIC TRADITION CARTHUSIAN IDEALS. page Il8 



CHAPTER FIVE 

THE SPIRITUAL DIARY OF ST. VERONICA DOMINICAN MYSTICS THE 
SUFFERINGS OF ANNE CATHARINE EMMERICH THE STIGMATICAS OF 
THE TYROL MISS COLLINS ST. GEMMA GALGANI THE SAINT OF THE 

IMPOSSIBLE. page 149 



CONTENTS 

CHAPTER SIX 

GREAT NAMES ST. FRANCIS OF ASSISI ST. CATHARINE OF SIENA 
ST. TERESA D'AVILA THE MYSTICS' MYSTIC ON THE BORDER-LINE 
THE CURIOUS CASE OF GEORGES MARASCO A MIRACULOUS CURE- 
SIMULATED STIGMATA THE PRETENDED MIRACLE. page l8l 



CHAPTER SEVEN 

THE REVERSE OF THE MEDAL DIABOLIC STIGMATA THE WITCH 
MAGDALENA DE LA CRUZ VIRGINIA AND THE SATANISTS OF AGEN 
ROSE TAMISIER DEMONIACAL AND POLTERGEIST MOLESTATIONS- 
DIVINE STIGMATA IN THE NINETEENTH CENTURY AND TO-DAY SOR 
PATROCINIO LOUISE LATEAU THERESA NEUMANN. page 214 



LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS 

DIONYSIUS AREOPAGITA Frontispiece 
PLATE i. MADONNA ENTHRONED AND DOMINICAN SAINTS facing page 80 

PLATE n. BL. MARIANNA DE JESXTS 81 

PLATE in. ST. GREGORY I THE GREAT, 590-604 96 

PLATE rv. SOR PATRGINIO 97 

PLATE v. BLESSED ANNA MARIA TAIGI, A ROMAN MYSTIC 160 

PLATE vi. ST. ROSE OF LIMA 161 

PLATE vii. ST. CLARE OF MONTEFALCO, O.S.A. 176 

PLATE vin. BLESSED BEATRIX D'ORNAGIEU, CARTHUSIAN 

NUN 177 

PLATE ix. THE VENERABLE MADRE SOR JOANNA 

RODORIQUEZ DE J^SUS MARIA 224 

PLATE x. BENEDICT XIV 225 

PLATE xi. THE TRANSVERBERATION OF THE HEART OF 

ST. TERESA 332 



INTRODUCTION 

1 HE important and very remarkable general revival of interest in the 
subject of Mysticism, which has been so widely in evidence in England 
during the past fifty years, and which shows every sign that it is no 
mere passing phase or transitory mode of thought, but a vital permanency 
since it has proved of real practical help and a source of strength and 
enlightenment to very many, is attributed to a large number of causes, 
the varieties of which I do not propose to discuss in detail. I will content 
myself with observing that I can hardly believe the impetus to be purely 
literary, although (as I suppose nobody would dispute) there is no doubt 
at all that valuable and sympathetic, and above all knowledgeable, 
Studies of Mysticism from able pens have done much, very much, to 
stabilize and help the movement. But seeing how deeply Mysticism has 
entered into and leavened people's lives, I hesitate to suggest that these 
Studies have actually created the great revival. For my part I would 
prefer to say that the time was ripe, and the "Spirit breathed where he 
will; and thou hearest his voice, but thou knowest not whence he cometh 
and whither he goeth". 

It appears to have escaped notice, or at any rate it has not been 
sufficiently remarked, that in England throughout the nineteenth century, 
there existed a very lifesome, if indeed a rather reserved school of mystics, 
that not a few mystical works of rare quality were published and eagerly 
perused. It is true that the flower of these were, perhaps, translations. 
Contrariwise, the writings of the Oratorian, Fr. Faber, had a wide 
circulation and exercised much influence. Translations, inadequate maybe 
in the view of modern searching scholarship, of the writings of St. Teresa 
of Avila and St. John of the Cross were made by David Lewis. Earlier 
in date, the "Oratorian Series", as it is generally known, of the Lives of 
the Saints, presented a number of volumes of mystical hagiography. To 
the first volume of The Life ofS. Alphonso Maria de Liguori, five volumes, 
1848-9, Fr. Faber prefixed a very ample Essay of one hundred and 
forty pages, On Beautification and Canonization. This is of great importance 
to the student of Mysticism. 

The bulk of the Oxford Book of English Mystical Verse is occupied 
by poets who date from 1801, the birth year of John Henry, Cardinal 
Newman, to the work of Arthur Shearly Cripps, who was born in 1869. 
It is true that in those pages, 133-516, Mr. D. H. S. Nicholson and Mr. 
A. H. E. Lee admit a few names and some verse which cannot be called 
"mystical" at all, but even with this proviso a number of poems are there 
to prove that the nineteenth century was by no means so spiritually 
sterile as many suppose. 

In their introduction (1921) Mr. Nicholson and Mr. Lee emphasize that 
the world appears to be "undergoing a spiritual revitalization", that 
Mysticism "has emerged from the morass of apathy which characterized 



INTRODUCTION 

the eighteenth and the greater part of the nineteenth century". I believe 
that this morass or slough has been thought of as far muddier, far more 
lethargically engulfing than really was the case. To turn to the eighteenth 
century, I will mention no more than two names, William Blake (1757- 
1827), and William Beckford (1760-1844). The latter may cause surprise. 
I reply, read An Excursion to the Grande Chartreuse in the Year 1778. 

In the nineteenth century, wherever in England there was a cloister, 
there was a centre of Mysticism. 

One may quote even an old Georgian divine in defence of Mystical 
Theology. William Law (1686-1761) in a letter to Dr. Trapp, says that 
mystical writers "there have been in all ages of the Church, but as they 
served not the ends of popular learning, as they helped no people to figure 
or preferment in the world, and were useless to scholastic controversial 
writers, so they dropt out of public uses, and were only known, or rather 
unknown, under the name of mystical writers, till at last some people 
have hardly heard of that very name . . . they were deeply learned in 
the mysteries of the Kingdom of God, not through the use of lexicons, or 
meditating upon critics, but because they had passed from death unto 
life". This letter of an eighteenth century cleric is of considerable interest, 
as being evidence from outside. Law's observations, moreover, are 
limited to England. In France, Spain, Italy, to name no other countries, 
Mysticism was always vigorous, fadeless and beautiful. 

This is why I think that Dr. A. Allen Brockington has misunderstood 
when in his Mysticism and Poetry, 1934, he writes (p. 158) : "This revival 
of interest (in Mysticism) in English-speaking countries coincides with 
a revival of interest in France". There could not in France be "a revival 
of interest", because the mystical tradition never lapsed. The Abb6 Henri 
Bremond's Histoire Littiraire du Sentiment Religieux en France depuis 
la Fin des Guerres de Religion jusqu' A nos Jours did not initiate a 
rejuvenescence of Mysticism in France. The ten volumes of this great 
masterpiece were the effect not the cause. 

This is not to suggest that the Abb6 Bremond's work is not of the 
greatest value and the influence of so vast a Study must be widespread 
and enduring. In England Professor Allison Peers is doing something 
of the same kind for the Spanish Mystics, and we cannot be sufficiently 
grateful for his translations of St. Teresa and St. John of the Cross. We 
may especially look forward (I hope) to a study from him of the Venerable 
Sor Maria Coronal de Agreda, concerning whom we hear nothing in 
English save a very few superficial articles, of which all are nugatory, 
and one at least is positively offensive. 

A systematic survey of the great Italian mystics is much to be 
desired. Baron von Hiigel's intensive study of St. Catharine Adorno 
Fieschi of Genoa has notably enriched our mystical literature, but 
beyond this, with the exception of St. Francis of Assisi and St. Catharine 

9 



INTRODUCTION 

of Siena, in England the Italian mystics are practically unknown. We 
have not a translation, selected passages or excerpts at least, from the 
Spiritual Diary of St. Veronica Giuliani. Professed students of mysticism 
have barely heard of St. Maria Maddalena de' Pazzi, of whom it has 
been finely said by a famous French writer: "Elle converse directement 
avec le Pre, et b<gaie, dans Textase, les explications des myst&res 
que lui divulgua I'Ancien des jours. Ses livres contiennent une page 
souveraine sur la Circoncision, une autre magnifique, constitute toute 
en antitheses, sur le Saint-Esprit, d'autres Granges sur la deification de 
Tame humaine, sur son union avec le ciel, sur le r61e assign^ dans cette 
operation au plaies du Verbe." 

We have not even in English, an adequate and complete translation 
of the Opere, the Works, of St. Catharine of Siena, 

Frequently I have been asked, which are the best general surveys 
of Mysticism? This is a question not easy to answer. To attempt to list 
the old masters of the spiritual life would be to compile a bibliography. 
There are, for example, such standard works as the Instructions Theo- 
logicB Mysticte, of Dom Dominic Schram, O. S. B. (1658-1720), and 
IlDirettorio Mistico of Gianbattista Scaramelli, S. J. (1687-1752), Schram 
has been translated into French. Scaramelli's work, of which there are 
many editions, was posthumously published, Venice, 1754, and has been 
translated into Latin, French, German, Spanish and Polish. An abridge- 
ment of IlDirettorio Mistico which appeared, London, 1913, as A Handbook 
of Mystical Theology, 168 pp., is altogether too drastically curtailed to 
be of any real use. 

La Mistica Teologia, 1623, of the Minim Fray Fernando de Caldera ; 
Terzago's Theologia Historico Mystica, Venice, 1764, and Gaetano 
Marcecalea's Enchiridium Mysticum, Verona, 1766, are books difficult to 
find. The same may be said of Lopez Ezquerra's Lucema Mystica which 
appeared towards the end of the seventeenth century. The Lucerna is 
actually the work of Dom Agostino Nagore, a Carthusian of Saragossa, 
who did not publish it. The MS. came into the possession of Ezquerra, 
who printed it at Bilbao, under his own name. Very valuable are the 
mystical studies of the Discalced Carmelite, P. Michel de la Fuente, who 
at the beginning of the seventeenth century died in the Odour of Sanctity. 

Of more recent volumes, Dr. Ludwig's Noack's Die Christliche Mystik, 
Konigsberg, 1853, must be used with considerable caution. Far more 
reliable and solid is Abb6 Migne's Dictionnaire de Mystique in the third 
Encycloptdie^Thtologique, 1885. The works of such authorities as Dom 
Marchaux, Mgr. Farges, P&re Poulain, Canon Auguste Sandreau, Fra 
Juan G. Arintero, O.P., all the Teresians, L6on Bor6, Dr. Lefebvre of 
Louvain, are classics in the history of Mysticism. If I have seemed to omit 
some important names it is merely because one must perforce limit a 
catalogue of authors. 

10 



INTRODUCTION 

Two works which I judge to be the essential text-books so to speak, 
of Mysticism, are Die Christliche Mystik, Regensberg, 5 Vols., 1836-42, 
of Johann Joseph von G6rres (1776-1848); and Canon J. Ribet's La 
Mystique divine, distingufo des Contrefagons Diaboliques et des Analogies 
Humaines. Les phtnom&nes Mystiques, la contemplation, les ph&nom&nes 
distincts de la contemplation, les causes des phtnombnes mystiques, first 
edition, Paris, Poussielgue, 4 Vols., 1879-1883. Albert L. Caillet in his 
authoritative Manuel Bibliographique gives unstinted praise to both 
these encyclopaedic studies. 

During the past fifty years a number of excellent books have been 
written by English scholars and students upon the various aspects of 
Mysticism, yet since these aspects are almost infinite, it is plain that there 
is room for many more studies of the supernatural and contemplative 
life. In fact, one may say that Mysticism is an exhaustless well, "fons 
aquae salientis in vitam aeternam". 

It can hardly escape remark that the more recent English writers on 
Mysticism almost sedulously avoid certain particular aspects of the 
subject, although such are integral to their theme, and of the very first 
importance. That the matter is difficult and needs most careful examina- 
tion affords no excuse for this pusillanimity of approach. Many authors 
have here quite possibly taken thir cue from Dean Inge, who in the 
Preface to his Christian Mysticism, 1899, very definitely emphasizes 
that he will not treat of and has nothing to do with "Supernatural 
phenomena". 

None the less, a Mysticism without supernatural phenomena is a 
starveling. At best it is limited and lopped, however interesting it may 
prove within its own set bounds. A study of Mysticism which ignores so 
vital a constituent can but be, so to speak, introductory, and who would 
linger in the narthex when he may approach the Altar? The Supernatural 
Phenomena of Mysticism must be studied by English scholars with 
sympathy and respect, which by no means preclude a keen judgement 
and the critical spirit, as is amply proved by the many weighty volumes 
acknowledged masters have written in Latin, in French and Italian, 
in German, Spanish, and many another tongue. 

I know of only two books in English which have as their definite 
theme supernatural phenomena: Levitation, published by Burns Gates 
& Washbourne, 1928; and The Testimony of Blood, by Captain Ian R. 
Grant, Burns Gates & Washbourne, 1929, actually not dated, but the 
Preface contributed by Mgr. Barnes is i6th October, 1929. The former of 
these, Levitation, is a translation, moreover, from the L&uitation of Professor 
Olivier Leroy. 

There are, of course, in various journals and magazines a number of 
articles dealing with mystical phenomena. But then it is by no means 
easy to track down old magazines. As anyone who has undertaken such 



INTRODUCTION 

research well knows to his cost, it involves much time, and much patience, 
since at best it gives a considerable amount of trouble. One has to be 
quite certain of the year and the month of issue of the journal in which 
the article appeared. Files of these journals are seldom available except 
in the largest Libraries. Very often, too, when one has found the article 
in question it proves of little value, which is rather disheartening as the 
outcome of a long and difficult quest. One cannot help feeling that if a 
writer's articles and essays are important they should not be allowed to 
be extravagantes, but deserve to be collected together in book form, 

In this present study, dealing with the Physical Phenomena of 
Mysticism, I have grouped these phenomena around Stigmatization, 
upon which (so far as I am aware) no book has been written in English. 
In saying this, it is, I think, quite legitimate to exclude The Stigmata: 
A History of Various Cases Translated from "The Mystik" ofGorres, Edited 
with a preface by the Rev. H. Austin, one volume, Richardson, Derby, 
1883. This is, truth to tell, a very thin, abridged, and attenuated version 
of two or three chapters from Gorres' monumental work. In any case, 
since it was published in 1883, it obviously cannot discuss the many 
recent pseudo-problems which concern, and "explanations" of, Stigmatiza- 
tion; I mean hypnotism, autosuggestion, psychoanalysis, and other 
pathologies. 

There is no work in English which corresponds to the immense 
investigations of Dr. Antoine Imbert-Gourbeyre of Clermont-Ferrand. 
His books have taken their place as classics, and must remain authoritative 
for all time. At least, humanly speaking, it is impossible to see how they 
can ever be superseded. The most important of Dr. Imbert-Gourbeyre's 
studies are: Les Stigmatises, 2 Vols., PalmS, Paris, 1872; La Stigma- 
tisation, 2 Vols., L. Bellet, Clermont-Ferrand; and the monograph 
L'Hypnotisme et la Stigmatisation, Bloud et Barral, Paris, 1899. 

It is with a full consciousness that these problems are very many, 
very intricate, and very profound that I have written this book. 

It is my pleasurable duty to thank Professor Allison Peers, Gilmour 
Professor of Spanish in the University of Liverpool, who has done so 
much to give us in England the Mystics of Spain, for his kind permission 
to quote from his many works, especially from those dealing with St. 
Teresa of Avila, and St. John of the Cross. 

I also have to thank the Editor of Argentor, the Quarterly Journal 
of the National Jewellers' Association, for kind permission to reproduce 
the illustration of St. Gregory the Great, Palazzo Ducale, Urbino. This 
illustration appeared in my article "Papal Tiaras", Argentor, January, 1947. 

The remaining illustrations are all from my own collection. 

MONTAGUE SUMMERS 
26th July, 1947. 
IN FESTO S. ANNJB, Avtae DSi. 

12 



CHAPTER ONE 

The Question Mysticism answers Derivation of the Word The Mysteries of Eleusis 

Dionysos Orpheus and his Mysteries Mystical Theology and the Areopagite 

St. Gregory the Great Contemplation The Categories of Mysticism. 

WHENCE? Why? Whither? The answer to these three questions is 
at once the explanation of and the reason for all religions. From the 
earliest dawn of conscious human intelligence to the very moment of 
penning or reading these words man is everlastingly asking himself, and 
always will be everlastingly asking himself, three questions. Where do I 
come from? Why am I here? Whither am I going? 

The high philosopher grows old through long years of concentrated 
study and intensest thought, not only researching into written records, 
the lofty message bequeathed by the greatest minds of all time, but 
more, unsparing of himself whilst deeply delving into the most hidden 
and complex recesses of his own brain, analysing his own abstruse specu- 
lations, painfully codifying his own actual experiences, and his reward 
comes when he triumphantly gives Ms reply, albeit voiced in terms which 
to the man in the street seem just bemused and fogged, idle prattle upon 
stammering lips, but which are (as he himself knows full well) crystal 
clear and pregnant with profoundest meaning. The business man, the 
man of affairs, in a general way has little inclination and less opportunity 
to follow up even trite but primary inquiries [1]. Yet he cannot altogether 
escape. Willy nilly, these problems force themselves upon him, maybe 
whilst he lies upon a bed of sickness, or in a day of depression and bereave- 
ment. And they are none the less importunate for their infrequency. 
He will evade them by a stupid agnosticism, or if he be foolish enough 
shirk the issue more brazenly and more contemptibly by a blank denial. 
More wisely, ignoring the pitiable bankruptcy of science falsely so-called 
he will have attached himself to, or perchance luckily have been born, 
and, as it were, naturalized into some set school of religious thought. 
And if he is sincerely convinced of the truth of, and so acts consistently 
in accordance with, the moral and spiritual precepts of his religion, so 
far, so good. But it is not very far after all. Even the ale-house sot must 
have his hour when his dreams are least drunken, least fevered and 
crapulent. Even the lowest, when his sodden senses rouse dimly, will 
sometimes come face to face with the question What is the meaning 
of it all? The finer the brain, the keener the intelligence, the more 
insistently does the riddle press for an answer. And as the Sphinx slew 
the man who could not solve her enigma, so a more awful death awaits 
those who refuse to attempt to find any answer to life's riddle, who 
counter the mystery with blank faces and sluggard denial. 

The Before, the Now, the Hereafter. Only religion, that is to say the 
spiritual history of the human race, can answer these questions, and the 
only religion is "a religion of veracity rooted in spiritual inwardness" [2], 
based upon a Divine and infallible authority. God, having winked at the 

13 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

times of ignorance, has brought mankind to the knowledge that "in him 
we live, and move, and have our being" [$]. 

The religious impulse is active conscious life, and, as Professor Leuba 
says, "conscious life is always orientated towards something to be secured 
or avoided immediately or ultimately". It is a very common error to 
mistake conversion [>] for religion, whereas it is hardly the first step 
it is more exactly an inclination to take the first step on the way. 
Professor Starbuck defines conversion as "a process of struggling away 
from sin rather than of striving towards righteousness" [3]. Religion is not 
a conscious "struggling away from". But it is a "striving towards" God. 
It is true that the "striving towards" inevitably involves the former, 
but this is almost per accidens, and it involves a very great deal more, 
until eventually and in its more perfect form it necessitates, as St. John 
of the Cross teaches us, a detachment from self. "Desire to possess 
nothing," [6] says the great Carmelite Doctor, "the mystic's mystic." 
But in possessing nothing man finds that he has gained everything. 
Mysticism is the very life-blood of religion. Before attempting any 
definition of this word Mysticism, it will be well to consider it stymo- 
logically, and incidentally to avail ourselves of what hints or help we 
may glean from its semantics and historical associations. 

Traditionally, and by very nearly the whole concensus of authority 
the word Mysticism is regarded as a derivative of the Greek jutfu, I ritually 
close my eyes and my mouth; hence, I keep an absolute silence [7]. There 
is a close connexion with pvtw, I give secret instruction, I initiate. 
The mystes (/^cmp) is one who has been initiated into profoundly esoteric 
knowledge of divine things, concerning which he is bound by a solemn 
vow to maintain an inviolable secrecy [5]. 

From the beginning then, the word is intimately related to the Greek 
mysteries [9]. It would hardly be too much to regard it as a purely 
technical, I might almost say a liturgical, term. 

There were several great Greek festivals during which divine emblems 
were shown under a veil of metaphor, and sacred symbolism was 
dramatized and enacted, the ceremonies sometimes taking a very 
grotesque form, as when young girls in honour of Artemis Agrotera, 
Artemis, Lady of the wild open places, the steppes and wolds, danced a 
"bear-dance", and were ritually known as bears 110]. This would certainly 
seem to point back to some far distant totem-cult when the tribe who 
worshipped the local goddess claimed some kind of spiritual kinship 
with the bear [11]. Originally, indeed, Artemis came from the cold bleak 
north, that is before later poets fabled her to have been born of Leto at 
Delos, and before at Ephesus she was identified with their Oriental deity, 
the nature-power, Mother of fertility and abundance. Again, Artemis of 
Brauron, an Attic village (now Vraona) near Marathon, was ruthlessly 
savage and cruel, delighting in blood, whilst in the Tauric Chersonese 
(the Crimea), "land of murderers", the horrors of human sacrifice lingered 
long [12], In later days Artemis was Hellenized. She became human and 
tender and fair, and was regarded as one with Diana, the chaste regent 
of the moon. 
14 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

Among the Greeks the chief Mysteries, that is to say solemn festivals 
with a profoundly esoteric significance, which was, however, often lost 
sight of although the ritual acts persisted, were the Thesmophoria, the 
Arrephoria, the Skirophoria, the Stenia, which were women's feasts [13], 
and in many respects almost identical. The Scholiast on Lucian [14], on 
the Hetairce (Dialogues of Courtezans, not altogether unlike a late Greek 
Ragionamenti] , regards the Arrephoria and the Skirophoria as parts of 
the Thesmophoria, the Arrephoria being a carrying of things not named, 
that is to say male sexual emblems, an ancient fertility rite. The Stenia 
is a ceremony of lesser importance, which, Photius [15] says took place 
at night. 

The mysteries of the Haloa, not celebrated by women alone, were 
according to Eustathius [Iff], who cites Pausanias, "a feast of Demeter 
and Dionysos", which is to say the conjunction of corn and the grape. 
Here the Hierophant presented the offerings, although priestesses solemnly 
attended. This is all most significant, and it is hardly too much to see a 
dim, and doubtless very vague foreshadowing, that sort of prototype 
of which ancient religions are full, of the one true Great Mystery, in which 
Bread and Wine are offered [17]. 

The Eleusinian Mysteries which must be distinguished from the 
festival Eleusinia [18] were a Ceremony so solemn, so sacred and august, 
as to stand away from (as it were) all other Greek Ritual rites, and they 
are well and wisely regarded as something altogether apart [19]. Their 
spiritual influence was enduring and immense. In fact it may be said 
that together with Orphism, with which occult philosophy they were 
largely infiltrated, the Eleusinian Mysteries were long the one spiritual 
influence of Greece. The other Mysteries I except the Mithraic Mysteries 
which belong to a later period the other Mysteries of Greece, at any rate, 
are no more than a fumbling in the dark, an endeavour, often praise- 
worthy enough within its limits, often pathetically childish and feeble, 
sometimes definitely twisted awry. At Eleusis we breathe a purer air, 
we sense the spiritual. Even now, after long centuries, anyone who has 
thoughtfully spent but a few hours at Eleusis can hardly fail keenly to 
realize the solemn associations of that place. Such was my experience 
during my own visits to the spot. 

Eleusis lies about fourteen miles west of Athens. It was an immense 
sanctuary, comprising buildings of all kinds, the enclosure containing 
numberless altars, shrines, chapels and ex-votos. The Hall of Initiation, 
Telesterion, itself measured one hundred and seventy square feet. The 
sacred precincts were destroyed in A.D. 396 by Alaric the Visigoth. To 
discuss the ritual of the Mysteries in fullest detail would demand much 
space, and is, moreover, a subject proper to the antiquarian and myth- 
ologist. None the less, a sufficient outline of the significant ceremonies 
must be essayed. 

The first and earliest stratum, so to speak, was no doubt the cult of 
the lady Demeter and her daughter, Kor5, the maiden, whose worship 
contained the live seeds of aspiration which blossomed into full fruit 
and flower with the inrush of Dionysos. The sad winter months, the fall 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

of the year, were renewed with the viridescence of young life, the spring- 
tide. It needs no very great preception to see how the Divine ordering 
of the universe thus in some sort pre-symbolized St. Anne, Our Lady, 
and the Birth of Our Lord. 

Dionysos, who is commonly regarded as the wine-god [20], is primarily 
the Spirit of Ecstatic Rapture (however induced), he is no mere physical 
inebriation. As Father Martindale strikingly writes: "He goes back to 
something deeper in human nature, more akin to Asia, whether nearer 
or more distant (I mean, India), where dreams and ecstasy are congenital, 
you would say" [21]. "Dionysos," says Dr. Gilbert Murray, "has given 
man Wine, which is his Blood and a religious symbol. He purifies from 
sin." "The religion of 'Dionysos' as Euripides found it, already mysticized 
and made spiritual . . . was exactly that kind . . . which lends itself 
to dramatic expression" [22]. The Bacchae of Euripides, probably produced 
at Athens in 405 B.C., which might be called The Triumph of Dionysos, 
is a sacred Mystery Play. 

Certain of Calderon's dramas at once recur in this connexion. Says 
Archbishop Trench [23] : "He took a manifest delight in finding or making 
a deeper meaning for the legends and tales of the classical world, seeing 
in them the symbols and unconscious prophecies of Christian truth. . . . 
Now it is the True God Pan, or Perseus rescuing Andromeda, or Theseus 
destroying the Labyrinth, or Ulysses defying the enchantments of Circe, 
or the exquisite mythus of Cupid and Psyche. Each in turn supplies 
him with some new poetical aspect under which to contemplate the very 
highest truth." Not the least lovely of these is El Divino Orfeo, the 
Divine Orpheus who descends into Hades to fetch back the soul He 
has wrested from Satan. 

Originally Dionysos came from the north, from Thrace [24], where 
his oracle-shrine was upon the heights of the mountains [25]. Late in 
the sixth century B.C. he is an Olympian, that is to say he has taken his 
place in the pantheon of the great Deities. In the Bacchae, however, he 
is born of SemelS, the Theban princess, and comes back to Thebes [26], 
having journeyed far and taught the world his choric ritual and dances. 
Strabo [27] notes that his orgiastic cult was Phrygian, and closely 
resembled the Corybantine rites of the Great Mother. The fact is that 
in his essentially spiritual signification Dionysos the Romans called 
him Liber, he who sets men free (in the highest sense, from sordid cares) 
belonged to all peoples; his titles, Bacchos, lacchos, Euios, Sabazios, 
and the rest are many; his activities manifold; and his mother Semel is 
the Earth. 

Before proceeding to a consideration of the ceremonial of the 
Eleusinian Mysteries it may be convenient here to devote some attention 
to the figure of Orpheus, whose Ritual and Mythology are so inextricably 
mixed and intertwined with those of Dionysos. As early as 450 B.C. at 
least and probably long before, the liturgy of Dionysos and that of 
Orpheus were considered to be identical. The historian Herodotus in his 
description of Egypt remarking upon the ancient traditions of the country 
observes that it is accounted profane for any to be buried in woollen 

16 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

cerements and, he says, in this they agree with Bacchic and Orphic 
rituals which, in sooth, are really Egyptian and Pythagorean [28]. In 
the Hippolytus of Euripides acted at Athens, 429 B.C., at one of the tensest 
moments of the tragedy when Thessus upbraids his son, the old hero 
cries: 

"Go revel in thy Bacchic rites 
With Orpheus for thy Lord and King" [29]. 

Later, Appollodorus has no doubt that Orpheus "invented the Mysteries 
of Dionysos" [80]. 

The poetic fable of Orpheus is well known. He is the master musician, 
the lord of sweetest harmony: 

Orpheus, with his Lute, made Trees, 
And the Mountain tops, that freeze 
Bow themselves when he did sing. 

He loves the nymph Eurydice, who at her nuptials is bitten by a venomous 
snake, and dies. Broken-hearted and bereft, he seeks his bride in the 
nether world, and by the magic of his music charms even the monsters 
and horrid powers of Hades, singing: 

Such notes as warbled to the string, 
Drew Iron tears down Pluto's cheek, 
And made Hell grant what Love did seek. 

So it is conceded him that he shall lead Eurydice back to life on condition 
that he does not look behind him, not even a moment's glance, whilst 
they go. Just before they reach the upper air his longing is so intense 
that he turns, only to see her vanish into mists and darkness. The gate 
is shut, no more to be opened. Thus far the poets, Vergil, Ovid, and the 
rest. The legend is continued in various ways. All forlorn, Orpheus 
withdraws to Rhodope (to-day called Despoto Dagh), a mountain range 
in Thrace, a part of the Haemus (Great Balkan), and here he charms even 
inanimate nature, and the wild untamed animals become gentle and 
loving as he sings. A change takes place in him. Poliziano in his exquisitely 
beautiful "Fable" or melo-tragedy Orfeo [32] makes Orpheus sing: 

He who would seek my converse, let him see 
That ne'er he talk of woman's love to me! 
How pitiful is he who changes mind 
For woman! for her love laments or grieves! 
Who suffers her in chains his will to bind, 
Or trusts^ her words lighter than withered leaves, 
Her loving looks more treacherous than the wind! 
A thousand times she veers; to nothing cleaves; 
Follows who flies; from him who follows, flees; 
And comes and goes like waves on stormy seas! 
High Jove confirms the truth of what I said, 
Who, caught and bound in love's delightful snare, 
B 17 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

Enjoys in heaven his own bright Ganymede; 
Phoebus on earth had Hyacinth the fair; 
Hercules, conqueror of the world, was led 
Captive to Hylas by this love so rare 
Advice for husbands! Seek divorce, and fly 
Far, far away from female company! 

We here meet with an extremely ancient tradition, and it would seem to 
indicate that in some districts, and at some time, women were not without 
difficulty rigidly excluded from the Orphic Mysteries. It is significant 
that Ovid in the Metamorphoses X, follows up his account of the retirement 
of Orpheus to Mount Rhodope with the stories of Cyparissus, Ganymede, 
and Hyacinthus [33]. The legend continues that the Thracian women, 
the Maenads, the Bassarids, celebrating in wildest fashion the orgies of 
Dionysos, in fury at his sentiments spreta injuria forma tear Orpheus 
in a thousand pieces, most horribly mangling his limbs. But Dionysos, 
sore grieved at the death of the bard of his sacred rites, Ovid tells, terribly 
punishes his frenzied votaries for the evil they have done. He transforms 
them slowly into oak-trees and fearful are their agonies as their bodies 
cruddle and harden into knotty wood. It is no exaggeration to say that 
a whole library of studies and monographs has collected around the 
death, and debated the reason for the death, of Orpheus, which generations 
of scholars regard as of cardinal importance. 

There are few gaps, in Greek literature, to be more regretted than that 
lost play by Aeschylus, whose subject was the slaying of Orpheus by the 
Maenads. We know little even of his Dionysian trilogy, The Edonians, 
The Bassarids, and The Young Men, with a satyric drama Lycurgus as 
the supplement. The first piece showed the advent of Dionysos in Thrace, 
and the third with a Chorus of youths, votaries of the god, exalted the 
triumph of their deity. One tradition related how Orpheus had been slain 
by Zeus, because he prematurely revealed the Mysteries to man. This 
legend, however, won little acceptance and is generally disregarded. This, 
at least, is certain, that the death of, and the subsequent divine honours 
paid to, Orpheus were closely connected with the worship of Dionysos. 

In all its complexities and implications the legend of Orpheus he 
was in early days made a Sun-god, Helios himself, or a high-priest and 
heirophant of the Divine Sun [34], who is inextricably combined with 
Dionysos, and, again, at other times a separate deity or hero, was indelibly 
stamped upon the imagination, and permeated the religion of Greece. 

Dr. Gilbert Murray well says that the Religion of Dionysos, "already 
mysticized and made spiritual", "is hard to formulate or even describe, 
both because of its composite origins and because of its condition of 
constant vitality, fluctuation, and development". 

Professor Lewis Campbell admirably sums up the importance of 
Orphism in the following sentences: "The Orphic ritual may be credited 
with two great contributions to religion the belief in immortality, and 
the idea of personal holiness." Each contribution was made more valuable 
by the fact that both were combined, so that without holiness blessedness 

18 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

could not be secured hereafter. A third contribution was "the idea of 
redemption or of atonement which entered largely into this religion" [36]. 

The idea of survival after death as expressed in the Homeric poems 
is very feeble and unreal. There was a survival, and that is practically 
all that can be said. The soul is a mere wraith. "The living heart is not 
in it," it is "strengthless" [37]. The ghosts, whom Odysseus calls up, are 
empty shadows, until they have drunk of the spilth of new blood they 
cannot speak. They are "the thoughtless dead, the phantoms of men 
whose life is dead". Thus when Odysseus addressed the wispy shade of 
Achilles, he straightway made answer: "Console me not in death, noble 
Odysseus! Would rather that I were a bondman of the glebe, the serf 
of a master hard and harsh, of some poor man, whose living was but 
scanty and sparse, than thus to be king of all the nations of the dead" [38}. 
Even in the JEneid when ^Eneas tried to embrace the "infelix simulacrum" 
of his lost Creusa he clasps the empty air, her figure is unsubstantial as 
the breeze and vanishes away like a swift dream fleets at morn. Precisely 
the same passage occurs when ./Eneas in the underworld would clasp in 
his arms his father Anchises [39]. The poor ghosts gibber and wail like 
a thin wind. It is all very depressing and rather grim. 

How entirely different the glorious vision of St. Rose of Lima, when 
she appeared to Diego Jacinto Paceco, a copyist who earned his liveli- 
hood by engrossing legal documents, but who was seized with agonizing 
writer's cramp so that his right-hand and whole arm were paralysed. 
Starvation, or the most abject beggary, seemed his fate. But there 
entered his room a Dominican nun, who smilingly sat down at his bedside, 
took the arm in her hands and stroked it gently. There was a spasm of 
pain, and the arm and hand were perfectly cured, and remained so until 
the day of his death. He was, in fact, able to write more clearly and with 
greater speed than ever before. This was not many years after Saint 
Rose's death, and seeing her portrait he at once recognized his visitant. 
After her death, Blessed Colomba of Rieti several times appeared in her 
convent and spoke with various sisters. She embraced the Prioress, 
Mother Cecilia, who said that the fragrance of her habit was like that of 
lilies, and the Mother distinctly felt upon her forehead a warm and 
loving kiss. Blessed Colomba also appeared in a Dominican convent at 
Mantua, where the sisters took her for one of the community. Here she 
talked with and affectionately embraced that astonishing mystic Osanna 
Andreasi, whose life has been written by the Bishop of Ceneda, Monsignor 
Corradino Cavriani. Similar examples might be almost endlessly multiplied. 

Greek religion generally, then, could only glimpse a very indefinite 
and vague sort of survival, but the teaching of the Eleusinian Mysteries, 
and herein lay an inexhaustible source of strength, utterly rejected this 
false spectral phantomry. The future life offered to the mystics was rich 
and real in one sense more real than this life it was a state of supreme 
happiness and full content. That the Eleusinian Mysteries were an 
intensely spiritual and permanently elevating influence the greatest 
thinkers and gravest minds of Greece proclaim with one accord. Sophocles, 
most ethical and dignified of ancient poets, hymns the sublime felicity of 

19 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

the Initiated, both in this life and in the life beyond. Plato, in his highest 
flight of contemplation, his most transcendental wisdom, takes the 
liturgical phrases and consecrated words of the Mysteries as fittest 
vehicles of his inward vision. Plutarch, again, writes that to die is to be 
fully initiated into the Great Mysteries, that then man is truly restored 
to liberty, has complete mastery over self, and crowned with myrtle 
holds communion with holy and pure souls, while the profane, worldlings, 
besotted and blind, the uninitiated, find their own level, lapsing into 
utter darkness and blackest night. The devout Marcus Aurelius, who 
reigned A.IX 180-192, a man in whom it has been well said "natural religious 
philosophy reached its brightest" his letters are full of references to 
prayer during his visit to Athens was solemnly initiated into the 
Eleusinian Mysteries. 

The ritual, in one or two details may seem to us a little crude, even 
grotesque, but it has to be borne in mind that, hallowed by antiquity, 
primitive elements which could not be discarded, enter in. 

There was a period of nine days preparation, a novena, since the 
Great Mother, Demeter, bearing torches in her hands, wandered for nine 
days. Porphyry says that "at Eleusis a public proclamation is made that 
the mystics must abstain from barn-door fowls, from fish and from beans, 
and from the pomegranate, and from apples. To touch any of which 
utterly defiles/' 

The solemnity commenced on the thirteenth day of the month 
Boedromion, that is to say about the end of September, when the Epheboi 
(the Young Men), marshalled by the Kosmeter, went in procession to 
Eleusis, to return to Athens escorting the Sacra (itpd), which were 
carried, carefully veiled from view, by priests, whilst occasionally it 
would seem that priestesses assisted. The Sacra were taken to the 
Eleusinion at the foot of the Acropolis, and here they remained, strictly 
guarded until the nineteenth day of Boedromion. What were these 
Sacra, Holy Things? In the first pkce, they could not be seen by the 
worshippers, at any rate without terrible profanation, until the votaries 
had undergone certain ceremonial purifications, and had been duly 
instructed in the occult meaning and esotery of these objects. They were, 
in fact, extremely significant symbols. 

The fifteenth day of Boedromion was occupied with the assembling 
of the Neophytes, youths who were candidates for initiation. In a solemn 
address delivered to the gathering in the Painted Chapter-house (Stoa 
Poikile) at Eleusis, the Hierophant admonished all present to observe the 
ritual with most rigid punctilio, and proceeded to interdict and debar 
any with hands unclean, any who spoke an uncouth savage tongue. 

A ceremony of essential importance took place upon the sixteenth 
of Boedromion, a day popularly known as "AAafo /*wrr<u, "To the salt 
sea, ye mystics all!" from the liturgical cry that heralded the act of 
purification in the sea. Clement of Alexandria says: "With good reason 
amongst the Greeks in the Mysteries a Ceremonial Purification takes 
the first place/' 

The Mystics went in procession to the sea, and it is curious to find 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

that this procession was technically known as 4'Xoo-ts, a driving forth, in 
other words a driving out of evil. Each man took with him a young 
sucking pig. When they arrived at the sea, which is six miles from 
Eleusis, the votaries bathed therein to deanse themselves, morally not 
physically, and the pig also was washed and purified. This ceremony of 
the animal purification is one of the primitive elements in the Mysteries, 
a detail which to us seems extraordinary, and, it maybe, unbecoming 
the solemnity. We can only compare it with the ritual of the scapegoat, 
"And when he hath made an end of reconciling the holy place, and the 
tabernacle of the congregation, and the altar, he shall bring the live 
goat; And Aaron shall lay both his hands upon the live goat, and confess 
over him all the iniquities of the children of Israel, and all their trans- 
gressions in all their sins, putting them upon the head of the goat, and 
shall send him away by the hand of a fit man into the wilderness. And 
the goat shall bear upon him all their iniquities unto a land not inhabited: 
and he shall let go the goat in the wilderness." Leviticus xvi, 20-22, 
(A.V.). And so in some sense the "caper emissarius" parallels the pig of 
purification. The pig was so important that when Eleusis minted her 
autonomous money, 350-327 B.C., the pig of purification is stamped upon 
one face of her coins. 

Purification in the sea was symbolic, but (it cannot be too strongly 
emphasized) not merely mechanical. This point has been widely mis- 
understood, and whilst abuses may have existed, these were guarded 
against so far as was humanly possible, and the idea of an automatic 
purgation repudiated. The Roman poet Ovid in his liturgical poem 
the Fasti comments upon the primitive belief that murder, or the stain 
of blood, can be deterged by ablutions. 

A! nimium forties, qui tristia crimina caedis 
Fluminea iolli posse putetis aqua! 

A couplet which old John Cower 1 , "Master of Arts, and sometime of Jesus 
College'', Cambridge, in his version of the Fasti quaintly renders: 

Ah, too, too silly, who imagine water 

Can wash away that heavy crime of slaughter. 

At the same time it must not be forgotten that pure water is a holy 
element, that certain natural things are in a very real sense hallowed of 
themselves, purifying and protective. The learned Bishop Binsfeld in his 
De Confessione Maleficarum has much to say very profoundly on this 
point. Divine Providence has given us, for example, herbs of virtue and 
healing, and from one point of view all that the Creator has made is 
worthy of respect. It is, of course, a very particular instance, and one 
in which the water has received a supreme sanctification, but the water 
of Lourdes (without, humanly speaking, any curative property per se) 
has restored to health hundreds of crass unbelievers. The Greeks believed 
in the cleansing power of "Waters at their priest-like task", and, myself, 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

I am extremely sceptical of this notion of a * 'mechanical purgation 1 '. To 
gauge an intention or even feelings at any given instant or in any given 
instance is scarcely possible. 

The purification was followed by a sacrifice, which was a sacrament 
as well as a gift-offering to Mother Demeter. 

Upon the igth-zoth of the month Boedromion (September-early 
October) came the Solemnity of the return of the Sacra to Eleusis with 
the ritual carrying of the statue of the fair boy-god, lakkhos, from 
Athens to Eleusis. "The procession which set forth at sunrise did not 
come to Eleusis until a late hour of the night, a night made day by the 
thousands of torches borne by the Mystics." lakkhos was identified with 
Dionysos, and is in fine the rapture, beauty, and inspiration of youth. 
Strabo [48] quite clearly says: 'They call Dionysos, lakkhos who is the 
live spirit and glad inspiration of the Mysteries of Demeter." At Eleusis, 
under the golden stars which spangled heaven's dark blue dome, the 
Mystics celebrated high festival. There followed very many ceremonies, 
sacrifices, prayers at shrines innumerable. Of priests, ministers and 
acolytes there were no less than twenty grades, and it is notable that the 
Supreme Hierophant and the High Priestess, when once they had been 
appointed, were never again known or alluded to by their secular names. 

A fast followed [49], the sacramental Kykeon was drunk. Eustathius 
says that kykeon meant a food between meat and liquid, a kind of rich 
broth, we may suppose. The initiated then solemnly took the Holy Things 
from the chest, placed them in the appointed repositories, and after a 
short space replaced them in the chest. The handling of the Sacred Things, 
venerating them, and returning them to their original coffers, must have 
had some significance we do not know, or at best can but partially 
guess at [60]. Meanwhile the hierophant delivered a homily. There is a 
passage in Tertullian Adversus Valentinianos, which throws considerable 
light upon this mystery. It is hinted that there was in some cases a 
further, and more occult initiation by the Epoptes, the master mystic. 
There seems to have been, we might venture to say, an inner circle whose 
teaching and cult was Orphism. Upon the second night of vigil were 
presented what may perhaps be best described, or at least thought of as 
Mystery Plays. Only a select number of those who had been initiated, 
not less than a year before, were admitted to these, and, even after a 
most careful scrutiny, entrance could not be obtained without showing 
a secret token and replying to the pass-words. We must be careful not 
to think of these sacred plays as anything in the nature of a theatrical 
performance, but rather as an act of worship. 

In some romantic and exquisitely poetical manner, we do not know 
how, they presented the legend of the lady Demeter and Kore the maiden, 
her daughter. There was, no question, elaborate and most effective 
liturgical symbolism. The ceremonial of a mimetic marriage, the celestial 
union of Heaven and Earth, Zeus and Demeter; the birth rites of Dionysos 
Zagreus; the adolescence of Dionysos the bridegroom; and other myths 
were shown. The god was slain by the wicked, and it would seem dis- 
membered, as Orpheus was torn to pieces by the raving Maenads of 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

Thrace. But for all his death he was immortal, and he appeared triumphant, 
radiant with glory, to confirm the faith of his votaries. The history of 
the soul in the after-world was shown. Meanwhile the choirs chanted 
litanies and hymns, sweetest frankincense was burned, and from time to 
time the solemn voice of the hierophant declaimed rhythmic invocations. 
The Mystics were wrought up to the highest pitch of ecstasy. As Father 
Martindale admirably sums up the effect of the whole: The Mystics "were 
subjected to a series of thrills, of violent alternations of light and darkness, 
of exhibition of symbols, of abstinence followed by rhythmic movements 
and processions. No one can fail to see how profound a nervous impression 
could thus be administered to a very unsophisticated, or again, an over- 
sophisticated clientele/' 

There were many other Mysteries besides the Eleusinian Mysteries. 
Smaller Mysteries, imitative Mysteries, local Mysteries, Mysteries which 
centred round the cults of tribal deities or even of heroes. There were 
too, in the course of time, Mysteries celebrated by vagrom priests and 
seers. The itinerant charlatan faquir had his following. Lucian in his 
Alexander draws a full length portrait of one of these pseudo-mystagogues 
and his quackeries. Abuses crept in and scandals. Apuleius of Madaura, 
who lived and wrote under Antoninus Pius and Marcus Aurelius (roughly, 
A.D. 160-192), draws a vivid vignette in his Metamorphoses of the votaries 
of the Syrian Goddess and their depravities, and the old high-priest who 
curses by Sabazios (a Phrygian Dionysos [52]), and Bellona, and the 
Idaean Mother (Cybele), and Venus, and Adonis. On the other hand 
this must be balanced by the exquisite rapture of the description by 
Apuleius again of the true Mysteries, chapters in which, it has been well 
said, "a pure mysticism and sublimity of emotion ... an ecstatic 
adoration of God is manifested in language and thought never equalled, 
still less surpassed save in the inspired writers of the Church" [53]. Rome 
was horrified when Publius, the profligate Publius Clodius, profaned the 
Mysteries of the Bona Dea, and Juvenal [64] is never more scathing than 
when he denounced the "perverted Rites" of the Baptae, "polluted priests" 
of the Thracian, afterwards Athenian, goddess Cotytto, 

Corruptio optimi pessima! Lilies, that fester, smell far worse than 
Weeds. "Later on the Mysteries became a money-making affair; and 
no one who observes the normal reactions to fierce religious nervous 
strain can be surprised that Christian Fathers rail bitterly at the 
obscenities accompanying, or following, these (lesser) rites" [55]. 

The Eleusinian Mysteries, however, and this is a most important 
point, preserved their pristine purity of intention, their solemn and 
august ceremonial. Had it been otherwise, that chaste and single soul, 
Marcus Aurelius, would not have been initiated. 

There is, however, ampler proof of the unblemished virtue and high 
morality of the Eleusinian Mysteries, of I do not hesitate to say their 
hallowing (within their own natural limits, be it strictly understood) 
than this. Fathers and Saints of the Church, not without a purpose, 
have sanctified and legitimatized many terms and phrases used in the 
Mysteries by applying them to the Divine faith and inspired practice 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

of the Catholic Church. That they were guided to do so, nobody can 
doubt. The shadow has become a living substance. This is indeed a 
very beautiful and wonderful thing. It is a Divine testimony to the 
Catholicity of the Church. Dean Inge has admirably said: "A doctrine 
or custom is not necessarily un-Christian because it is "Greek" or pagan. 
I know of no stranger perversity than for men who rest the whole weight 
of their religion upon "history", to suppose that our Lord meant to raise 
a universal religion on a purely Jewish basis" [66]. St. Paul said: "Ex 
hoc ad gentes vadam" (Acts, xviii, 6). 

When the clearer light dawned, Mysticism acquired a fuller and 
profounder signification than could possibly have been conceived by 
even the greatest minds of Greece and Rome, than could have been 
grasped by the most single and purest of Eleusinian or Egyptian occultists. 
Their rituals, exquisitely beautiful and deeply symbolical as they were, a 
quittance of earthly taint, a spiritual cleansing, a gazing up to the golden 
stars, fall and must necessarily have fallen far far short of the Divine 
Ordinances, when the Way to the Absolute God was manifested infallibly, 
most truly and unmistakably, once and for all ages of ages. But the 
Divine Spark was not quenched ; it was rather kindled into a Living Flame. 

One of the great problems discussed by Clement of Alexandria in the 
Stromata, written about A.D. 200, is the value of Hellenic philosophy to 
a Christian. This great thinker does not hesitate quite boldly to say that 
Hellenic philosophy is one of God's gifts and salutary. The part which it 
plays in the world's thought is most assuredly secondary and preparative, 
but none the less it is beneficial. "In philosophy there is philosophical 
truth, and so in Hellenic philosophy there is Hellenic truth. But there 
is only one great truth, beyond human conception, that is the Son of 
God Who Himself and none other teaches it to us and makes us under- 
stand/ 1 (Strom., I, xx, 97, i-ioo, i.) "The truth which is manifested in 
Hellenic philosophy is but partial truth." (Strom., VI, x, 83, 2.) Christ 
is the Truth. What is, within its own limitation, true of philosophy, is 
even more true in the case of the Mysteries. It must be remembered that 
St. Jerome, De viris iUustribus, xxxviii, St. Cyril of Alexandria, In 
Julianum VI, and other Saints and doctors praise Clement very highly. 

At this point it is essential to make quite plain and precisely define, 
even to meticulousness, the meaning which is connoted in this study by 
the words "Mysticism", "Mystic". It is safe to write that no vocable in 
the English language has been misused in such variations and vagaries, 
so misunderstood, so distorted in endless, question-begging, irrelative, 
and often meaningless contraditions as the term "Mysticism". 

Dean Inge in his Christian Mysticism gives an Appendix (A), culled 
from authors of many centuries, of no less than six-and-twenty explana- 
tions. This proves a valuable comment and illuminating [57], It is unex- 
aggerated to say that a clear nineteen of these enucleations, particularly 
the more garrulous and verbose, display an almost incredible misappre- 
hension of the subject and term; many are just ignorant, some perverse, 
some actually mischievous and travestied. 

The word "mystic", as we have seen, was originally used in connexion 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

with the Greek Religious Mysteries, particularly the Eleusinian Mysteries. 
The Christian use of the word is due to the author known as Dionysius 
the Areopagite, who was long traditionally identified with the convert [58] 
of St. Paul, by apostolic authority consecrated Bishop of Athens, and 
afterwards Bishop of Paris. Under the ninth Day of October the Roman 
Martyr ology has: "At Paris, the natalitia of the Holy Martyrs Dionysius 
the Areopagite, Bishop; Rusticus, a Priest; and Eleutherius, a Deacon; 
of whom Dionysius, being baptized by St. Paul the Apostle, was conse- 
crated First Bishop of Athens, after which, coming to Rome, he was sent 
as a missionary by Blessed Pope Clement I into France to preach unto 
the heathen folk, the Gauls, and having his see at Paris (Lutetia 
Parisiorum) for many years he most faithfully fulfilled the office of a good 
and vigilant Prelate, after which he suffered martyrdom, being beheaded 
by the sword together with his companions, all of whom had endured the 
most exquisite tortures. This took place under the prefect Fescennius" 

[591. 

The Christian use of the word "Mysticism", then, is due to St. Dionysius 
the Areopagite, whose teachings on this subject are presented to us by 
a religious writer, probably of the earlier part of the fifth century, who 
gave the title Mystical Theology to a little treatise of five chapters, brief 
but most profound, in which he sets forth and formulates his teaching 
upon this subject. He claims to have derived much from the teaching of 
St. Bartholomew, and although no writings of this Apostle are extant, it 
is more than probable that Dionysius is actually deriving from the 
original source. We know from the Scriptures that St. Bartholomew 
was a contemplative and mystic of the highest order [60]. 

St. Dionysius in his very first chapter, at the outset, insists that the 
mystic, or he who aspires to tread the mystic way, "in the concentrated 
and wholly intent practice of mystical contemplation* ', must abandon 
the things which are merely intellectual and the conceptions of the 
intellect, all perceptions, indeed, conveyed by the senses, "all things 
which are not and likewise things which are", and thus, human under- 
standing being wholly laid to sleep, he must with mighty effort and not 
without travail and toil strain upwards to union with Him, Who is 
above all understanding and beyond all knowledge. So the mystic will 
attain to that divine Darkness which is radiant Light [61]. 

St. John of the Cross, the mystic of mystics, writes: "The soul must 
not only be disencumbered from that which belongs to the creatures, but 
likewise, as it journeys on, it must be annihilated and detached from all 
that belongs to its spirit" [62]. This is a hard saying, and it may be as 
well to emphasize here that these experiences and aspirations and 
completest self-emptyings are only for those who dwell on the most 
rarefied heights. As in heaven, so in mysticism, there are many mansions. 

Tauler the Dominican speaks of the mystic being utterly emptied by 
God, so that he may be completely filled with God. 

According to Dionysius, who, as Abbot Butler says, being "the Father 
of scientific Mystical Theology, is rightly given the first place", according 
to the Areopagite, then, as essential (we might say the essential) of 

25 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

mysticism is "the intent practice of mystic contemplation", a striving, 
in which, as Blessed John Ruysbroeck makes clear, "two spirits strive 
together; the Spirit of God and our own spirit* '. 

In the West for centuries the word which was in use was Contemplation 
and not Mysticism. Even when Mysticism became a current term, the 
old word "Contemplation" still held. Consequently, " 'Contemplation' is 
the word that will be met with in St. Augustine, St. Gregory, and St. 
Bernard, to designate what is now commonly called 'the mystical 
experience' ". 

The mystical experience is nothing else than Union with God, and the 
Great Mystics all teach that this experience is literally, although momen- 
tarily, or at least temporarily, the enjoyment upon earth, whilst in the 
body, of the Bliss of Heaven. 

St. Augustine, whom it may be observed, Professor Allison Peers [07], 
following Abbot Butler, considers the "Prince of Mystics", "for in his 
own field he can have no rival", in his Confessions has the extraordinary 
phrase quoted below, a phrase astounding in its simplicity, overwhelming 
in its profundity. 

Abbot Butler and Professor Peers in their praise of St. Augustine 
follow the train of a long line of writers. "Eximius pater," Erasmus hails 
the saint, "most excellent and admirable Father," and "chiefest among 
the most lustrous Lights of Holy Church." Dr. Conel in his Answer to 
John Surges (p. 3), writes that the Bishop of Hippo was "a man far 
beyond all that ever were before him, or shall in likelihood follow after 
him, both for divine and human learning, those only being excepted 
that were inspired", that is those of the canon of Sacred Scripture. Dr. 
Field, Of The Church, calls him "the greatest of all the Fathers, and the 
worthiest divine the Church of God ever had since the Apostles' time". 
The learned Forester (Monas. Thessagraph, in proem, p. 3.), writes that 
St. Augustine is "The Monarch of the Fathers". 

Incidentally the Proper Collect [68] of St. Augustine commences thus: 
"Deus, qui abditiora sapientiae tuae arcana beato Patri Augustino 
(revelasti), Lord God, Who has revealed to our Blessed Father Augustine 
the most close and hidden secrets of Thy Heavenly Wisdom . . .", 
words of much significance. St. Augustine, then, in one of his sublimest 
apostrophes cries: "(Mens mea) pervenit ad id, quod est, in ictu trepidantis 
aspectus, tune vero invisibilia tua per ea quae facta sunt intellecta 
conspexi, sed aciem figere non evalui. My mind in the swift flash of a 
motitation, attained to the Absolute Being, the Ultimate and Only 
Reality, All that Is. Then, of a truth, I saw and understood What is 
Invisible comprehended by Things Created. Yet I could not sustain the 
sight of Infinity and Eternal Reality. It was a glimpse, transient, a 
second's space" [69]. 

Contemplation (i.e. Mysticism), again, according to St. Augustine is 
"the conscious and direct striving to grasp and understand those things 
which truly and in absolute reality ARE", and, when apprehended, the 
mind reaches "an entire enjoyment of the Highest and Real Good", 
and man eventually attains to "the Ultimate Cause, the First Principle, 
26 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

the Highest Motivity, the Divine Kinetic Energy, whereby all things 
were made and exist" [70]. 

It must be emphasized that this is not merely a possible, but an 
actual experience. Not unseldom mystics have attained this state, 
although (as the Saint remarks) commonly it does not endure. Yet it 
can hardly be called rare, and in the higher grades of mysticism it is, 
perhaps, not unusual. 

This transcendent experience, beyond spirit, beyond self, was by one 
school of mystics termed "Unknowing", since knowledge implies a percep- 
tion which is able to differentiate one thing from other things, and funda- 
mentally postulates the ability to separate this thing from that. But in 
the Unitive Life all is one. There is no desire for, and hence no faculty 
of differentiation. As it was said: Abide in me, and I in you. "Manete 
in me, et ego in vobis" (St. John, xv, 4). And again: I am in my Father, 
and ye in me, and I in you. And the consummation of mysticism is: 
That they all may be one: as thou, Father, art in me, and I in thee, that 
they also may be one in us. "Ut omnes unum sint, sicut tu Pater in me, 
et ego in te, ut et ipsi in vobis unum sint." It should be remarked that 
the Latin unum conveys a union which can hardly be conveyed, or at 
least not so emphatically and completely conveyed, in English (St. John, 
xvii, 21). 

In the second half of the fourteenth century we have the English 
treatise The Cloud of Unknowing, the author of which has not been 
identified. It is the work of a contemplative of the highest order, and 
one who was saturated with the spirit of the Areopagite. It is almost 
certain that the same mystic made the first translation of the Theologia 
Mystica, Dionise His Divinite, a work which in the ages of faith "rar 
across England like deere". 

We may recall Maritain's remark that "to believe, humanly speaking, 
is much less than to know; but to believe by supernatural faith is much 
more, incomparably more, than to know in a natural way". 

It is hardly an exaggeration to say that the teaching of St. Augustine 
was authoritatively passed on the word ''popularized" has not unfittingly 
been used by St. Gregory the Great (reigned A.D. 590-604), who was 
steeped in and, perhaps sometimes unconsciously, reproduced the doctrine of 
the Bishop of Hippo [77]. We shall find much in St. Gregory, it is true, 
which, if not entirely new, at any rate opens up new ideas and fresh 
suggestions. A monk, yet, as called to be first a Papal Nuncio, and then 
Supreme Head of the Church, actively engaged in many businesses, St. 
Gregory looks upon Contemplation as one of the most desirable and 
pleasant of all things, yet not such a repose and a reward as God allots 
to all, since many are called to the active life, to battle in the world in the 
Divine service, and inasmuch they are so called for them this is the 
highest vocation. 

St. Gregory's celebrated Homilies on Ezechiel [72] contain his most 
noteworthy and detailed observations upon Contemplation, and it is 
here that occurs the famous passage contrasting and relatively balancing 
the question of the Two Lives, that is to say the Contemplative Life and 

27 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

the Active Life. He utilizes and expounds in detail the illustration of 
Mary of Bethany and her sister Martha (St. Luke, x, 38-42). "Maria, sedens 
secus pedes Domini, audiebat verbum illius. Martha autem satagebat 
circa frequens ministerium." Mary, sitting at the feet of the Lord, 
hearkened intently to His words. Martha, however, was busily engaged 
in serving. St. Gregory emphasizes that Martha's occupation is not 
blamed. But Mary is praised as having chosen the best part. The Active 
Life, as typified by Martha, ceases with this world. The Contemplative 
Life, as typified by Mary, does not so cease but is continued eternally, 
more fully unto completest perfection. St. Gregory does not, I think, 
remark that it is not the service of Martha which is referred to in Christ's 
reply, but the remonstrance is addressed to her on account of her rebuke 
of her sister. Service is praiseworthy and good. To be critical of others, 
whose service differs from our own, is blamed. Parenthetically, I may 
observe that the word "cumbered" which is used in the Authorized Version 
"Martha was cumbered about much serving" has led to much mis- 
interpretation and a good deal of popular and long-seated misunder- 
standing. The word is very expressive, and its employment in this 
passage is all the more unfortunate because it is so expressive. 

In the same Homily, to which reference has just been made (On 
Ezechiel, II, ii), St. Gregory formally defines "the two lives of which we 
learn from the written word of Almighty God, namely, the active life 
and the contemplative". The active life consists, for the greater part, 
in what are known as "corporal works of mercy", to wit, feeding the 
hungry, instructing the ignorant, nursing and caring for the sick, doing 
good to all men so far as lies in us. Our Lord Himself by His own example 
taught us all these things. He fed the hungry with loaves and fishes, as 
is recorded in all four gospels; He "taught as one having authority"; 
He healed the sick; He went about doing good. We have then the Highest 
example and divine precept in the active life. 

But when we remember the three years of active ministry we must 
not forget the thirty years of contemplative life. As William Blake writes 
in The Everlasting Gospel: 

What was He doing all that time, 
From twelve years old to manly prime? 
Was He then idle, or the less 
About His Father's business? 

St. Gregory says that the contemplative life consists in "having ever 
a lively love of God and one's neighbour, yet to rest from exterior 
activities and not concern oneself in businesses, but to cleave closely and 
solely to the desire for God, whence the mind has no pleasure in aught 
else, and is unconcerned with the world outside, so that, all cares being 
cast away, the mystic burns to see the Face of his Creator". 

The mystic may be called from his retirement, and he obeys. At the 
word of his sometime pupil, Blessed Urban II, who became Pope in 1088, 
St. Bruno, the Father of the Carthusians, without a murmur left his 
28 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

solitude among the mountains, and in 1089 betook himself to Rome to 
assist with his aid and advice the new Pontiff in the ruling of a tumultuous 
and brawling court, distracted with political quarrels and clamouring. 
St. Bruno was one of the greatest of anchorites, whose sole happiness was 
uninterrupted contemplation. Beckford [73] says that "Saint Bruno was 
certainly a mighty genius; I admire the motives which drew him to this 
desert", the Grande Chartreuse, a "wonderfully wild" spot. But "the 
request of Christ's vicegerent was not to be refused; and Bruno quitted 
his beloved solitude". "The pomp of the Roman court soon disgusted the 
rigid Bruno, who always poetical, singular and visionary, had weaned 
himself entirely from worldly affections. Being wholly intent on futurity, 
the bustle and tumults of a busy metropolis became so irksome that he 
supplicated Urban for leave to retire; and, having obtained it, left Rome, 
and immediately seeking the wilds of Calabria, there sequestered himself 
in a lonely hermitage." Beckford who, during his stay at the Grande 
Chartreuse, took occasion to read St. Bruno's works, remarks that they 
dwell on "the delights of solitude" and are "full of enthusiasm". 

The point is that the most ascetical and eremitical anchorite, St. 
Bruno, one of the profoundest contemplatives in all history, did not 
hesitate at the bidding of authority and the call of duty to repair to the 
world's metropolis, to take up a burden of political activities and share 
in the crowded life of a court. 

Of St. John of the Cross, a nun wrote: "It always seemed that his soul 
was at prayer." Yet it was said of him "he had a great gift for govern- 
ment." He was the bulwark and stay of St. Teresa, the Foundress of no 
less than seventeen convents of the Discalced. St. John, then, certainly 
had to exercise very actively his genius for organization; he wrote a 
great many letters, letters which must have cost him much time and 
thought, in training the nuns under his direction. He was sub-prior and 
novice-master at Duruelo. He was sent to undertake the supervision of 
a newly-established Carmelite College at the Cathedral City of Baeza, 
which meant "not unseldom presiding at the students' exercises, and 
sometimes taking part in the disputations" [74], which ran high, and in 
which, moreover, Doctors and Dons of Baeza University joined with a 
good deal of brio and zest. But all the while he was putting into practice 
perfected detachment. 

In a letter dated 6th July, 1591, only five months before his death, 
when already he had been "thrown into a corner like an old rag" to use 
his own phrase St. John says to a nun, who bewailed the seeming triumph 
of his persecutors and enemies, "As to my affairs, daughter, let them not 
trouble you, for none of them trouble me. . . . These things are not done 
by men, but by God, Who knows what is meet for us and ordains things 
for our good. Think only that God ordains all. And where there is no 
love, stablish love there, and you will find love." 

These instances of St. Bruno and St. John of the Cross and many 
more might be cited show how right was St. Gregory the Great when 
he wrote that in the order of things the mystic may often find himself 
called to pass from his real life, the Contemplative, to the Active Life, 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

and he even says that it is useful for the mind to turn from the Contem- 
plative to the Active. We conclude that those mystics to whom it is 
given to lead uninterruptedly the Contemplative hfe are indeed highly 
favoured, but at the call of duty (that is, the voice of God) the Active 
Life, in which they are bidden take part, by no means deranges, impedes, 
or even intrudes and impinges upon the Contemplative Life. The mystic 
may well shrink from the Active Life. In fact, St. Gregory says that a 
mystic should avoid, and, if possible, refuse secular business. At best, 
he submits to it. In his Regula Pastoralis the Saint instances the prophet 
Jeremiah [76] who longed for the Contemplative life, and who was sent, 
most unwillingly to "go and cry in the ears of Jerusalem" and proclaim 
the message of God. 

St. Gregory, following St. Augustine, is quite clear that the Contem- 
plative Life is better than the Active. He emphatically lays down that 
"the Contemplative Life is greater in merit and higher than the active", 
and again he urges that the Contemplative Life, although "second in 
time, is in merit far exceeding the active" [76]. 

There are few figures in history which stand out more prominently 
than St. Gregory. He is generally acknowledged to have been one of the 
greatest of all the successors of St. Peter. Dom Aegidius Ranbeck [77] 
gives a long list of his labours "the relief of the famine which succeeded 
the plague at Rome; the exhaustion of the treasury in procuring corn 
supplies; the feeding of multitudes of the poor; the providing for the 
necessities of the Church throughout the world", the mission to England; 
the reform of church music; and numberless other businesses. Indeed, 
owing to the negligence of the Emperors and their exarch$, St. Gregory 
was obliged to take upon himself the burden of the civil government of 
Rome. None the less St. Gregory was a mystic of a very high order, and 
more than once in his works he speaks of experiences, which must have 
occurred to himself, such as rapts and ecstasies, psycho-physical pheno- 
mena, in fact. Although he does not dwell upon these "passings beyond 
the barriers of the flesh", his mention of such trances and the like is very 
important. Moreover his Dialogues are full of occultism, and strange as 
it may appear in reading this fine work one is constantly reminded of 
such authors as the Capuchin Taillepied (Psichologie ou traiti de I' Appari- 
tion des E sprits); Joseph Glanvil (Saducismus Triumphatus), and Richard 
Baxter (The Certainty of the Worlds of Spirits), 

Abbot Butler, however, reminds us that "what is now called a purely 
contemplative life, in which the works of the active life are sought to 
be reduced almost to a vanishing point, lay quite outside St. Gregory's 
mental horizon; he seems to take for granted that such a life is not 
liveable in this world" [78]. It remained for St. Romuald with the 
Camaldolese and St. Bruno, Father of the Carthusians, to show that 
actually such a life was liveable in the world. Although perhaps in his 
works he does not explicitly and in detail counsel in set phrase and 
precisely pattern the purely contemplative life, there can be no doubt 
(I think) that St. Augustine envisaged and approved it as the best. When 
he was dwelling in community near Tagaste, he utterly withdrew from 
30 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

the world, "living for God alone, wholly occupied in fasting, prayer, and 
similar good works, meditating day and night upon the things of God, 
and closely following the manner of life of the solitaries of the Egyptian 
desert" [79]. 

In his Benedictine Monachism Abbot Butler points out that among the 
monks of Egypt, "we find the conception of the contemplative life 
pushed to the extreme limit". He draws attention to the fact that St. 
Benedict and other famous Founders wished agricultural work to have 
an integral place in their monastic institutions. The Trappists are a 
contemplative Order, and are great agriculturists. Hence, adds the Abbot, 
"judged by the Egyptian standard, Trappist life is not contemplative, 
nor any form of Western monastic life for men [80], except, perhaps, the 
Camaldolese and Carthusian, who are half-hermits." The abbe Nicholas 
Lenglet-Dufresnoy (1674-1755) in his Tmiti Historique et Dogmatique sur 
les Apparitions, 2 Vols., Avignon and Paris, 1751, has almost precisely 
the same observation, I, p. 245. He says; "Les Chartreux and les 
Camaldules, qui sont nos seuls Solitaires, s'occupent de TOffice Divin, 
de la prifere, de l'6tude." 

It may, however, be remarked the Order of Vallis Umbrosa founded 
by St. John Gualbert in 1015 or, according to Ascanio Tamburini in 
1012 is entirely contemplating. Hlyot, Histoire des Ordres, V. pp. 
300-01, distinctly says that the holy Founder built his Vallombrosans 
on 'Tamour de la solitude et le d6sir d'une plus grande perfection". 
He speaks of "la vie Eremetique" of the Monks, and details their exact 
observance of the most rigid rule, their almost perpetual silence, their 
enclosure and meditations. The contemplative ideals of the Vallombrosans 
are also insisted upon by such authorities as Eudosio Locatelli in his 
Vita del glorioso Padre san Giovanni Gualberto, Florence, 4to, 1633; and 
Diego Franchi in his Historia di san Giovanni Gualberto, Florence, 4to., 
1640. Almost precisely the same may be said of the original rule of the 
Sylvestrians, founded by St. Sylvester Gozzolini, the hermit of Osimo, 
in 1230, for whom see Sebastiano Fabrini's Chronica delta Congregatione 
de 9 Monachi Silvestrini, Camerino, 8vo., 1618; and the Constitutioni di 
Monachi Silvestrini, Camerino, 4to., 1610. The Olivetans founded by 
Blessed Bernardo Tolomei of Siena in 1319 are, strictly speaking, con- 
templatives, for whom see Lancelotto's Historiae Olivetanae, 4to., Venice, 
1623. The contemplative monks and cloistered nuns of the Olivetan 
Order must be distinguished from the Olivetan Oblates founded by St. 
Francesca Romana, a surpassing mystic, in 1437. The Oblates, or 
nobili dame of Tor d6' Specchi still have their house at Rome in the 
street so-called, at the foot of the Capitol. 

The Vallombrosans, Sylvestrians, and Olivetans follow the Rule of 
St. Benedict. 

There are also Hermits of St, Jerome, Hieronymites, an Order to 
which an ascetic Rule was given by Blessed Pietro Gambacorta of Pisa, 
as related in Pietro Bonacciosi's voluminous chronicle of the hermits, 
Pisana Eremus, sive vitae et gesta Eremitarum D. Hyeronimi qui in 
Rdigione B. Petri de Pisis flonwrunt, I2mo, Venice, 1692. 

31 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

It should be observed that the Order of the Most Holy Saviour, 
founded by St. Birgitta of Sweden in accordance with the Rule and 
Statutes divinely revealed to her, is purely contemplative. "The life of 
both monks and nuns was to be wholly contemplative and the enclosure 
was of the strictest kind, such as is now called papal enclosure/' writes 
Sister Mary Dominic, 0. SS. S., in her admirable study of St. Birgitta, 
God's Ambassadress (by Helen M. D. Redpath), The Bruce Publishing 
Company, Milwaukee. Sister Mary Dominic is a Bridgettine of Syon Abbey. 
To-day there are no Bridgettine monks, but happily Syon Abbey, founded 
by King Henry V in 1415, remains, and can claim unbroken continuity. 

St. Augustine held in highest esteem hermits and recluses, and there 
can be little doubt that he designed his Order of Augustinians, founded 
in 388, to be purely contemplative [81]. The very name Eremites, the 
Hermits of St. Augustine, proves as much. The Rule of St. Augustine is, 
however, elastic, and it could be interpreted and followed in several ways. 
Additions were made in various places; local customs were introduced; 
and as the centuries went on there were great divergences, until in the 
year 1256 Alexander IV united all the houses, and even the anchorites 
and recluses, into one Order by a special Bull, which constituted four 
Provinces. Three hundred years later, in 1567, Pope St. Pius V, ranked 
the Augustinians with Mendicant Friars (the Franciscans, Dominicans, 
Servites, etc.), but for all that, as Taker and Malleson remark [82], "The 
Augustinians, or Austin friars, although now classed among Mendicants, 
are really an Order of hermits", that is to say they should be purely 
contemplatives. To-day the Augustinian Eremites are often engaged in 
parish work and other activities, excellent in themselves, but none the 
less businesses which (strictly speaking) ought to lie outside their Rule, 
since the ideal is that the Eremites should be purely contemplative, 
"judged by the Egyptian standard". From time to time there have been 
Congregations of Augustinian Solitaries, as for example that of Centorbi, 
so-called from a mountain of that name in Sicily, where a hermitage was 
founded by Andrea del Guasto, and approved by Pius V, Sixtus V, and 
Paul V. The Augustinian Congregation, Coloriti, named from their 
monastery on Monte Colorito, near Morano in Calabria, founded by 
Bernardo de Rogliano, were anchorites. Their Rule was approved by 
Pius IV in 1560. 

I have emphasized the fact that the Eremites of St. Augustine were 
intended by their Founder to lead a strictly contemplative Life, because 
St. Augustine, as a mystic, should be placed with St. Bruno and St. John 
of the Cross, and the fact that whilst the sons of St. Bruno remain the 
sons of solitude and silence, that houses of the sons of St. Augustine are 
to be found, not so often in remote places, but in populous cities might 
seem to require some explanation. 

So the truth of Abbot Butler's words is borne out. To-day, of men only 
the Camaldolese and Carthusian are in the integral sense Contemplatives. 
This applies, of course, to the general and formal Rule and Regimen of 
Religious Orders. Many members of other Orders, glorious and saintly 
names, have been mystics who walked the heights, and dwelt in heavenly 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

contemplation whilst on earth. St. John of the Cross was a Carmelite, 
although it is very significant that, as he informed St. Teresa, "for many 
days the Lord had been calling him to a stricter observance, that he had 
already resolved to go to the Carthusians and that they had assured him 
that they would receive him" [83]. St. Peter of Alcantara and St. Joseph 
of Copertino (one of the most amazing mystics in all hagiology) were 
Franciscans; St. Albertus Magnus, Blessed Henry Suso, and John Tauler, 
were Dominicans; Benet Canfield, P&re Yves de Paris, Zacharie de 
Lisieux, authors of the profoundest mystical treatises, were Capuchins; 
St. Miguel de los Santos, subject of astounding and perhaps unique mystical 
phenomena, was a Discalced Trinitarian; the stigmatized Fra Bernardino 
de Reggio was a Capuchin; Blessed Dodo of Hascha [84], who was marked 
with the Five Wounds, was a lay-brother of the Order of Premontr. 
Such a list might be almost indefinitely prolonged. 

"The Carthusian is essentially a solitary/' says Dom Lawrence 
Hendriks [85]. "To begin here on earth in the least imperfect manner 
possible, the life of mystic contemplation we are destined to lead in 
Heaven, such is the object of the Carthusians" [86]. "Contemplation is 
for all, but the contemplative life is only for a few," writes Father 
Bede Jarrett [57], the famous Dominican. We may all be mystics to 
some degree, however little, but we cannot all lead the Mystical 
Life. 

Parenthetically, the Persian philosopher Al-Ghazzali, a Moslem 
theologian of the eleventh century says: 'The Science of the Sufis aims 
at detaching the heart from all that is not God, and at giving to it for 
sole occupation the meditation of the Divine Being." This Oriental 
parallel is, at least, interesting. 

St. Augustine [88] very plainly enlarges upon the three kinds of 
life, all in their kind excellent. There is the contemplative life (vita 
otiosa) [89] ; the active life (vita negotiosa) ; and the mixed life, which latter 
combines the former two. He instructs us that if activities are imposed 
upon us, we must undertake and fulfil them for the love of our neighbour, 
as the Gospel enjoins, yet we should not abstain all the while from 
drinking deep of the well of contemplation. He himself was called to the 
See of Hippo, with its responsibilities and multifold charges, and he did 
not refuse the burden. None the less it was a burden. St. Thomas Aquinas 
is often quoted as laying down that the "mixed life" is the best the 
Saint does not use the actual phrase "mixed life" but he only allows 
this under certain very important conditions, which qualifications are 
not unseldom overlooked and ignored to the misapprehension of St. 
Thomas's teaching. Active works must be added to the Contemplative 
Life, and must be derived from contemplation, in no way subtracting 
from it. Any businesses which hinder or impede contemplation are not to 
be pursued but rather abandoned, since, if such prove the case, they 
cannot be good or desirable. In view of St. Dominic's foundation of 
strictly cloistered nuns, and his insistence upon enclosure, it would not 
have been possible that the teaching of St. Thomas should bear the 
complexion too generally put upon it; Some extremists, utterly mistaken, 
P 33 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

have gone so far as to represent St. Thomas as being somewhat critical of 
the purely Contemplative Life. 

In 1680 Padre Paolo Segneri, who was the most popular preacher 
throughout Italy and high in favour at the Papal Court published a 
rather argumentative little volume, Concordia tra la fatica e la quiete 
nell'orazione in which he contended that the highest form of life possible 
on earth is the "Mixed Life", activity tempered with contemplation. This 
aroused some criticism, and Segneri followed up his Concordia with a 
Lettera, emphasizing rather too rashly his previous argument. The Lettera 
was placed on the Index, and although the Concordia escaped any official 
censure it was quietly discountenanced, and Segneri was privately 
instructed to revise and modify it. For us the whole matter is finally 
settled by an Apostolic Constitution, 10 August, 1924, of Pope Pius XI, 
who on the occasion of his "Considered Approval of the Statutes of the 
Carthusian Order" wrote: "They lead a life by these constitutions so 
shielded and protected from the din and folly of the world that not 
only are all their contemplative faculties focused upon the divine 
mysteries and the eternal truths, while with fervent and continual 
prayers to God, they seek the prosperity of His Kingdom and its daily 
extension, but in addition by mortification, both prescribed and voluntary, 
of mind and body, they cleanse and expiate the faults not so much of 
themselves as of others. In fact, it must be said of them that, as did 
Mary of Bethany, they have chosen the better part. For no more perfect 
adjustment and regulation of life could be proposed to men than that 
which at the call of God they take up and embrace." The Pope praises 
St. Bruno as "A man of remarkable sanctity who restored the contem- 
plative life to its youthful integrity," and, he continues, "if ever it was 
of importance that there should be such anchorites (as the Carthusian 
monks) in the Church of God, surely this is the time when they should 
flourish most." "There are some perhaps," the Pontiff remarks with deep 
emphasis, "who still think that the virtues which are mis-named passive, 
have long grown obsolete, and that for the ancient disciple of the cloister 
a wider and more liberal exercise of active virtues should be substituted. 
This opinion met with refutation and condemnation at the hands of our 
Predecessor, Leo XIII, of immortal memory, in his letter Testem Bene- 
wlentiae, which was given on the 22nd day of the month of January in 
the year 1899; and no one can fail to recognize how this woefully mistaken 
idea is harmful and destructive to theory and practice of Christian 
Perfection." 

When Pope Honorius III (1216-27) wished to impose enclosure upon 
a number of religious women and beatas (to use a Spanish word which 
has no exact equivalent in English), who were living under no rule, 
St. Dominic warmly exerted himself to carry out the Pontiff's will, and 
it was due to him that the Sisters of Santa Maria in Trastevere cloistered 
and confined themselves in the convent of St. Sixtus, where Blessed 
Diana d'Andald was professed, and of which house Blessed Cecilia dei 
Cesarini, a daughter of one of the noblest Roman families, was elected 
prioress [90]. St. Dominic himself fastened the grille. 

34 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

St. Augustine, whilst freely allowing that Contemplation, which is to 
say the Mystical Life, is open for all to follow, and, it may be, achieve 
if they persevere, emphasizes that hermits, such as those of the Thebaid, 
enjoy exceptional advantages in this respect, and are most blessed and 
holpen in their way to the highest things [91]. He does not fail, moreover, 
to point out that the way is no mere intellectual path. It can be trod by 
quite simple souls, who are single and tireless in their desire for the 
Eternal [92], We must not fall, however, into the opposite error and 
suppose that natural genius and learning are in any sense impediments 
to the approach. Denys the Carthusian, whose De Contemptu Mundi and 
Scald religiosorum are handbooks of mysticism, was a most profound and 
prolific author. He himself says: "O my God, devoutly I give thee thanks 
for having called me, whilst I was still young, to the Order, wherein 
by Thy good grace, ever aiding me, I have passed six-and-forty years; 
and during all this while blessed be Thy Holy Name I have ever 
been a most diligent and unwearying student/' The "Ecstatic Doctor", 
as he is called, continues: 'This work, although wholly and entirely 
intellectual, has often proved to me the occasion of much suffering. And 
it is precisely this which has made it so profitable to my soul. For it has 
greatly helped to mortify my senses; it has held in check and subdued 
unruly passions and desires; it has increased my love for my own home, 
my cell" [93]. The complete works, Opera omnia, of holy Denys the 
Carthusian, of Roermond, who lived 1402-71, are comprised in no less 
than forty-five folio volumes [94]. 

If the question is asked and it certainly suggests itself why the 
Works of Denys the Carthusian are not so well known as those of St. 
Teresa, for example, or St. John of the Cross, or Blosius, the answer is 
not far to seek. Even scholars have been intimidated by the immensity 
of his writings; his profundity of thought, and he was deeply read in 
St. Dionysius the Areopagite and Blessed John Ruysbroeck, whom he 
had assimilated into himself, so to speak; moreover, from a practical 
point of view, the Carthusian's Works are not easy to be obtained [95]. 

Nor was the Ecstatic Doctor at any pains to make the way he taught 
easy. His hours were spent in raptures and the fruition of heavenly 
apparitions. A Spanish Dominican, Fr. Juan G. Arintero, has written a 
treatise The Heights of Contemplation Accessible to all [96]. In one sense 
this is true. All may contemplate, but few can reach the Heights. It is 
necessary to distinguish very carefully here. The learned Alban Butler, 
discoursing of the two works of St. Catharine Fiesca Adorna of Genoa, 
On Purgatory and A Dialogue, whilst speaking with unstinted praise and 
admiration of these writings, adds in a foot-note, "These treatises are 
not writ for the common class of readers" [97]. Denys the Carthusian is 
very emphatic that "without special grace given no one can be raised 
to the heights of contemplation"; he affirms (what is amply evident, but 
too often forgotten) "that temperaments differ widely", that "all men are 
not suited nor called to be contemplatives", and ordinary folk "must 
be restrained from climbing too far up the holy mountain" [9g], where, 
in fact, the air is over rarified for them to breathe. He says, moreover, 

35 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

in another place, that "God endows those whom He will with the faculty 
of mystic contemplation", and "who shall dare to dispute the will of 
God in this?" [99]. 

Deep writers are doubtless correct when they magnify the Contemplative 
State as superior to all others, yet, it must be borne in mind, very few 
(comparatively) are capable of it, and none ought to pretend to it but 
those who are called by God to so sublime a State, which is not to be 
proposed in its fullness to all persons indiscriminately. 

Denys Ecstaticus, then, regards it as a question of vocation. In some 
sense it may prove to be a question of terms. But a delusive vocation, 
the result of fleeting enthusiasm, a mirage, if obstinately persisted in is 
bound to end in unhappiness and disaster and spiritual discontent. On 
the other hand, it is impossible to disregard a true vocation, to attempt 
to fly from it, to smother it, because of temporalities and the wiles of 
the world. The result in this case will be equally fatal, and spell misery. 

It has been asked, and the query is very pertinent, 'Tor Whom is 
St. John of the Cross writing?" [100]- In the Ascent of Mount Carmel 
St. John makes it quite clear that his teaching is not for all. Indeed he 
reiterates this, and is so emphatic upon the point that Professor Peers 
observes [101]: "Such counsels are not given to all. On this St. John of 
the Cross insists so often that it seems impossible that those of his critics 
who write as if his rules were intended for all can have read him, except 
possibly in extracts." Nothing could be more strongly worded. Professor 
Peers is an acknowledged authority upon and a deep student of St. 
John. 

For whom, then, is the Saint writing? In the first place, as he himself 
avers, he is addressing "certain persons of our Holy Order of Mount 
Carmel of the primitive observance, both friars and nuns". But, 
secondarily, he is writing for all contemplatives, even for such as are 
constrained to live in the world. And, thirdly, his teaching may in its 
degree and so far as they are able to receive it (but no more) be profitable 
to all Christians, even to those who are the merest novices in mysticism, 
who have hardly taken a preliminary step on the way, and who, humanly 
speaking, cannot be conceived of as ever attaining the heights of the 
Mystic Mount, but who will continue humbly doing their duty in the 
estate to which they are called, where God has placed them, and who 
accordingly in their measure are leading the perfect life as their lights 
allow. 

To read with thoughtful care, to meditate upon the writings of St. 
John, even to follow (as far as in us lies) the precepts of St. John all this 
is excellent. Were such not the case St. John would not have been pro- 
claimed on 24 August, 1926, a Doctor of the Church by that most sagacious 
and unerring of Pontiffs, Pope Pius XI. But St. John himself says in his 
teaching of the Dark Night, that amazing psychological experience he 
typifies under this name, that although the Night of Sense, which it is 
essential to pass through on the journey to the Ultimate Conception, 
comes to many mystics, the Darker Night, the Night of the Spirit, is 
traversed by very few. These Nights are terrible to endure, but the 
36 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

Night of the Spirit is incomparably more agonizing than the Night of 
Sense. 

Dean Inge, analysing St. John's teaching, speaks of "the night of 
sense"; "the night of faith". "Faith is midnight; it is the deepest dark- 
ness"; and the third night, "the night of memory and will," when the 
dawn is about to break. 

It may be well, here, to correct a popular and mischievous misappre- 
hension of St. John's teaching with regard to pilgrimages, oratories, 
images, and rituals. It has been said that he considered these as nugatory 
and of no worth. Nothing could be farther from the truth, and, indeed, 
nothing could be more impious. St. John plainly writes that images are 
"most important for Divine worship and most necessary". What he does 
say is that when the soul is overwhelmed with God, and filled with God, 
there will be no room for aught beside. But this essence of spirituality is 
hardly conceivable in this world. 

For example, most elaborate and detailed instructions were given 
with reference to the making of the Ark (Exodus, xxv), even the two 
craftsmen to be employed were particularly named, Bezaleel and Aholiab 
(Exodus, xxxi), whilst the Shekinah, the visible glory of the Lord, 
descended and rested on the mercy-seat. There was a Mystic Ark in 
Heaven (Apocalypse, xi, 19). 

St. Alphonsus Liguori tells us that a tepidity with regard to Shrines, 
Relics, Pilgrimages, the wearing of the Scapular, and the like is a sure 
sign of dry rot in the soul. It would be most blameable and evince a 
complete lack of spirituality if the votary were not inspired to a more 
fervid devotion by Loreto, Campocavallo, Genzano, Fatima, Limpias, 
Caravaggio, Hal, Asserbroeck. There is no mysticism without Mary. So 
St. Alphonsus teaches, and so taught St. Bernard of Clairvaux, St. 
Bonaventura, and numberless other Saints and doctors. 

St. John of the Cross, then, could not and did not minimize the value 
of these holy things. Perhaps we shall best understand his thought if we 
consider Relics. St. Alphonsus considers a devotion to Relics a sure mark 
of true spirituality. But there will be no Relics in Heaven. 

Incidentally, I may mention that the sublimest contemplatives, the 
Carthusians, at their house of St. Hugh's, Parkminster, Sussex, for 
example, have a most glorious and magnificent Relic Chapel, where are 
religiously venerated a large number of important and Sacred Relics. 
The Carthusian nuns of Var preserve the Relics of St. Rossolina of 
Villeneuve (1263-1329), a Carthusian [102]; and the Relics of Blessed 
Beatrice d'Ornacieu [103], who died in 1303, a stigmatized Carthusian 
nun, are preserved by the Carthusian nuns of Beauregard, near Voiron 
(Department de ris&re). Moreover, the eighth of November, the Feast 
of Holy Relics, is observed as a high Solemnity throughout the whole 
Order. This devotion to Holy Relics, which prevails so strongly among 
the Carthusians, who alone, with the exception of the Camaldolese, 
according to Abbot Butler (as we may remind ourselves) strictly fulfil the 
ideal of the highest form of the Contemplative Life in Orders of men, 
is most striking and significant. The Camaldolese have the same devotion. 

37 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

To suppose that St. John of the Cross in any sense rejected the 
veneration of Relics, then, is a most grievous error and an entire mis- 
understanding of the precepts of the Saint. No one would have been more 
horrified and pained than he at so impious a suggestion. The famous 
sentences in the Ascent of Mount Carmel do not mean this. 

In order to arrive at having pleasure in everything, 
Desire to have pleasure in nothing. 

Thus he writes, but he is speaking to souls who are very far on the way 
to the Ultimate Union. If we are going to follow those who have so 
misrepresented the Saint it is but a short step to saying that prayer itself 
is a useless and vain thing. A point may be reached when prayer itself 
is emptied into adoration, which after all is essentially prayer. Thus 
in The Excursion Wordsworth wrote of the mystic: 

In such access of mind, in such high hour 
Of visitation from the living God, 
Thought was not; in enjoyment it expired. 
No thanks he breathed, he preferred no request; 
Rapt into still communion that transcends 
The imperfect offices of prayer and praise, 
His mind was a thanksgiving to the power 
That made him; it was blessedness and love! 

The English poet is in these lines exactly describing the supra-sensual 
state to which the Spanish mystic guides us. Again, Wordsworth in The 
Prelude speaks of looking towards the Uncreated with a countenance 

Of adoration, with an eye of love. 

It seemed to him that earth and heaven and every creature, of whom he 
was one, gazed upon God: 

One song they sang, and it was audible, 
Most audible, then, when the fleshly ear, 
O'er come by humblest prelude of that strain, 
Forgot her functions, and slept undisturbed. 

The ear was deaf to human sounds because it heard the music of the 
spheres. The lips were mute and dumb, but they moved in fervent prayer. 
A contemporary (if prejudiced) record [104] tells us that the first 
indication of the Quietist heresy was the laying aside "the use of the 
Rosary, the daily repeating the Breviary, together with the common 
Devotions to the Saints 1 ' , and it was found that certain communities 
"instead of their Beads, and their Hours, and the other Devotions to 
Saints, or Images, were much alone, and oft in the Exercise of Mental 
Prayer: and when they were asked, why they had laid aside the use of 
their Beads, and their ancient forms \ their Answer was, that their Directors 
38 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

had advised them, to wean themselves from these things, as being but 
Rude Beginnings, and hindrances to their further progress/' The poison 
was fearfully insidious, and those who had thus strayed were at once 
required "to return again to the use of their Beads, and their other 
abandoned Forms'". Pope Innocent XI (1676-89) forthwith explicitly 
condemned nineteen Quietistic doctrines which were being secretly taught, 
the first being a complete misunderstanding of what is meant by Con- 
templation. The Third Error was that "All Study and Learning, even in 
Sacred Matters and in Divinity, is a Hindrance to Contemplation". The 
thirteenth Error to be condemned was that "the Images of Christ and 
of His Saints, are hurtful to contemplative Persons, and they ought to be 
avoided and removed, that so they may not hinder Contemplation". The 
very fact that many gave up the use of their beads is enough to indicate 
that something extremely subtle and extremely evil was at work; for, 
as we know, Our Lady Herself revealed the Rosary to St. Dominic, who 
may truly be said to be the Author of this Devotion, and a possessed 
person (however unwillingly) was compelled on one occasion to confess 
that all who are constant in their love of the Rosary will receive the 
reward of Eternal life [106]. If we disarm ourselves how can we fight 
the foe? 

The great and stalwart Pontiff, Alexander VIII (Pietro Ottoboni), who 
succeeded the Venerable Innocent XI on 6 October, 1689, Alexander VIII 
"an Angel to look upon and an Apostle when he spoke" [106], very 
actively prosecuted the Quietistic heresy. He amply recognized how 
dangerous is the contamination of truth by a substruction of errors, the 
infective masquerade of corruption as seeming good. His successors, 
Innocent XII (1691-1700), and Clement XI (1700-21), were no less 
diligent in their zeal for the right. These Pontiffs although there were 
eruptions of evil, now and again, as was inevitable may be said to have 
stamped out the plague. 

Pseudo-mysticism there has always been, and always will be. Cockle 
is oversowed among the wheat. In the garden of the mystics alongside 
the lilies and roses of Paradise grow Deadly Nightshade, and the scarlet 
poisonous berry, so fair to the eyes, and the fascinating exotery of 
brightly-blooming venomous flowers. Needs must we be careful which 
buds we pluck. 

It is undeniable that in England for the past fifty years, and more, 
the interest in and a desire for the understanding of "mystical literature'' 
has been steadily increasing. When the Rev. Robert Alfred Vaughan 
published in 1856 his singularly unsympathetic and boorish study Hours 
with the Mystics, A Contribution to the History of Religious Opinion, he felt 
it necessary to preface his arid chapters with explanations and apologies. 

The book is in execrable taste. On the evening of a November day 
three friends who "sat about their after-dinner table, chatting over their 
wine and walnuts" lightly embark upon a discussion of the profoundest 
problems of the spiritual life. When their talk is not leaden dull it is 
facile and flippant to a degree, nay more, it is not unseldom (although 
I am willing to believe unwittingly) profane. There is something that 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

disgusts and revolts in the gross-daubed caricature of the beauty of 
Blessed Angela di Foligno, which finishes on a sneering note with 
"Catharine of Siena is a specimen somewhat less wretched, of this 
delirious mysticism". 

"A history of Mysticism/' Vaughan writes, "old visions and old 
obscurities who is bold enough to expect a hearing for that? . . , 
While we are rejoicing in escape from superstitious twilight, is it well to 
recall from Limbo the phantasms of forgotten dreamers ? . . . Mysticism 
is confessedly more or less a mistake." His defence for touching these 
"bygone speculations" is that "Mysticism, though an error" has from time 
to time been associated with a measure of truth, that on the whole good 
may be said to have outweighed the evil, that historically the Neo- 
Platonists and Bernard of Clairvaux are important. Although R. A. 
Vaughan quite plainly regards mysticism as a dream, one may learn 
valuable lessons even from the history of delusions. It is useful to erect a 
guide-post, since, even in the mid-nineteenth century, some were "not 
free from liability to mistakes in the direction" of the mystics. 

In fact the Preface to the First Edition (1856) and the Preface by 
Wyclifie Vaughan to the Third Edition (1879) are both very dryly 
significant. 

It is true that contemporaneously Thomas Richardson and Son of 
Derby were issuing a number of small (but extremely useful) mystical 
treatises, for example Blessed Henry Suso's Little Book of Eternal Wisdom, 
translated by Richard Raby, which ran into at least two editions, second 
edition, 1866; a few fragmentary excerpts from The Revelations of St. 
Bridget, Princess of Sweden, London, 1873 ; The Stigmata, a chapter or 
two translated and drastically abridged from the Mystik of Gorres, and 
edited by the Rev. H. Austin, Derby, 1883 ; but all these had a limited 
circulation, and were practically unknown save to the few. 

In 1846-7 Father Faber was enthusiastically planning and published 
the Series generally known as the "Oratorian Lives of the Saints", a 
series which included St. Rose of Lima, 1847; St. Benedict Joseph Labre, 
1850; St. Paul of the Cross, 3 Vols., 1853, and many more. But these, 
although heartily approved of by Cardinal Wiseman, were not generally 
liked. Faber took every precaution to guard against misunderstanding 
and forestall adverse criticism. He protected himself, so to speak, by 
including a work of the last authority, Heroic Virtue: A Portion [107] 
of the Treatise of Benedict XIV on the Beatification and Canonization of 
the Servants of God, 3 Vols. In his Preface to St. Rose of Lima, Faber 
is at considerable pains to warn readers that in the book they will find 
"several stiff and unenglish expressions", which, however, "belong to the 
proper and recognized terminology of Mystical Theology" [108], and he 
observes that "English readers . . . may be a little startled with the 
Life of S. Rose. The visible intermingling of the natural and supernatural 
worlds . . . may even offend", but he earnestly bids his readers to 
whom these chapters may at first flush seem something extraordinary, 
"grotesque" even, reflect deeply and reflect again before they venture 
to carp or criticize, 
40 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

None the less, the Mysticism of the Saints was looked askance at, 
and "it seemed to many a departure from Christian prudence" to continue 
the publication of the Series. Faber consulted the Oratorians, who were 
never formally responsible for the Series, and Dr. (afterwards Cardinal) 
Newman writing from Maryvale on 30 October, 1848, whilst he explicitly 
tells Faber, "For myself, you know well without my saying it, how 
absolutely I identify myself with you in this matter," is obliged to convey 
the general opinion of the Fathers of the Congregation "in advising you 
to suspend the series at present". "It appears," says Newman, "that 
there is a strong feeling against it on the part of a portion of the Catholic 
community in England, on the ground, as we are given to understand, 
that the lifes of foreign Saints, however edifying in their respective 
countries, are unsuited to England." 

The fact is that one hundred years ago Catholicism in England was 
sadly tainted with Jansenism, inert and easily enervated. A mere spark 
of the Faith remained. Mysticism was taboo. 

Faber submitted. At no small sacrifice to himself, after an interval, 
he continued the Series with certain modifications. Even this did not 
please, and eventually the publication of the Lives of the Saints was 
brought to an end. It must be borne in mind that those years 1840 to 
1860, and even later, were extremely critical, and doubtless in the circum- 
stances all acted for the best, as they saw it. 

Mysticism, then, was regarded with distrust and suspicion, and (it 
is no exaggeration to write) with a certain hostility. 

To-day it may fairly be said that the Mystics have come to their 
own. Occasionally a shrill scolding voice may be heard, but the tiny 
pipe at once dies away in nothingness and is forgotten. Meanwhile studies 
of the subject of mysticism are eagerly read, and with a very real 
sympathy. Many who do not understand show themselves respectful, 
at least, and sincerely seek an explanation, an exposition of the areana 
coelestia. 

The fact is "that personal religious experience has its root and centre 
in mystical states of consciousness" [109], Fundamentally, there can be 
no religion which is not personal and institutional. And where there is 
religion there must be mysticism, however inchoate and unformed 
(perhaps even unrecognized) it may be. Mystical states of consciousness 
are in the highest degree Knowledge. It has been well said, that whether 
we relish it or not the mystic is invulnerable [110]. Actually, although in 
many cases all appearance may seem to be against it, a non-mystic cannot 
and does not exist. He may have almost quenched and muddied his 
mysticism with materialism; he may have fouled and sullied it with 
coatings and coverings of animalism and lubricity; he may hotly and 
scientifically deny its presence, and repudiate the whole idea ; but willy 
nilly the divine spark and immortal because divine has been once lit 
in every man's heart, although only too often it is eclipsed and dim and 
ineffectual, and (humanly speaking) it might seem impossible that it 
should be blown even to the faintest flicker of a rush-light flame. 

Startling as it may sound, it is in the very strictest sense true to say 

41 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

that we are all mystics. It will therefore seem contradictory, or at least 
paradoxical when certain persons or their writings are declared to be 
utterly destitute of any mystic quality. But it will be understood that this 
latter use of the words "Mystic", ''Mysticism" is the generally received, 
current, and accepted phraseology. The little mystic seed is dormant, 
stifled, hardly alive, in many instances quashed, in so far as it is possible 
to kill it, but dead, stark dead, it cannot be. Accordingly it must be 
emphasized and clearly borne in mind that in these chapters the words 
"Mystic", "Mysticism" are not used in this the narrowest, and perhaps 
the nicest sense. A more particular definition of "Mysticism" and the 
meaning attached to the word in this book will be given later. It seemed 
fitting, if not entirely necessary, to draw attention to the widest sense 
the word may bear. 

It were good if in English we had other terms to connote Mysticism. 
But we have not, and hence this explanation must and will reasonably 
suffice. We might certes use the word "spirituality", for every man being 
created a spiritual being must possess spirituality. This alternative would 
not, in fine, clear the ground any more successfully. 

It is understandable from what has been said that Mysticism may be 
and has been taken to denote many things of most varied kinds, and 
accordingly serious writers on the subject at the very beginnings of 
their studies are careful to explain and insist upon precisely how they 
intend to employ the term in their chapters, and what they mean by it, 
no more and no less. 

Dean Inge [111] says that "no word in our language has been employed 
more loosely than 'Mysticism' ". Abbot Butler [112] remarks, "there is 
probably no more misused word in these our days than 'mysticism' ". 

The word "Mysticism" has been used to mean metaphor and moon- 
shine; literary symbolism; poetical rhapsody and dithyrambs; primitive 
music and surrealist paintings of a fantastic not easily comprehensible 
kind ; a dreamy amorousness or nonchalance ; a sweet sickly sentimentalism, 
"the worse for being warm"; vague and irresponsible theories about God, 
heaven, the stars, the supernatural; curious and unexplained phenomena; 
abstractly verbose Emersonianism; pantheistic and even atheistic 
reveries [114\; a vapid emotionalism; hauntings; pseudo-psychical 
investigations; illusions and hallucination; abnormalities; vaudeville 
telepathy; autosuggestion; judicial astrology; faith-healing, so-called; 
theosophy; spiritualism (spiritism) and necromancies; with kindred dark 
experiments and many a charlatanism it were unprofitable and bootless 
to rehearse. At the outset all these phantasmagoria and pathologies we 
sweep aside once and for all. 

In view of what has been just said it is little to be wondered at that 
there have been put forward scores of definitions of "Mysticism", that a 
large number of them are flatly contradictory, and that many do not 
define at all. R. A. Vaughan in his Hours with the Mystics, a work so 
uncouthly written in dialogue [115], has: "Willoughby. Here's another 
definition for you: Mysticism is the romance of religion. What do you say? 
Gower. True to the spirit not scientific, I fear", and (I would add) 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

not a definition, although a pretty enough phrase. Dean Inge cites in 
Appendix A to his Christian Mysticism no less than twenty-six definitions 
and attempted definitions. As he indicates, this list might be almost end- 
lessly prolonged, but quite profitlessly. Of set purpose he does not separate 
the chaff from the wheat, and a few, at any rate, of the specimens he 
presents are deliberately chosen to show what ignorances and bathos 
certain authors have not been ashamed to posit and present. 

Since an explication of Mysticism is admittedly so different and so 
profound it were worse than waste of thought and time to do other 
than go at once to the great authorities and hear what they have to 
say. 

Perhaps the greatest historian of Mysticism is Johann Joseph von 
Gorres (25th January, 1776-29^ January, 1848) "urn die Erneuerung des 
Katholischen Deutschlands hoch verdienter Mann". His influence in his 
own day was enormous, and his encyclopaedic knowledge has set him in 
the very front rank of writers on the subject. His chief work is Die 
Christliche Mystik, Regensburg, 5 Vols., 1836-42. "No man was better 
equipped to treat so intricate a subject than he, and none have dealt with 
it more lucidly yet more learnedly along the lines he planned." The 
French translation of Die Christliche Mystik by Charles Sainte-Foi, 
La Mystique Divine, Naturelle et Diabolique, 5 Vols., Paris, 1854, ^ as 
taken its place as a classic, and the translator's own commentary and 
epilogue, although brief, are of the first importance. (I use the Second 
Edition, 5 Vols., Paris, 1861-2.) Gorres says that Mysticism may be 
considered under two aspects. It is implanted in the very nature of man, 
but it also is supernatural, above and beyond the nature of man. 
Mysticism is pre-eminently Christian, and therefore the ineffable truths 
of Christianity must have the deepest influence in moulding and developing 
it. That there was precursory mysticism of the patriarchs and prophets 
and other holy persons is true, but Gorres holds that Mysticism had its 
birth on the day of Pentecost, that it increased and grew, and attained 
perfection amongst the solitaries and monks of the desert, whence it 
has flowed like a river of many waters irrigating the whole world. 

There is a Divine Mysticism; there is what may be loosely termed a 
Natural Mysticism; and necessarily there is the counterpart of Divine 
Mysticism, a Diabolic Mysticism. Natural Mysticism, according to Gorres, 
may be held to include clairvoyance, second-sight, dowsing, somnambulism, 
hypnotism, and the like. He speaks of the malign power of the Evil 
eye [110], which has been recognized from dateless antiquity, since Pliny 
in his Natural History tells us of the Fascinatores among the Triballi and 
Illyrii, histories which have been handed down from remotest records. 
Apollonides speaks of females among the Scythians who can use this 
fearful gift. They were known as Bythiael. Under Natural Mysticism 
Gorres mentions those who have secret and occult relations with the 
earth, instancing the Spanish Zahories, who claimed to be able to see 
through the crust of the earth, provided it were not covered with blue 
silk or cloth, and who were often resorted unto to discover springs of water, 
veins of ore, buried treasures, concealed corpses, as also to cure various 

43 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

diseases. The Dorset Daily Echo, 22nd July, 1947, reports how when 
engineers and water diviners had during many years failed to find more 
drinking water for a town near Simla, a sadhu from the Himalayas came 
to the place, and after standing silent for a while with eyes closed, 
seemingly absorbed in communion with some exterior force, pointed to 
a particular spot, and said: "Dig here, and you will find much cool pure 
water." This was done, and water gushed forth with great force in large 
quantities. The Zahories repudiated any magic, even so-called "white 
magic". It was, they declared, a natural gift with which they were indued. 
The Holy Office, however, thought fit to draw up elaborate and detailed 
forms of interrogation when questioning a Zahori, who is particularly 
to be examined whether anything was done over and beyond his exercise 
of "natural power", whether masses had been said, if holy water were 
used, or if there were fumigations, the invoking of Saints or the use of 
unknown formulas with strange names, and anything more of this kind. 
In a later chapter it will be particularly discussed whether the classification 
"Natural Mysticism" is admissible, and if so, to what category are we to 
assign these curious businesses. 

Diabolic Mysticism is the dark realm of black magic, possession, 
demoniality, evil evocations, goety, witchcraft with its hideous pacts 
and sabbat assemblies. Satanism must necessarily, as it occurs, be dealt 
with in these chapters, as illustrative of the shadowed side of Mysticism, 
which it is impossible should entirely be ignored in hagiography and 
other mvstical studies. 



NOTES TO CHAPTER ONE 

1. In case this sentence is liable to be misunderstood, it may be advisable to 
emphasize that, of course, no sort of reflection is intended upon the business life 
or the crowded career of a public man. Such admirable activities obviously have 
their important and indeed essential place in the divine scheme. Many, in the 
world but not of the world, have attained, and (I doubt not) are attaining a very 
high degree of perfection. For example, St. Yves was a lawyer; St. Thomas More 
practised at the Bar, was Speaker of the House of Commons and later Lord High 
Chancellor of England; St. Ferdinand, King of Castile and Leon, was a monarch 
whose reign proved one of the most stirring events; St. Wenceslas, Duke of Bohemia, 
"glorious for holiness and miracles", who was martyred in A.D. 938 under great 
difficulties held the reins of government with a firm hand. St. Zita of Lucca was 
a poor serving-maid, whose one aim was "to give God glorious service in her daily 
work". Blessed Anna Maria Taigi, a married woman and the mother of several 
children, valued by her husband as an "excellent housewife and manager", was a 
mystic of the highest order. St. Teresa of Avila, the great contemplative, travelled 
about Spain, and founded seventeen nunneries of her reformed Carmelites, which 
entailed a world of business. 

Our Lord and Our Lady sanctified all social functions by their presence at 
the wedding-feast at Cana of Galilee. Our Lord supped with Simon the Pharisee. 
Nevertheless, it was said, "Maria optimam partem elegit" ("Mary hath chosen the 

44 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

best part"). The late Holy Father, Pope Pius XI, in an Apostolic Constitution, 
loth August, 1924, addressed to the Carthusians, distinctly states that there can be 
no more perfect way of life than that which is found in the solitude and silence of 
the cloister. "Avarus non implebitur pecunia: et qui amat divitias, fmctum non 
capiet ex eis: et hoc ergo vanitas." ("He that loveth silver shall not be satisfied 
with silver: nor he that loveth abundance with increase. This is also vanity." A.V.) 
Ecclesiastes, v. 9. I have thought it well to put a note on these points, here, at 
the very outset, although actually and necessarily they will be dealt with and 
discussed in ample detail in the body of Chapter I. 

2. The phrase is that of Professor William James, TJie Varieties of Religious 
Experience, Ed., 1916, p. 7. But his appli cation of the phrase is erroneous. 

3. The Acts of the Apostles, xvii, 28 (A.V.). 

4. Our Lord said : "Nisi conversi fueritis et efficiamini sicut parvuli non intrabitis 
in regnum coelorum." Sec. Matthaeum, xviii, 3. ("Except ye be converted, and 
become as little children, ye shall not enter into the kingdom of heaven, A.V.) 
Little children implicitly trust, believe in, and obey their father and mother. 
They are, then, to be followed in this, and we are bidden to trust, believe in, and 
obey divinely constituted authority. The actual conversion takes place when a 
man bends his will to do this. He is, as Our Lord said elsewhere, "born again". 
"Nisi quis renatus fuerit denuo, non potest videre regnum Dei." Sec. Joannem, 
iii, 3. To endeavour to see, and hence to attain (to enter into) the kingdom of 
heaven is the true religious impulse. The mere conversion per se although it is 
impossible to separate genuine conversion from its consequences is the opening 
of the "heavenly door", as Richard Rolle calls it, but it is not necessarily the entering 
in. A man may turn aside to pantheism or some other specious allurement, not 
without a mirage of spiritual joy. True conversion is known by its development, its 
growth; false conversion by its standstill, its sterility. "Ex fructu arbor agnoscitur." 
Sec. Matthaeum, xii, 33. ("For the tree is known by his fruits", A.V.) 

It were superfluous to do more than mention the abuses of thought, verbiage, 
and practice, the term "New Birth", grossly misunderstood, has lead to among 
disordered enthusiasts. When an unbridled hysteria accompanies so-called "con- 
version" and this symptom only too often occurs it is a very morbid sign. The 
sense of newness and the shouting for joy so piously expressed by Billy Bray, an 
illiterate "evangelist", when he described his "conversion" in November, 1823, are 
just exuberant emotionalism. See W. F. Bourne, The King's Son, a memoir of Billy 
Bray, London, Hamilton, Adams & Co., 1887, p. 9. How different, how dignified, 
how lasting and sincere, the conversion of Matt Talbot, the Dublin labourer, 
1857-1925. This "poor, ignorant, labouring man, lived and prayed in a Dublin 
tenement room". As a young man he was addicted to strong liquor and spent all 
his wages in the public house. He would often sell the boots off his feet for drink, 
and walk home in his stockings. One Saturday night he was twenty-five years 
old he quietly announced his intention of giving up drink. There were no 
histrionics, no vehemence and impetuosities. But there can be no doubt that 
this poor man led an intensely mortified life, and attained a very high degree of 
interior spirituality. See Sir Joseph A. Glynn, The Life of Matt Talbot, 7 and 8, 
Lower Abbey Street, Dublin, 1926. A decree of the Sacred Congregation of Rites 
signed by the Holy Father, announcing the introduction of the cause of the beatifi- 
cation of Matt Taylor, has just been publicly proclaimed (June, 1947). 

The Latin word conversio signifies a revolving, revolution, of the sky and 
heavenly bodies, in which sense Cicero uses the term. In general, it came to mean 
any alteration or change. The younger Pliny in his Letters uses the word of a 
change of view, or the modifying an opinion. St. Augustine has "conversio ad verum 
deum," De Civitate Dei, vii, 37, which is obviously "a striving towards righteous- 
ness". 

5. Psychology of Religion, p, 64. 

6. Ascent of Mount Carmel, I, xiii. Works of St. John of the Cross, 3 Vols., 
translated and edited by E. Allison Peers. Vol. I, p. 63. 

7. Hesychius Lexicographus (5th century, A.D. ?) accepts this derivation and 
emphasizes that the mystics shut their eyes and mouths to all worldly things, so 

45 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

that they may interiorly concentrate their thought, and thus be divinely illuminated. 
Hesychius, edited M. Schmidt, Jena, 1858-68. 

8. Actually the epoptes (tirfarrp) was fully and finally initiated in the Greek 
mysteries, but mystes (pforrp) by an extended use also came to imply the complete 
and ultimate initiation. Lidell and Scott, MTTTTJS an overseer. One who has been 
admitted to the highest grade of the mysteries. 

9. I surmise that A. Lasson in his Meister Eckhard der Mystiker, Berlin, 1868, 
is the only writer who holds the extraordinary view that the relation of the word 
Mysticism to the Greek mysteries has no bearing on the subject. 

10. In the Lysistrata of Aristophanes the Chorus of Women says: "I was little 
bear to Artemis at the Brauroma." 

11. Among the Red Indian Apaches to-day the Bear is spoken of with the 
greatest respect, and given the title Ostin, Old One, equivalent to "Sir". 

12. See, for example, the Iphigeneia in Tauris of Euripides, in which drama it 
is ordained that the priestess Iphigeneia should sacrifice her own brother, Orestes, 
to the goddess, against whose savagery she cries out. The conscience of a humanized 
Greece was stirred and shocked by these primitive barbarisms. 

13. One may compare the secret rites of the Bona Dea at Rome. Juvenal 
descnbes the degradation to which fell "The secrets of the Goddess nam'd the 
Good*', "At whose feasts no men were to be present". Dryden's translation of the 
Sixth Satire, and his note. 

14. //. i. Scholiast edited by E. Rohde, Rhein. Mus. xxv. p. 549. 

15. Photius Lexicographus, the ninth century, A.D. Migne, Patrologia Graeca, 
Vol. CIII. 

16. Eustathius ad II. ix, 530, 772. Eustathius of Constantinople, Bishop of 
Thessalonica, died A.D. 1198. He was one of the most learned scholars of his day. 
Commentarii ad Homeri Ihadem, ed. G. Stalbaum, 3 Vols., Leipzig, 182729. 

17. As St. Thomas Aquinas says, "umbram fugit veritas, noctem lux eliminat". 

Panem, vinum in salutis. 
Consecramus hostiam. 

18. Revue des Etudes grecques, xxxii, p. 462. 

19. Scholars generally are agreed upon this. Miss Jane Harrison Prolegomena 
to the Greek Religion, Cambridge, 1903, p. 150 dissents, but is singular in her views 
which are, to say the least, extremely hypothetical and hardly borne out. 

20. "Ego vitis vera." Sec. Joannem, xv. i. ("I am the true vine"). 

21. The Religion of Ancient Greece, p. 22. 

22. Euripides, Translated into English Rhyming Verse by Gilbert Murray, ed. 
1924, introductory essay, pp. Iviii-ix, and passim. First edition, 1902. 

23. Life's a Dream: From the Spanish of Calderon by Richard Chevenix 
Trench, 1856, pp. 97-8. 

24. Herodotus, VII, no. A great many authors, historians and poets, bear 
witness to the Thracian origin of Dionysos. The Roman poet Ovid has "Threcia 
Bacche," Amores, I, xiv, 21. But in Statius, Silvae, HI, iii, 193. Thracius is Orpheus. 

25. Mount Edon, a spur of the Pangaeus range, in south-eastern Thrace, was 
a famous shrine of Dionysos, whence in Roman poets, Propertius I, iii, 5; Silius 
Itallcus, I, 1, Lucan, I. 1; Edoms is a votary of Dionysos, a Bacchante. 

26. The Bacchae opens with the speech of Dionysos: 

Behold, God's son is come unto this land 
Of Thebes, even I, Dionysos, whom the brand 
Of heaven's hot splendour lit to life, when she 
Who bore me, Cadmus daughter Semett, 
Died here. 

I quote the translation by Dr. Gilbert Murray. When Semete's lover, Zeus, at her 
urgent entreaty, appeared to her in his full glory, the mortal maiden died in the 
blaze of the coruscating levin. Her child, Dionysos, prematurely born, was fostered 
4 6 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

until the full time had come by his divine father, and miraculously born again. 
Hence Semele" is Keraunia, she of the thunder, or, the thunder-smitten. Any place 
struck by lightning was regarded as sacrosanct. Primitively this would have been 
a taboo. There was in historical times a tomb of Semele* on a blasted spot at Thebes. 
Pausanias, IX, xvi, 7, saw "SemelS's Monument". 

27. Strabo X iii, 470. Strabo the Geographer, born. 66 B.C. d. c. A D. 24. 

28. Herodotus, II, 81. 

29. Dr. Gilbert Murray's fine translation here unfortunately obscures the point. 

30. Apollodorus, I, iii, 2, 3. Apollodorus Mythographus A.D.I. (?). Edited by 
R. Wagner, Mythographi Graeci, I, Leipzig, 1894. 

31. Reference to Calderon's El Dimno Oyfeo has just been made in the text. 

32. The Orfeo was composed in two days at Mantua, on the occasion of the 
visit to his native town of Cardinal Francesco Gpnzaga. The r61e of Orfeo was 
taken by Messer Baccio Ugolini, singing to the viol. I quote from the exquisite 
translation of John Addington Symonds. The queer drug-twisted mind of Edgar 
Allan Poe utterly misunderstood the Orfeo of Poliziano. 

33. See Ovid Metamorphoses, V, 79-85. Phanocles, apud Stobaeum, serm LXIV, 
says that Orpheus was killed by the frenzied women owing to his introduction of 
paiderastia. But there is the legend of Laius, son of Labdacus. See also Aristotle, 
Politics, II, 10. For Dionysos and Polymnos see Arnobius, Adversus Gentes, V, p. 177, 
ed. 1651; also Clement of Alexandria; Protrepticiis (Hortatory Address), ed. O. 
StcLhlin, Leipzig, 1905-09; Julius Firmicus, De err ore profanarum Religionum', 
Theodoret, Sermo 8 de Martynbus\ Nicetas on St. Gregory Nazianzen, Oratio 
XXXIX. 

34. Orphica Lithika. Edited by E. Abel, Leipzig and Prague, 1885. 

35. The Athenian Drama, III, Euripides. First ed., 1902. Ed. 1924, p. i viii, 
and p. 165. 

36. Professor Lewis Campbell, Religion in Greek Literature 898, p 253. 

37. Ihad, xxiii, 103. 

38. Odyssey, xi, 466. 

39. Aeneid, ii, 790-4; and vi, 700-02. 

40. Porphyry, De Abstinentia (On Abstinence from Animal Food), iv, 16. Libanius 
the sophist, 4th century A.D., speaks of the Mystics as "pure of soul", as well as 
ritually uncontaminated. 

41. Theon of Smyrna, p. 22, preserves the precise formulary. The latter phrase 
is ambiguous, and instead of meaning "any who spoke an uncouth savage tongue" 
may apply to any having some natural impediment of speech. I am inclined to think 
this is the truer interpretation, as balbuties or stuttering would prevent the utterance 
of the sacred words with the necessary clarity and correct intonation. 

42. Clement of Alexandria, Stromateis, V., 689. 

43. Vincent Barclay Head, Historia Nummorum, A Manual of Greek Numis- 
matics. Oxford, 1887, p. 328. 

44. As by Dean Inge, Christian Mysticism, p. 353. 

45. Fasti, II. 

46. Published, 1640, at Cambridge, by Roger Daniel, the University Printer. 

47. Euripides has: 6aXdo-<ra /c\tf TT&VT& T&vQp&Trav /cd/ca. Iphigeniain Tauns, L. 1193. 

48. Strabo, X, iii, II. 

49. Clement of Alexandria, Protrepticus, II, 18. 

50. The suggestion has even been made that in the Mysteries silence was 
imposed not so much because there were any secrets to reveal, but rather because 
the Holy Things should not be profaned by being brought into contact with common 
life. Inge, Christian Mysticism, p. 351. Whilst it is true that the Sacra must be care- 
fully guarded from any vulgarization, there was an Ultimate Mystery, a very 
real and sacrosanct thing. 

51. Against the Valentinians. The Valentinians were the most numerous and 
most powerful of all the Gnostic sects. Their theosophy was exceedingly complicated 
and esoteric, and it is hardly surprising that so axcane a doctrine should have split 
up into two schools, W. Bousset and some other scholars link up their gospels 
with the licentious Syrian worship and black magic. Valentine himself was at 

47 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

Rome from A.D. 136 to 165. St. Irenaeus wrote against him, and from this work 
Tertullian (circa A.D. 145-220) has taken over much. 

52. For the worship of Sabazios there are many references. See Strabo. X, iii, 
471, Aristophanes, Birds, 875; Clement of Alexandria, Protrepticus, II Arnobius, 
Contra gentes, V. 

53. Father Cyril Martindale, S. J., article Paganism. 

54. Juvenal, //, 92, and see the Sixth Satire. 

55. Father Martindale, The Religion of Ancient Greece, p. 24. 

56. Christian Mysticism, p. 350. See further an excellent little popular pamphlet 
Catholic Rites and Pagan Customs by Sir Bertram Windle, Sc.D., Ph.D., F.R.S., 
who utterly refutes the so-called "historical'' attack upou the church. 

57. So Dean Inge, of course, intended it, and his comments upon some of the 
wordy statements he cites are both pungent and pointed. The late Miss Evelyn 
Underbill exhausted a volume of 539 pages (Seventh Edition, 1918), in "tracing 
the Mystic Way", and was no nearer nor more knowledgeable at the end than 
when she began. 

58. Quidam vero viri adhaerentes ei (Paulo) crediderunt: in quibus et Dionysius 
Areopagita, et mulier nomine Damaris et alii cum eis. A ctus Apostolorum, XVII, 
34. "Hpwbeit certain men clave unto him, and believed: among the which was 
Dionysius the Areopagite, and a woman named Damaris, and others with them," 
Acts, xvii, 34 (A.V.). 

59. Natihtia, birthday, technically signifies "Heavenly Birthday", that is the 
day of the martyrdom. Pope St. Clement I is dated A.D. 92-101, or by some authorities 
A.D. 88-97. For St. Dionysius "commonly called St. Denis," see Butler, Lives of the 
Saints under 9th October. Four treatises of the Areopagite are preserved: Concerning 
the Heavenly Hierarchy; Of the Ecclesiastical Hierarchy; Of the Divine Names ; and 
the Mystic Theology. It is generally accepted that these works are not actually from 
the pen of the convert of St. Paul, and as we now have them it is believed that 
they are revisions belonging to the fifth century. The author of the tractates in 
their present form is unknown. But they contain and reproduce the teaching of 
St. Dionysius the Areopagite, and they have exercised so immense an influence 
upon and so essentially informed religious history that a vast literature surrounds 
the whole subject. Erudite commentaries were written very early, and the excursuses 
of the monk Maximus, who died in A.D. 662, are printed with most editions of the 
Areopagite. Dionysius (as we have him) is an extremely difficult author, his language 
is often obscure, and the singularly acute annotations of Maximus prove of con- 
siderable value. As early as the Lateran Council of October, 649, Pope St. Martin I 
had occasion to complain that many passages of Dionysius were being (perhaps 
wilfully) misunderstood and misinterpreted. It has been said, and not without 
some truth, that John Scotus Erigena "popularized Dionysius for Latin Christen- 
dom". St. John Damascene, again, in De Fide Orthodoxa appeals to the authority 
of Dionysius, St. Thomas Aquinas was well acquainted with and often uses the 
wisdom of Dionysius, whom, however, he does not hesitate to say is liable in 
some passages to be taken in a wrong sense. This is due to the fact that the Areo- 
pagite employs out-of-the-way phrases, and expressions which may seem startling 
but are in reality, when examined, perfectly orthodox and consonant with solid 
dogma. The fact is that Dionysius is a writer for theologians, and not for the 
many. 

The Opera Omnia of Dionysius are in Migne, Patrologia Graeca, 3-4. This is a 
reprint (not without some errors) of the Venice edition of 1755-6. The Works 
were translated into Latin : Opera S. Diony sii Areopagitae . . . a Balthazar Corderio 
Latine interpretata; folio, 1634. The Abbe* Darboy published a French translation, 
Oeuvres, with an introduction, Paris, 1845. There are English versions. The Works 
of Dionysius the Areopagite translated by the Rev. J. Parker, 2 Vols, Oxford, 
1897, and in one Vol. The Divine Names and The Mystical Theology, with an 
introduction, by C. E. Rolt, S.P.C.K. 1920. 

60. See St. John's Gospel, I, 43-51. The identity of Bartholomew and Nathanael 
is proved by Rupertus, Gayanti, Fr. Stilting the Bollandist, and many other 
authors of weight. 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

61. St. John of the Cross, a supreme mystic, has realized and expressed so 
intensely the mystic doctrine, that he has been called the Doctor de la Nada 
(Professor Allison Peers Spirit of Flame, Student Christian Movement Press, Ltd., 
1943 PP- 9&-7) but this is equivalent to Doctor del Todo. Doctor of the All. For he 
who discards everything, gains everything. "The Super-Essential Ray of Divine 
Darkness"; says Dionysius, Rolt, p. 192. 

62. Spirit of Flame, Student Christian Movement Press, Ltd., 1943, pp. 120-1. 

63. Western Mysticism, 1922, p. 5. To Abbot Butler's works the student of 
mysticism is more deeply indebted than any single acknowledgement in a note 
can convey. Yet not to overload page after page with references to these studies, 
which are among the very horn-books and gazeteers, so to speak, of the subject, 
one only recognition of and grateful expression for the Abbot's profound and 
inspiring Studies must (however inadequately) suffice. 

64. This is the heresy of Quietism, a dangerous shadow-land; doubly dangerous, 
indeed, because of its half-truths and the mirage of its beauty. So much is profoundly 
true, so much is beautiful, but the quicksands of Quietism are treacherous. Many 
precepts of the Quietists might be paralleled with sayings of the Saints and orthodox 
mystics. Perhaps the best printed account there are many MSS. sources is to 
be found in Bernino, Historia di tutte L'Heresie, IV, 726, etc., Venezia, 1717. Quietism 
was condemned by Pope Venerable Innocent XI (1676-89), in his bull Coelestis Pastor, 
published 19 February, 1688; by Pope Alexander VIII (1689-91), and by other 
Pontiffs. Heppe has written Geschichte der quietistischen Mystik, Berlin, 1875. 

65. Adornment of the Spiritual Marriage, Book II, c. 54. Blessed John 
Ruysbroeck (1293-1381). Canon Regular of St. Augustine, was beatified in 1908. 
In his writings can be traced the influences of Aristotle, Plotinus, St. Dionysius, 
St. Augustine, Richard of St. Victor, and others, whilst amongst his followers are 
such great mystics as the Benedictine Blosius (1506-65); Denys the Carthusian 
(1402-71) ; the Carthusian Laurence Surius, who translated into Latin the Works 
of Ruysbroeck, Opera Omnia, Cologne, 1652. The original Werken, written in the 
Flemish of Brabant, have been edited by J. David, 6 Vols. Ghent, 1858-68. There 
are French and English translations, some paraphrases of various treatises, and 
general studies. The English life is by Dom, V. Scully, London, 1910; and there 
is a brief monograph by Dom Hubert Van Zeller. 

1 66. Abbot Butler, Western Mysticism, p. 3. 

67. Spirit of Flame, A study of St. John of the Cross, p. 94. The only mystics 
Professor Peers parallels with St. John are St. Augustine and Blessed John 
Ruysbroeck. 

68. This collect is Proper to the Augustinians, and is also used by the~ 
Dominicans and some few other orders following the Augustinian Rule, e.g. the 
Servites. 

69. Confessions, Book VII, c. 17. The Latin text is Knoll's (Teubner, 1909). 

1 have paraphrased, as giving the fuller sense, rather than literally translated, the 
original. In the Loeb series, col. 1922, the passage will be found, Vol. I, p. 386. 

70. De Quantitate Animae, 75, 76. 

71. F. H. Dudden, Gregory the Great: his place in History and Thought. 2 Vols., 
1903. See Vol. II, p. 293 and p. 468. 

72. II, ii, 8-u. 

73. The Travel-Diaries of W^lham Beckford of Fonthill, edited by Guy Chapman, 

2 Vols., 1928. Vol. I., pp. 277-310. "An excursion to the Grande Chartreuse in the 
year 1778." 

74. Jean Baruzzi, Saint Jean de la Croix, Paris, 1924, p. 208. n.i. 

75. "Dixi, A.a,a, Dpmine Deus: ecce nescio loqui, quia puer ego sum. Et dixit 
Dominus ad me: Noli dicere; puer sum: quoniam ad omnia, quae mittam te, ibis. . . . 
Et factum est verbum Domini ad me, dicens : Vade, Et clama in auribus Jerusalem/' 
Then said I, Ah, Lord God! Behold, I cannot speak: for I am a child. But the 
Lord said unto me, Say not, I am a child: for thou shalt go to all that I shall send 
thee. . . . Moreover the word of the Lord came to me, saying, Go and cry in the 
ears of Jerusalem. Jeremiah, i, 6, 7, and ii, i, 2. 

76. Homily on Ezechiel, I, iii, 9, and M or alia, vi, 61. 

D 49 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

77. Saints of the Order of S. Benedict. Vol. I, 1896, pp. 345-9. Translation ed. 
by the Very Rev. J. Alphonsus Morrall, O.S.B. 

78. Western Mysticism, p. 269. 

79. Pere H&yot, Histoire des Ordres Monastiques, Paris, 1715, Tome III, p. 2. 

80. The strictly enclosed Orders for women are purely contemplative. Thus, 
to name but a few, we have certain cloisters of Augustinian nuns: Similarly, 
Benedictine nuns; Bridgettines ; Carmelites; Poor Clares; the Sepolte Vive or 
Farnesiane nuns who have three grates, curtained; Capuchin nuns; Servite nuns 
of the Second Order; Discalced Trinitarian nuns; Redemptoristines their convent 
(Dames Rouges) at Bruges will be known to many Dominicanesses. For the latter 
see Dominican Contemplatives by a Dominican of Carisbrooke. It is much to be 
regretted that the stricter observance for Dominicans, men, instituted by the 
Venerable Antoine le Quieu (1601-76), commonly known as the Congregation of 
the Blessed Sacrament, was not continued and developed, for this would have been 
an order of purely contemplative Dominicans. The Life of the Venerable Antoine, 
written by a member of his Reform, Father Archangel Gabriel of the Annunciation, 
was published at Avignon in 1682. 

81. Helyot, ut cit. pp. 3. sq. q. The discussion as to the origins of the Eremites 
(Hermits) and the Austin Canons belongs to monastic history, and accordingly I 
feel it impertinent to enter into it here. 

82. Christian and Ecclesiastical Rome, 1900, Part III, p. 214. There are, it is 
true, Recollect Augustinian Fathers, and in England they have a house at Ivy- 
bridge, Devon. But, as the Prior, Fr. Arostegui, writes to me the Recollects to-day 
lead "a mixed life, contemplative and active". 

83. St. Teresa. Foundations, Chapter 3, St. John agreed, at St. Teresa's 
suggestion, to remain a Carmelite in order that he might aid her to restore the 
Primitive Carmelite Rule. 

84. He died in 1231. See the -4 eta Sanctorum, 3Oth March, De Beato Dodone, ordinis 
Pracmomstratensis in Frisia. Marchese, Diario Dominicano, Naples, 6 Vols, folio, 
1 668-8 1, by an error lists Bl. Dodo as a Dominican. 

85. The London Charterhouse, 1889, p. 33. 

86. La Grande Chartreuse par un Chartreux, 3me edition, p, 367. The Lay 
brothers of a Charterhouse, under the supervision of Dom Procurator, "perform 
Martha's part". The Procurator is the Officer who attends to the essential business 
of a monastery. 

87. Dominican Contemplatives, Preface p. v. 

88. De Civitate Dei, XIX, 19. 

89. Otiosa is sometimes taken to mean "lazy", "idle", and although in classical 
and later authors the word has this sense, it is far from implying anything of 
the kind here. "Idle" is, in fact, a late meaning. Otiositas idleness is late Latin. 
The Vulgate has "multam malitiam docuit otiositas", Ecclesiasticus, xxxiii, 29. 
("Idleness hath taught much evil," Douay). Cicero uses otiosus as signifying 
"calm", "free from passion", "tranquil". 

90. Vita delle Beate Diana d'Andald, Cecilia, ed Amata. Tradotta dal Francese 
(di P. Fr. Giacinto Maria Cormier dei Predicatori) per cura del Revmo Mons. Egido 
Mauri, O. P., Vescovo di Osimo e Cingoli, Roma, 1922, pp. 64-70, and passim. 

91. De Moribus Eccl, Cath. 66. 

92. Epistolarum Liber, CXX, 4. 

98. Opiscula aliquot, Cologne, 1534, folio. 386. 

94. Edited by the Carthusian Fathers of Montreuil-sur-Mer. It is recorded 
that 150 volumes of the works of Denys are preserved in the Charterhouse at 
Ruremonde. 

95. There are very few monographs on Denys Cartusiensis. D. A. Mougel, 
Denys le Chartreux, Montreuil-sur-Mer, 1896; and K. Krogh-Tonning Der Letzte 
Scholastiker, 1904, will be found useful. 

96. Cuestiones misticas t o sea Las alturas de la Contemplacion acesibiles a todos, 
Salamanca, 1920. 

97. The lives of the Fathers, Martyrs, and other Principal Saints. Four Vols. ; 
Dublin, Coyne; London, Booker, 1833. Under date 14 September, p. 443, col. 2. 
50 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

98. De contemplations, Book I, art., 15; Tornaci, 1912, Vol. 41, p. 151. Denys 
constantly appeals to the authority of St. Gregory, "dicit Gregorius"; "ut docet 
Gregorius". 

99. De fonte lucis, ibid, p. 115. 

100. St. John of the Cross, E. Allison Peers, Faber and Faber, 1946, p. 45. 

101. Ibid, p. 28, n.5. 

102. Feast of St. Rossolina, 16 October, Sainte Rosehne des Ayes, de L'lllustre 
Famille des De Villeneuve, Religieuse Chartreuse, par le Chanoine A. Arnaud. Aux 
Arcs (Var), et Avignon, 1913. 

103. Feast of Bl. Beatrice, 13 February. Some of her Relics are also at Parmnie 
(de L'Isere). 

104. Three Letters Concerning the Present State of Italy, written in the year 1687, 
sine loco. Printed in the year 1688, pp. 17, 42. 

105. Vita S. P. Domimci Ordinis Praedicatorum Fundatoris, Auctore R.P.E 
Nicholas Ganssenio . . . Antverpiae M.D.C. XXII. Liber I. Cap. V. De auctore 
Sanctissimi Rosarii, ejusque efficacia, pp. 3140. 

106. Bernino. Historia di tutte L'Heresie, IV, 727-8. 

107. Chapters XXI-XXX, inclusive, of the third book of the great work of 
Benedict XIV. 

108. This particular reference is to passages in the Life of Blessed Colomba 
of Rieti, translated from the Italian, 4to, Perugia, 1777, and included in the same 
volume as St. Rose. 

109. William James. The Varieties of Religious Experience, ed. 1916. p. 379. 

110. Ibid, p. 424. 

111. Christian Mysticism, 1899, Lecture I, commencement. The apogee of 
muddledom in attempting to define mysticism has been attained by a recent 
author Mr. Lewis Spence, The Magic Arts in Celtic Britain, 1945, Preface, p. iii, 
who employs the term "Magic" as usefully describing . . . Mysticism itself, which, 
he adds "has, I believe, intimate associations with it, in the historic sense at 
least!" 

112. Western Mysticism, 1922, Prologue, p. 2. 

113. For example, the address to the graduating class at Divinity College in 
1838. Miscellanies, 1868, p. 120. 

114. The story of my Heart, by Richard Jefferies, who (it is true) is said to have 
made a good death, breathing the Holy Name. 

115. The Rev. R. A. Vaughan appears to have read fairly widely among the 
mystics, but, it must be confessed, with little or no grasp of what he was reading. 
His book, despite some interesting features, is a thoroughly bad one. The flippant 
dialogue is often awkward and silly. Ignorance and gross prejudice slime every 
page. Even so cautious a writer as Bean Inge observes: "There is something almost 
offensive in telling the story of men like Tauler, Suso, and John of the Cross, in 
the form of smart conversation, at a house-party, and the jokes cracked at the 
expense of the benighted 'mystics' are not always in the best taste." 

116. The authoritative work on the evil eye is Tractatus de Fascinatione, auctore 
J. Christiano Fromanno, Norimbergae, M.D.C. LXXV. There is a study, a very 
uncommon book, by Nicolo Valletta, Circulata sul Fascino Volgaramente deUo 
Jettatura, Napoli, 1787; and 1819. The jettatore is a person reputed to have an evil 
eye. The Evil Eye, published by Murray, London, 1895, by Frederick Thomas 
Elworthy, is a valuable and comprehensive volume. 



CHAPTER TWO 

Mysticism Defined The Goal of Mysticism Deification The Three Ways The 
Nineteen Phenomena of Mysticism Catalogued and Classified. 



theme is the Physical Phenomena of Christian Mysticism. 

We are now ready to consider some half-a-dozen authoritative 
"dictionary definitions'' of Mysticism. 

Corderius says that "Mystical theology, which is to say the science of 
mysticism, is a certain experimental knowledge, deliberately sought and 
followed up but without effort of our own, centring and wholly concen- 
trating upon God, who is all in all. This knowledge is a divine inspiration, 
an infused contemplation, which by supernatural acts of Faith, Hope, 
and Charity, so purifies the intellect to join it as closely as possible with 
God. Mystical theology, in truth, as the celestial name of this science 
implies, signifies a particular, hallowed and sacredly occult knowledge 
of God and the things of God/' 

Thus St. Teresa in a letter of February, 1576, to her Jesuit confessor, 
P. Rodrigo Alvarez, writes: "I term a mystical state that which no skill 
nor effort of our own, however much we labour, can attain to, notwith- 
standing we should prepare ourselves for that state, and this preparation 
on our part will inevitably prove to be of immense service and a very 
help." In the Way of Perfection, Chapter XXI, she advises those who are 
embarking on this divine voyage to give themselves much to prayer, but 
not to many prayers, "the Paternoster and Ave Maria suffice". The Prayer 
of Quiet is the first step to pure contemplation, and the Prayer of Quiet 
is a supernatural state to which no industry of our own or reliance on 
ourselves can raise us [1]. It may also be remarked that St. Teresa 
emphasizes how arduously and with what perseverance the Dark Powers 
assault and endeavour to turn aside and mislead any soul essaying to 
commence upon the mystic way. 

The Seraphic Doctor, St. Bonaventura, says that Mysticism is "an 
act of the intelligence, which, set free from all that can let or hinder and 
purified by the grace of God, concentrates its gaze upon the supernatural 
vision of things eternal; and having seen intellectually, and seeing, 
known and being certain, remains rapt in blissful admiration" [2]. 

The Venerable John of St. Samson [3], a French Carmelite of the 
Reform, 1571-1636, an extraordinary mystic who almost normally, so 
to speak, worked miracles of the highest order both during his life and 
after his death, a profound master of the spiritual heights, of whom it 
was said "he welded the mysticism of St. Teresa and of St. Ignatius 
Loyola together in one", writes that "Mystical theology in its very essence 
is nothing else than God, ineffably perceived" [4]. It has been said by a 
great authority that the Works of the Venerable John of St. Samson are 
52 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

not for all to read, but are the pasturage of the "sovereign mystics" 
alone. 

Another Carmelite, Philip of the Trinity, states: "In the mystical 
union God is perceived by an interior close embrace; he is very really 
felt by the soul which rests in His arms, beloved and secure. The soul 
knows that it is indeed God, because God thus gives it the absolute 
certitude of the Divine presence and enfolding" [6]. This is what Gerson 
calls "the embrace of an intuitive immortal Love" [6]. 

In his treatise La Mystique et la Perfection Chr&tienne [7] Mgr. 
Waffelaert, Bishop of Bruges, sets forth that a thing may be deemed 
perfect when it fully attains its fit and proper end, and that the per- 
fecting of a mystic consists in the complete accomplishment of Love. 
It is love which unites us to God, our ultimate and only end. Mystical 
union or contemplation (in its right sense), says Sandaeus [8] is "a mutual 
embrace between God, who is the spouse, and the soul, which is the 
bride". Whence St. Alphonsus Liguori tells us that "passive union is 
not altogether necessary for a soul to become perfect; it suffices to 
achieve active union. Now active union is the perfect conformity of our 
will with the Divine Will, and in this of a verity consists all the perfection 
of Divine Love" [9]. 

Bossuet in his condemnation of Quietism very pertinently comments 
that to teach flatly "leave God to act" is "to pretend to a love which is 
no love" [10]. Merely to leave God to act would be to forego all co-opera- 
tion and be unfaithful to grace. We must shun this spiritual sloth, and 
the commandment was given "Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all 
thy heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy mind" [11]. Love then 
is active, but activity reaches a repose of pure union, which is the true 
passivity. Passivity not laziness. The Quietists taught indolence, which 
is the death of love. 

The traveller, as St. Teresa says, rests when he has come to his 
journey's end. It is true, that on the way he may halt and stop awhile, 
but only for refreshment's sake so that he is enabled to continue his 
path with renewed courage and strength [12]. 

Gianbattista Scaramelli, S. J. (1687-1752) in his great work upon 
Mysticism, II Direttorio Mistico (ed. Roma, 1900), writes that "Experi- 
mental mystical theology, according to its proper aim and end is a 
certain knowledge of God which the soul (ordinarily speaking) receives 
in the state of darkness which is infinite light, that is to say the ineffable 
glory of the highest contemplation, essentially accompanied by so 
assumed and intimate an experience of love that the soul discards and 
forgets all else to be united with and (in a sense) transformed into God, 
so close is the Union." 

The Abb6 Ribet in his Mystique Divine (1878; new edition, 3 Vols., 
Paris, 1895) writes that "Mysticism is the science which treats of super- 
natural phenomena, be they interior or exterior, which duly prepare, 
essentially accompany, and closely follow upon the passive attraction 
of souls to God and by God, which is Divine Contemplation; and this 
science classifies these phenomena and attests them genuine and good, 

53 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

by the authority of Scripture, by the authority of the Doctors of the 
Church, and by reason. Moreover, this science distinguishes these 
phenomena from seemingly similar (but illusive) phenomena which are 
due to satanic and diabolical agencies, as it also distinguishes them 
from happenings which, however strange and unusual, are purely natural. 
Finally, this sublime science lays down practical rules for the guidance 
of souls in these ascents to heavenly things, ascents which unless regulated 
and rightly understood are not without danger/' 

There are then mysterious influences which operate in the soul of 
man, there are psychological and physical phenomena, which are from 
without, from God, from natural causes, or, it may be, wrought by the 
devil. Hence the absolute necessity for caution and direction, in fine 
that "discerning of spirits" of which the Apostle speaks, I Corinthians, 
xii, 10. 

The Abb Migne [14] in his Dictionnaire de Mystique (the third 
Encycloptdie thtologique, 1885) writes thus: ''Mysticism is the com- 
pleter knowledge of that supernatural state of the soul which is manifested 
and visible in the body of the mystic, as well as in the order of exterior 
and physical phenomena, by its effects which are (as itself is) wholly 
supernatural." This is to say, the interior and spiritual mysticism finds 
expression in exterior and corporeal phenomena. 

Parenthetically, we would emphasize that as Benedict XIV, quoting 
many approved theologians, in the twenty-first chapter of the Third 
Book of his great work on The Beatification and Canonization of the Saints 
instructs us for any sort of cultus of a holy person heroic "virtues are 
indispensable, and they must have been exercised in the highest, that 
is to say, in a heroic degree". Without this essential preliminary all else 
is regarded as valueless, and impertinent to the cause. Wherefore 
Scacchus [16] and Castellinus [16] agree and assert that "not all the 
just are to be canonized by Holy Church, but those who have shone 
forth brightly with Heroic Virtue". 

The Mysticism, as exhibited with Exterior Physical Phenomena, is 
the Mystique Divine, the attraction of souls by God to God, whence it 
is necessary in the very first instance only to study those souls who, 
just and holy, have practised virtue in an exemplary (perhaps a heroic) 
degree. 

It does not at all follow that such although doubtless worthy of 
Canonization are, or will be, even Beatified by Holy Church. If we take 
the Calendar, for example, of the Carthusian Order, we find only some 
thirteen or fourteen Carthusian Saints and Beati. And yet these Holy 
Souls, entirely worthy of formal Canonization, who are Sons and Daughters 
of the Patriarch St. Bruno, outnumber and outshine the stars. 

Mysticism, although ultimately so profound a knowledge of, and a 
magnetic attraction to, God, is not (as some might mistakenly suppose) 
an erudite and esoteric science, only for the chosen few. The Abb Henri 
Bremond makes this abundantly clear when he says that the study of 
mysticism is for all. A man may be deeply interested in the biographies 
of mystics, and learn much from long quotations derived from recondite 

54 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

writings of the Mystics, without thoroughly understanding (and far less 
personally experiencing) what Mysticism is. "It is enough to appreciate 
that a Mystic is a person as human as any one of us, but he is moreover 
a privileged person, one to whom God communicates Himself in an 
especial manner beyond all ordinary understanding. Those who seek 
enlightenment, and yet who have not the time to study first hand" [17], 
the works of the Mystics, may profit much by reaking studies of Mysticism, 
the more so as such works necessarily cite important passages from the 
writings of the Mystics themselves. 

There are few, if any, studies of the Physical Phenomena of Mysticism 
in English. Our authors have dealt rather with the history of Mysticism; 
with Mysticism as a psychological experience ; with the religious philosophy, 
that is to say, the theology of Mysticism. Or else, there has been selected 
and separatedly treated one supremely pre-eminent mystic, whose 
writings are examined carefully and paralleled with the teaching and 
utterances of other great mystics; whose influence, contemporary and 
through the centuries, is treated in detail. 

The Physical Phenomena of Mysticism, however, have been touched 
upon but incidentally [18], and one might almost say imprecisely. 
Nevertheless, these phenomena are of the first importance and in many 
languages most erudite and profound studies are devoted to this one 
aspect of the Mystical Life. We may instance the encyclopaedic Die 
Christliche Mystik of the learned Gorres; Doctor A. Imbert Gourbeyre's 
two works, each in a couple of volumes, Les Stigmatis&s and La Stig- 
matization; the Institutiones Theologiae Mysticae (also in two volumes) 
of the Benedictine Dom Dominic Sehram; Abb6 Ribet's standard La 
Mystique Divine, distingute des Contrefa$ons diaboliques; and very many 
more. 

During the last fifty years there has been steadily growing an interest 
in and, one may happily say, a better understanding of Mysticism. Not 
a few serious and scholarly writers have notably helped this. At the risk 
of seeming invidious by mentioning only three or four names out of many, 
I would instance Dean Inge's Bampton Lectures Christian Mysticism, 
first published in November, 1899, together with several other of his 
works, Studies of English Mystics, 1906, his introduction to Light, Life 
and Love (selections from German Mystics) 1905, for example. Baron 
Friedrich von Hugel's The Mystical Element of Religion as Studied in 
Saint Catherine of Genoa and her Friends, 1908, is enrolled among the 
books of reference of its kind. Dr. Rufus M. Jones, an American Quaker, 
published in 1909 a volume, Studies in Mystical Religion, which has 
exerted considerable influence. Abbot Butler's Western Mysticism, 1922 
(but commenced in 1904), is of ultimate authority. The work of Professor 
Allison Peers in the rich field of Spanish Mysticism, his studies and 
translations of St. Teresa, St. John of the Cross, Blessed Ramon Lull, 
and many others, may be regarded as indispensable handbooks on the 
subject. I do not say that we shall all of us agree in every point with 
these scholars. In fact on occasion we may differ pretty widely, and 
prefer an entirely contrary view. But all that they have written is 

55 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

stimulating, worthy of deep consideration, not lightly to be dispatched, 
and of permanent value. 

Translations, too, from the French, such as Monsignor Farges' 
Mystical Phenomena, 1926, and the English version of Lejeune, Intro- 
duction to the Mystical Life, have borne the test of years and proved 
immensely helpful, thorough, staunch and sound. 

Experience shows that The Oxford Book of English Mystical Verse, 
issued in 1921 when "the fortunes of Mysticism were mending", has 
given a very real pleasure, and something far more valuable, far more 
lasting, stirring deeper spiritual depths than pleasure. We are so grateful 
for this anthology that we do not hesitate to draw attention to one 
sad blemish, the admission especially towards the end of the collection 
< of more than one writer who was no poet, and more than one copy 
of verses which are not in the least degree mystical. 

It is significant, too, that within the last fifty years a very wide 
popularity has been achieved by books, purporting to deal with mysticism, 
but which in fact ladle out a soppy sticky sentimentalism, not to mention 
those silly little feminine manuals which profess to teach Mysticism for 
the million. 

Far more undesirable than even this persiflage are the works 
emanating from certain schools of theosophy, which after all is merely 
an unintellectual Gnosticism, newly furbished and revived, together 
with the grimoires for they are nothing else of spiritism and medium- 
ship, which masquerade as Mysticism, and delude their thousands. 

Truly, as Professor Allison Peers says in the Foreword to his Spirit 
of Flame (1943), a Study of St. John of the Cross, the word Mystic 
"for some time past has been getting into the wrong company". It is, 
indeed, no easy task for the student of Mysticism to avoid these mis- 
adventures and dangers. It is equally difficult, wellnigh impossible, to 
frame any general advice. The safest and best way is to be guided by an 
expert director, and upon this the Mystics have always insisted. Yet 
there are many circumstances in which such help is not to be had. 

Mysticism, the great quest of Mysticism, even for the student, the 
man who is as it were merely interested from the outside, has its 
very real dangers. How much more difficult is it for one who essays to 
tread the mystic path, to practise as well as learn. 

There is no Bibliography of Mysticism. Whether such an encyclo- 
paedia could be compiled, I am tempted to doubt. Several authors have 
appended "select bibliographies", but these aie necessarily very meagre, 
although useful enough so far as they go. For example, the works of 
Pierre Poiret (1646-1710) give a longish list of titles, which prove very 
useful, and other writers [Iff] have essayed something of the same 
kind [20]. The Enchiridium mysticum, Veronae, 1766, of Gaetano Marce- 
calea is a very rare book. Perhaps the most comprehensive Bibliography 
is Albert Caillet's Manuel Bibliographique des Sciences Psychiques ou 
Occultes, 3 Vols., 1912, Dorbon, Paris. This great work, however, is to-day 
five and thirty years old, and even for its date there are not a few 
omissions. Moreover, there will be found included very many titles which 
56 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

are nothing to the purpose. None the less, granted these reservations 
which I do not minify, Caillet is (I believe) the most recent reliable 
bibliography of a general kind. 

Much, then, remains to be done. So much that a beginner may well 
feel a trifle daunted. A reasonably comprehensive bird's-eye view of 
Italian Mysticism [21], following it may be the lines Professor Peers 
has sketched out in his Studies of Spanish Mysticism, is an urgent 
desideratum. More important still would be an ampler work modelled, 
perhaps on the Abb6 Bremond's Histoire Litteraire du Sentiment Religieux 
en France. The Revelations of St. Maria Maddalena de' Pazzi with her 
Life should be rendered accessible in English. It is true that we have 
The Life of Mary Magdalene of Pazzi, a Carmelite Nun, "newly translated 
out of Italian by Vincent Puccini by the Reverend Father Lezin de 
Sainte Scholastique, Provincial of the Reformed Carmelites of Touraine, 
Paris, 1670. And now done out of French, London, 1687. With an 
appendix, pp. 85-134, A brief discourse about discerning and trying the 
Spirits whether they be of God." But such works are of the last rarity. The 
Diario of the stigmatized Capuchiness, St. Veronica Giuliani, is a treasury 
of mystic experience of the first importance. There are literally a score 
of such treatises which seem the very rudiments of the subject. There is, 
so far as I am aware, no adequate translation of the Opere of St. Catharine 
of Siena. Not even a selection from Denys the Carthusian is to be found. 
The Revelations of St. Gertrude, the Works of St. Hildegarde, the Reve- 
lations of St. Mechthild of Hackborn have not been competently englished 
and edited. Above all, perhaps, we lack a translation of the Revelations 
of St. Birgitta of Sweden, than which there is no more important work, 
a very fount of mysticism. The Mystica ciudad de Dios (The Mystical 
City of God) of the Ven. Sor Maria Coronel de Agreda is not available. 
Only a very little of the Visions of and the vast literature which has 
concentrated around Anne Catherine Emmerich is accessible [22]. 

It were easy, but it were tedious to prolong the list. I have cited 
enough to show what huge gaps there exist in mystical works to be 
read in English, gaps which are grievously frustrating to any student. 

But the goal is great enough to compensate for all obstacles, all 
disappointment on the way. 

The end of Mysticism and the aim of the Mystic is to achieve the 
soul's conscious union in this life with Ultimate and Absolute Reality. 

We may use such metaphysical terms as "Cosmic Consciousness", 
or speak of 'Transcendental Reality", or "the Absolute", or "Ultimate 
Reality", or "Absolute Being" St. Augustine [24] has "Id quod est", 
"That Which Is" but after all it is far simpler and more explicit to say 
GOD. The Mystic's claim then is that even in this life it is possible to 
achieve a complete union with God. This does not merely imply a sense 
or even a sensible interior conviction of the Presence of God, but the 
union of "spirit with Spirit". Which experience is quite literally Heaven 
upon Earth since Heaven is nothing other than the conscious enjoyment 
of the Presence of God. 

Professor Seth says that "God ceases to be an object, and becomes 

57 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

an experience. . . . Mysticism bids the individual aim at nothing less 
than an interpenetration of essence". 

Thus St. Catharine of Genoa writes [25] : 'The soul, when purified, 
abides entirely in God; its being is God." 

St. Francis de Sales speaks of the soul being united to God, fastened, 
firmly fixed, and, as it were, glued to God in "unions d6ifiques", so 
that it cannot in any wise be separated from God, being inextricably 
mingled with, absorbed and engulfed in God. This union is not to be 
attained without the long exercise of great (heroic) virtue [26]. 

Professor William James [27] emphasizes that "as a matter of psycho- 
logical fact, mystical states "are" authoritative over those who have 
them. They have been "there", and know. It is vain for rationalism to 
grumble about this. The mystic is invulnerable, and must be left in 
undisturbed enjoyment of his creed." 

The Mystic does not, of course, become God by any actual deification 
or identification with God, but he can only rise to the supreme union 
through the humanity (derived from Mary) of Christ, of Whom St. 
Athanasius says: "He became man that we might be deified." Blessed 
Henry Suso, the Dominican, in a passage, which is admittedly difficult 
and profound, at least implies that there is a certain spark of the Divine 
Essence in man's immortal soul, and it is this which can be most closely and 
inseparably united to God. Blessed Henry further says that the Mystic's 
"Essential Reward consists in the contemplative union of the soul with 
the pure Divinity, for rest she never can till she be borne above all her 
powers and capacities and introduced to the natural entity of the Persons, 
and to the clear vision of their real essence. And in the emanation of 
the splendour of Their essence she will find full and perfect satisfaction 
and everlasting happiness; and the more disengaged and abstracted the 
self-egression of such souls is, the more free will be their soaring exaltation; 
and the more free their exaltation, the deeper will be their penetration 
into the vast wilderness and unfathomable abyss of the unknown God- 
head, wherein they are immersed, overflowed, and blended up, so that 
they desire to have no other will than God's will, and that they become 
the very same that God is: in other words, that they are made blessed 
by grace, as He is by nature" [28]. 

Blessed Henry tells us how some persons are unconsciously attracted 
by God, and he explains the intimate and essential part which Our 
Blessed Lady takes in the divine operation of Mysticism, since without 
Her there is nothing. 

Blessed John Ruysbroeck, also, in the conclusion of the Spiritual 
Nuptials says that mystics "see that they are the same simple ground 
as to their uncreated nature, and are one with the same light by which 
they see, and which they see". The soul is a divine spark, ever seeking 
union with the Divine Fire whence it has been struck. It is, writes St. 
Bonaventure "apex mentis seu scintilla". This Union, then, is the 
goal. What of the way or ways by which that goal happily 'may be 
reached? 

Suarez [80] says that "Mystics classify three stages or ways, the 
58 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

purgative way, the illuminative way, and the unitive way", which latter 
actually is hardly to be distinguished from the goal. 

This is confirmed by Pope Benedict XIV, who speaks of "those who 
are in the state of beginners, of others who are in the state of making 
progress, and of others who are in the state of perfection. We also find 
mention of a threefold way, the purgative way (as they call it), the 
illuminative way, and the unitive way" [31]. These ways or states they 
may be called by other names are axiomatic in Mystical Theology, and 
Pope Innocent XI, expressly condemned a proposition, number twenty- 
six, of Michael de Molinos, who denied that there were three ways or 
states in Mysticism. 

Molinos insisted upon an "interior" state. He held that there was but 
one way "unica via, scilicet interna", an internal and passing experience, 
which actually either resolves itself into aridity, so that the soul is so 

speak frozen, and makes no progress at all or else this state resolves 
itself into complacency, pride, and self-satisfaction, wherein lies the deadly 
danger that the soul being puffed up imagines the goal (in reality far off) 
has already been attained, and hence it becomes lazy, effortless, and 
inert, it slumbers and sleeps perilously, as did the foolish virgins. 

It has been observed "Molinos believed that he had found a royal 
road to God, without any intermediaries at all. Provided that the 
believer treated both Church and Jesus as a means to an end beyond 
themselves, Molinos was willing to make use of both. Beginners might 
begin with the Church. Through the Church they found their way to 
devotion to Jesus. At the third and highest stage both were left behind, 
and God remained alone" [55]. Thus concisely and clearly phrased the 
horrid blasphemy of Molinos is very apparent. His teaching led to blank 
atheism, but he so very cleverly disguised it that for a while he deceived 
many. 

Internal and Mystical silence is good, but we must not stop here. 
It has pleased the Divine Power to exhibit Physical Phenomena of 
Mysticism, to stamp His servants, as it were, with His own supernatural 
sealing, visible, and cognizable to all. These sealings of God are what 
we term the Physical Phenomena of Mysticism. 

There are, of course, many, very many Mystics of the highest order 
who have not been thus favoured by God, for, as it was said, "the wind 
bloweth where it listeth" (St. John in, 8), and the Apostle tells us that 
"there are diversities of gifts" and "diversities of operations" but the 
manifestation of the Spirit is given to every man to profit withal, 

1 Corinthians, xii. 

Be the reasons what they may, English writers upon Mysticism have 
not dealt with or at any rate very incidentally touched upon these 
Manifestations, and the time is over-ripe for a Study of the Physical 
Phenomena of Mysticism. 

These phenomena are so many and so varied that it is almost 
impossible to give a full list of such mysterious happenings and to 
classify them, but it will be useful to essay some kind of conspectus, 
however inadequate. 

59 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

In the first place, and almost parenthetically, we may take examples 
of mystical experiences and knowledge connected with the Blessed 
Sacrament. There have been mystics who could distinguish by a kind 
of spiritual perception the sacramental presence, and who recognized 
an unconsecrated host from one which was consecrated. Such was Jane 
the Meatless, a Norfolk maiden. A holy Carmelite, Casset; St. Francis 
Borgia, and others enjoyed this extraordinary gift, as also does Theresa 
Neumann, of Konnersreuth, to-day. 

The appearances in the Host to certain mystics are in many shapes 
[S3], but it should be noted that mystics seem in some supernatural mode 
to attract the Sacrament, as approved theologians have said there is "a 
double magnetism". The Augustinian, Blessed Veronica of Binasco [34], 
drew the Blessed Sacrament from the Altar through the air to herself. 
The same marvel is related of Elizabeth of Jesus. When the priest was 
about to give communion a Host detached itself from the ciborium 
and leapt into her mouth. Similar instances are recorded of St. Catharine 
of Siena, of St. Teresa the Great, of the Venerable Domenica dal Paradiso, 
whose miraculous communions were by no means infrequent, and of St. 
Gemma Galgani. This even happens at a considerable distance as is told 
of St. Veronica Giuliani the Capuchiness, and of Ida of Louvain. Rader 
in his Bavaria Sacra relates the same of the daughter of King Bela, the 
cloistered Dominican nun, St. Margaret, canonized by Pius XII in 
November, 1943. 

A very exceptional phenomenon occurred when at Mass after the 
Consecration the chalice momentarily disappeared from the altar and 
was swiftly returned. It had been put to the lips of Saint Maria Francesca 
of the Five Wounds, a stigmatized Alcantarine of Naples [55]. 

There have been Saints and holy persons who could feel the Blessed 
Sacrament. Such was St. Rose of Lima, and the Venerable Maria d'Agreda. 
Some could taste it, for example the Franciscan Blessed Angela of Foligno, 
Ida of Louvain, Lucy of ALdehausen. Others could smell a heavenly 
fragrance, the Premonstratensian St. Herman Joseph, St. Catharine of 
Siena, St. Philip Neri, Giles of Rheggio. Others could hear it, St. Pascal 
Baylon, St. Joseph of Copertino, Blessed Henry Suso, the Spanish mystic 
Jerome Gratian of the Mother of God. Very many could see It miraculously, 
as St. Catharine of Siena, St. Joseph of Copertino, Blessed Mary of Oignies, 
Blessed Veronica of Binasco, Peter of Toulouse, Ven. Domenica dal 
Paradiso, Teresa Higginson, and a great number beside. 

The more usual higher Physical Phenomena of Mysticism may be 
conveniently (but by no means exhaustively) listed as follows: 

Ecstasies, rapts f and trances, which must be carefully distinguished 
from any morbid, cataleptic, or hypnotic state; from any form of hysteria, 
or pithiatism (to use BabinsM's [36] nomenclature) or temporary amnesia, 
or somnabulism; or again from a "natural ecstasy", which is an alienation 
of the senses due to intensive concentration or emotion. These ecstasies, 
rapts, and trances must in the case of a mystic be shown to be super- 
natural or divine ecstasy. 

Stigmatization. That is to say the supernatural imprinting upon .the 
60 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

body of the mystic of the Five Sacred Wounds. Sometimes the punctures 
of the Crown of Thorns, or the stripes and weals of the scourging, are 
superadded. The divine stigmata must be distinguished from false 
stigmata, or consciously counterfeited stigmata, or what are known 
(incorrectly) as ''natural stigmata". Stigmatization will be the subject 
of the following chapter. All true stigmatics have received the wounds 
in a rapture of ecstasy. 

Levitation. Mystics are not only raised from the ground by some 
divine psychic force, however exercised, for a few inches but for many 
feet, and are even wafted hither and thither. This phenomenon has 
been parodied at spiritistic stances. The case of the medium Home is 
well-known, and the medium Colin Evans is said to have been raised 
several feet from the ground, at a public stance. A photograph was taken 
of this happening by infra-red light. Benedict XIV instructs us that "No 
natural power can cause levitation of the body, but this is not beyond 
the power and subtle craft of the devil to effect" [37]. 

Bilocation. The appearance of the same person in two entirely separate 
places, often far away from each other, at the very same time. The 
theological implications of bilocation are to be carefully distinguished. 
Philosophers hold that there is no absolute impossibility (and indeed 
such a phenomenon has been known) in the same body being at once 
circumscriptively in one place and definitively elsewhere, since local 
extension is consequent on a naturally universal, but still not essentially 
necessary, property of material substance. God in His omnipotence may 
delocalize the material substance, which then by Divine Agency would 
be rendered capable of receiving definitive, and consequently multiple 
location. St. Antony of Padua, preaching on Holy Thursday, 1227, in 
the church of St. Pierre du Queriox at Limoges, remembered how at that 
very time he was due to chant a lesson of Tenebrae in his own com- 
munity. He broke off his sermon, and drew his hood over his head. At 
the same moment he appeared among the friars, went to the lectern, 
chanted the lesson, and when he had finished withdrew from choir. 
Simultaneously, in the pulpit, he put back his hood and resumed his 
discourse. Another example of bilocation is that episode in the life of 
St. Alphonsus Liguori, who whilst seated in his chair at the Episcopal 
Palace of St. Agata dei Goti, of that small diocese lying between Naples 
and Capua, passed into a deep trance, and was seen by those present 
to enter the bedchamber at the Quirinal, Rome, of Pope Clement XIV, 
and for several hours to assist with his prayers and consolations the 
dying Pontiff, who expired on 22nd September, 1774. A few minutes later 
St. Alphonsus awoke from his trance. In two letters, written in obedience 
to her Director, on the First and Second of January, 1881, Teresa 
Higginson with the great simplicity of truth, says how whilst not 
neglecting her duties at home, she found herself mysteriously transported 
to some country, which she supposed to be Africa, among aborigines 
whose peculiar habits and dispositions she describes very fully. She was 
enabled to instruct them and help them in many ways [38]. Bilocation 
must not be confused with apparitions and spectral appearances at the 

61 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

moment of death, very many examples of which are recorded, as, for 
example, by St. Gregory in his Dialogues, by Mrs. Catharine Crowe in 
The Night Side of Nature (1848), by Dr. F. G. Lee in his More Glimpses 
of the World Unseen (1878), and by many other writers. These apparitions 
are technically known as "wraiths". 

A luminous irradiance, not rapid like a flash of light, but steadily 
shining, bright and clear, and (says Benedict XIV) "of some sensible 
duration of time" often surrounds the heads and faces, sometimes the 
whole bodies of mystics. It is, as it were, an aureole of glory. This 
irradiance, so the same Pontiff lays down, must be seen in the full light 
of day. (It is, therefore, quite another thing from the phosphorescence 
which has been known to glow in the darkness or owl-light of the stance 
room.) It must be observed by several persons, not a few; so there shall 
be no question of hallucination. It must be prolonged and steady, no 
flash or electric spark. The person who emits this supernatural splendour 
must be known to be an individual of great virtue and very holy, and 
the irradiance shines forth beautifully when they are engaged in some 
religious act, such as a deep meditation, preaching, or, it may be, rapt 
in ecstasy. Benedict XIV emphasizes the fact that a natural phenomenon 
of seeming fire has been known to burst out and illumine all the head 
and even the human frame under certain conditions. This is a very 
different thing from the supernatural glory which environed Jean 
Calaguritanus whilst he was lost in profound prayer. Those present saw 
the Carthusian Dom Matthias Torner bathed in light at the moment he 
began his first mass, and this irradiance continued until he descended 
from the altar. The Venerable Orsola Benincasa, the Theatine nun, was 
often seen as though in the midst of a lambent flame, but she herself 
was quite unconscious of the prodigy. Upon one Lady Day, as he was 
preaching to a crowded congregation, the face of St. Fran9ois de Sales 
glowed with unearthly light. All present marvelled at it, and since it 
was immediately recorded and attested there can be no question of its 
truth. Precisely the same prodigy occurred to St. Alphonsus Liguori, 
when he was preaching at Foggia, and was witnessed by a crowded 
church. In the diocese of Foggia (Capitanata) and by the Redemptorists 
a Commemoration of this marvellous happening is solemnly observed on 
22 March each year. 

Supernatural fragrances and perfume. The phenomenon of sweet- 
smelling effluvia scattered from the person and clothes of the mystic 
is so common that cases are numberless and indisputable. Dr. Imbert- 
Gourbeyre reckons them by hundreds, and there are hundreds more 
which have not been recorded. Where St. Catherine of Ricci had walked 
through the cloister was known to the nuns by the delicious scent that 
clung even to the flags whereon she had trod. Father Beyonne says 
that objects she touched were often impregnated for days with perfume. 
St. Thomas Aquinas often irradiated male frankincense from his habit and 
cowl. "The odour of sanctity" is more than a mere phrase. St. Herman 
Joseph could be traced through the corridors of Steinfeld by the rare 
fragrances he scattered as he went to and fro. St. Francis of Paola and 
62 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

Venturini of Bergamo diffused heavenly aromas when they offered the 
Holy Sacrifice. 

Inedia, or supernatural abstinence. This abstinence from food which 
occurs so frequently in the case of Saints and Mystics is quite another 
thing from the Ecclesiastical Lenten Fast, or any other Fasts prescribed 
throughout the year. These are cases of complete abstinence from food 
or drink, especially among ecstatics who are marked with the Stigmata. 
Parenthetically, there have been, of course, impostures such as Ann 
Moore, known as the Fasting Woman of Tutbury, and Mary Thomas 
of Tanyralt in Merionethshire, who was feigned to have lived many years 
without taking food. Paullus Lentulus wrote The Wonderful History of 
the Remarkable Fast of the Maiden Appolonia Schreiber, of the Canton of 
Berne, Berne, 1604, to which he appended accounts of other remarkable 
fasts. There are, also, the public and very reprehensible exhibitions of 
"fasting men". It may be well here to quote briefly from Dr. Imbert- 
Gourbeyre, La Stigmatisation (II, p. 183) : "Blessed Angela of Foligno 
remained twelve years without taking any nourishment; St. Catharine 
of Siena about eight years; Blessed Catharine of Racconigi ten years; 
the Venerable Domenica dal Paradiso (or II Paradisino, a tiny hamlet 
near Florence) twenty years; and in our own day Maria-Rosa Andriani 
(d. 1848) twenty-eight years; Maria Domenica Lazzari (d. 1848) and 
Louise Lateau (d. 1883), fourteen years." Since the 3oth September, 1927, 
Theresa Neumann has lived solely on the Eucharist. 

A supernatural lack of sleep. Or rather perhaps one ought to say no 
need for sleep has been observed in many Mystics and Saints. This is 
not insomnia, which brings about a low state of health, depression and 
even a settled melancholy. Nor is it the natural faculty, which is recorded, 
that desires very little rest or sleep. Thus Nicholas Ferrar of Little 
Gidding slept only two or three hours each night, but this had not the 
slightest effect upon his physical fitness and energy. His constitution 
did not require any further repose. This is entirely different, being 
natural, from the supernatural vigils of the Saints and Mystics. St. 
Catharine of Siena, for example, hardly slept for half-an-hour every 
two days. Yet she was never weary, or harassed, or fatigued. The Fran- 
ciscan St. Colette, spent a whole year without sleeping, whilst Agatha 
of the Cross (1547-1621), a Spanish Dominicaness, for the last eight 
years of her life did not sleep at all. This is an extraordinary phenomenon 
and infrequent. For it to be supernatural it is necessary that the Mystic 
should be proved to remain well and energetic, with no injury to health 
nor exhaustion, no morbid hypochondriasis. 

Supernatural dreams. These phenomena are among the most difficult, 
although not among the most important, in the study of Mysticism. 
"Dreams! What age, or what country of the world, has not felt and 
acknowledged the mystery of their origin and end?" Le Fanu exclaims. 
That a dream may have a spiritual origin is a question no Christian could 
for a moment debate, since there are so many instances, and those of 
profoundest importance and meaning, recorded both in the Old and New 
Testaments, and in the Lives of the Saints. The observing and inter- 

63 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

pretation of dreams, oneirology and oneiromancy, are known in all ages 
to all peoples and connected with much that is superstitious and profane. 
The heavenly command was given [39] : "You shall not divine nor obscure 
dreams", Leviticus xix, 26, and again, Deuteronomy xviii, 10, "Neither 
let there be found among you any one that . . . observeth dreams and 
omens". Among the impieties and sorceries of King Manasseh of Judah 
are reckoned that "he observed dreams, followed divinations, gave himself 
up to magic arts", II Chronicles xxxiii, 6. But we also have the dreams 
of St. Joseph, St. Matthew i, 20, and ii, 19; also the dream in which the 
Magi were bidden not to return to Herod, but to journey back to their 
own country by another way. Warning dreams have been dreamed by 
many who were not even mystics, far less Saints. There are very 
informative and striking chapters upon this in Mrs. Crowe's The Night 
Side of Nature, and Dr. F. G. Lee's More Glimpses of the World Unseen. 

The question how to distinguish supernatural dreams from the 
ordinary (and often meaningless or confused) dream is dealt with by many 
authors, notably by Benedict XIV, and even more fully by Gaspar 
& Rejes (Jucund. Quaest. Elys. Campo, qu. 37) who treats the whole 
subject of dreams at great length. Preternatural visions and admonitions 
are some from God, some from the devil; some occur in sleep, and some 
whilst men are waking. Very briefly the signs by which the supernatural 
origin of a dream may be recognized are, firstly, a dream divinely sent is 
always extremely reasonable and directive, without any diversion of 
romantic imaginings; secondly, the dream affords intelligible and wise 
guidance, or may foretell in plain fashion some future event; thirdly, 
a divine dream leaves a complete and ineffable impression, and is 
remembered in detail as one simple whole, whereas natural dreams are 
often complicated and confused in detail, not easy to recall; fourthly, 
a divine dream is often sent to two or more persons simultaneously without 
any previous discussion or mutual conversation concerning the subject 
of the dream. Such a dream was that when Our Lady appeared in their 
sleep to St. Peter Nolasco, St. Ramon de Penafort, and King James of 
Arragon, severally, directing that the Mercedarian Order be founded in 
Her honour. Jean Gerson adds that an increase of humility after a dream 
betokens a divine origin, and this agrees with what St. Hildegarde tells 
us that the devil fell through pride, and humility is the touchstone, the 
measure whereby to measure divine promptings. (Responsum Hildegardis 
ad Epistolam Monachorum Sigebergensium, CXXXVII, Migne, Patrologia 
Latina, 197, pp. 366-67.) 

There is an old sentence, current in mediaeval England, which is really 
derived and condensed from the Revelations of St. Birgitta, "Thus may 
thou know the unclean spirit : for he stirreth thee to seek thy own worship 
and praising; to be proud of the gifts that God hath given thee ; he stirreth 
thee to intemperance in all thy members; to these he inflameth thy heart." 

Gerson, De distinctione verarum Revelationum afalsis, is very emphatic 
that in the matter of all supernatural and supernormal phenomena 
humility is the proof whether their origin be divine. "Monitiones 
intrinsecae, omnis Revelatio, omne Miraculum, omnis amor extaticus, 
6 4 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

omnis raptus, si humilitas praecedit et comitetur et sequatur; si 
earn perimens misceatur (crede mihi) signum habet quod a Deo sunt 
aut bono ejus Angelo, nee fallens." 

Of dreams Sir Thomas Brown in his Religio Medici profoundly says: 
"I thank God for my happy dreams, as I do for my good rest . . . and 
surely it is not a melancholy conceit to think we are all asleep in this 
world, and that the conceits of this life are as mere dreams to those of 
the next; as the phantasms to the conceit of the day. There is an equal 
delusion in both, and the one doth seem to be but the emblem or picture 
of the other; we are somewhat more than ourselves in our sleep, and 
the slumber of the body seems to be but the waking of the soul. It is the 
ligation of the sense, but the liberty of reason ... we must therefore 
say that there is something in us that is not in the jurisdiction of 
Morpheus." 

Visions and Apparitions. These phenomena, again, are amongst the 
most difficult, yet also amongst the most important in the study of 
Mysticism. 

Revelations, Locutions, and Prophecy. These are equally difficult, and 
equally important phenomena. Fortunately we have a very safe guide 
in Pope Benedict XIV, whose immense learning treats of such matters 
in great detail. The Revelations of the Saints are among the Classics of 
Mysticism. No student of the subject can advance very far without 
some knowledge, at least, of the Revelations of St. Gertrude; the Works 
of St. Hildegarde; the Life and Revelations of Blessed Angela of Foligno; 
the Revelations of St. Birgitta of Sweden; the Works of St. Catharine 
of Siena; of St. Teresa, the Great Carmelite; of St. Maria Maddalena 
de' Pazzi; and I will add that incomparably beautiful book, The Mystical 
City of God, by the Venerable Sor Maria de 'Agreda, together with the 
Revelations and Visions of the Augustinian, Anne Catharine Emmerich 
of Diilmen. Benedict XIV is cautiously emphatic that even the Reve- 
lations, approved by the Apostolic See, of great Saints, such as St. 
Birgitta of Sweden and St. Catharine of Siena, although undoubtedly 
true and Divinely inspired are to be accepted as of human faith, and 
in the words of Cardinal Torquemada "piously and modestly under- 
stood". A greater weight is given to the Revelations of St. Birgitta on 
account of their liturgical use by her Daughters. St. Birgitta teaches the 
Immaculate Conception. It has been said that St. Catharine taught that 
Our Lady was conceived in original sin [40], but scholars and theologians 
are agreed that the passage in question is an interpolation. Contelorius [41] 
goes so far as to say that sanctity is not to be inferred from Revelations, 
Scacchus [42], however, and the authoritative Delrio [43] agreeably 
modify this opinion. 

Telekenesis. That is to say the knowledge of things which are happening 
or have just happened at a considerable, sometimes a very great, distance. 
Saints and Mystics have had an extraordinary knowledge of what is 
going on elsewhere, although it may be far away, and there could be no 
normal channel through which the information could be so immediately 
transmitted. Telekenesis, of course, is entirely different from and far 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

beyond telepathy, which is merely thought-transference. Again, it must 
be distinguished from clairvoyance. According to the Oxford English 
Dictionary [44] Clairvoyance is "The faculty of mentally perceiving 
objects at a distance or concealed from sight, attributed to certain 
persons, or to persons under mesmeric conditions" [45]. There is no 
question here of any mesmeric condition, and, of course, we entirely 
exclude from consideration the humbug and frauds of the "professional" 
clairvoyant, whether at some private gathering or at a pubHc stance. 
No mystical gift can be bartered for money, and it is much to be feared 
that this "clairvoyance" is very largely of diabolical origin, for the Church 
has always recognized that evil spirits may obtain a knowledge of things 
passing in distant places. One of the most striking instances of divinely 
supernatural telekenesis is when Pope St. Pius V on -7 October, 1571, 
was informed of the result of the Battle of Lepanto and the Victory of 
Don John. The Holy Father at the very decisive moment was discussing 
some business of the first importance with a Congregation of Cardinals. 
Suddenly he rose, left them abruptly, and went to the window which he 
opened. For a moment his eyes were fixed on the heavens, and then 
returning to the table he said: "It is not now a time to talk any more 
about affairs, however pressing; it is the time to give thanks to Almighty 
God for the signal victory which He has vouchsafed to the Christians." 
This fact was carefully attested at the very moment and authentically 
recorded so as to admit of no shadow of doubt. There is (apparently) a 
natural telekenesis, outside the midnight and murk of the stance-rooms, 
of which an example was displayed by Mr. Stephan Ossowiecki, a Polish 
gentleman, whose supra-normal gifts are described in Dr. Gustave 
Geley's work, Paris, 1924, L'Ectoplasmie et la Clairvoyance [46]. 

Vision through opaque bodies. This phenomenon of Mysticism has 
been known to occur in cases of normal subjects, that is to say persons 
who were decidedly not mystics and had neither read nor were interested 
in mystical works. Science has carefully investigated and is still making 
experiments in regard to this subject. Much that is valuable has been 
discovered, but nothing has been arrived at in regard to the super- 
natural gift of the mystic. One of the most extraordinary examples of a 
person upon which this gift was conferred is the Trinitarian, Blessed 
Anna Maria Taigi. She saw the bottom of seas and lakes, and of the 
fathomless ocean; she penetrated the heights of heaven, and saw into 
the abyss of the earth, as clearly as she discerned the four walls of the 
room [47]. 

Infused knowledge. This is a supernatural aptitude for learning and 
a truly divine wisdom which in almost infinite variety and measures 
have been miraculously bestowed upon Saints and Mystics of all ages, 
so that they were able to understand and explain the most difficult 
and intricate problems of psychology and theology. Many mystics, of 
course, St. Augustine, St. Albertus Magnun, St. Thomas Aquinas and 
St. Bonaventure, for example, were erudite scholars and masters. On 
the other hand, St. Joseph of Copertino (1603-63), who was born of 
poor parents in a tiny village on the gulf of Tarento, received no education 

66 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

(humanly speaking) and yet he was easily able to resolve the most complex 
problems in mystical theology, which professors of the science were at 
a loss to interpret and understand. Blessed Osanna Andreasi of Mantua 
(1449-1505), a Dominicaness, was miraculously instructed by our Lady 
in an instant how to read and write, so that the humble nun became a 
great mistress of the spiritual life, and we possess forty-two letters, 
replete with the highest mysticism, which she addressed to priests and 
religious [48]. Perhaps the most remarkable example of infused knowledge 
is St. Catharine of Siena, whose works explore the highest and untrodden 
realms of the spirit and soar profoundly to the very throne of God, who 
is recognized by aU as a Supreme Mistress of the Mystical Ulsdoctrina 
ejus infusa, non acquisita fuit [49], and yet she was a tremendous force 
in the politics of the day, she was concerned with many domesticities, 
and had not been tutored by scholars or learned men. The daughter of 
a respectable bourgeois family, her education such as it was must 
have been of the very simplest. 

Discernment of spirits. "Believe not every spirit, but try the spirits 
whether they are of God; because many false prophets are gone out 
into the world," says St. John [50], who proceeds to give the rule how 
we may know a good spirit from an evil spirit. And nevei was this precept 
more needed than to-day [51]. It is essential that the mystic should be 
able to recognize, however cunningly devised and clever the masquerade, 
the evil, which imitates and impersonates the good. As will be noted later, 
doctors give many signs whereby we may distinguish the divine from the 
diabolical. St. Catharine of Siena, Cardinal Bona, Gerson, Tanner, the 
Capuchin Taillepeid, and many more have written most convincingly 
upon this difficult subject. 

The Franciscan Cardinal Brancati de Laurea [52] points out that 
the true mystical gift of discernment of spirits is "a special instinct 
whereby man without human industry, discerns spirit from spirit". No 
doubt the rules and tests "which are to be learned by human industry 
and toil", which are taught by theologians and writers on occultism, are 
scientifically very valuable and in practice of infinite use, but the mystic's 
gift of discernment of spirits is a grace gratis data, that is to say not 
derived from ascetical love and the like, but a supernatural faculty 
divinely and freely bestowed. And yet so subtle prove the devices of the 
demon that many are not only deceived, but persist in their deceit and 
become ardent propagandists of necromancy and every kind of dark 
diabolism. 

The gift of healing^ should be mentioned as granted to many mystics, 
not of their own seeking, and sometimes almost without their knowledge, 
or at least with their having only a very indirect apprehension of their 
power. Here we distinguish the gift as enjoyed by mystics who are not 
formally acclaimed as Saints, who possibly will not ever be distinguished 
by the honours of Beatification. 

A supernatural and extraordinary empery over nature and creatures is 
a phenomenon which has characterized many mystical souls. Thus, on 
one occasion, when St. Hugh of Grenoble, the Bishop who allotted to 

67 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

St. Bruno the first (the Grande) Chartreuse, was residing among the 
Carthusians with whom he loved to sojourn, on entering the refectory 
upon a high festival found the monks sitting motionless before their 
repast. By some accident, no other food being obtainable, fowls had 
been served at table, and the Rule forbade them to eat this flesh. Taking 
his place, the aged prelate making the sign of the cross on the birds 
changed them into small tortoises, which are edible and are classed as 
fish. So the fathers partook and were satisfied. Zurburan has painted this 
incident. A similar miracle over nature is related of St. Ulrich, first bishop 
of Augsburg, who on a fast day converted a joint of meat into fish by the 
sacred sign. In pictorial art he is often represented with a fish as his 
symbol. There is a fine drawing of St. Ulrich and his fish by Albert Diirer. 
The same thing is told of the great St. Alphonsus Liguori, who although 
bidden by the Major General of the Redemptorists to eat a plate of veal 
converted it by the holy sign into a cod cutlet. 

The Augustinian mystic, St. Nicolas of Tolentino, as he lay wasted 
and weak on his death-bed, exhausted by the broiling August heat, so 
excited the pity of his sorrowing brethren that they brought him a dish 
of doves, most delicately dressed, to tempt his appetite. The Saint, 
however, reproved them, firmly, but in gentle terms. He had never 
tasted animal food in his life. Painfully raising himself on his poor pallet, 
he stretched his hands over the dish, and lo ! the birds rejoicing were in a 
flash covered with plumage, and flew out of the window of his little white- 
washed cell towards the blue sky beyond. But they hovered around 
until in a few days the Saint breathed his last [55], when they were seen 
mounting into the air, accompanying (as it is piously believed) his soul 
to Paradise. For as he breathed his last the room was filled with a 
heavenly fragrance, as of lilies, and gleamed with a radiant light. 

A cup of wine blessed by St. Dominic from which he drank first, 
was partaken of in the refectory by twenty-five brethren at their meal, 
and when the thirst of all was quenched, was yet found to be brimming 
full as though nobody had so much as touched it with his lips, St. 
Dominic, moreover, when on board a galley which was like to be over- 
whelmed in a fierce tempest by his prayers immediately calmed the 
storm [54]. The Francisan mystic St. Peter of Alcantara [55], the director 
of St. Teresa, an ascetic of surprising holiness, walked upon the waves 
of the sea as though it were dry land, as also did St. Peter Nolasco, 
Father of the Mercedarians, and St. Maria de Cervellione of the same 
Order, and the Dominican St. Peter Gonzalez. 

It were superfluous to detail the power over animals, wild and gentle, 
exercised by St. Francis of Assisi; how St. Giles the hermit was com- 
panioned by a hind which he loved; how a lion dwelt, like a dog, with 
St. Jerome and protected him; how a wolf guided the blind St. Herv; 
and St. Sylvester Gozzolini, the founder of the Silvestrine monks, was 
served by a fierce wolf which dwelt near the Saint's retreat at Monte 
Fano and obeyed in most docile fashion his least word [56]. Amazing 
as it may appear, the mystics had reached such heights that animals 
and nature itself devotedly submitted to them and were lovingly subject. 

68 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

This is even shown in those small domestic matters, which may 
appear trifling, but which are so essential to our well-being and health. 
From 1873 to 1876 Teresa Helena Higginson was an elementary school- 
teacher at St. Mary's, Wigan. She shared her humble little room with 
another teacher, Miss Susan Ryland, who is now a religious. One bitterly 
cold morning they found that by some accident their little stock of fire- 
wood was exhausted. Teresa Higginson told Miss Ryland to look in a 
certain cupboard. "I have, and it is quite empty/' was the reply. " Just 
ask St. Joseph to help, and look again," said Teresa. "You had better 
ask him. He won't do it for me. I'm not good enough," answered Miss 
Ryland. "Well, look again, dear," suggested Teresa. Miss Ryland did so, 
and found a neatly stacked pile of wood, of quite a different and a better 
kind than the bundles they usually bought. A child was suffering from 
some ailment of the chest. By rubbing on some ointment Teresa Higginson 
cured the little boy at once. The delighted mother cried out: "Oh, how 
wonderful! Where can I get a supply? Tell me the chemist's name." In 
distress Teresa turned to Miss Ryland and whispered: "Whatever shall 
I do? It was just ordinary lard." On one occasion a fire was wanted 
immediately for some poor woman who had been taken ill. Teresa made 
the sign of the cross over the cold dead embers in the grate, and at once 
they sprang into a bright blaze. Such is the power of mystics over 
inanimate nature, even in the simplest domestic details, the lowly paths 
of life [57]. 

The King of Mystics, our Lord Himself, was tempted of the devil. 
Naturally Satan and his legions will assault and molest all those who, 
however, inadequately and with many a fall, are trying to attain to 
the supernatural light. Mystics, as is to be expected, will be the especial 
objects of his enmity; against mystics he will (so to speak) concentrate 
his malice and exercise the fullness of his power. Mysticism is essentially 
rooted in faith, and Canon Ribet warns us "It is rare that faith, which is 
the foundation of the spiritual life, is not subject to the most terrible 
diabolical assaults" [58]. To this extraordinary temptation are often 
superadded those of hideous blasphemy and hatred of God. Instances 
of such awful trials might be cited from the lives of Blessed Angela of 
Foligno, Saint Margaret of Cortona, St. Teresa of Avila, St. Maria 
Maddalena de* Pazzi, St. Francis de Sales, and many more. These 
phenomena teach us that there must be no false security. The Mystic 
must ever watch and pray. 

There are also actual demoniac molestations, most terrifying and weird 
experiences. St. Christina of Stommeln was constantly harassed, beaten, 
battered, and bruised by a fiend. On one occasion when two Dominican 
friars came to visit her, and she rose to greet them an invisible force 
hurled her backwards and struck her head repeatedly against the wall 
with horrid violence. She was cut and stabbed until blood came. These 
manifestations occurred before most trustworthy witnesses, and there 
cannot be a shadow of doubt that such outrages are reported with 
scrupulous accuracy. Again and again she was bespattered and polluted 
with deluges of indescribable filth [59]. St. Gemma Galgani was also 

69 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

tortured and assaulted by demons. Once, she says, "I got such a strong 
blow of a cudgel on my left shoulder that I fell. Even to-day I feel sick 
and ill from the pain." Again, the devil seized her and dashed her to the 
floor, where she lay senseless. Such phenomena were frequent [60], and 
greatly alarmed all in the house. 

The Cur d'Ars, St. Jean Vianney, was sensibly persecuted by devils. 
At night the infernal enemy would rouse him from his few hours' sleep 
by thundering blows upon the doors and walls of the presbytery. It was 
at first thought that a gang of armed thieves had broken into the house, 
there were creaks as if all the furniture had been shattered in a thousand 
pieces. An awful silence followed for a few moments, and there were 
heard yells of maddened laughter which froze the very blood of the 
listeners. It was soon evident that the hubbub was preternatural. This 
persecution of the demon the grappin as St. Jean Vianney called him 
continued for a period of no less than 30 years, and the phenomena 
are attested by dozens of impeccable witnesses. Thus the infernal enemy 
would drum incessantly upon the table or chimney-piece, would imitate 
the clearing of wood, planing boards, hammering nails, just as if a 
carpenter were noisily at work in the house; would overthrow platters 
and smash a water-jug to smithereens. M. Monnin, who was actually 
present, relates how one night the evil one set fire to the heavy serge 
curtains of the Saint's bed. "Ah, this is a good sign," mildly observed 
the Cur6, "the demon is very angry with us." 

In the Lent of 1875 when Teresa Higginson and Miss Susan Ryland 
were living at Wigan, the latter was terribly alarmed as the house rang 
again and again with hoarse yells and shrieks of piercing agony, whilst 
a crash of thunder seemed to shake the very walls, and pale ghostly 
lights flickered about, dancing round the room. Miss Ryland cried out 
in terror, but Teresa said: "Don't be alarmed, dear. It's only the devil. 
He wants to be noticed, but he cannot really harm us. Let us say our 
prayers." One night, or rather early one winter morning, there came a 
low insistent rapping at Miss Higginson's bedroom door. Thinking that 
someone had suddenly been taken ill she got up quickly and opened the 
door, only to receive a violent blow on the face so that her cheek was 
bruised and swollen, whilst a soft laugh of bitter malicious glee was 
plainly heard. 

Such phenomena are well known. They have, indeed, been described 
and classified by the learned Peter Thyraeus, S. J., of Nuys (Cologne) 
in his great work De Locis Infestis and the Libellus De Terrificationibus 
Noctumisque Tumultibus (On Haunted Places, and also a Treatise on The 
Terrors of Darkness and Midnight Noises). 

The physical phenomenon known as Incendium Amoris, the Burning 
Fire of Love, is far from uncommon in the annals of sanctity and is often 
recorded in the biographies of exalted mystics. It is the merest truism to 
observe that even in the most ordinary individual a great emotion has 
a corresponding corporeal effect, that there will be an actual rise of 
bodily temperature, an expressive flushing of the face; and when the 
ardour of love is experienced (a love far other than gross sensuality and 
70 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

carnal desire) a flood of happiness will pulsate and permeate both mind 
and body, resulting in a kind of ardour and joy that lighten the meanest 
trivial round, whilst all nature, things animate and inanimate, wears 
a smile. The keener the emotion the more intensive the result. In the 
case of mystics this result is raised to the highest possible degree, and 
becomes even violent in its vehemence and excess. Father Cepari, a 
Jesuit of very holy life and great discretion, who after Father Fabbrini 
was the confessor and later the biographer of the Saint, tells us how St. 
Maria Maddalena de* Pazzi was transformed by sudden overwhelmings 
of love, "for her face, losing in a moment the extreme pallor which had 
been produced by her severe penances and her austere cloistral life, 
became glowing, beaming with delight, and full; her eyes shone like 
twin stars, and she exclaimed aloud, crying out '0 love! O Divine Love! 
O God of Love!' " Moreover, such was the excess and abundance of this 
celestial flame which consumed her, that "in the midst of winter she 
could not bear woollen garments, because of that fire of love which burned 
in her bosom, but perforce she cut through and loosened her habit". She 
was even compelled to run to a well and not only to drink a quantity of 
icy cold water, but to bathe her hands and her breast, if haply she 
might assuage the flame [62]. Very much the same is related of St. Peter 
of Alcantara, who was often obliged to unfasten his habit even in winter, 
and to go out into the chilly air, so torrid were the fires that burned 
and broiled in his breast. He even burst into jubilant song, and with- 
drew into the recesses of a lonely wood that he might the more freely 
hymn the divine goodness. Not infrequently peasants who passed by 
would hear the liquid music of his voice [63]. 

It is recorded of St. Philip Neri that often as he said Mass his face 
was illumined, and it seemed that sparks of fire darted from his eyes. 
He sometimes swooned away, overcome by divine love, and on one 
occasion the flame of interior supernatural love so scorched and blistered 
his throat that he was ill for several days [64]. 

When in the Church of the Madonna della Piete (SS. Bartolomeo 
ed Alessandro, piazza Colonna) at Rome, the venerable Cardinal^Pedicini 
gave Holy Communion to the Trinitarian, Blessed Anna Maria Taigi, 
streams of perspiration poured down her face, she wept abundantly and 
uttered deep sighs. Her cheeks became rose-red, and often surprised 
by a spasm of divine ecstasy she fell swooning to the ground. "Often/' 
the Cardinal said, "have I seen her fall, after receiving Communion, as 
if struck by lightning, and thus remain a long time burned in the sweet 
flames of divine love" [65]. 

Of the Venerable Serafina di Dio, a Carmelite nun of the Capri 
convent, who died in 1699, it is recorded that after Communion, and 
sometimes when she was rapt in prayer, the community saw her with 
her face glowing like a red flame and her eyes sparkling fire. "It burned 
them if they but touched her", and she declared that she was consumed 
and shrivelled with heat, that >er blood was as molten lead in her 
veins [66]. 

Suor Maria Villani of Naples (1584-1670), a Dominicaness, who 

7* 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

with pardonable exaggeration her daughters considered almost to rival 
the Seraphic Mother, St. Catharine herself in her profound knowledge 
of mystical theology, is described as "a furnace of love, a furnace thrice- 
heated". When she drank cold water a sizzling sound was heard as if 
the liquid was being poured upon red-hot iron [67]. 

The extraordinary heat phenomena manifested in the cases of that 
noble figure St. Catharine of Genoa, of the Capuchin Fra Girolamo da 
Narni, of St. Stanislaus Kostka, of the Venerable Orsola Benineasa [68], 
from whose throat there not unseldom came a perceptible white smoke 
as if ascending from a brazier lighted within, and other extraordinary 
but amply attested cases are recorded on unimpeachable evidence. 

The most perfect degree of mystical union with God, the mystics' 
goal, which rises through and above ecstasy, the height of earthly con- 
templation, and a sure foretaste of heavenly bliss is the state known as 
the Mystical Marriage. That great master of mystical theology, Gian- 
battista Scaramelli, S. J. (1687-1752), in his II Direttorio Mistico says 
that the Flame of Love is conceded only to those on the very highest 
peak of the Mystical Marriage, which is an ineffable Spiritual Union 
with Deity. "The essentials of the Spiritual Marriage are/' Scaramelli 
considers, "in the first place, the intellectual vision of the Holy Trinity; 
and, secondly, an intellectual vision of the Divine Word, that is of Jesus 
Christ, together with some intellectual locution in which a mutual consent 
is given, and vows of fidelity exchanged." I would add that a Vision 
or the Presence of Our Lady is necessary to the fulfilment of the 
Mystical Marriage, since the Son will not give Himself in wedlock 
without the consent and approval of His Mother, and the Mother must 
be present at the marriage of Her Son. Thus in the Mystical Marriage 
of St. Gemma Galgani, "Gemma gave herself to Mary, and Mary to 
Gemma". She was then able to exclaim "The Heart of Jesus and my 
heart are one and the same thing" [69]. "Rich presents were not wanting 
to these espousals of Jesus and His beloved. Jesus appeared to her 
in the form of a lovely child in His Mother's Arms, and the Holy 
Mother, taking a ring from His finger, put it on that of his fortunate 
servant." 

True Mysticism has well been called "The Mystical Love-Story". 
"Quia amore langueo" is the refrain of the exquisitely beautiful Middle 
English Poem, which is usually cited under this title [71]. In the case of 
the Premonstratensian, St. Herman Joseph of Steinfeld, the Religious 
gave him the name "Joseph" because of his tender devotion to Our Lady. 
The Saint's humility was deeply wounded, but under obedience he took 
that name, and he was regarded as the Spiritual Spouse of Mary. His 
joy was full when Our Lady Herself greeted him as Joseph, and 
acclaimed him as Her spouse indeed. In Mystic Marriage the Queen of 
Heaven Herself placed the nuptial gold ring upon his finger. There are 
few love-songs sweeter than that commencing, "Gaude, plaude, clara 
ROSA", with which St. Herman salutes Her [72]. Canon Augustine 
Wichmanns puts the following lines in St. Herman's mouth who thus 
salutes "Deiparam suam sponsam": 
72 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

COY mihi cor excors^ mens amens, nescia vitae. 

Vita est; quod reliquum, funeris urna mei est. 
Quid? mirum-ne? rosa et spina es mihi suavis et acris, 

Quae modo delectas, quae modo pungis amans. 
Ddectas quoties mihi te considero sponsam: 

Pungis in amplexus dum nequeo ire tuos. 
Ergo MARIA veni, nostrosque incurre lacertos; 

Quae modo me pungis spina, futura rosa es. 

The passionate song is that of Catullus. 'This monk can give lessons 
to lovers!" Arthur Symons once wrote, wondering at the ecstasy of 
St. John of the Cross [74]. May we not echo the words of one who was 
himself a poet of the finest and first quality? When we read St. 
Herman's poem to Our Lady we cry 'This Nobertine can give lessons 
to lovers!" 

Father Auriemma [75] relates that the brother of a King of Hungary 
used daily to say the Office of Mary, to whom he vowed himself body 
and soul, and thus he advanced far along the mystic path. However, for 
grave political reasons he was persuaded that he must marry. The day 
before the celebration of these very splendid nuptials he was kneeling 
in his room, reciting as was his wont the Office of Our Lady with great 
fervour and devotion. When he came to these words Quam pulchra es, et 
quam decora! [76] (How beautiful art thou and how fair!) there entered 
the chamber a lady of surpassing loveliness, who said to him, "If indeed 
I am as beautiful and fair as thou sayest, why dost thou abandon me 
for another bride? Know, then, that if thou wilt break off this marriage 
I will be thy Spouse, and thou shalt inherit the Kingdom of Heaven, 
where I am Queen, instead of an earthly empire/' The prince fell prostrate 
before Her, and that very night privily leaving the palace he went far 
away into a lonely spot where he dwelt as an anchorite, and lived a 
most holy life, dying amid the songs of angelic choirs. 

In his "Examples Appertaining to the Blessed Virgin Mary", Number 
65, of that sublime work The Glories of Mary [77], St. Alphonsus Liguori 
tells us how a young man, who intended to become a cleric, in the 
ardour of his love one day placed a valuable ring, an heirloom, upon 
the finger of a statue of Our Lady, vowing he would renounce the world 
and choose Her only for his spouse. After some time he relaxed in his 
devotion, and decided to live in the world, since he had fallen in love 
with a lady of high rank, who accepted his hand. Mary appeared to him 
and rebuked hi gently for his infidelity. Thereupon he gave up all idea 
of the intended match, and became a monk of a strictly eremetical and 
contemplative Order. 

The Mystical Marriage, the consummation of the spiritual life, is 
a state not easily to be attained, but once it has been reached the 
most watchful fidelity and caution are needed. It is a supreme privilege, 
but also a supreme responsibility. This, "the most intimate of all human 
experiences" [78] the phrase is that of Professor Peers has been most 
amply described, as far as language can reach, for it is literally an 
ineffable experience, by St. Teresa of Avila. It should be emphasized 

73 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

that Christ impressed upon the Saint "Ut vera sponsa meum zelabis 
honorem". ("As My Bride and Spouse in very deed thou must with all 
care most zealously guard Mine Honour") [70]. These words have an 
especial significance when it is borne in mind how scrupulous and how 
nice the honour of a Spaniard was, the honour of a Grandee, nay more 
than a Grandee, the honour of His Majesty, the King. The proper preface 
of the Mass of St. Teresa speaks of the Saint "Sibi (Christo) spiritali 
connubio sociatam, data dextera", that is to say "joined in spiritual 
wedlock to Christ, Who gave her His own Right Hand" [80]. 

As St. Teresa insists the Mystical Marriage is indissoluble. It is para 
siempre, for ever and ever, an eternal Union. 

The Mystical Marriage of the Holy and Seraphic Mother, Catharine 
of Siena, was accompanied by celestial phenomena of the most extra- 
ordinary and exalted kind. There is in the Saint's house in Fontebranda 
a very beautiful painting by Professor A. Franchi, 1896, depicting "II 
mistico sposalizio di S. Caterina" as the Saint herself described it [81]. 
In the year 1364, about Carnival time, when the world without was 
indulging in all lusts and follies, St. Catharine was praying in her own 
little room, and there appeared to her Our Lord and Our Lady, accom- 
panied by a vision of Saints, St. John the Evangelist, St. Paul, St. Dominic, 
her spiritual father, with the holy King David, who played sweetly upon 
a harp of gold. Our Lady presented the humble virgin to Christ. Where- 
upon Our Lord taking her hand in His placed upon her finger the 
wedding ring of four orient pearls and a diamond which shone like the 
sun. "Thou art my spiritual Spouse in faith, and one day thou shalt 
be wedded to me for ever in Paradise", came the Divine words, and 
slowly the heavenly vision faded from the sight of the enraptured 
Saint. Formerly the Feast of the Espousals of St. Catharine was 
observed in the Dominican Order, but since 1855 the title of the 
Solemnity has been changed to the Translation of the Relics of the 
Saint. 

Mystical Marriage, this sublime experience of the Saints, is described 
by one of the most remarkable of English mystics, Margery Kempe of 
King's Lynn [82]. The wife of John Kempe, a prosperous middle-class 
citizen, Margery, who lived at the turn of the fourteenth century, could 
neither read nor write, but she dictated the story of her life; her pil- 
grimages, near and far, to the Holy Land, to Rome and Assisi, to St. 
James at Comppstella, to Aachen; and above all she told of her marvellous 
spiritual experiences. When she was praying in St. Peter's at Rome, 
on the gth November, 1414, she heard the Father of Heaven say that 
He would have her wedded to the Godhead, and that anon she should 
live with Him in bliss everlastingly. In utter abasement she wept bitterly, 
but "the Father took her by the hand, in her soul, before the Son and the 
Holy Ghost, and the Mother of Jesus, and all the twelve Apostles, and 
St. Catharine, St. Margaret, and many other Saints and Holy Angels, 
yea, a great quire of the Angelic hosts", and thus the Mystic Marriage 
was made. Whereupon "the Mother of God, and all the Saints that 
were present in her soul, prayed that they might have much joy together. 

74 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

And there was a sound of harps and other instruments of music, for 'it 
is full merry in Paradise'." 

It is interesting and not without significance that Margery Kempe 
learned much of St. Birgitta of Sweden, and was much influenced by 
the teaching and example of that Saint, who was canonized during 
Margery's visit to Rome. 

Mystical Love, as Bastide observes, is a very rich and very complex 
sentiment, which overflows on all sides [83]. Indeed it is no exaggeration 
to say that consciously or subconsciously it focuses into itself every 
fine emotion and energizes them all to an unexampled degree. It is the 
completest Union and the Highest Experience possible in this life. 

A posthumous phenomenon of Mysticism is Incorruption, that is to 
say the complete absence after many years (it may be centuries), of 
the normal cadaveric putrefaction. Through some extraordinary and 
supernormal cause the bodies of many Saints and Mystics have been 
entirely preserved and are immune from decomposition or decay. 

In the first place it is necessary to say that there is no question of 
embalming or of exceptional conditions of sepulture. As is well known 
there exist bodies, like the natural mummies of Peru, which although 
intensely desiccated are yet whole and not fallen to dust. There are, 
again, the shrivelled corpses a gruesome sight in the Capuchin 
cemeteries of Palermo and Malta. Human decay can be naturally 
retarded, or even wholly arrested, by the process known as saponification. 
At Kiev there is (or was) a "laura", known as that of the Pescery, which 
exhibited twenty-three bodies of Saints, all entire, if mummified, robed 
in richest vestments and lying in open sarcophagi. At Cettinje, the 
village capital of Montenegro is venerated in the Greek Monastery the 
incorrupted body [84] of the Bishop King, St. Peter I, the Vladika, 
who died in 1830. The Saint lies vested in his Pontificalia of scarlet and 
gleaming gold, the face when the shrine-tomb, which is lined with blue 
velvet and silver, is opened for veneration, being reverently covered 
with the thinnest veil of white china-silk, through which the features 
are clearly discernible. Upon his great Feast-day, Petrov-dan, in July, 
the little chapel, and in fact the whole town, is thronged with pilgrims, 
many sick and suffering, who have come from near and far, to touch the 
holy remains with their lips, and haply the infirm, the halt, the lame, 
and the blind are healed there. A Montenegrin will tell you the histories 
of cures innumerable, which personally I do not question. 

The preservative property of the crypts under St. Michan's Church, 
Dublin, are most remarkable. Any decay in the bodies committed to 
them is strangely arrested. These antiseptic qualities are believed to be 
largely attributed to the extreme dryness of the vaults, and to the great 
freedom of their atmosphere from dust particles [8$]. 

Now and again history or antiquarian research records isolated 
examples of the same extraordinary preservation, for which it has been 
extremely difficult to supply any explanation that seems adequately to 
cover the separate cases. 

It may be remarked that in the calendar of the Orthodox Russian 

75 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

Communion there are a number of holy persons, whose bodies, after 
the lapse of many years, were discovered to be entire, and indeed this 
phenomenon appears to have been regarded as a sufficient testimony 
for official canonization or at least as a very strong and convincing 
argument [86]. 

This is assuredly not the case in the Catholic Church. It were a 
great error to suppose that all cases of immunity from corruption after 
death, many of which might be either accidental or due to certain 
conditions of entombment capable of scientific explanation, would 
result in the person concerned, however pious and holy, being raised 
to the altars of the Church. St. Bernadette Soubirous died, humble and 
hidden, in the Convent of St. Gildas at Nevers in 1879. She was 34 years 
old. In 1909 her body was exhumed, and a careful eye-witness records: 
"Not the least trace of corruption nor any bad odour could be perceived 
in the corpse. Even the habit in which she was buried was intact. The 
face was somewhat brown, the eyes slightly sunken, and she seemed 
to be sleeping" [87]. St. Thr6se of Lisieux, the Little Flower, died on 
30th September, 1897. She was 24 years old. From the hour of her death 
her cultus commenced, and has spread the whole world over. She was 
originally buried in the Grand Cimettere on the hillside at Lisieux. When 
the coffin was disinterred it was found that the body had crumbled to 
dust, the bones only remaining. These were, as is customary, enclosed 
in a beautifully modelled figure of the Saint, venerated in the Carmel 
at Lisieux. St. Th6rse was canonized on I7th May, 1925. 

The phenomenon of mystical Incorruption then, has no bearing 
upon canonization. It is true that Baron Freidrich von Hugel regards 
(to a very great extent at least) the popular cultus of St. Catharine 
Fiesea Adorna of Genoa, a veneration which may be said to have begun 
with the week-long honour paid to her holy body immediately after 
death and the discovery in May or June, 1512, of the incorruption of 
her remains, as in some degree a determining factor in the canonization 
of the Saint, which solemnity was performed by Clement XII, on i8th 
May, Trinity Sunday, 1737 [88], But the heroic virtues and genius of 
St. Catharine of Genoa, without due examination and official approval 
of which she would not have been raised to the altar, are one thing; 
and the phenomenon of her incorrupted body, a very great and especial 
grace of God, another. Possibly Baron von Hiigel is right in his inter- 
pretation of these events, but as he himself very candidly allows many 
other weighty circumstances enter into the matter. I will merely observe 
that when at Genoa forty years ago, and upon subsequent visits, I was 
privileged to venerate at a very close distance the Incorrupted Body 
of St. Catharine, and it remains an unforgettable experience. Ineffable 
sanctity pervaded the whole of that little chapel where she sleeps. 

The ecstatica, Anne Catharine Emmerich, died on gth February, 1821, 
She was buried at Diilmen, on the i3th February. Rather more than 
six weeks afterwards, in consequence of a rumour that the holy body 
had been stolen, the grave was opened. There was no corruption, and 
the face, sweetly smiling, was unflecked and pure. So Luisa Hensel and 
76 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

others who were present bore witness. The grave was opened a third 
time on 6th October, 1856. The body was intact as before, after four- 
and-thirty years. Yet Anne Catharine Emmerich has not as yet received 
the honour of beatification. 

This extraordinary phenomenon, this great and signal grace of 
supernatural Incorruption does not pave the way to canonization. It 
is regarded as in some sense accidental, although certainly a divine 
prodigy. The reason for this lies in the fact that whilst the privilege 
has been bestowed upon a number of Saints and Mystics in whom have 
been verified (in their secondary application) the words of the Psalmist- 
Prophet: "Neither wilt thou suffer Thine Holy One to see corruption", 
Psalm xvi, 10, yet at the same time many Saints and Mystics of 
exceptional innocence of life have in their death shared the common 
lot of man, dust to dust, and their bodies have suffered natural decay. 
Such has been the case, for example, with St. Aloysius Gonzaga, S. J., 
St. Stanislaus Kotska, S. J., St. John Berchmans, S. J., and the Passionist 
St. Gabriel of Our Lady of Sorrows. 

We can only say that the Divine Plan as regards the Phenomenon 
of Supernatural Incorruption has not been made clear to human intelli- 
gence. Wherefore Holy Church, whilst glorifying Heaven for these 
instances of Saints to whom this marvellous privilege has been granted, 
does not pronounce in this particular. 

Yet at Siena most blessed sight! upon the Feast of the Seraphic 
Mother, St. Catharine Beniscasa "in the blaze of sunlight and of tapers, 
far away behind the glass and gilding of a tawdry shrine, is seen the 
pale white face which spoke and suffered so much years ago. The contrast 
of its rigid stillness and incorruption with the noise and life and light 
outside is very touching" [89]. 

At Bologna, in the convent adjoining the Church of Corpus Domini, 
Via Tagliapietre may be seen the miraculously incorrupt body of another 
St. Catharine, St. Catharine Vegri, a Poor Clare who died in 1463. In a 
small sanctuary, hung with crimson damask, the Saint is seated, richly 
robed, in a gilt chair. The flesh is desiccated but there is no putrefaction. 
On the contrary a heavenly perfume and a heavenly peace fill that 
little room. No one can enter it and venerate those sacred remains 
without reverence and awe. 

At Florence the Carmelite nuns honour in its superb crystal shrine 
upheld by great rococo cherubim, the holy body of their Mother, St. 
Maria Maddalena de' Pazzi, that supreme mystic, whose life (it has been 
said) was one long ecstasy. She died in 1607, and the flesh is still supple, 
the body absolutely entire [90]. Moreover a fragrant oily liquid which 
has miraculous properties exudes from these hallowed remains. To kneel 
there in veneration and love is an experience which transforms, an 
experience never to be forgotten. The same good nuns possess the incorrupt 
body of the Dominicaness, Blessed Maria Bartolommea Dei Bagnesi [91], 
There she lies, robed, crowned with a silver crown, in the superb chdsse 
presented by Maria Luisa, Queen of Tuscany. Two angels guard her, 
holding triple girandoles. The Beata died in 1577. 

77 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

When St. Rita of Cascia, O.S.A., the "Saint of the Impossible", 
died in 1457 a marvellously fragrant perfume exhaled from the body. 
In 1627 an d again in 1682 when her coffin was opened the remains were 
found without the least spot of corruption, and the chapel was filled with 
the sweet scent of newly-gathered roses [02]. The Dominicaness Blessed 
Osanna of Mantua [93] died in 1505. Three years later her body was 
shown to be incorrupt, and this proved the case upon re-examinations in 
1602, 1686, and 1871. Blessed Lucia of Narni, a stigmatized daughter 
of St. Dominic, maintained the same supernatural incorruption, and 
175 years after her death (1544) the wound in the side was yet open 
and bathed in fresh blood [94]. 

The psychology, then, of Mysticism is corporeally plastic, and 
evidences itself in certain phenomena some of which impress themselves 
materially upon the living body of the Mystic, for example, the Stigmata, 
Levitation, Bilocation, whilst other phenomena are mental, for example, 
Visions, Telekenesis, Infused Knowledge. But all these may be widely 
classed as the Physical Phenomena of Mysticism and extraordinary graces. 

I would emphasize that we are none of us bound to more than "the 
observance of precepts", and comparatively few fulfil even their obliga- 
tions, or at least they fulfil them with tepidity. We are not, however, 
bound to more than correspondence with these graces bestowed on us. 
Some generous souls aim higher, and strive to obey the counsels of 
perfection. 

Supernatural phenomena, wonderful though they may be beyond all 
words, count for nothing in reference to sanctity, I mean that Sanctity 
the Church insists should be primarily and manifestly proven before 
any person is raised to the altars. Benedict XIV expressly says [95]: 
"Manifold excellence of life is required both for Beatification and 
Canonization." Francesco Maria, Cardinal & Monte, Bishop of Porto, 
in the year 1622, in the case of St. Teresa, lays down that "canonization 
requires virtues of a heroic and prominent Degree", and he proceeded, 
to show that the virtues of St. Teresa had fully attained to this degree. 
It were superfluous to multiply authorities. So much having been said; 
the Physical Phenomena of Mysticism are of the utmost significance 
and importance. There is unhappily in a material age a tendency, which 
is at root very evil, and indeed an inspiration of the demon, to under- 
rate or minimize these. There are few studies of Mysticism in English 
which do not relegate these phenomena to the background, so to speak, 
or treat of them gingerly and even shamefacedly. This is very deplorable, 
and it seems highly advisable, nay necessary, that there should be a 
treatise concentrating upon and emphasizing the Physical Phenomena 
of Mysticism. 

I am very well aware that each chapter of the present work could 
be^ extended to a separate volume. To instance one phenomenon alone, 
Stigmatization, which has been exhaustively studied by a great authority, 
Dr. Antoine Imbert-Gourbeyre, Professor at the School of Medicine at 
Clermont-Ferrand. Dr. Imbert-Gourbeyre has written Les Stigmatises, 
2 Vols. (630 pp.), Paris, Palm<, 1873; La Stigmatisation, 2 Vols. (xlix 
78 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

576 pp. and 576 pp.), Clermont-Ferrand, Bellet, 1894, and second edition, 
2 Vols., Clermont-Ferrand, Bellet, and Paris, Ch. Amat, 1898; UHypno- 
tisme et la Stigmatisation, Paris, Blond et Barrat, 1899; to mention no 
other of the Professor's treatises. Madame Jeanne Danemarie's Le Mystire 
des Stigmatises, Paris, 1933, giving some account of Anna Catharine 
Emmerich and Theresa Neumann and a visit to Diilmen and Konners- 
reuth, is of much interest. In fact, a whole literature concerns these two 
stigmatics alone. 

Accordingly this one single volume, although I have tried to make 
the purview as wide as possible, can (in some sense) only be regarded 
as a preliminary and of necessity a curtailed study. 

At the risk of some repetition it may be useful to give here a list 
under nineteen heads of the principal Physical Phenomena of Mysticism. 

Ecstasies, rapts, and trances. 
Stigmatization. 
Levitation. 
Bilocation. 

The Luminous Irradiance. 
Supernatural Inedia. 
The Supernatural Lack of Sleep. 
Supernatural Dreams. 
Visions and Apparitions. 
Telekenesis. 

Vision through opaque bodies. 
Infused knowledge. 
Discernment of spirits. 
The Gift of Healing. 
Supernatural Empery over nature- 
Demoniacal Molestations. 
Incendium Amoris. 
The Mystical Marriage. 
Supernatural Incorruption. 

It is the tritest truism to insist upon and emphasize the extraordinary 
influence of the Mind upon the Body. Mysticism must so far as possible 
be entirely divorced from moods, which are in fact various forms of 
mental enslavement. They are that "alloy of self", of which St. Catharine 
of Genoa so profoundly discourses, and with what depth of wisdom does 
she pronounce that "selfishness is the root of all the evils to which we 
are exposed either in this life or in the future". No question the Mystic 
whose feet are set upon the path will, nay, necessarily must, at the begin- 
nings of the pilgrimage towards Ultimate Reality encounter and have 
to fight with and overcome these dissatisfactions and distractions, these 
human tendencies to halt, even, for a moment or two, maybe, to stray. 
The Mystic, to use a phrase of Cowley, "must never stop nor ever turn 
aside in the race of glory no, not like Atlanta, for golden apples", and 
the Mystic's glory the Mystic's goal is a Perfect Union with God. 

70 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

The Mystic is not the commonplace conventional man. As Jonson 
has it of the ordinary individual, "What a deal of cold business doth 
a man misspend the better part of life in in scattering compliments, 
gathering and venting news, following feasts and plays, making a little 
winter love in a dark corner/' And then, Bishop Earle tersely writes 
his epitaph, "When he is gone, there wants one, and there's an end." 

St. Teresa of Avila was once, she says, "a prisoner to things of the 
world". The distinguishing feature of Isabel de Flores, whom we know 
better as St. Rose of Lima, "The Rose of Mary", was "a great tranquillity". 
In one of her treatises St. Catharine of Siena tells us how "God had taught 
her to build in her soul a private closet, strongly vaulted with Divine 
providence, and to keep herself always close and retired there. He had 
assured her that by this means she should find peace and perpetual 
repose in her soul which no storm or trouble would disturb." 

St. John of the Cross, only a few months before his death, when 
he had been deprived of all official standing in the Order, when his 
health was utterly broken, and his enemies banished him with contumely 
to the lonely little house at La Penuela, when malice was assaulting 
him on every side and ugly whispers were being deliberately circulated 
up and down the country, wrote to a nun at Segovia, a holy Carmelite, 
who had longed for him to return as Provincial, "As to my affairs, daughter, 
let them not trouble you, for none of them trouble me. What I greatly 
regret is that blame is attributed to him who has none; for these things 
are not done by men but by God, Who knows what is meet for us and 
ordains things for our good. Think only that God ordains all." So intense 
was the hostility against him that it appears an attempt would be made 
to expel him from the Order. A disciple in sore distress privily warned 
him of the bitter conspiracy for it was nothing else and, in the last in 
date of his letters the Saint replied: "Son, let not this grieve you, for they 
cannot take the habit from me save for incorrigibility or disobedience, 
and I am quite prepared to amend my ways in all where I have strayed, 
and to be obedient, whatever penance they give me." 

"As to my affairs, daughter, let them not trouble you, for none of 
them trouble me." "Son, let not this grieve you." To what sublime heights 
of perfection had not the Mystic attained who could under such conditions 
write with this unearthly serenity and calmness. Truly John of the Cross 
had reached the summit of the mystical Carmel, and was far above the 
clouds and storm-wracks. He looked down with clear unwinking eyes 
upon this wretched weary world so full of jars and strife and rankling 
hate that lay far far beneath his feet. 

Comfort is not the Beatific Vision. Thomas & Kempis sagely says: 

Sint Temporalia in usu, aeterna in desiderio. 



So 




PLATE II: BL. MARIANNA DE JESUS 

From a painting by Mercedarian 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

NOTES TO CHAPTER II 

1. Les Oeuvres de la Sainte Mere Tivese de Jdsus . . . nouvellement traduites 
. . . par le R. Pere Cyprien de la Nativit6 de la Vierge, Carme Dechauss6 Paris: 
1650. Le Chemin de Perfection, p. 387, and Chapter XXXI, pp. 416-22. 

2. Tertio itin., Dist. 2. 

3. Jean du Moulin. He was blind from the age of three years old. He -was a 
great Latin scholar and a most accomplished musician. His mystical works which 
are many have been compared to those of Ruysbroeck, since he is among the 
profoundest of mystical writers. Vie du venerable frere Jean de Saint-Samson, 
par le R.P. Sernin-Marie de Saint-Andr6, Carme dechauss6, Paris, 1881. 

4. Maximes, Ch. XXI. 

5. Disc, prelim, Art 8. 

6. Theologia mystica, No. 28. 

7. Bruges, 1911. 

8. Fr. Sandaeus, S.F. (1578-1650) Theologia Mystica, Ed. Mainz. 

9. Homo apostolicus t app. i, 16. 

10. Oeuvres, edit, Lachat, Vol. XIX, p. 310. 

11. St. Matthew xxii, 37. 

12. Le Chemin de Perfection, Chapter XXXI, ut supra, 

13. Vol. I, p. 15. 

14. Jacques Paul Migne, 1800-75. 

15. De notis et signis Sancitatis, II, c, iv. 

16. De Certitudine Gloriae Sanctorum; in app. ad. c. iv. 

17. Histoire LitUraire du Sentiment Religieux en France, II. L* Invasion Mystique, 
Paris, 1925. 

18. Dean Inge in the Preface to his Christian Mysticism, emphasizes that he 
concentrates upon "the philosophical side of the subject", and takes a full page 
to inform his readers that he ignores the Physical Phenomena of Mysticism. 

19. Fr. Scheuer in the Revue d'asctique et de mystique, July, 1 923, and January, 1 924. 

20. Zero has been plumb reached in a "short-title catalogue" which lists rather 
superficial studies of Ann Catharine Emmerich, St. Bernadette, Levitation, along- 
side of a reprint of Pierce Egan's The Life of an Actor, and rubbish such as The 
Little Book o' Tricks, George Bernard Shaw's My Spoof at a Seance, Louisa Lawford's 
Fortune-Telling by Cards, together with a romance such as Dumas, Memoirs of a 
Physician, and Henry Cockton's farcical novel Valentine Vox> the Ventriloquist. 

21. Ernile Gebhart has written Ultalie mystique, Paris, 1890, 5th ed. 1906, 
which is useful but very tentative and restricted in its survey. The Italian Mystics 
of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries are hardly known in England. 

22. To-day (1947) as I write, any book concerning Anne Catharine Emmerich 
is of the last rarity, and is not to be found outside a very few libraries. But such 
books should be generally obtainable, and I fear that it is by being constantly 
baffled in his search for works on Mysticism that the inquirer loses heart and 
eventually abandons a quest which seems hopeless. 

23. Dr. R. M. Bucke, a Canadian psychiatrist, names his work Cosmic Con- 
sciousness: a study in the Evolution of the Human Mind. Philadelphia, 1901. 

24. Confessions, vii, 23. 

25. Vita e Dottrina t Genoa, 1551, p. I78b. (Reprint.) 

26. TraitS de L' Amour de Dieu, vii, 3; and vi, 12. This treatise was immensely 
popular, and (it is said) the precepts of St. Francis were studied and followed 
in every convent. When Pius IX declared St. Francis a Doctor of the Church the 
Pontiff in his decree uses the following most striking and significant words: "in 
mystica theolpgia mirabilis Salesii doctrina refulget." 

27. Varieties of Religious Experience, pp. 423-4. I do not quote the whole 
section which is of some length. 

28. Blessed Henry Suso's Little Book of Eternal Wisdom, translated from the 
German by Richard Raby; Richardson, Dublin and Derby, 1866. Second Edition, 
p. 74. 

F -81 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

29* Itinerare, c. i. 

30. Tom II de relig. lib. 2. De Oratione, c. xi, n. 3. 

31. Heroic Virtue: A Portion of the Treatise of Benedict XIV on the Beatification 
and Canonization of the Servants of God. English translation; Richardson and Son, 
1850. Vol. I, p. 262 sqq. 

32. The Spiritual Guide, reprint of the translation of 1688. Foreword by Dugald 
Macfadyn, pp. 21-2. 

33. Our Lord often appeared in the Blessed Sacrament to St. Catharine of 
Siena, and under different forms. Sometimes she saw Him as an Infant, sometimes 
He was older and radiant with light. At Christmas Blessed Mary of pignies saw 
Our Lord in the host as an Infant on His Mother's lap; in Passiontide she saw 
Him on the Cross, and swooned away with grief. 

34. See the Bollandists under isth January. 

r " 35. The incident is related in The Life of the Saint, by Father E>. Bernardo 
Laviosa, C.R.S., a work of authority not to be gainsaid since it received the 
imprimatur of the Dominican Magister Sacri Palatii. 

36. J. Babinski, Hypnotisme et HysUrie du Rdle de L'Hypnotisme en Thtra- 
peutique. Paris, 1891. 

37. De canonizatione Sanctorum, III, c. XLIX, n. 3. 

38. Teresa Higginson Servant of God 1845-1905, by the Rev. A. M. O'Sullivan, 
O.S.B. (1924,) 

89. In these passages I quote Douay. A.V. has "times". The Vulgate has 
"somnia". 

40. Nicolas Lanckzi deals with this point. Tom. 2. Opuse, p. 49. 

41. De Canonizatione Sanctorum, C.V., n. 17. 

42. De notis et signis Sanctorum, VIII, c. 4., p. 922. 

43. Disquisitiones magicae 9 Lib. IV, c.i. qu. 2, sect. 2, Objiciat forte aliquis. 

44. A poor and inadequate definition. The word "clairvoyance" or at any rate 
"clairvoyant" is far earlier in use than the O.E.D. notes. 

45. It is significant that a Leaflet issued by a Spiritualistic Society about 
1870 says: "A powerful physical medium is usually a person of an impulsive, 
affectionate, and genial nature, and very sensitive to mesmeric influences", and, 
I would add, the more likely to be possessed. 

46. English translation by Stanley de Brath Clairvoyance and Materialization. 
T. Fisher Unwin, 1927. 

47. Life of the Venerable (Blessed) Anna Maria Taigi. Third Edition. Burns 
and Oates, 1879. Chapter XVII, p. 281. 

48. Vita delta B. Osanna Andreasi Sescritta de Mons. Corradino Cavriani, 
Monza, 1888. Parte seconda. Capo I. La beata Osanna, coll' ajuto delta SS. Vergine, 
e mediante una scienza supernalmente infusa impara ottimamente a leggere ed a 
scrivere. pp. 103-08. 

49. Lectio VI (ex Romans Breviario) ad Matutinum, die XXX Aprilis. 
Breviarium juxta Ritum Sacri Ordinis Praedicatorum. Mechliniae. H. Dessain, 
1893- 

50. Epistle I, iv, 1-3. 

51. See the very important book by J. Godfrey Raupert, K.S.G., Christ and 
the Powers of Darkness. First published in 1914, the warning is as cogent and as 
necessary, perhaps more necessary, to-day as when this very serious volume was 
originally issued. Also see, by the same author, The Dangers of Spiritualism, which 
had reached a fifth edition in 1920. 

52. 3 Sent. torn. 4, dist. 19, art. 10, ii, n. 361. 

53. St. Nicholas died at the convent of Tolentino, loth September, 1306. The 
incident of the doves, restored to life, has been painted by the assistant of Raphael, 
the "capo-scuola of the Ferranese school", Benvenuto Tisio, often known as 
Garofalo. 

54. Vita S. P. Dominici, auctore R. P. E. Nicalao Tanssenio. Antuerpiae. 
M.D.C. XXII. Lib. II. XIV. 188-9. 

55; See his life written by Fr. John of St. Mary in 1619; and also another 
biography written in 1644 by Fr. Martin of St. Joseph. 
82 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

56. Sebastiano Fabrini, Chronica delict, Congregazione dei Monachi Silvestrini. 
Camerino, 1618. 

57. Teresa Helena Higginson, School Teacher and Mystic, by Cecil Kerr, 1928, 
p. 21. 

58. La Mystique, Vol. I, p. 396. 

59. Acta Sanctorum. June. Vol. IV. Antwerp. 1707. 

60. Life of Gemma Galgani t by Father Germanus, C.P. Translated by the 
Rev. A. M. O'Sullivan, O.S.B., 1914. Chapter XIX. 

61. Cologne, ex officina Mater cholini 1598, and several subsequent editions. 

62. La Santa di Firenze. Firenze, Libreria Luigi Manuelli, 1906. See also the 
Life of St. Maria Maddalena de Pazzi in the Oratorian Series, pp. 235-37. 

63. Historia de las vidas y milagros de S. Francisco, Petro de Alcantara y de 
los Rehgiosos insignes en la Reforma de Descalzos, por F. Martin de S. Joseph, 
2 Vols. folio, Arevalo, 1644. Also Vie de Saint Pierre d* Alcantara, e*crite en Italien 
par le P. Marchese de L'Oratoire, et traduite en Francois. 4to. Lyons. 1670. 

64. Bacci's Life of St. Philip Neri, edited by Fr. Antrobus, 1902. Vol. I, 
pp. 26, 141. 

65. Life of the Venerable (Blessed) Anna Maria Taigi, the Roman Matron, 
1769-1837. London, 1879. Chapter XI, pp. 178-183. 

66. Vita della Venerabile Serafina di Dio. Rome, 1748, p. 260. Written by two 
Oratorians, Sguillante and Pagani. 

67. Vita Delia Serva di Dio, Suor Maria Villani. Naples, 1674. -By ^ e Dominican, 
Fra Francesco Marchese, O.P. 

68. Vita della Madre Orsola. Benincasa, Fondatrice delle Monache Theatine 
per il Padre Francesco Maria Maggio. Folio, Rome, 1655. 

69. Life of Gemma Galgam, by Father Germanus, C.P., 1914, p. 275. pp. 251-2. 

70. The mystics of Islam, the Sufis, develop on their own lines this aspect of 
mysticism. In the twelfth century we have such writers as Al Ghazzali, and in 
the thirteenth such poets as 'Attar (c. 1140-1234); Sadi (1184-1263); and JalSlu- 
Ddin Rumi (1207-1273). The Divan of Hafiz has been translated (in selections) 
by John Nott; by H. W. Clarke, 2 Vols., London, 1891, and also by John Payne. 
The poet Jarni still conserved the tradition in the fifteenth century. He lived 
1414-1492. 

71. This poem may conveniently be found in The Oxford Book of English 
Mystical Verse. 1921, p. 6. Here it is dated fifteenth century. Such a stansa as the 
following is very significant: 

What shall I do now with my spouse? 

abyde I will hyre iantilnesse; 
wold she loke onys owt of hyr howse 

of fiesshley affeccions and vnclennesse; 
hyr bed is made, hyr bolstar is in blysse, 

hyr chambre is chosen, suche ar no moo; 
Loke owt at the wyndows of kyndnesse, 

Quia amore langueo. 

72. Beati Hermanni Joseph Canonici Steinfeldensis Ordinis Praemonstratensis 
Opusula . . . olim vulgata a R. D. Joanne Chrys. Vander Sterre Abbate S. Michaelis 
Antverpial typis denuo edi curavit Ignatius Van Spilbeeck, Cam. Tong. Namurci, 
1899, pp. 29-43. 

73. Augustini Wichmans Canonici Tongerloensis Epigrammata Taminiae, 1895, 
p. 12. "Apostrophe Divi Hermanni ad Deiparam suam sponsam dum nimio Ejusdem 
amore languescebat." 

74. Contemporary Review t April, 1899. 

75. Tom. I.C., VIII. 

76. Canticles, VII, 6. 

77. The Glories of Mary , Part II, p. 215. St. Peter's Press, 1948. 

78. Mother of Carmel, by E. Allison Peers. S.C.M. Press, 1945, p. 119. 

79. The Carmelite Breviary. First Antiphon of First Vespers, isth October, 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

Feast of St. Teresa, "Zelo zelata sum pro honore sponsi mei Jesu Christi, qui dixit 
mihi, ut vera sponsa meun zelabis honorem". 

80. The proper Mass (with Preface) of St. Teresa; the Carmelites, Spain, 
et alibi. 

81. The Mystical Marriage of St. Catharine is the subject of a painting by the 
great Dominican master, Fra Bartolommeo (1475-1517). In this Our Lady is 
enthroned holding her son, and St. Catharine receives the mystic ring from the 
Infant Christ. On one side of the throne stand St. Peter, St. Bartholomew, and 
St. Vincent Ferrer; on the other St. Dominic and St. Francis of Assisi. Originally 
designed for the convent of San Marco, this picture excited the intense admiration 
of Raphael when he visited the artist at Florence between 1505 and 1507. Lectio 
VI of the Office "In Translatione S. Catharinae Virg. O.P.", authorized by the 
Sacred Congregation of Rites on 5 May, 1891, describing the Solemn Translation 
of the Relics of St. Catharine to the High Altar, which Pius IX himself consecrated, 
of Santa Maria sopra Minerva, concludes: Cujus solemnions Translationis, idem 
Pontifex-ex sacrae Rituum Congregationis decreto in ulsit, ut in Ordine Praedica- 
torum quotannis sub ritu Toto DupHci memoria celebrasetur, assignata Feria quinta 
post Dominicam Sexagesimae, qua die antea fieri solebat sub ritu Duplici Com- 
memoratio sanctae Catharinae Senesis, seu Desponsationis ejus, quoniam ea die 
Christo Virginum Sponso seraphicam Virginem mystics desponsatam fuisse trade- 
batur, quemadmodum venerabilis Raymundus, sanctus Antoninus altique gravissimi 
testantur scriptoses." 

The Solemn Translation of the Relics took place on 5 August, 1855. The Feast 
is annually celebrated on the Thursday following Sexagesima Sunday. 

82. The Book of Margery Kempe, a Modern Version, by W. Butier-Bowdor, 
1936. See also Katharine Cholmeley, Margery Kempe Genius and Mystic. London, 

1947- 

83. The Mystical Life, by Roger Bastide. Translated from the French G. H. F. 
Kynaston-Snell and David Waring. London, 1934, P- 213. 

84. "Dieser diirre, steinharte, Kadaver," says Schwarz, Montenegro, Leipzig, 
1883, pp. 81-2. 

85. 1 quote from D. A. Chart, Story of Dublin. Fuller details are to be found in 
The Registers of the Church of St. Michan, edited by H. F. Berry, M.R.I. A., Dublin, 
1907. Preface, p. vi. 

86. J. Bois, Dictionnaire de Thtologie Catholique, Vol. II, 1665-1669; and see 
also P. Peeters, Analecta Bollandiana, XXXIII (1914), pp. 415 sqq. 

87. Kempf. Holiness of the church in the nineteenth century, English translation, 

p. 212. 

88. F. von Hiigel, The Mystical Element of Religion, 2nd ed., 1923, Vol. I, 
pp. 300-306. 

89. J. A. Symonds, Siena, reprinted in Sketches and Studies in Italy and Greece. 
Third Series, New Edition, 1898, p. 65. In quoting I have ventured to amend a 
couple of words. The body of St. Catharine lies under the High Altar of Santa 
Maria Sopra Minerva, Rome. 

90. La Santa di Firenze, Firenze, 1906. At p. 129 there is a photograph of 
the shrine. 

91. La Santa di Firenze, Firenze, 1906. At p. 39 there is a photograph of the 
shrine. 

92. Cardi, Vita della B. Rita de Cascia, Foligno, 1805. St. Rita was canonized 
in 1900 by Leo XIII. 

93. Mgr. Corradino Cavriani, Vita della B. Osanna Andreasi di Mantova, 
Monza, 1888. 

94. Padre Domenico Ponsi, Vita della B. Lucia virgine di Narni, 1711. 

95. De servorum Dei Beatificatione et Canonisatione, III, XXI. The Oratorian 
translation of a part of this great work, Heroic Virtue, 3 Vols., London, Dublin, 
and Derby, 1850, is admirably done. 



84 



CHAPTER THREE 

Ecstasy The Ecstasy of the Neo-PlatonistsThe Demoniacal Ecstasy of Witch 
Folk Natural Ecstasy Divine Ecstasy Rapture The Intermingling of the Natural 

and Supernatural Worlds. 

1 HE word Ecstasy, derived through the late Latin exstasis [l] from 
the Greek Ixoroo-t? "displacement", and in late Greek "a trance", is 
etymologically defined as that state of transport in which the soul, 
liberated from the body is absorbed in the contemplation of divine 
things. Dr. Henry More, the Cambridge Platonist, speaks of "the 
Emigration of humane Souls from the bodie by Ecstasis". Mystic 
theologians poise the question whether the soul does actually cease to 
animate the body, but St. Thomas, who amply discusses this point, 
decides that a complete alienation of the senses, so that the soul is 
incapable of producing any conscious or sensible corporal operation, is 
sufficient. Thus when St. Paul was "caught up into paradise and heard 
unspeakable words" II Corinthians, xii, 3, he says "whether in the 
body, or out of the body, I know not: God knoweth"; St. Thomas tells 
us that the Apostle "rapt to the third heaven by the power of God 
contemplated the Divine Essence (that is Ultimate Reality). But it 
is impossible that a man in his normal bodily state should contemplate 
the Divine Essence, unless such a one were wholly estranged from the 
senses" [2]. 

But if the senses are ravished away and (so to speak) annihi- 
lated, the human intelligence and understanding by the operation 
of divine grace are upheld, and the spiritual sight and hearing and 
reason remain, so that the Mystic after the ecstasy can remember, even if 
he cannot, in human phrase, express the height and depth of this super- 
natural experience. Moreover, the functions of the vegetative life persist, 
that is to say breathing and lie circulation of the blood, notwithstanding 
they persist insensibly. St. Augustine, although quite familiar with the 
phenomenon of ecstasy and all its conditional effects, never relates it 
as a psycho-physical experience of his own enduring, but this may well 
be on account of the humility of the great doctor who would not so much 
as speak of so supreme a favour. He says, however, that "when the 
mind is wholly concentrated on higher things, and thus completely 
abstracted and entirely withdrawn from the bodily senses it is called 
an Ecstasy. The soul is caught away so as to be rapt from the body 
and feeling more than in sleep, but less than in death" [3]. 

In a supernatural or divine Ecstasy the soul is withdrawn from the 
body and updrawn unto God Himself: but afterward the soul is restored 
to the body, to the members of the human frame [4]. When commenting 
upon St. Paul's words "whether in the body, or out of the body, I know 

85 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

not", St. Augustine very profoundly says that the Apostle, when rapt 
to Paradise, did not know "whether he was in the body, as the soul 
is in a body and sustains the life of the body, whether it be awake or 
asleep, however deeply slumbering and comatose, or whether his soul 
had actually parted from his body, which must then have lain dead, 
until the revelation being ended, it was restored to his dead members 
which came to life again. And since it was so uncertain whether his soul 
was for a while entirely separated from his body which thus was left 
stark and dead, or whether in some ineffable way the soul although caught 
up to the third heaven yet vivified his body, hence it appears that St. 
Paul said: Whether in the body or out of the body, I know not; God 
knoweth" [$]. St. Augustine from this and other passages concludes 
that probably the soul (anima) remains in the human body during ecstasy, 
but the mind (mens); or animus, the vivifying sensible principle leaves 
the body. Yet in some cases he seems to imply that the soul itself (anima) 
is parted from the body, which accordingly must be sustained in some 
miraculous manner. St. Augustine in fact distinguishes at least two 
kinds of ecstasy, and we feel convinced that he experienced ecstasies, 
although (as noted above) he would not describe them. Plotinus and the 
Neo-Platonists were acquainted with Ecstasy. In fact Plotinus, who is 
echoed even as late as Amiel, considered that as the visible world of 
sense is only a shadow of the real world of intelligence, so action is only 
a shadow of higher things, of mystical contemplation. The things we see 
with human eyes, the things we do are glamour. In his Journal the God- 
tortured morbidly introspective Amiel cries out that "action is coagulated 
and clotted thought". 

It is hardly to be surprised at that the doctrine of ecstasy in Plotinus 
can be paralleled in the writings of Christian Mystics, but with that 
subtle difference which is basically as wide as a gulf between. "The 
soul/' says Plotinus, "when wholly and entirely occupied by fervent 
love of Him eagerly strips herself of all form which she has, yea, even of 
that which is derived from Intelligence itself, for whilst in conscious 
enjoyment of any other attribute or accident it is impossible that she 
should either behold, and in far less degree that she should be assimilated 
with, Him" [6]. 

"In the reduction of your soul to its simplest self (difA.cm$), its 
divine essence," says Plotinus, "you realize this Union, this Identity 
(evoxro/). Like only can comprehend like" [?]. Ecstasy is the liberation 
of the mind from its finite consciousness, in which state it may attain 
to the Infinite. 

It is recorded that Plotinus experienced this ecstasy of the Neo- 
Platonists four times; Porphyrius his disciple, five times; lamblichus 
thrice. The Neo-Platonism of Plotinus and Proclus had, it must be 
frankly admitted, considerable influence in the West. St. Augustine in 
his Confessions, vii, ix, relates how certain books of the Platonists, 
translated out of Greek into Latin fell into his hands, and how an intensive 
study of these proved to be the beginning of his Conversion. Little 
question these were the works of Plotinus which he came to know in 

86 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

A.D., 385, and the following year he was baptized by St. Ambrose. In 
these volumes, he found many things agreeable to the Christian doctrine, 
and to a certain degree his whole intellectual outlook was permanently 
coloured by what is good in Neo-Platonism. This is not to say that he 
had anything but contempt for the aberrations and debasement of this 
school, the abracadabra of the theosophists [$], which find so much 
favour to-day, and seem to flourish with lush luxuriant corruption, as 
indeed was the case in the fourth century. 

Neo-Platonism unless most strictly safeguarded is full of danger. It 
will only too soon be sensed in most subtile manner to deviate from 
Christianity, this mysticism of human invention. In the first place it 
proves to be pantheistic at the core, and has as its goal not Union with 
God, as rightly understood, but fusion (one might say confusion) with 
Deity. 

Aristotle himself would have eschewed this. And he makes the Vision 
of God rbv 0&v eopeiv the ultimate end of man [9]. 

So kaleidoscopic is it, so mutable in terms and teaching, and often 
so charlatanical in its conjurors' ecstasy, that it is far from easy to 
discern what Modern Theosophy may or may not mean. Professing itself 
to be the ancient wisdom allegedly underlying all philosophies and 
religion, a secret known only to the initiates, it resolves itself into a 
mass of contradiction inextricably mixed up with Buddhism, and further 
gives a strong Brahmin colour. Such vagaries as Mrs. Besant's Esoteric 
Christianity (1901) a "theosophical classic", and the earlier Key to 
Theosophy and Isis Unveiled, in point of scholarship are valueless, 
whilst their philosophy has run riot in berserker frenzy. Theosophy, so 
called to-day, is the heir of all the ages of Gnosticism, as full of tricks as 
a monkey, as full of holes as a sieve [10]. 

It has just been observed that Theosophy has borrowed largely from, 
and "conveyed" as the wise call it, many details and characteristics of 
certain Oriental religions. In these we find, however ill-directed and 
askew, such an innate yearning for Mysticism that there have actually 
been evolved methods and means by which to attain to Ecstasy. That 
these are largely practised and performed, openly advocated even, in 
the West to-day there can be no question. The following four recipes 
by which ecstasy may be attained are quite frankly recommended by 
Hindu Yogi. (Yoga is defined as "in Hindu philosophy, union with the 
Supreme Spirit; a system of ascetic practice, abstract meditation, and 
mental concentration, pursued as a method of obtaining this/') Mantra- 
Yoga, to repeat monotonously for an indefinite period the same word, 
above all some word signifying the name of God. Laya-Yoga t to con- 
centrate for a very long while upon some one object, which is especially 
effective if the object be shining or brilliant. Raja-Yoga, gradually to 
suspend the breath in respiration. Hatha-Yoga, to fix the gaze intently, 
and to support bodily postures (generally with extreme discomfort) 
for a very long space of time. Of Oriental practices and beliefs I have 
nothing to say, but it is a saddening thought that it ever should be 
supposed in the Western world that God could be attained by this sort 

87 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

of purely mechanical and unhealthy process. Such artifices are truly 
reprehensible in the highest degree, and, I fear, are dangerously akin to 
a dark and evil occultism. The Christian suspects and abhors the impiety 
of contrivances which are so essentially artificial, materialized, and 
unnatural. 

It is not without significance that Mr. Arthur LiUie in his Modern 
Mystics and Modern Magic relates how Mr. Stainton Moses, a well- 
known devotee of Spiritism, at one period of his mediumship passed 
through a terrible crisis. Evil spirits assailed him. He saw their forms; 
he heard their hideous voices. Foul stenches defiled his rooms. "He 
tried the Indian Yoga. This only made matters worse." 

A great deal more might be said. This much was necessary, and it 
is painful to dwell further upon these mystical aberrations and spiritual 
deceptions, which can only have as their least injurious result a morbid 
self-hypnotism. 

At this point before seeking a definition of true Ecstasy, it may 
be well to emphasize that Ecstasies, Rapts, and Trances, must be dis- 
tinguished from any cataleptic state, from any alienation of the senses 
through intense concentration, or from that experience which is known 
as natural ecstasy. 

Incidentally Doctor Paolo Mantegazza, a declared materialist and 
free-thinker, most of whose suppositions and hypotheses have been 
refuted and disproved by the later school of Professors of Science 
many of whom frankly confess their groundwork is just shifting sand 
is the author of a study Le Estasi umane, utterly demolishing his 
confrere Dr. Henri Legrand du Saulle, a physician of the Hospital of 
BicStre, who attempted to make a clean sweep of Ecstasies and the 
concomitant circumstances of Ecstasy with the two words "hysterical 
phenomena". 

Mantegazza was, at any rate, too honest and clear-minded to tolerate 
such shallow ineptitudes, but some theory had to be evolved to meet the 
facts. Accordingly in his Human Ecstasies he elaborated the suggestion 
that man, in virtue of his own natural powers, can so profoundly con- 
centrate his mind on the contemplation of Heavenly things as to lose 
himself, rapt in God. To this state he gave the name "Human Ecstasy". 
A contradiction is at once apparent. If the mind is enraptured by Heavenly 
things, how can 'Human' be applicable or appropriate? Again, what 
could Mantegazza, who did not even believe in God, know of Heavenly 
things? 

In a manuscript treatise Father Baldelli, whose opinion is quoted with 
approval and confirmed by Benedict XIV, writes "As to the causes of 
Ecstasies and Raptures, these are assigned by St. Thomas, namely, 
Almighty God; the power of the devil, as permitted by God; and a certain 
natural temperament. Now, although an intense concentration upon 
divine things and a complete abstraction from the senses, the natural 
conditions and functions of the body, can be only from God, because it 
is from Him that every good thought and every holy inspiration which 
avail to the right estate of our salvation must proceed, nevertheless on 

88 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

occasion the total suspension of the senses, whether such alienation result 
because the mind is wholly occupied with and absorbed by some object, 
or whether because, without it being intent upon any especial thing, it 
is simply deprived of the use of its senses, may proceed also from the 
working of the devil, and likewise from physical causes of one sort or 
another. There can be no question that the ecstasies and raptures of 
would-be contemplatives who are without humility and utterly corrupt 
with hateful pride come from the devil, as that great theologian Cardinal 
Tomaso de Vio Gaetani [11] very plainly proves. From the demon also 
proceed the trances of men and women witches, when they remain 
utterly inert in one spot like dead persons, and are verily deceived by 
phantasy and fictitious appearances which the devil, their master, 
conjures up and produces in their imagination, and then they are 
persuaded that they have been in various places, and have satiated them- 
selves with wickedness according to their abominable desires." 

The authors of the Malleus Maleficarum [12] an authority not to be 
gainsaid, expressly lay down that although the transvection of witches 
to the Sabbat or nocturnal gathering may "often happen by illusion and 
merely in the imagination", yet to decry the actual and bodily trans- 
vection of witches to and fro their hellish rendezvous, where they are 
present in person, savours of heresy. It is found then that some witches 
are transported only in imagination, but it is also found in the writings 
of learned Doctors that many have been bodily transported. Thomas 
of Brabant [13], a Dominican and suffragan bishop, 1201-70, in his 
famous work Bonum universale de Apibus has much to say both of these 
real and imaginary transvections. During these fantastical journeys the 
witch lies as if dead, and is utterly without sensation. In fact the witch 
has fallen into a diabolic ecstasy. St. John Grahame Dalyell in his Darker 
Superstitions of Scotland [14] gives an account of the trial for witchcraft 
on 2nd October, 1616, of Jonka Dyneis who was "discovered and seen 
standing at her own house wall, in a trance, and being questioned she 
gave no answer but stood as if bereft of her senses". Johann Scheffer 
(1621-79), Professor of Law and Librarian of the University of Upsala 
in his History of Lapland [15], English translation, Oxford, 1674, studied 
very closely the sorceries of the Laplanders, and describes how when a 
warlock is consulted, he dances an extraordinary dance, presently falling 
to the ground as if dead, and when he rises from his diabolic ecstasy he 
answers the questions which have been put to him. Meanwhile his fellow 
wizards carefully guard the inert body, and no living thing is suffered to 
touch it. 

Henry Boguet, a great authority, in his An Examen of Witches [16] 
(1590), Chapter XVII, discussed "Whether Witches go in spirit to the 
Sabbat", and decides: "There can be no doubt that there are times when 
witches go to the Sabbat both in body and spirit"> so there is no question 
at all that most frequently, perhaps, witches are actually and corporeally 
present at the Sabbat, but he also cites cases, when witches attend the 
Sabbat whilst they are demoniacally entranced. "Certain witches, who 
after having remained in their houses and dead for the space of two or 

89 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

three hours, have confessed that they were at that time at the Sabbat 
in spirit, and have given an exact account of all that took place there/* 
Such were the warlock Groz- Jacques, and Clauda Coirieres, "a most 
pestilent hag". One Holy Thursday night George Gandillon of Aranthon 
lay in his bed for three hours as if he were dead, and then suddenly came 
to himself. He had been rapt in a diabolical ecstasy. Innumerable 
sorceries and murders were proved against him and he was duly executed. 
So Boguet concludes that with regard to these witches "who remain 
unconscious and as it were dead (i.e. in a diabolical ecstasy) it is probable 
that Satan sends them to sleep, and in their sleep reveals to them what 
happens at the Sabbat so vividly that they are fully assured they have 
been actually present". But, he adds, "this never happens except to such 
as have previously attended in person the witches' assembly, and have 
already enlisted beneath Satan's standard" [17]. 

Pedro Ciruelo, Canon of Salamanca, who for thirty years acted as 
Inquisitor at Saragossa, and was a theologian of profound knowledge 
and long practical experience, in his Opus de magica superstitione [18] 
(A Study of the Evil Craft of Black Magic), Alca&, 1521, which at once 
took its place as supremely authoritative, describes how witches, male 
and female, after smearing themselves with horrible unguents (the 
witches' salve) and pronouncing certain cantrips are carried through 
the air to the sorcerers' rendezvous. This transvection may be actual 
and real, or illusory. In the latter case the fiend enters their bodies and 
they lie stark and stiff, utterly without feeling, dead and cold. The 
demon then presents to their imagination the horrors and filth of the 
Sabbat, which upon recovering their senses they remember, and are very 
clearly aware of all that has passed. Whilst they are rapt in this devil's 
ecstasy they have no feeling whatsoever, and may be beaten or burned 
without any effect. Ciruelo holds that whether the transvection be actual 
or in a trance the guilt is the same, since it initially arises from the pact 
with the devil. Francisco Torreblanca Villalpando [19], and the sagacious 
Arnaldo Albertino [20], with many other authorities maintain precisely 
the same view. Villalpando definitely speaks of "the power of the demon 
to produce these ecstasies, in which the subject becomes as it were, a 
corpse, utterly insensible to all feeling". 

It is proven, then, that there is an ecstasy of sorcerers, as well as an 
Ecstasy of Saints. 

The famous psychic investigator, the late J. Godfrey Raupert, K.S.G. 
in his work The Dangers of Spiritualism [21] gives in detail the case of a 
gentleman, M. , who after dabbling in spiritism developed certain mysterious 
powers which first fascinated and then obsessed him. Among these 
phenomena was that of passing into trance. "Throwing himself back into 
an easy-chair, and closing his eyes, M. gave one or two gasps and twists, 
and then passed into a quiet trance-like state. The next moment, however, 
his eyes partially re-opened, a violent contortion shook his frame, and his 
features, undergoing a strange and startling metamorphosis, assumed 
those of an old man of a most crafty and cunning type. A rasping voice 
and a defective enunciation suggesting a toothless mouth, poured forth 
90 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

a stream of the most horrible and unheard-of blasphemies." Here we 
have a case of diabolic ecstasy immediately succeeded by possession. 
Father Stanislaus M. Hogan, O.P., who has deeply investigated the 
subject says [22] : "The methods used by Spiritists are pretty well known 
to most persons. There is a darkened room, and a medium . . . the 
medium goes into a trance or hypnotic sleep" 

There exists, indeed, a particular class of mediums known as "trance- 
mediums". The records of Spiritism give dozens, one may without 
exaggeration write hundreds of typical and uncontested instances. 
J. Godfrey Raupert in his Christ and the Powers of Darkness [23] very 
clearly explains that there is a certain receptivity of mind which is 
intimately connected with the spiritual life, and which (in a sense) 
co-operates with God so that the Christian is uplifted and led to the 
consideration and contemplation of divine things. This is an active and 
definite operation of the will, the co-operation of the human will with 
God's will, and this in its higher stages leads to Ecstasy, and ultimately, 
if persevered in along the right lines, to Sanctity itself. 

But there is an Unlawful Mental Passivity, the abandonment of reason 
and self-control. This is a complete and ignorant surrender of the will to 
unknown forces and intelligences, and this terminates in that loss of 
consciousness, which travesties and in every particular imitates (or 
endeavours to imitate) the Ecstasy of the Saints. 

How are we to differentiate in the first place? The answer has been 
divinely given. "Ye shall know them by their fruits. Every good tree 
bringeth forth good fruit; but a corrupt tree bringeth forth evil fruit," 
St. Matthew, vii, 16, 17. 

Yet there are difficulties and complexities, and great caution must 
be exercised, since, we are warned, "false Christs and false prophets shall 
rise, and shall show signs and wonders to seduce, if it were possible, even 
the elect", St. Mark, xiii, 22. Among the manifest evidences of diabolical 
ecstasy the following may be named. Should the person who is rapt be 
of notoriously evil life, holding false and impious opinions, or should 
the subject falling into ecstasy be engaged upon some wickedness, such 
as foul necromancy, then it is a diabolic trance. Again, should the 
individual whilst in ecstasy, make any obscene exhibition or lewd move- 
ments, that state is clearly diabolical. Under the same heading come 
those distortions of the limbs, the hideous grimacing and writhing features, 
with foaming and frothing at the mouth, which are so frequently observed 
in spiritistic mediums. Gravina, Cardinal Tomaso de Vio Gaetani, the 
Carmelite Thomas of Jesus, and indeed all mystical theologians maintain 
this opinion. Moreover if the person "under control" in the trance talks 
very rapidly and incoherently, babbling and stuttering, and if blasphemies 
or if ribald and filthy words are spewed forth, then unquestionably it 
is a satanical ecstasy. 

In his study The Dangers of Spiritualism (pp. 157-8) J. Godfrey 
Raupert relates the pitiful case of a Nonconformist minister who began 
quite innocently and unknowingly to dabble with occultism, automatic 
writing and the rest. For a few weeks the communications were very 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

pure and beautiful. Then they became mixed with unclean language. 
He at once tried to break away from the influence which was over- 
coming him, but too late. In trance he was haunted with the foulest lan- 
guage and suggestions. The ecstasies so exhausted and wore him down 
that the end was death in the saddest circumstances. Benedict XIV 
observed that if these ecstasies are trafficked for money, or exhibited 
before a number of people convened for that purpose, in modern parlance 
"a circle", they are undoubtedly of infernal origin. St. John of the Cross 
so keenly appreciated the danger of ecstasy, unless it be certainly from 
God, that he refrained from desiring it. In the Life of Mother Frances 
of the Mother of God we read that at her urgent prayer Our Lord, 
strengthened her so that she was able to bear these divine operations 
without any phenomena appearing visibly. 

The true receptive attitude towards God brings joy, tranquillity, 
peace of mind, interior happiness and calm. There is a burning desire 
to draw nearer to Christ, a growing devotion to His Mother, a submission 
to God's will, and all these show themselves in the daily round. There 
is a distaste for, an abhorrence of, any feverish excitement. The relations 
with those persons who have to be dealt with in the way of friendship, 
acquaintanceship, business, are characterized by a new kindliness, which 
incidentally need not be divorced from firmness, as justice may require. 
The moral fibre is strengthened. 

The effects of unregulated and unlawful psychic passivity are soon 
apparent. There begins a curious inexplicable restlessness of mind; an 
inability to concentrate shows itself; a seemingly unfounded apprehension 
supervenes; the psychic sickness manifests itself in irregular motions of 
the limbs. There is a morbid craving for continual excitement. There 
are frequently pains in the head which can only be eased by giving way 
to an intermittent inertia, abandoning oneself to the seizures, for such 
and nothing else are these ecstasies and trances of spiritism. Religion in 
any true sense of the word becomes detestable, Prayer, the Sacraments, 
the view (much more the touch) of Holy Relics, cause actual repugnance 
and are shunned. Nay, further they are mocked, often with obscene 
blasphemy. Health and happiness are destroyed. In many cases, not 
traceable to the pitiable effects of heredity, dipsomania develops/ It is 
not necessary to dwell upon the complete moral deterioration of many of 
these unfortunate* [24]. 

It is a sad and sickening subject, but so much and I have under- 
stated rather than emphasized the fact it is essential to record. The 
conclusion is inevitable, and humanly speaking, proven [25]. Except 
when there are impostures and fraud [26], and the frequency of 
such charlatancy, trickery often carried through with the most con- 
summate cunning, is notorious, spiritistic trances cannot but be held to 
be diabolical. The Ecstasies of sanctity they certainly are not; neither 
can they be supposed to be natural rapture. One category alone is left. 

It is a relief to turn from these fearfully dark and sordid businesses 
to the consideration of those states which are known as "natural ecstasy", 
perhaps not entirely a happy nomenclature, but one in traditional use 
92 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

and generally accepted, and sanctioned by the great authority of 
Benedict XIV. 

St. Thomas says that ecstasy is an abstraction which arises from 
one of three causes, from a physical cause, which is natural ecstasy; 
from the working of Satan, which is diabolic ecstasy; from the supreme 
power of God, which is Divine Ecstasy, and, as I understand it, true 
Ecstasy in the real sense of the word. 

The learned Pope tells us that a natural ecstasy results from natural 
causes, whereas Catalepsy (or Catochus, Catoche, as the disease was 
called) is in some sense a natural ecstasy, since persons seized thereby 
are deprived of all movement, and there is a total suspension of any 
sensation or consciousness. 

Paolo Zacchia, who was physician to Innocent X, makes a very 
important point in reference to natural ecstasy. He tells us that it is 
never accompanied by levitation, "for it is altogether contrary to nature 
for a body to be raised up of its own strength, and be supported in the 
air" [27]. Benedict XIV observes that a natural ecstasy is followed by 
a certain weariness and fatigue. Zacchia writes of this in detail, and says 
that if heaviness of the limbs, torpor, a mental sluggishness, a paleness 
of the face, which may be drawn and sad, and depression generally, are 
the after effects of the ecstasy, it is certainly natural. Consalvo Durante 
confirms this opinion when he writes [28] that the body of a holy person, 
who is rapt away to the contemplation of divine mysteries, is not (as 
might be surmised) on his coming to himself left weak and languid, but 
that on the contrary the ecstatic is refreshed and invigorated. 

Girolamo Cardano, the celebrated philosopher and physician [29], 
who was born at Pavia, 1501, and died at Rome in 1576, in his great 
folio De remm varietate libri xvii, published at Basle, 1557, relates that 
he was of his own volition able to induce a natural ecstasy, and in that 
state was insensible to any pain, even the agony of an intense attack of 
gout, nor did he in the slightest feel blows and stripes, with whatever 
force and how roughly he might be cudgelled and batooned. Benedict XIV 
ascribes this to a particularly unusual organization of his nervous system 
and the membranes. 

Cardano discusses natural ecstasy in his Somniorum Synesiorum . . . 
libri quatuor, Basle, 1562, Book ii, cap. 8, a passage which may haply be 
given in the old-world paraphrase of John Aubrey's Miscellanies [30]. 
"Men fall into an Ecstasy many ways, either by a syncope, by a vanishing 
and absence of the spirits, or else by the withdrawing of every external 
sense without any other cause. It most commonly happens to those who 
are over solicitous or fix their whole minds upon doing any one particular 
thing. An Ecstasy is a kind of medium between sleeping and waking, as 
sleep is a kind of middle state between life and death. Things seen in 
an Ecstasy are more certain than those we behold in dreams; they are 
much more clear, and far more evident. Those seized with a (natural) 
Ecstasy can hear, those who sleep cannot/' Aubrey then gives three 
instances, of which one (at least) supposed to have befallen the Arch- 
bishop of Armagh, Dr. Usher (1586-1656) is not admissible, as Aubrey 

93 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

himself allows. Another of his examples runs as follows: "Tis certain, 
there was one in the Strand, who lay in a trance a few hours before he 
departed. And in his trance he had a vision of the death of King Charles II. 
It was at the very day of his apoplectick fit/' 3rd February, 1685. The 
King died on the following 6th February. 

It must be borne in mind that, however interesting, these are only 
rough notes made by Aubrey, and except in the case of the Saints, when 
the evidence has been sifted, re-sifted, and sifted again, any death-bed 
phenomena require the most scrupulously careful investigation. They are, 
for our purpose, alien to the point at issue. 

A certain school, rather audaciously, denies the existence of natural 
ecstasy, but all authority is against them. Contemporary psychology, 
also, accepts the ruling of St. Thomas, which is in itself of ample weight 
and hardly open to discussion: Intensa meditatio unius abstrahit ab aliis 
[3;?]. When we further find that scientific inquirers such as were Cardano 
and Zacchia, who have the approval of Benedict XIV, and mystical 
theologians such as Dom Dominic Schram, O.S.B. (1658-1720), that great 
authority, Cardinal Brancati di Lauraea, and Fr. Rolli La magie moderne; 
to mention no more, are agreed that there is a state which is commonly 
called "natural ecstasy" the denial of this condition by P&re Poulain, S.J., 
and the Olivetan Dom Marchaux, is more than a little startling, not to 
say temerarious. It may be true that the instances cited are few, but 
some at least are of themselves amply convincing. Nobody would venture 
to assert that because a certain state is but seldom recorded, it does not 
exist. 

Moreover there have no doubt been many examples which were 
not noticed. "If human nature truly possessed this power, we should 
not be reduced to a mere three or four anecdotes during centuries. . . . 
In the course of the last two or three hundred years Europe has been filled 
with scholars of the first order who have plunged into deepest meditation 
and concentration of thought over metaphysical and mathematical 
problems. Not once have they been observed in an attitude of ecstasy 
with the eyes fixed, the arms extended towards the theorem upon which 
they were so completely engaged. No ecstasy is cited in the cases of 
Newton, Leibnitz, or Euler, or Lagrange, Laplace, and so on" [32], These 
statements of P&re Poulain are hardly correct, and his argument if 
argument it can be called is nugatory. 

There is no writer who treats more clearly and more concisely of 
natural ecstasy than Dom Schram [33], who says that (as we have already 
seen) it certainly must proceed from natural causes, it may be from 
sickness, or from an unusually intensive concentration of the imaginative 
and mental faculties. He cites many examples, for instance that 
personally known to St. Augustine [34] of the priest Restitutus, who 
when he pleased could entirely abstract himself from and (as it were) 
divest himself of his senses, falling prone, as if dead, in which state he 
did not flinch or move if he were knocked about and buffeted soundly, 
nor yet if he were pinched and pricked even to blood, no, not even if his 
flesh were scorched with fire. Whilst rapt in his self-induced trance he 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

was conscious of nothing save that sometimes (he said) if those present 
bawled and shouted in his ear he heard a faint far-off whisper but 
when he returned to himself he at once felt the ache and pain of the 
contusion or injury. St. Fran?ois de Sales in his Traicte de V Amour de 
Lieu, Paris, 1647, vii, 6, expressly states: "Certain philosophers and 
profound scholars by intensive mental concentration have been rapt in 
ecstasy, which is a natural ecstasy." 

Dom Schram lists eight signs which denote that this preternormal 
state is a natural ecstasy. It may, then (i), be the consequence of some 
disease of debility. (2) If the natural ecstasy recurs at fixed and regular 
intervals. (3) If after the ecstasy, the subject (as Zacchia remarks) is 
found to be weak and suffering pain. (4) If the mind appears confused, 
and the subject is bewildered and perplexed. (6) If the ecstasy originates 
from concentration upon some thing not of the divine order, but of the 
earth, earthly. (7) Natural ecstasy may be induced by an extremity of 
fear. (8) In certain cases music will produce a form of rapture, which is 
natural ecstasy. So Cassiodorus (c. 480-575) in his Variarum (Miscellanies), 
II, 5, and the learned Dom Augustin Calomet (1672-1757) in his treatise 
upon Ancient Music, are agreed. To these signs we may add that the 
ecstasy is natural if it can be self-induced, as auto-hypnotism; and if 
there is no levitation during the trance. 

As has just been remarked, St. Francois de Sales makes mention of 
philosophers and profound scholars who have been rapt in natural ecstasy. 
Benedict XIV cites the case of Plato who was sometimes so immersed 
in metaphysical speculations as to lose the use of his senses. Socrates, 
also, as is related in the famous passage of the Symposium, whilst in 
the besieged camp at Potidaea, remained standing and entirely without 
external sense or movement, forgetting either to eat or drink for the 
space of twenty-four hours, absorbed in deepest meditation. 

With regard to Archimedes of Syracuse, the greatest mathematician 
and engineer of antiquity, who when he had solved the true principle 
of the equilibrium between the weight of a floating body, and the hydro- 
static pressure of the liquid wherein it swims, in a transport leaped from 
the bath and, oblivious of all else, rushed naked through the streets of the 
city, crying aloud Eureka (I have found the answer to the problem), this 
might indeed be a natural ecstasy, and so some authorities account it, 
but Mgr. Farges favours the view that it was an extraordinary distraction. 
Again, when Syracuse was captured by Marcellus in 212 B.C., the Roman 
soldiers bursting into his library found him seated in meditation upon 
some profound problem and when the sword passed through his body his 
only cry was: "Do not disturb the circles traced upon the ground/' The 
aged scholar may well have been in a natural ecstasy, but the truth is 
we lack the precise data to pronounce upon the phenomenon. It would 
be necessary to inquire into such concomitants of natural ecstasy as 
anaesthesia, muscular rigidity, analgesia, and the like. 

William Tocco, prior of Benevento, who had been personally 
acquainted with the Saint, tells us of the natural ecstasies of the Angelic 
Doctor. One instance is very widely known. Upon a certain occasion 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

when, as obedience compelled him, he was seated at a royal banquet 
where King Louis IX of France and the Queen entertained a number of 
their highest nobles and eminent men, it was observed that he was lost 
to all around. The Dominican Prior, his neighbour, plucked him sharply 
by the sleeve to recall him to himself. All was in vain, until suddenly 
with a mighty blow of his fist on the board which made the golden goblets 
and the trenchers jump and ring again, he cried out in his sonorous 
voice that echoed through the hall, "Yes; that is a conclusive argument 
utterly refuting the Manichees." The Saint had been jrapt away, seeing 
and hearing nothing round him, threading the logical intricacies of some 
clinching redargution to confound the foul sophistries of the Vaudois 
and Cathari. Good Father Prior rebuked him, bidding him remember 
the presence, and St. Thomas in his humility seemed abashed. Not so 
King Louis, who with a kindly smile, bade one of his secretaries at once 
write down what was in the Saint's mind lest by any chance so brilliant 
and convincing a train of thought with its conclusion be lost. Further, 
Baltellus relates, how once when St. Thomas was absorbed in reflection 
on the mystery of the Holy Trinity, the lighted candle which he held 
in his hand burned down and was consumed, scorching his fingers without 
his perceiving it. 

Again, in the year 1272, when he had come back to the convent at 
Naples, St. Thomas was one day bidden to betake himself to the 
cloister, where two great prelates, the Cardinal Legate of Sicily 
and the Archbishop of Capua, had arrived to consult with him on urgent 
business. The holy Doctor at once descended the stairs, but to the surprise 
of the Cardinal and Archbishop he passed them by, his gaze fixed and 
intent, his face aglow with joy. They caught, however, the murmur: 
"That, and none other must be the solution." The Archbishop followed, 
and pulled him by the sleeve, upon which the Saint came to himself, and 
returned with many apologies to the distinguished visitors, for he was 
the soul of courtesy. "I have just hit upon the solution of a very nice 
and much-debated theological point," he said. 

These then were natural ecstasies, but St. Thomas was more often 
caught away and rapt in divine Ecstasy. 

What is Divine Ecstasy? Alvarez furnishes us with a dictionary 
definition: "Divine Ecstasy is the complete and entire Uplift of the 
mind and spirit to God, which is necessarily accompanied by a total 
abstraction from consciousness and the bodily senses, an inevitable and 
essential concomitant circumstance of the overwhelming force and power 
of this very Uplifting" [35]. 

Schram draws attention to several sublime accidents which are 
frequently, but not always experienced by ecstatics. Such, for example, 
are levitation, inedia, radiating light, and in some cases the impression 
of the stigmata, ,with other celestial phenomena. He also gives various 
signs whereby the Ecstasy may be recognized to be Divine. Only persons 
of a very holy life aiid advanced in mysticism are the subjects of such 
Ecstasies during which they contemplate the things of heaven and, it 
may be, that there are made to them from God Revektions, which they 

9$ 




PLATE IV: SOR PATRGINIO 

From a contemporary print, 1868 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTIC ISM 

remember and oftentimes divulge. Not unseldom the ecstatic, whilst 
caught up to the third Heaven, will speak of paradisial mysteries, 
inflaming the hearts of all present, if bystanders there be, with the love 
of God, and, as it were, drawing them sweetly towards Him. A Divine 
Ecstasy very often enraptures the ecstatic during prayer, and especially 
after receiving Holy Communion. The effect of a Divine Ecstasy results 
in an increase of holiness and a greater desire for God. 

Cardinal Bona [36] and the Venerable Thomas of Jesus [37] hold that 
(for the most part) Divine Ecstasy is of no long endurance. The Carmelite, 
Philip of the Trinity [38], goes so far as to say that it lasts seldom, if 
ever, above an hour. But, in seeming disagreement with the ruling of 
these great masters of the mystical life, there are recorded many 
instances of prolonged Divine Ecstasies, as we shall see below in their 
place. 

This circumstance is not so contradictory as it may appear. These 
mystical theologians were speaking only of the height or culm of the 
"Great Ecstasy", and so Benedict XIV clearly understands them. Indeed 
it can be interpreted in no other way. 

St. Teresa [39] says that the soul seeking God experiences an infinitely 
sweet but almost over-powering joy so that it falls into a kind of heavenly 
swoon, which is of such profundity that the living frame is deprived of 
breath, and all bodily forces fail. It is true that at the beginning this 
state only lasts a very little time. "If it lasts for a full half-hour, it is 
ample. At any rate so it seems to me. Myself, I have never experienced 
it for so long a while as that." And yet the Saint who wrote these words, 
"St Teresa herself died after fourteen hours of ecstasy" [40] . 

Benedict XIV very clearly and concisely sums up thus: "The signs 
of a Divine Ecstasy are principally to be derived from his conduct who 
is subject to them. A Divine Ecstasy takes place with the greatest 
tranquillity of the whole man, who is placid and calm, both exteriorly 
and interiorly. He who is rapt in a divine ecstasy speaks only of heavenly 
things, which mightily move the bystanders to the love of God; on 
returning to himself he appears humble, and even, as it were, daunted 
and abashed. Overflowing with heavenly delights and consolations, his 
face is cheerful and glad, whilst in his heart there is ineffable peace and 
security. He is far from relishing the presence of bystanders, since he 
fears he may haply acquire the reputation of sanctity. Most generally, 
whilst he is praying fervently, or assisting at Mass, or after he has 
received Holy Communion he falls into an ecstasy or sublime trance." 
Martin Delrio [41] speaks of a certain servant of God, who in the year 
1585 dwelt at Burgos, a town of Castile, and who after receiving the 
Blessed Sacrament was straightway rapt into an ecstasy. Upon returning 
to herself, overcome with shame and confusion, she would hurry quickly 
away from the church, and when she had returned home, she was wont 
to retire for a good while to her chamber. The learned Scacchus relates 
the same thing of St. Catharine of Siena. 

In his Life of St. Peter of Alcantara, the Franciscan ascetic of the 

Discalced Reform [42], Father Francesco Marchese, an Oratorian, who 

97 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

incorporated in his work [43] much material from the processes of canoni- 
zation, after speaking of the Divine Ecstasies and Raptures which the 
Saint was wont to experience whilst saying Mass, continues: "When, 
after he had finished his Mass, he unvested, the Saint at once left the 
sacristy and without any delay returned to his cell. It was noticed, too, 
that although usually he walked in a very quiet and grave manner, 
nevertheless, at these times, he hastened along in a remarkable way, 
not unseldom breaking into a run, swift as the wind, in order that he 
might reach his cell as quickly as possible, and close the door. His profound 
humility would not suffer him to divulge what extraordinary favours and 
graces Heaven was pleased to bestow upon him in this retirement. None 
the less the friars heard deep sighs and, as it were, a sweet plaint with 
sharp cries he was unable to suppress. So the religious were very certain 
that at these moments he was visited by Our Lord in some extraordinary 
manner." This, as we shall note later, was Rapture. 

To learn something of the more pregnant details of Divine Ecstasy 
we must turn to the pages written by that great Mistress of the Spiritual 
Life, St. Teresa of Avila, whose descriptive powers and psychological 
insight are of the very highest order, and whose autobiography, the 
Vida "covers her outward and inward life . . . (so) that no one can be 
said to know her who is not familiar with it" [44]. And not to know 
St. Teresa is to be ignorant of mysticism. 

The latest Spanish editor of St. Teresa's Works, P. Silverio de Santa 
Teresa, frankly considered the Vida her masterpiece. Ribot writes [45] : 
"The autobiography of St. Teresa may inspire us with full confidence. 
It is a confession made by order of her spiritual director, it is the work 
of an acutely sensitive and receptive mind very gifted in observation, 
knowing precisely the use of languages to express the finest shades of her 
meaning." 

Divine Ecstasy consists of two states [46], which are to be entirely 
differentiated, and yet which are essentially united and confixed. The 
one state is psychological and interior, but wholly of the supernatural 
order. This is the uplift of the soul to God, a most powerful, active, and 
transcendent emotion, when the soul (so far as is possible) sees God, 
holds converse with Him, and learns from Him the arcana of heavenly 
mysteries. This, the essential element cannot in itself be ocularly perceived, 
but it is none the less invariably manifested, and exhibits itself in the 
phenomena of the second state, the physical state [47], which produces 
a complete alienation of the senses, muscular rigidity, and is very often 
the occasion of other extraordinary mirables and prodigia. 

It is an error to suppose that mystical writers have given the name 
Ecstasy exclusively to this second state, which is indeed an inseparable 
concomitant of the spiritual rapture, wherein the soul has found God. 
In speaking of Divine Ecstasy we always postulate and presuppose the 
first state. 

In the Vida St. Teresa describes the Fourth Degree of prayer, Divine 
Ecstasy. The soul is "fainting almost completely away, in a kind of 
swoon, with an exceedingly great and sweet delight". "The soul feels 
98 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

close to God and . . . there abides within it such a certainty that it 
cannot do other than believe." "I could not cease believing that He 
was there, for it seemed almost certain that I had beea conscious of 
His very presence. Unlearned persons would tell me that he was there 
only by grace; but I could not believe that, for, as I say, He seemed to 
me to be really present; and so I continued to be greatly distressed. 
From this doubt I was freed by a very learned man [48] of the Order 
of the glorious Saint Dominic: he told me that He was indeed present 
and described how He communicated Himself to us, which brought me 
very great comfort" [49], 

In The Interior Castle, a later work, St. Teresa treats of Ecstasy in 
even ampler detail. First we must recall St. Teresa's love of water, limpid 
crystal streams, "unpathed waters, undreamed shores", "waters at their 
priest-like task" [50], that "river of God which is full of water"; above 
all, draughts from that "well of water springing up into everlasting 
life", and says the Saint "I cannot find anything more apt for the explana- 
tion of certain spiritual things than this element of water". Expanding 
this metaphor of water, she writes: "But now the great God, who controls 
the sources of the waters and forbids the sea to move beyond its bounds, 
has loosed the sources whence water has been coming into this basin; 
and with tremendous force there rises up so powerful a wave that this 
little ship our soul is lifted up on high. And if a ship can do nothing, 
and neither the pilot nor any one of the crew has any power over it, 
when the waves make a furious assault upon it and toss it about at 
their will, even less able is the interior part of the soul to stop and stay 
still where it likes, while its senses and faculties can do no more than 
has been commanded them" [52]. 

God, the Divine Being, the Ultimate Reality, is the supreme object 
of interior Divine Ecstasy. But the matter is complex. It does not end 
here. It is true that some mystics, such, for example, as the marvellous 
St. Maria Maddalena de' Pazzi, had a direct perception of the Ancient 
of Days. Yet the supreme object of Divine Ecstasy is also Christ our 
Lord, and it is an abominable heresy, a most black and damnable error 
to attempt to separate the Divinity and the Sacred Humanity of Jesus 
Christ [52~\. The Beghars and Michael Molinos essayed to do this with 
very subtile snake-like casuistry. So perfidious a fallacy was expressly 
condemned by the Venerable Innocent XI in his bull Coelestis Pater, 
which was signed 20th November, 1687; and again by that holiest of 
popes, his successor, Alexander VIII (1689-91), who is aptly described 
by Bernino [63] as "an Angel in looks, in speech an Apostle". 

The contemplation of Our Divine Lord, of His Sacred Heart as so 
wonderfully revealed to St. Margaret Mary Alacoque, the Precious 
Blood, His holy Wounds, His adorable Face, all these have enraptured 
mystics of the highest order. 

The Seraphic Mother, St. Catharine of Siena, had a particular devotion 
to the Precious Blood. In fact she has been termed the Prophetess of the 
Precious Blood, and she singled out this devotion with a more than 
ordinary predilection. The mere thought of blood, as she remembered the 

99 



"I HE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

Blood which stained the Cross on Calvary, would throw her into a Divine 
Ecstasy. In all hagiography, in all the Lives of all the Saints there are 
few episodes more striking and none more profoundly moving than that 
when she comforted and was present at the execution of the young 
gallant of Perugia, Xiccolo Tuldo the lad was only about eighteen 
who was cruelly and so unjustly condemned to death [54]. All the world 
lay fair and smiling before him; there promised a high and noble career. 
St. Catharine accompanied him to the scaffold. "Stay with me, and 
leave me not/' he had pleaded, "Then all will be well with me, and I 
shall die content 5 ' "$$]. Whereupon, says the Saint, "I felt the sweet 
fragrance of his blood, and it was a fragrance blended with the odour of 
my own blood, which I have so often longed to shed for the sake of 
Jesus, my loved one, my spouse/' They prayed to the Madonna, and to the 
Virgin Martyr, St. Catharine of Alexandria. "Remember, dear brother 
mine, the Blood of the Lamb," she murmured. The axe fell. Catharine 
at the moment saw his soul in the realms of heavenly bliss. In ecstasy 
she saw Christ her Spouse radiant as the golden sun. In her hands she 
held the youth's severed head. Her dress was saturated and soaked with 
his hot streaming blood. And so she passed on her way, still in Ecstasy. 
"My soul/' she says, "was so filled with gentle peace and a calm not 
of this world, so fragrant was the odour of blood, that I could not bear 
to wash off the blood which incarnadined my habit and crimsoned my 
hands." In her own Oratory, to which she had retired, she fell into 
Ecstasy after Ecstasy. In some mystic way she was bathed in the Blood 
of Christ, whose love so exhausted and refreshed her that she could only 
sigh : "O Blood ! burning fire ! O Love ineffable ! O blood !" 

There is no profounder mistress of the depths of the spiritual life 
than the Seraphic Mother, Catharine of Siena, who stands with Teresa 
of Avila, and some few more, higher than the very heights of heaven. 
Another Dominicaness, Blessed Osanna of Mantua, fell into an Ecstasy 
at the sight of blood, so intense was her devotion to the Mystery of the 
Precious Blood, since anything which reminded her of the Blood of 
Christ threw the Beata into a trance of love, wherein her soul was utterly 
submerged and immersed, and she vaguely describes herself as bathed 
in a great light and elevated to union with God. Human language failed 
when she attempted to relate these supernatural experiences. Moreover 
she was extremely anxious to keep these phenomena secret, and when, 
in spite of her efforts, the rapture descended upon her whilst others 
were present she was, on returning to herself covered with confusion 
and shame. In her Spiritual Letters she addresses the monk Girolamo 
da Monte Oliveto as "my dear son born to me in the Blood of Our Lord" 
and she tells him how in a celestial radiance far outshining Sol at hottest 
noon she saw and mystically perceived the Father, the Son, and the 
Holy Ghost, and how also a celestial voice spoke to her saying: "My 
daughter, leave the father who begat and the mother who bore thee 
Come unto Me, beloved child. I am thy Heavenly Father, Eternal God] 
and thy mother is the most Blessed Virgin Mary/' She also beheld a vision 
of Christ, covered with wounds and carrying His Cross under the weight 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

of which He tottered, about to fall prone, so faint and weary was He. The 
sight of His Blood, as it were, intoxicated her, and pressing her lips to 
the Wound in His Side, where the lance had pierced, she drank and was 
inebriated with the Precious Blood [56]. 

I have as an example selected this one aspect of Our Lord's Humanity, 
the Precious Blood, to show that the contemplation of such subjects may 
be the culm of Divine Ecstasy. It would be easy, but superfluous, to 
enlarge upon this, to show that the Blessed Sacrament ; the Holy Infancy; 
the hidden mystery of the Thirty-Three Years, so honoured by Blessed 
Michael of Florence, the Camaldolese; by the Carmelite lay-sister of 
Dole, Anne of the Cross; by Mother Louisa of Jesus; and other saintly 
souls; and many more Mysteries can uplift to the highest Ecstasy. 

One of the most extraordinary of mystics St. Joseph of Copertino [57], 
fell into Ecstasy upon hearing the Holy Name of Mary, to which Name 
the Trinitarian Blessed Simon de Roxas [58] also had a burning devotion, 
which often threw him into a Divine Ecstasy. Similarly, the Passionist 
[59], St. Gabriel of the Sorrowful Virgin, was enraptured when he 
meditated upon the Dolours and Joys of Mary. 

In the Life of St. Benedict Joseph Labre (beatified by Pius IX, 20th 
May, 1860; canonized by Leo XIII, 8th December, 1881) by Don Antonio 
Maria Coltrano, a priest of Rome, which was published by Galomini, 
Rome, 1807, there is a striking passage, Part III, Chapter 9, in reference 
to the Ecstasies of this great Saint. "If his sublime and rapturous con- 
templations show clearly the interior fire of love, which consumed the 
burning heart of Benedict Joseph, the Ecstasies wherewith he was from 
time to time favoured by Almighty God, yet more clearly make it 
manifest, for St. Thomas says that nothing can cause Divine Ecstasy 
in man, save only Love: "Divine Love is the direct cause of Divine 
Ecstasy." Now, Ecstasy, as this state is commonly defined by mystical 
theologians, is a total and entire suspension of the senses, caused by a 
very lively apprehension of the greatness of God and of the overwhelming 
force of His Love, and this with so much sweetness and calm that there 
is nothing in it of that violence which is the peculiar property of Rapture. 
Such Divine Ecstasies were very common with St. Benedict Joseph, and 
they were mistaken by the ignorant and ordinary folk for bodily diseases, 
fainting fits and physical seizures, arising from nothing other than his 
extraordinary abstinence, the weakness of the stomach from which he 
suffered, and the like. This need not surprise us in the least, for not 
unseldom many persons striving to lead spiritual lives and devoted to 
God have fallen into this error. 

The Ecstasies with which God favoured His beloved servant, the 
Venerable Sister Gertrude Salandri, were taken to be sickness and fits 
of epilepsy. Thus, when, before the foundation of the monastery of 
Valentano, she was staying at the Convent of St. Catharine in Viterbo, 
she suddenly passed into Ecstasy and seemed like a dead person. The 
good nuns, confused and amazed, hastily called in a skilful physician, 
who on examining her proved to be just as mistaken. It was thought 
proper, however, to resort to drastic remedies, blisters and cautery. 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

Sister Gertrude remained insensible to everything. After several hours 
she came out of her Ecstasy, and when the nuns asked how she felt, 
she tenderly replied: "I have no pain whatsoever save what you caused 
me whilst I was entranced. You have hurt me very sorely, but let that 
pass, let it be for the love of God." 

St. Benedict Joseph had sometimes scarcely begun to pray before 
Heaven overwhelmed him with a most sweet Ecstasy. He was absorbed 
in God, and, as in Ecstasy the senses are lost and have no power to 
perform their natural functions, the ecstatic is insensible to the effects 
of fire or iron when employed to arouse him. Thus St. Benedict Joseph 
was utterly unconscious of all, and some, quite misunderstanding, shook 
and struck him very roughly, but all to no purpose. At Loreto, as Father 
Temple judged, he was overwhelmed by Rapture. A priest also saw him 
carried away in Rapture in Santa Maria sopra Minerva, when the Saint 
uttered sobs and sighs and tore open his ragged coat at the breast to 
assuage the fiery flame within. A Professor of Dogma at the Roman 
College, when meditating in the Church of San Ignazio, piazza San 
Ignazio, Rome, saw St. Benedict Joseph pass into a Rapture with extra- 
ordinary concomitant phenomena. 

St. Benedict Joseph Labre was a Frenchman, being born at Amettes, 
near Boulogne, on a6th March, 1748, and died at Rome on i6th April, 

1783- 

It should, incidentally, be said here that, as the learned Matthaeucci 
[60] observes, Divine Ecstasy with concomitant phenomena, is one of 
God's gifts gratia datae (as the theologians have it), that is to say it is 
granted by God to whom He will, when He wills, and as He pleases. 
There are many holy persons, and canonized Saints even, who do not 
experience the rapture of Ecstasy, and who are none the less holy because 
of that. Yet we must always bear in mind that Ecstasy is a surpassing 
great Gift. Divine Ecstasy although not regarded as a proof, is assuredly 
a sign of remarkable sanctity. 

Benedict XIV lays down that "The character of the ecstasy being 
ascertained, yet of itself, although divine and proceeding from God, it 
does not avail to prove sanctity, implicitly, for it neither sanctifies, nor 
is it a necessary effect of sanctifying grace, being a grace gratis data 
wherefore, in order that it may be taken into account in the official 
process of Beatification and Canonization, it is necessary to prove that 
the ecstatic was endowed with heroic virtues; for then it will be a Sign 
of sanctity and of the ecstatic's love of God, and on the other hand of 
God' love to him. . . . These Divine Ecstasies are for the most part 
not granted to every one of the faithful, nor to those of ordinary spiritual 
attainments, but only to the perfect and established in the spiritual life, 
and so to those who are remarkable for virtues and especially for their 
charity. . . . Divine Ecstasies, therefore, accompanied with heroic 
virtues, in causes of Beatification and Canonization, though not directly 
(as the Schoolmen's phrase runs), yet indirectly furnish some very 
weighty evidence of sanctity" [61}. 

As the same learned Pope says, not only many Martyrs but a large 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

number of other Saints have been raised to the Altar without their 
having been endowed with any mystical gifts from God or having trod 
the extraordinary and phenomenal paths of holiness. "Numberless souls," 
writes Sandreau, "do arrive at perfection, and consequently the unitive 
way, without receiving such sublime favours. Hence it is necessary to 
conclude that there is a unitive or perfect way without contemplation 
(Divine Ecstasy). Wherefore some bifurcation at a certain point must 
be admitted. This is strictly logical, but it hardly accords with traditional 
doctrine" [62]. We may conclude, then, relying upon the authority of 
Benedict XIV that it is in some circumstances possible, but in fact 
excessively rare and altogether unusual. 

Does a Divine Ecstasy differ from a Divine Rapture, and, if so, in 
what particulars? St. Thomas teaches us that Rapture is accidentally 
more than Ecstasy, since Rapture is accompanied by a certain degree 
of violence, the onrush of the Divine. The Saint writes [63] : "Rapture 
involves something more than Ecstasy, for Ecstasy precisely speaking 
implies a transport out of and beyond oneself, so that a man is removed 
from his normal well-ordered condition, but Rapture entails something 
of violence" [64]. 

The Cistercian Cardinal Bona (1609-74) in his great work De Dis- 
cretione Spirituum (On the Discerning of Spirits), c. xiv; n.2; very amply 
discusses the matter. "This, then," he says, "is the essential difference 
between Ecstasy and Rapture. The former estate withdraws the mind 
from the senses more gently and (as it were) persuasively. The latter 
more powerfully and not without violence of a kind, so that Rapture 
adds this to Ecstasy, namely it catches up the resistless soul with power 
and might, most rapidly and by divine compulsion sweeping upwards 
and onwards away from the senses and all things appertaining, so that 
it is~ swiftly carried and borne aloft to the enjoyment of the intellectual 
vision and aflame with the ardent love of heavenly things." 

Many mystical theologians conceive that there cannot be rapture 
without the manifestation of extraordinary phenomena. Cardinal Brancati 
holds this opinion. 

None the less the learned Cardinal allows that Ecstasy and Rapture 
are terms used indiscriminately, and Consalvi Durante quite plainly 
writes: "We may take it as very certain that mystical theologians some- 
times apply the words Ecstasy, Transport, and Rapture to the same 
state, and that even in the Holy Scriptures they are similarly employed." 
I find that in the French translation (1650) of the Works of St. Teresa 
the words Evanoftissement and Ravissement are regarded as identical. 

Bearing in mind what St. Thomas says, it is yet allowable, then, 
yet not very precisely accordingly to the Mystical Doctors, to use Ecstasy, 
Transport, Trance, Rapture, without the nice (yet actual) distinction 
being made. A Rapture cannot be resisted, no, not for a moment, even 
if the ecstatic be in company with others, or in a public place. It over- 
whelms and overpowers. Thus in the case of Teresa Helena Higginson 
(1844-1905), this Spouse of the Crucified, whilst living at 15 Ariel Street, 
Bottle, that insignificant little two-storeyed housefoan absolutely common- 

103 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

place rather drab row, where she had lodgings with the Misses Catterall, 
her fellow-teachers at St. Alexander's School, the rapture would descend 
upon and overwhelm her. At first the Misses Catterall were, not unnaturally, 
alarmed, and tried to rouse her by bumping her pretty forcibly in her 
chair all round the room, but it was absolutely useless. After a while 
they recognized the supernatural, and ceased to notice her condition, 
merely remarking to one another: "Teresa has popped off again." 

Of St. Miguel de Santos, the glory of the Discalcead Trinitarians, we 
are told in his Proper Office crebis et mirificis rapiebatur extasibus, "he 
was very frequently caught up in Raptures and altogether phenomenal 
Ecstasies" (Matins f Lectis vi). When he fell into rapture, often during 
prayer, he ran through the cloisters at wonderful speed uttering loud 
cries of joy, and darting hither and thither with such celerity that nobody 
could stay him. 

In the Bull of Canonization of St. Maria Maddalena de' Pazzi it is 
related how when the rapture overwhelmed her she rushed to and fro, 
up and down the stairs and along the corridors, through the nuns' garth, 
with inconceivable rapidity, often tearing her habit in her haste, and 
throwing to one side anything which came in her way. 

These Saints, sublimest mystics both, were literally inebriated with God. 

"A Divine Ecstasy/' says Benedict XIV, "takes place with the 
greatest tranquillity of the whole ecstatic, both outwardly and inwardly/* 
The same circumstances accompany a Divine Trance. 

Gianbattista Scaramelli in his great work II Direttorio Mistico says 
that there is Ecstasy properly so called, and Rapture, Ecstasy is truly 
the Mystical Union of Love in so far as the soul is transported without 
any violence but even with a certain tranquillity. The distinguishing 
feature of Rapture is that there is always some element of suddenness, 
of surprise and violence. He further divides Rapture into three classes: 
those Raptures in which the exterior senses are suspended, whilst the 
interior senses are retained, which is not strictly speaking a Rapture at 
all, yet is (as it were) a promise of Rapture to come. There are, secondly, 
the Raptures in which both exterior and interior senses are suspended, 
which Scaramelli terms "Perfect Raptures", and of these, the third degree 
(or class) of Rapture is the highest point of Rapture when both exterior 
and interior senses are suspended in the contemplation of the Beatific 
Vision. Scaramelli judges that this third Rapture, which is, so to speak, 
an extension of Perfect Rapture is rarely experienced during life. But, 
since we know that in Heaven, Christ still bears the marks of his Wounds, 
we must not separate the Humanity of Christ from the Divinity of Christ, 
or we shall fall into peril, nay, into the pit. Nor must we separate the 
Humanity of Christ from the source whence He derived it, Mary. These 
are very deep matters, and scrupulous care is needed. 

Scaramelli gives his opinion that a state of Rapture may last for 
several hours or even for days, but that there will be fluctuations in its 
intensity. Which is to say that Rapture must and will ebb back to 
Ecstasy. At its highest point Rapture (he says) will scarcely exceed half- 
an-hour, which seems to be consonant with what St. Teresa writes. 
104 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

It were best, it appears to me, to be more exact and stricter and 
differentiate in our use of the terms "Ecstasy" and "Rapture", and in so 
doing we shall be adhering more closely to what St. Thomas says, and 
more scrupulously following the mind of Benedict XIV. For, the Pontiff 
writes, "Divine Raptures are not long, but frequently brief, as Cardinal 
Bona [66] and Thomas a Jesu [66] quite plainly prove". The fact is that 
the human soul and body are unable (unless, indeed, miraculously sus- 
tained) to stand the sweetly violent influx and onrush of the Divine. 

So we find that Mgr. Farges or his English translator says "Ecstasy 
lasts but for a few moments, as St. Teresa declares many times" [67]. 
This is very misleading, and in the next paragraph the statement is at 
once qualified (not to say contradicted) by more than half-a-dozen 
examples of Saints whose Ecstasies endured for hours, days and weeks. 
I have already pointed out that the culm or height of the Great Ecstasy 
is here spoken of by St. Teresa, as quoted, but even so the learned author 
of Mystical Phenomena does not, so it appears to me, differentiate between 
Divine Ecstasy and Divine Rapture, the latter of which is inevitably 
accompanied by extraordinary phenomena, which can be and are 
remarked by witnesses and bystanders. Such, as we have just observed, 
occurred, in the cases of St. Miguel de los Santos and St. Maria Madda- 
lena de' Pazzi. With regard to St. Joseph of Copertino Rapture was 
accompanied by Levitation. 

On one occasion, i8th October, 1501, the Venerable Domenica dal 
Paradiso [68] fell into an Ecstasy, which increased with a violent spasm 
to Rapture, when she saw the Mother of God attended by St. Gabriel 
and an Angel, who was (Domenica understood) her own Guardian Angel. 
At the command of the Madonna the two celestial Spirits conducted 
Domenica to Heaven, and here by a special privilege of the Mother of 
Wisdom she was permitted a clear understanding of the Humanity 
of Our Lord and the Divine Essence. Extraordinary phenomena 
accompanied this Rapture, which lasted for three hours according 
to her confessor, Canon Benivieni, who was a witness of these marvels 
which he communicated to Domenica's later director Fra Francesco 
de Onesti [69]. 

Blessed Osanna of Mantua during one Lent fell into an Ecstasy which 
lasted three days; and, once, after having received Holy Communion on 
Ascension Thursday she was rapt into Ecstasy for forty-eight hours. 
In his mystical Prologue to the Life of Saint Mary of Oignies [70], 
Cardinal Jacques de Vitriaco [71], speaks of the great sanctity of 
many religious women in the diocese of Li&ge, for the most part, as 
I take it, Beguines. He says that many "were so carried out of, and 
beyond, themselves, by their sweetly plentiful draughts of the Holy 
Ghost, that they passed practically the whole day in an ecstatic silence. 
So long as His Majesty, the King of Heaven, deigned to repose within 
them, they had not the least perception of anything that was going on 
around. So deeply in its profundity did that Peace of God, which passeth 
all understanding, absorb and encloister their exterior senses, that they 
could not be aroused by any noise, no, however loud and clanging it 

105 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

might be, nor could they be hurt by any buffet or knock upon their 
bodies. Even pricking them sharply, again and again, had no effect what- 
soever." "I have myself seen," continues the Cardinal, "a religious who 
frequently fell into Ecstasy, yea, very oft as many as five-and-twenty 
times in the space of one short day. I have seen her in Rapture more 
than seven times, and that for a long while together. Whenever the 
Rapture fell upon her she remained stationary, motionless, and immobile, 
until she returned to herself. Yet, however unusual a position she was in, 
however ill-balanced and precarious for the moment, she never tottered 
nor fell, but was supported most wonderfully by her Guardian Angel. 
Sometimes if the Rapture overwhelmed her as she was stretching out 
her hand far, it would remain steadily in that awkward and difficult 
gesture. And when she came to herself the limb was not stiff and benumbed, 
but lithe and lissom, nor was she in the least weary, rather she was active 
and nimble, and her heart was full of great joy." 

The Sen-ant of God, Elisabetta Canori Mora, a Tertiary of the Dis- 
calced Trinitarians, on 23rd October, 1816, passed into a Rapture, 
during which she saw the Madonna Who held in Her arms the Infant 
Jesus. There also appeared St. Joseph; the three Holy Magi; the two 
Patriarchs of the Trinitarians, St. John de Matha and the royal hermit 
St. Felix of Valois; together with an infinite host of Angels. The Divine 
Child placed upon the finger of the ecstatica, whose hand He took in His, 
a ring brilliant with heavenly jewels. Such were the effects of this 
Rapture that Elisabetta remained in ecstasy for a full fortnight. In 
1823 upon the Feast of the Visitation, 2nd July, Elisabetta fell into a 
Rapture during which she endured the Mystery of the Transverberation 
of her Heart, and from that day until her death on 5th February, 1825, 
her life, whether she was in church, in her little private Oratory, at home, 
at table, and even in the street, was one long almost uninterrupted series 
of Ecstasies and Raptures [72]. 

The Ecstasies of the Venerable Orsola Benincasa, Foundress of the 
Theatine Nuns (1547-1618), were so frequent as to be almost unin- 
terrupted. Directly the trance came on she at once became entirely 
insensible to any exterior happenings. When she was a child these 
Ecstasies were not understood, and rough methods were employed to 
arouse her. She was pricked with needles and even cut with sharp lancets; 
her hair was pulled; bystanders nipped and pinched her black and blue; 
they bruised her with their blows; they even went so far as to burn 
her with a naked flame, but all these injuries affected her not in the 
slightest, although when she returned to herself she keenly felt the result 
of such ill-judged, and indeed cruel, maltreatment. Later, ignorance and 
misunderstanding turned to admiration and awe. Those who dwelt with 
her, or had the opportunities of observing her almost daily realized that 
she was indeed a saint. Thus the Superior, Suor Angela Raparo, who lived 
with Orsola for twenty-eight years, deposed on oath that the holy ecstatica 
was rapt many times each day, and that not a day passed without her 
being entranced in heavenly wise. The priest, Don Vincenzo Nero, 
solemnly averred: "With my own eyes I have beheld her very many 

106 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

times rapt in ecstasy . . . absolutely immobile, absolutely insensible/* 
In very deed the life of this holy nun is described as one long Ecstasy of 
Divine Love. Moreover in Rapture she was levitated [73]. 

Blessed Maria Ana de Jesus, in the world Dona Mariana Ladran 
de Guevara, a Discalced Mercedarian nun (1565-1624) of Madrid, was 
subject to the most extraordinary and prolonged Ecstasies, and over- 
whelming Raptures during which she was frequently levitated. In her 
Revelations she acknowledges (under obedience) that her soul received 
extraordinary illuminations from God, to Whom she was closely united 
in mystic vision [74]. 

In the New World Mystical Phenomena glorified the supernatural 
life of la azucena de Quito, the Lily of Quito, Blessed Marianna di Gesu 
de Paredes y Flores, who was frequently entranced in Divine Ecstasy, 
so that as her director P. Camaccio attested she was overwhelmed in 
Heavenly Love to so intense a degree that she was ineffably united to 
God. Moreover, on one occasion when a priest Don Sebastiano Delgado 
came to speak with her, she was discovered to be so entranced in Ecstasy 
that it was impossible to arouse her, and the good father gazed with awe 
and wonderment upon such holiness and purity. 

When San Franciso de Borja, S.J., was in contemplation he remained 
motionless, as if carved in stone, and once when a wooden column fell 
upon him, inflicting a severe wound, he knew nothing of it, until he came 
out of his ecstasy and to his surprise found he was in bed, whither the 
bystanders had carried him, with a physician in attendance [76]. 

In her little hermitage, which she had built with great palm leaves 
and other branches of trees in the most sequestered and remote corner 
of her father's garden, St. Rose of Lima, who may truly be called 
Wonderful even among the Saints, passed entire days in Divine Ecstasy. 
Herself the "Flower of the New World", "the Passion-Flower of Christ", 
her virginal seclusion, her austerities, her fasts and penances, were such 
that men read of them with a kind of wonderment, and feeding only 
on the Bread of Angels she appeared truly in some sense to share the 
angelic nature and to become a Sister of the Seraphim. "It is in a garden 
we always seem to find her", says a mystic -writer, and we are told that 
the very flowers smelled more sweetly as she plucked them with her fair 
and lovely hands, hands which had been clasped in those of her Secret 
Bridegroom to Whom His Mother had given her, and Who had whispered 
so tenderly, "Rose of My Heart, My Rose be thou My Spouse, Mine own". 
And one day, in the cool of the evening, when she was walking in a parterre 
planted with fragrant flowers in which she took great delight, she saw 
that they had been gathered. Upon which she sorrowed not a little, until 
presently she heard her Lover's voice: "Rose, My Rose, thou art a 
flower. Give Me all thy love, for know that it was I Who gathered these 
flowers, for I will have no rival, no, not any creature even be it a flower 
shall share with Me in thy heart." It was her custom to retire to her 
mysterious hermitage on Thursday very early and to remain there, 
encloistered and unseen until Saturday night. And there, as the poet 
says [77], she would 

107 



IKE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

take possession of that sacred store 
Of hidden secrets and holy joys. 

Words which are not heard with Ears 
(Those tumultuous shops of noise) 

Effectual whispers, whose still voice 
The soul itself more feels than hears; 

Amorous languishments; luminous trances; 
Sights which are not seen with eyes; 

Spiritual and soul-piercing glances 
Whose pure and subtil lightning flies 

Home to the heart, and sets the house on fire 
And mdts it down in sweet desire 

Yet does not stay 
To ask the windows leave to pass that way; 

Delicious Deaths; soft exaltations 
Of soul; dear and divine annihilations; 

A thousand and unknown rites 
Of joys and rarefy } d delights . . . 

Isabel de Flores y Oliva, whom the world knows as St. Rose of Lima. 
"It is in a garden we always seem to find her." When with the early 
dawn, in the cool of morning ere the sun had yet risen in his might, she 
passed through the garden herself the fairest flower of all she bade 
Nature awake and praise with her their common Creator, Who had 
made both trees and shrubs and fragrant herbs and flowers, the dawning 
and the evening, the golden disc of the sun, the silver orb of the moon. 
Then the boughs rustled gently as she went on her way to her anchor- 
hold, and the breeze that softly stirred them seemed to make music to 
God. The flowers also swayed and bowed to greet her, opening their 
petals and rousing from sleep, to send forth their rich perfume from 
nature's thuribles, an incense to the Most High. The birds sang in sweet 
chorus, and loved to nestle on her arms and shoulders. The insects, too, 
welcomed her footsteps with their joyous hum, a low bourdon note of 
praise, and together with her all living things gave matin thanks to the 
Lord. 

At eventide before they sought their nests the feathered choristers 
would wing their way to sing their vesper hymn with Rose. So when 
she gave the sign one little voice would pipe in harmony with her own 
canticle of love. "Do thou begin, my dear little bird," said she, "do thou, 
sweetling, begin thy glad song. Let thy tiny throat, so full of melody, 
pour forth thy song. I then in concert will join with thee. Together we 
will praise Him Who made us both." And so they sang, as it were in choir 
antiphonally, and when the bird uttered his notes Rose would sit silent 
and watch him with her lovely eyes; but as his voice died away she took 
up the song, and he in his turn perched near would listen with marvellous 
attention, until when the hour came, at the end, their voices would blend 
in heavenly harmony. And so she blessed him and thanked him for his 
melody, and he would taie leave, flying to his nest, while veiling her 
face she would in silence withdraw to the house, there to seek her chamber, 

108 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

very privily, not to sleep but to pray and macerate her innocent body 
with those disciplines and penances, which seem to us so terrible, that 
we can hardly understand, can scarce bear to hear of them. Even her 
director, a holy man of the strictest austerity, felt bound to bid her 
moderate her mortifications [78], 

It is true we cannot understand the visible intermingling of the 
natural and supernatural worlds. We cannot understand the joy of pain, 
the foolishness of the Cross. It has been admirably said by a profound 
spiritual writer that "so completely child-like was St. Rose herself, and 
so child-like the wonders with which her Divine Spouse encircled her, 
that in reading her Life it seems hardly ever to strike us that she was 
anything but a little girl ... yet he will find a thorn who shall dare to 
handle roughly this sweet mysterious Rose which St. Dominic planted 
in the garden of his Master". 

A little girl. Yes, in her twelfth year St. Rose had attained the 
Unitive Life, by means of which "the soul becomes one spirit with Him", 
Why speak of her Raptures and Ecstasies? Her whole Hfe was one long 
Ecstasy. Little wonder that all God's creatures loved her, that the birds 
sang softly round her Hermitage, that when she was ill one little bird 
perched near the window and began to sing so sweetly that she fell into 
a Rapture which lasted from dawn until dusk. Little wonder that when 
on one occasion she passed swiftly through the streets of Lima to Santo 
Domingo that holy woman Louisa de Melgarcyo knelt down, and with 
deepest veneration kissed the places where the feet of Rose had trod [79]. 

The Raptures and Ecstatic experiences of St. Rose were described 
by her, under obedience, to her Director, to several learned Dominican 
and Jesuit divines, and especially to the famous mystical theologian, 
Juan de Castile, the author of a very profound treatise on Mysticism, 
but so far as possible she lived retired from the world. On the other 
hand, the Raptures and Ecstasies of the Bguine Blessed Christina of 
Stommeln (1242-1312), who was under Dominican direction, were care- 
fully recorded by the parish priest Dan John, and collected by Father 
Peter of Dacia [80], who knew her intimately and who put together 
much material for a projected work (not fully completed) Liber de 
Vertutibus Sponsae Christi Christinae (A study of that Holy Woman and 
true Spouse of Christ, Christina). Peter of Dacia was a man of great 
talents and learning, we might almost say of genius. At Cologne he had 
studied under St. Albertus Magnus himself. It was upon 24th February, 
1268, that he first beheld Christina in ecstasy. Someone had been singing 
the hymn "Jesu dulcis memoria" and upon hearing she was rapt in 
Ecstasy, unconscious, immobile. This state continued four hours. Again 
and again in the presence of a little group of friends, pious women and 
good religious who visited her, Christina passed into Divine Ecstasies. 
On Whit-Sunday, 1268, after she had made her communion she remained 
motionless for many hours, her face covered by her veil, wrapped in her 
cloak, caught up in Ecstasy. Extraordinary phenomena accompanied 
these trances, and her Raptures were frequent. As will be dealt with in 
a later chapter she was further subject to diabolical attacks of the most 

109 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

furious kind. Here we have the case of a Mystic whose Ecstasies were 
carefully observed by a trained theologian, a Dominican friar of whose 
good faith and clear balanced apperception there can be no doubt. There 
were, of course, many other witnesses, and all describe without deviating 
or exaggeration precisely identical happenings. Such evidence it is 
impossible to gainsay. 

The Passionist, Father Germano of St. Stanislaus, a trained, cautious 
and most careful investigator, for a long while remarked and recorded 
the Ecstasies and Raptures of St. Gemma Galgani of Lucca [57]. Gemma 
Galgani was born I2th March, 1878, and died nth April, 1903. She was 
canonized by Pius XII on Ascension Thursday, 2nd May, 1940. The 
Divine Ecstasies and Raptures of St. Gemma overwhelmed her when she 
least expected the Heavenly afflatus, whilst she was seated at table, 
working in the kitchen, quietly conversing with others, walking in the 
streets, anywhere. There was generally a forewarning, a burning flame 
of love towards God and Our Lady seemed to blaze more fiercely in her 
heart and consume her. If there happened to be the time and opportunity 
she would quickly retire, and this sometimes was the case. But often she 
was unable to do so through the circumstances in which she was, and not 
unseldom the Rapture was instantaneous, sweeping her away to Heaven. 
There was no ghastly pallor, no agitated and convulsive movements, 
no muscular contortions and grimacing, such as (Fr. Germano aptly 
comments) almost invariably occur in the trances of mediums. Simply, 
her exterior senses ceased to act. "One might puncture her hands, her 
head or arms with a pin; apply fire to her tender skin; make deafening 
noises; all without effect/' "If you had seen Gemma yesterday," wrote 
one of the family, "My God! one could not look upon her without awe. 
She did not seem to be a mortal, her countenance was that of a seraph. 
We were moved to tears and deepest devotion. That hour, whilst Gemma 
was in ecstasy, that hour 'twas but a minute to us." This phenomenon 
proved to be very frequent in the home circle. Naturally they did not 
talk of it abroad. It was too sacred and too reverend for that. Father 
Germano himself says: "How often have I not melted into tears, while 
praying at her side or saying the Divine Office with her, and she, all 
the while, was rapt in Divine Ecstasy." 

The Rapture, or Extraordinary Ecstasy, frequently accompanied by 
mystical phenomena, used (as it was observed) to entrance her every 
Thursday evening about eight o'clock (the hour of the Last Supper) 
and on Friday afternoon about three (the hour of Calvary). As soon as 
she knew what was going to happen she hastened away to seclude herself 
in her own little room, where very often she was found, if any one 
followed her, stretched immobile, overwhelmed by the Divine Assault, 
upon her humble pallet-bed. Fr. Germano tells us much of the celestial 
locutions, certain vibrated words from Heaven, which she uttered during 
Rapture. These are St. Paul's "hidden words". Audivi arcana verba, said 
the Apostle. 

There were also apparitions of our Blessed Lady which at once 
threw Gemma into an Extraordinary Ecstasy. "Gemma gave herself all 
no 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

to Mary, and Mary to Gemma." The Passionist, St. Gabriel, appeared 
to Gemma many times. Just before her death Gemma fell into an Ecstasy 
which lasted a very long while, and Fr. Germano tells us that when he 
administered the Holy Viaticum she was in Ecstasy. In a sublime Ecstasy 
on Holy Saturday, nth April, 1903, she passed to Heaven. 

It was in Ecstasy that the wonderful visionary, holy Anne Catharine 
Emmerich, on gth February, 1824, after indescribable sufferings, passed 
to her exceeding great reward. It was remarked that at this supreme 
moment her stigmata shone, radiant with light. 

Johann Joseph von Gorres in his Die Christliche Mystik [82] gives 
many examples of Ecstasies which lasted many hours, and even for days. 
Thus the Ecstasies of the Franciscan friar, Blessed Nicolas Factor of 
Valencia [83] usually lasted twenty-four hours. Blessed Oringa of Lucca, 
an Augustinian nun, frequently remained in Ecstasy for several days 
together [84], Blessed Angela of Foligno [85] was often three days at 
a time in Ecstasy; on occasion St. Ignatius of Loyola was rapt for a 
whole week. St. Maria Maddalena, St. Fran?ois di Paola, and other 
mystics, especially the BSguine, Venerable Gertrude de Oosten [86], who 
died in 1358, endured even longer transports. The great Augustinian 
Archbishop of Valentia, St. Thomas of Villanova (1488-1555) fell in a 
rapture lasting twelve hours, during which time he was levitated [87]. 
Once when preaching on Maundy Thursday before the Emperor Charles V 
in the Cathedral at Valladolid he was ravished in Ecstasy in the pulpit 
to the great admiration of a crowded congregation. 

An ecstatic of the highest order was the Trinitarian Fra Bernardino 
dell' Incarnazione. Born at Terracina on ist May, 1819, Filippo Vicario 
entered the Order of the Most Holy Trinity in 1835, and was ordained 
priest in 1842. The ancient church of San Crisogono in Trastevere having 
been given by Pope Pius IX in 1856 to the Trinitarians is the head- 
quarters of the Order. From 1856 until his death on izth September, 
1893, Padre Bernardino lived as one of the community of San Crisogono. 
His holiness and humility was known by all. He was famous for his 
ecstasies which he in vain endeavoured to conceal, since he was rapt at 
Mass, which he usually said at Our Lady's Altar in San Crisogono; he 
was gifted with the power of miracles and of healing. When in old age 
he tottered, feeble and infirm, through the cloisters, the ecstasy like a 
divine breath, came upon him; his strength and energy returned, he 
walked with a firm step; his eye lit with an eagle fire. On his death, his 
confessional was literally broken to pieces by the thousands who rushed 
into the church to secure relics. The beatification of Fra Bernardino is 
(it is confidently awaited) merely a matter of the official process. 

Examples could be multiplied. It should be noted that neither the 
frequency, nor the prolonged duration of these Divine Ecstasies ever 
injured the health of the mystics, nay rather these sublime experiences 
seemed to invigorate them and renew all their forces. As St. Teresa of 
Avila writes: "This Prayer (Ecstasy) last as long as it may, never does 
the least harm, at any rate my experience is that I have never suffered 
the slightest hurt or injury from it. Nor do I remember, however 

in 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

physically sick and weary I may have been, that when Our Lord has 
granted me the favour of this surpassing grace, I have ever felt the 
worse therefor. Nay, rather, I was always very much better afterwards, 
and obtained notable relief, and was strengthened, body and soul. In 
sober truth, what harm can so signal a Divine Blessing do? The exterior 
signs and effects are most plainly to be seen, and amply suffice to show 
that one is invigorated and braced up to a remarkable degree, and there 
must have been some especial cause and active power for good inasmuch 
as it ravishes away our bodily forces and perceptions with such a heaven 
of delight that they are restored to us reinvigorated, rejuvenated and 
most sweetly refreshed' 1 [88]. 

Divine Ecstasy may not untruly be said to be the Gateway to the 
Mystical Life. Of course God can lead His chosen souls to the Supreme 
Union, to Himself, by many paths and guide them in channels we know 
not. But so far as mere human knowledge ventures (with all due reserva- 
tion and in all humility) to pronounce, Divine Ecstasy is that great gift, 
freely given, when and as He will, whereby we are drawn to the Ultimate 
Reality. Perhaps only a few comparatively are found worthy of such 
a gift, only a few could correspond with such a grace. Nevertheless it is 
the lot of the Mystics. 

It is during Divine Ecstasy that the highest phenomena of the 
Mystical Life occur, for the most part. It is during Divine Ecstasy that 
the choicest gifts are bestowed, that the Bridegroom adorns the Bride 
with the most radiant argentry of light. 

We follow the sure guidance of Benedict XIV, who in his great work, 
treats at considerable length "Ecstasy, Transport and Rapture", as being 
in some sense preliminary to other remarkable phenomena of the higher 
states of Contemplation. This is our groundwork, our preface to the 
Physical Phenomena of Mysticism. 

In Trance Divine ecstatics and ecstaticas have received and yet 
receive that wondrous charism, the stigmata; in Trance Divine they are 
dowered by the Heavenly Bridegroom with those rich red rubies, the 
crimsoned jewels of Christ. 



NOTES TO CHAPTER III 



1. Extra stare. In the Vulgate, Acts in, 10, we have exstasis used as meaning 

ajnazement At the miracle of the healing of the lame man all the people "impleti 

sunt stupore et extasi' , which both Douay and A.V. render "they were filled with 

wonder stupore) and amazement (*w)". But in later Latin entasis signifies 

ecstasy in the true technical sense. 

j ^ Thomas ' II "* 11 ' <3- cbcxv > aa- 3 and 4. 1 insert "Ultimate Reality" since 

/ta hStoS?* 8 * 5 ^^ ^^ ? V ' ** iS **"* * ** esfence!because 
He is being itself; whereas everything else is being by participation" 

3. De Genes* ad, litteram, xii, 12, 25, and xii 26 s* 

4. Sevmones, Hi, 16. ' ' ^' 



*!? 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

5. De Genesi ad htteram, xii, 5, 14. I have paraphrased a long passage of the 
holy doctor. 

6. Enneades, vi, 7, 34. Plotini Enneades, Edidit R. Volkmann, 2 Vols., Leipzig, 
1883-4. 

7. Quoted by R. A. Vaughan, Hours with the Mystics, 3rd col., 1879, Vol. I, 
p. 81. 

8. For Modern Theosophy see a history of contemporary Societies in the 
Nouvelles rehgieuses, ist September, 1919. This informative essay was written on 
the occasion of the solemn and supreme condemnation of Theosophy by the Holy 
Office, Acta Apostolicae Sedis, ist August, 1919, p. 317. 

9. Aristotle Mor. Eud., VII, xv, 16; Mor. Mcom., i and x; Metaph. xiii. 

10. The best brief, and probably the most accessible, account of this extra- 
ordinary movement is Theosophy, by the Rev. C. C. Martindale, S.J., London, 
Catholic Truth Society. 

11. Dominican Cardinal, philosopher, theologian, and exegete. Born at Gaeta, 
2oth February, 1469; died, Rome, 9th August, 1534. His Commentaries on the 
Summa Theologia of St. Thomas are recognized as a classic in Scholastic literature. 
This great Thomas was called by Clement VII "the Lamp of the Church". 

12. Malleus Maleficarum translated by the Rev. Montague Summers, London, 
John Rodker, 1928, Part I, Question i, p. 3; and Part II, Q. i, Ch. 3, pp. 104-109. 

13. Thomas of Brabant is often referred to as Thomas Cantimpratensis, Thomas 
of Cantimpre\ 

14. Edinburgh, 1834, p. 481. 

15. Lappoma, 1674. There is also a French translation, Histoire de la Lapome, 
4to, Paris, 1678. 

16. Discours des Sorciers. English translation, John Rodker, 1929, pp. 46-51. 

17. Bartolommeo Spina, O.P. (c. 1480-1546), Magister Sacri Palatii, Quaestio 
de Stngibus, 1523, c. XIV; Peter Binsfeld, Suffragan Bishop of Trier, Tractatus de 
Confessionibus Maleficorum et Sagarum, Trier, 1589, conclus. vii, dub. 5. 

18. The work was translated into Spanish, Salamanca, 1530, and 1556. In 
1628 Miguel Santos, Bishop of Solsona, entrusted Doctor Pedro Antonio Jofreu 
to supervise the issue of a new edition. This appeared, Barcelona, 1628. Glosses 
were furnished, as also a quantity of additional matter. 

19. Epitome Delictorum, sive de Magia, Seville, 1618. There are several reprints. 

20. Inquisitor of Sicily. The De Agnoscendis Assertionibus Cathohcis is a 
posthumous publication, Palermo, 1553; and Rome 1572. 

21. Fifth Ed., London, Kegan Paul, 1920, p. 90. 

22. The Catholic Church and Spiritism. Dublin, 1931, p. n. 

23. Heath Cranton, and Ouseley, London, 1914, pp. 185-193. 

24. Sir William Barrett says: "As a rule, I have observed the steady down- 
ward course of the mediums who sit regularly/ 1 Horace Greeley, in his Recollections 
of a Busy Life, writes: "I judge that laxer notions respecting marriage, divorce, 
chastity, and stern morality generally have advanced in the wake of Spiritualism." 
Dr. B. F. Hatch, the husband of a famous medium, Cora V. Hatch, does not mince 
his words in his Spiritualism Unveiled: "I have heard much of the improvement 
of individuals from a belief in Spiritualism. With such I have had no acquaintance. 
But I have known many whose integrity of character and uprightness of purpose 
rendered them worthy examples all round, but who, on becoming mediums, and 
giving up their individuality, also gave up every sense of honour and decency." 
Such testimony from men of so high a standing, and men who had exceptional 
opportunities to observe the points at issue, requires no further attestation, 
although, as a matter of fact, their witness could be supported by unimpeachable 
and multiplied evidence. 

25. The Holy Father has not as yet infallibly pronounced upon the essential 
nature of Spiritistic phenomena, and has not directed the Sacred Congregation 
of the Inquisition to promulgate a definite and authoritative judgement, although 
we are at liberty to say that there has been an indicative judgement, giving reason 
to believe that the Church strongly suspects that in these Spiritistic manifestations 
diabolic agencies may and do per accidens intervene. Th Church absolutely forbids 

H 113 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

the faithful to take any part whatsoever in Spiritistic practices. In 1898 the Holy 
Ofnce explicitly forbade automatic writing, and this applies to the use of planchette, 
the ou:;a board, and any similar contrivances. In 1917 any participation in 
SDiritistic seances, although such participation might be strictly limited to the 
role of an onlooker, was fanned. But Catholic authority does not prohibit the 
investigation of Phenomena commonly classed as psychic research. Naturally 
such investigation must be undertaken by the properly qualified, not employed 
as a means for self-advertisement or allowed to be indulged in by vulgar curiosity. 
See further La Religion Spiriie, Paris, 1921, by the learned Dominican Professor, 
Pere Mainage. 

26. F. \V. FitzSimons in his Opening the Psychic Door, 1931, deplores that 
Spiritism "is so mixed up with fraud, vulgarity, contradiction, and humbug". 
There can be no doubt that on many occasions the medium Eusapia Palladino 
obtained so-called "supernatural effects" by trickery. The medium Monck was 
caught red-handed. Archdeacon Colley discovered the frauds of William Eglinton. 
"It unfortunately fell to me," he wrote in a letter to The Medium and Daybreak, I5th 
November, 1878^ "to take muslin and a false beard from Eglinton's portmanteau." 
These properties had been employed in a fake materialization. Henry Slade, the 
Holmeses, and dozens of other notorious mediums were caught in covert mum- 
meries. At one time Mr. H. Dennis Bradley remained a firm believer in the pre- 
ternatural powers of the American medium, George Valiantine. Yet it was 
Mr. Bradley himself who detected Valiantine in a most flagrant forgery of a 
thumb-mark. See and After, 1931, by Herbert Dennis Bradley. 

In fairness it should be added that not unseldom Eusapia Palladino (and 
others) did exhibit the most extraordinary and inexplicable powers. It does not 
follow that because a medium is discovered once or twice (or several times) to be 
fraudulent the phenomena surrounding this medium are always imposture. But 
this does not in the least help the matter. The history of witchcraft affords many 
striking parallels. 

27. Quaestiones Medico-legates. Liber iv; Lit. i. De Miraculis, q. 6, n. 10. 
This pronouncement has a very pertinent bearing on the trances of spiritistic 
mediums, which are certainly not divine, and cannot (Zacchia tells us) be natural, 
since levitation at stances is not unknown. It is said that the medium, Colin Evans, 
whilst in deep trance, was levitated at a public meeting. 

28. De Visiombus, c. iii, p. 69. 

29. He professed medicine and mathematics at the Universities of Milan, 
Pavia, and Bologna, ultimately residing at Rome where he practised under 
St. Pius V and Gregory XIII. 

30. John Aubrey, F.R.S. 1626-1697. Miscellanies upon Various Subjects, 1696. 

31. Swnma, I-II, q. xxviii, a. 3. 

32. Pere Poulain, Des extases naturettes, p. 7. 

33. Institutions Theologiae Mysticae, Leodii, 1848, II, pp. 328-36. 

34. De Civitate Dei, Lib. XIV, c. 24. 

35. De vita spirituali, lib. v; 3, c, 8. 

36. 1609-74. General of the Cistercians. De Discr. Spir., c. xiv. 

37. Carmelite, 1564-1627. Opera, I, II, disp. iii, c. 8. 

38. Carmelite, 1603-71. Summa theologiae mysticae. 

39. Les CEuvres de la Sainte Mere Tr&se de Jesus. Paris, 1650. "La Vie de la 
Saincte Mere Te"rese de Jesus," chapitre XVIII, p. 103. 

40. Mgr. Farges, Mystical Phenomena, "Translated from the Second Edition 
by S. P. Jacques," Burns pates and Washbourne, 1926, p. 171. 

41. Martin Antony Delrio, S.J., born at Antwerp, 1551; died at Louvain, 1608. 
He did not enter the Society of Jesus until he was thirty, after he had served as 
Counsellor of the Supreme Council of Brabant. He also acted as Auditor General, 
and in many other offices of great responsibility. He was familiar with at least 
nine languages, and is justly regarded as a prodigy of learning. This famous scholar 
was a Doctor of several Universities. He professed Philosophy and Theology at 
Salamanca, Douai, Liege, and Louvain. 

42. St. Peter of Alcantara, 1499-1562. Founder of the Barefooted Reform of 
214 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

the Franciscans, known as Alcantarines, or the Friars of the strictest and 
eremetical observance. 

43. I have used the French version, the original not being accessible. Vie de 
Saint Pierre d* Alcantara, 6cnte en Itahen par le P. Marchese de I'Oyatoire 6- tradmt 
en Francois. 4to, Lyon, 1670. 

44. Professor E. AUinson Peers, Mother of Carmel, S.C.M. Press, 1945, P- 39- 

45. Psychologie de V Attention, Paris, 1889, p. 143. 

46. J. J. von Gorres, Die Christhche Mystik. 5 Bande, Regensburg, 1836-42. 
French translation by Charles Samte-Foi, 5 Vols, Pans, 1861 (deuxieme edition), 
II, ch. ii. pp. lo-ii. 

47. It is impertinent to argue that the second state is not inevitable in the 
absolute sense, since God could (if such were His will) immunize ecstasies from it. 
Further, it is pointless to quote the only two examples, Our Lord and Our Lady, 
Who enjoyed the Beatific Vision always and uninterruptedly, without any 
alienation of the senses. 

48. Fray Domingo Banez, O.P. 

49. I quote the translation of Professor Allison Peers, as also in the following 
passage from The Interior Castle. 

50. dXcwnra /cXitfet, irdvra ravdptlnruv KZK&. Euripides. 

51. Interior Castle, VI, v. 

52. Unhappily, certain frenectic theosophists have endeavoured to revive 
these pernicious and pitiful follies, for example Mrs. Annie Besant in her Esoteric 
Christianity (1901) ; Charles Webster Leadbeater in his The Hidden Side of Things 
(1913); Mr. Kingsland in his Esoteric Basis of Christianity; and others. 

53. Historia di tutte I'Heresie; Venezia, 1717; IV, 711, seq. 

54. St. Catharine's letter to Blessed Raymond of Capua gives the details. 

55. Storis di Santa Caterina da Siena (from the French of P. Chavin de Malan), 
versione Italiana a Prefazione di Pietro Vigo, Siena, 1906, pp. 105109, gives a 
useful and concise summary, and reproduces Sodoma's exquisitely beautiful 
picture of the Execution of Tuldo. 

56. Blessed Osanna Andreasi, 1449-1505. The Vita, Monza, 1888, by Monsignor 
Cavriani, Bishop of Ceneda, reprints certain Laudi and seven of the 42 extant 
Letter e Spintuali of the Beata. A number of unedited MSS., poems and letters, 
were in 1888 still preserved in the Casa degli Andreasi, then the property of the 
Conte Magnaguti. 

57. Vita di Ven Giuseppe, by Conte Domenico Bernini, 1722. St. Joseph was 
canonized in 1767. 

58. Officia Propria Festivitatum et SS. Ord. Discalecatorum SS. Triinitatis. . . . 
Romae, Typis Salviucci, 1840, Die Septembris xxviii, In Festo B. Simonis de 
Roxas . . . Fundatoris Congregat. Ave Maria. 

59. Vita del Beato Gabriele del I'Addolorata, Students Passionista. Scritta dal 
P. Germano di S. Stanislao. Roma, 1908, St. Gabriel (1838-1862) was canonized 
by Benedict XV on 13 May, 1920. 

60. Pract. Theologo. Canon, tit. vi; c. 6, n. 10. 

61. Benedict XIV quotes several authorities who support this view, Cardinal 
Brancati; Scacchus, Matta De Canonizatione Sanctorum, pars III, c. iv, n. 31; 
and Matthaeucci. 

62. The Mystical State, by Auguste Sandreau, Canon of Angers. English 
translation, London, 1924, p. 141; n. 158. 

63. Summa, II, 2dae; qu. 175, art. 2. 

64. Benedict XIV cites a number of authorities who follow St. Thomas and 
add further explanations, for example, Arauxo, Scacchus, Consalvi Durante, 
Castellini, and Antony of the Annunciation. Silvius in his glosses upon St. Thomas 
says that violence is not essential to rapture, but it suffices if the rapture exhibit 
something like a sweet violence. 

65. De Discretione Spirituum, c. XIV; n. 6. 

66. Opera, torn. II, disp, iii, c. 8. 

67. Mystical Phenomena, by Mgr. Albert Farges, translated from the Second 
French Edition by S. P. Jacques, London, 1926. 

"5 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

68. A hamlet near Florence. 

69. Intern Xarrazione delta Vita, Costumi e Intelligenze Spiritual della 
Venerdbile Sposa di Gesu Suor Domemca dal Paradiso, by B. M. Borghigiani, a 
large quarto, partially printed, Firenze, 1719, and completed 1802. In the seven- 
teenth century the author was able to make use of the copious material preserved 
in the convent "La Crocetta" at Florence. Here are (or were) preserved six or eight 
folio MSS. volumes written by Domenica's director for thirty-seven years, Fra 
Francesco Onesti de Castiglione. 

70. Butler calls her "Saint", but Papebroke styles her "Blessed". In the 
Flemish Calendars, however, she is St. Mary of Oignies. There is, moreover, a 
church dedicated to her. 

71. Canon Regular of Vitry, afterwards Bishop of Aeon, in Palestine, and 
thence translated to the See of Jerusalem. He died at Rome in 1244. 

72. Compendia della Vita della Serva d^ Dio Elisabetta Canori Mora, Romana, 
Terziana deli'Ordme de'Tnmtari Scalzi. Roma: Tipografia degh Artigianelli, 1896. 
This Compendia is based upon the letters of the servant of God, written under 
obedience at the desire of Padre Ferdinando di San Luigi, a Discalced Trinitarian, 
who was her director, and also upon the writings of EHsabetta's daughter, Maria 
Giuseppa, who was requested by Padre Giovanni, the General of the Trinitarian 
Order, to put on paper everything she remembered of her mother's life. All this 
material, after having been closely examined by a number of skilled theologians, 
was embodied in the Process of the Cause for Beatification, the Ponente being 
Cardinal Raphael Monaco La Valletta, Bishop of Ostia and Velletri. 

73. Historia Clericorum Regularium, by Joseph de Silos, 3 Vols., folio Rome, 
1658. Histoire della Religione dei Padri Chierici Regolan, raccolta del P. Gio, Battista 
del Tuffo, 2 Vols., folio, Rome, 1609. Father Placidus a Sancta Theresia, Com- 
pendium vitae Mains Ursulae Benincasae; et Regulae Virginum Romanarum Teat- 
marum. Francesco Maria Maggio has written Vita della Madre Orsola Benincasa, 
Fondatnce della Monache Theatine, folio, Rome, 1655, and a Compendium 
(ejusdem vitae), 8vo, Brussels, 1658. I have seen it stated that in 1514 and 1679 
Maggio's two works were censured, but either upon some slight correction the 
note of censure was withdrawn, or else an error has been made, as Maggio is quoted 
with approval by orthodox and correct authors. 

74. Feast, lyth April. The Mercedarian Breviary, Matins, Second Nocturn, 
Lectio V, says: "Tanto divini amoris aestu conflagravit, ut saepe tota supernis 
ardoribus colliquesceret, et frequenter a sensibus abstracta admirabiles raptus, 
et suavissimas extases pateretur." 

75. Vita della Beata Marianna di Gesti da Pasedes e Flores Vergine Secolare 
Americana, detta II Giglio di Quito, descritta da D. Giovanni del Castillo, Canonico 
della Cattedrale di S. Giacomo del Chile. Roma, Tipografia Bernardo Morini, 
1854. B. Marianna was born 1618; died 1645. Vita, Lib. II, c. iv. 

76. Sgambata, Compendium Vitae S. Francisci Borgiae, cap. XXI. Pere Verjus, 
a French Jesuit, in his life of San Francisco de Borja, drawing upon original and 
some MSS. sources with which he was furnished by the Borja family, gives an 
account of the Ecstasies and Raptures of the Saint. 

77. Crashaw: Prayer. An Ode which was praefixed to a little Prayer-book given 
to a young Gentle-woman. 

78. Le Pfroit et Ste Rose de Lima. By M. T. de Renouard de Bussiere, Paris, 
1863. 

79. Of the older Lives of St. Rose these may be cited as amply authoritative 
the Dominican Leonard Hansen's Rosa Peruana. Vita Mirdbilis et Mors pretiosa 
S. Rosae a Sancta Maria. Ulyssiponte Occidentale, 1725; and also La Vie de Ste. 
Rose by Pere Jean-Baptiste Feuillet, O.P., Missionary Apostolic in the Antilles. 
The third edition (which I have used) of Pere Feuillet's work was published in 
Paris, 1671, the year of the Canonization of the Saint by Clement X. 

80. Peter of Dacia was born in the island of Gothland. The Dominican province, 
Dacia, included Sweden, Norway, and Denmark. 

81. The Life of the Servant of God Gemma Galgani an Italian Maiden of Lucca. 
By her Spiritual Director Father Germanus of St. Stanislaus, Passionist. Trans- 
116 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

lated by The Reverend A. M. O'Sullivan, O.S.B., with an introduction by Cardinal 
Gasquet, London and Edinburgh, Sands and Co.; St. Louis, Mo., B. Herder, 1914- 
The Appendices, pp. 377-433, in which Father Germanus examines various 
mystical phenomena or any kind of spiritism and spiritistic manifestations,^ and 
shows that such cannot be attributed to hysteria, or hypnotism, are especially 
valuable. 

82. La Mystique Divine, tra. M. Charles Sainte-Foi. Deuxieme Edition. Vol. II, 

PP- 45* S 3<I- 

83. 1520-1583, Feast, 23rd December. "Quoties . . . amarissimae Passionis 
Dominicae, sive inter concionandum, sive inter aliquid faciendum, meminisse 
contingit, raptus atque in extasim factus est." Martyrologium Franciscanum 
authore Arturio a Monasterio, folio, Paris, 1653. See also Luke Wadding Annales 
Minorum, 8 Vols., folio, Lugdumi, 1647, etc., and Fortunatus Hueber, Menologium 
. . . Beatorum, etc. Ab imtio Minontici instituti usque ad nioderna tempera, 2 Vols., 
folio, Monachii, 1698. 

84. loth January (or i8th February), 1310. Acta Sanctorum, January, torn, i, 
p. 651. 

85. Franciscan. Died 4th January, 1309. A eta Sanctorum, 4th January De Beata 
Angela de Fulginio. The works of Blessed Angela were conveniently published 
in Part V of the Bibhotheca Mystica et ascetica; Beatae Angelae de Fulginio 
Visionwm et Instructionum Liber, Cologne, 1849. 

86. Acta Sanctorum, 6th January, De venerabili vlrgine Gertrude ab Oosten beghina 
delphensi in Belgio. 

87. The Vida of St. Thomas, O.S.A., was written by Miguel Salon of Valentia; 
and also by two Augustinians, Jerome Canton and Nicasius Baxius. 

88. La Vie de la Saincte Mere Ttrese de Jesus, chapitre XVIII. Les Oeuvres de 
la Sainte Mkre T6re$e de J6sus . . . nouvellement traduites . . . Paris. MDCXXXXX, 
p. 103. 



117 



CHAPTER FOUR 



The Mystety of StigMOtisatwn -The Fenta, or Heart Wound Stigmatization, True 

and False HypnotismAutosuggestion Pathological Phenomena Clara of Monte- 

falco passitea of Siena The Seraphic Tradition Carthusian Ideals. 

1 HE mystery of stigmatization, that is to say the reproduction upon 
a living subject of the Wounds and bodily suffering of Christ, as inflicted 
by the nails and lance, the Crown of Thorns, and other instruments and 
circumstances of the Passion from Gethsemane to Golgotha, is perhaps 
the most widely known, one might even venture to say (using the word 
in its first sense) the most notorious, of all the extraordinary physical 
phenomena of the supernatural life. 

This mystery, its repercussion, accomplishes itself in various ways, 
and under widely differing conditions. Generally speaking, the hands 
and feet are pierced clean through, and the side is gashed, more or less 
deeply, as if by the nails and the soldier's spear of Calvary. These wounds 
are, in the majority of cases, distinctly visible; in some instances they 
are hardly to be seen. There are also stigmata known as "concealed 
stigmata". These are none the less real and veiy true. The wounds have 
been inflicted supernormally and ecstatically; they have been endured 
and with pain throughout life, but are only manifested upon death. 
Occasionally, when the wounds have been clearly apparent for a certain 
period of time, it may be many months or years, they disappear from 
sight, but later recur and become as distinctly expressed as hitherto, 
but so far as can be ascertained without any predetermining cause or 
interior impulse or exterior foreaction. 

The marking with the Five Wounds, accompanied or unaccompanied 
by the Crown of Thorns, has been designated by some writers "Complete 
Stigmatization", and the term may be allowed to stand for convenience' 
sake. Yet other stigmatic imprints are recorded. Such are the weals of 
the scourging; the wound in the shoulder; on the wrists, the livid braising 
of the cords; and on the mouth the hyssop mark of the sponge sopped 
with vinegar which was set upon a reed. 

The Ferita, as it is technically known, the heart-wound, or trans- 
verberation of the heart, under which condition noimally the subject 
would die, since the wound (humanly speaking) ought to be mortal, is 
a phenomenon which may be considered separately* In some rare instances 
autopsy has revealed in the heart characters and symbols, or flesh forma- 
tions of the Instruments of the Passion. 

The state of rapture known as the "Plastic Stations of the Passion" 
with its mysterious concomitants, so nearly akin to stigmatization, and 
often as it were colleagued, is more understandable after inquiry into and 
discussion of the main subiect-matter. 

118 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

Stigmatization is to be divided into two kinds, each one of which 
varies in degree and is disuniform. There is sacred or divine, true Stig- 
matization, sometimes called mystical or religious or hagiological Stigma- 
tization; and also diabolic or satanical Stigmatization, whict is simulated 
Stigmatization. Sacred Stigmatization is that divinely imprinted, and a 
true pattern of the Wounds of Christ. It has in very many cases been 
authoritatively approved as such by the solemn judgement of the Church. 

Thus Howard C. Warren, Princeton University, in A Dictionary of 
Psychology, 1934, under "Stigmatization" gives the definition of divine 
(true) Stigmatization and no other. It may be noted that, wisely perhaps, 
no explanation is discussed. The fact of true Stigmatization is denied 
by none. For example, the fact is honestly and candidly admitted by 
such eminent specialists, both of the free-thinking school, as Dr. Pierre 
Janet in the Bulletin de I'lnstitut psychologique international, Paris, July, 
1901 ; and the then Professor of Religious Psychology at the Sorbonne, 
Dr. Dubois, writing in the Revue des Deux Mondes, ist May, 1907. Dr. 
Janet and Dr. Dubois suggest, it may be remarked, some sort of 
explanation, but very tentatively, and what they have to say is frankly 
hypothetical. 

A very voluble and dogmatically assertive school has announced its 
theory that Stigmatization may be produced by unconscious autosug- 
gestion, which in psychoanalytical cant is defined as "the subconscious 
realization of an idea in more or less complete independence of hetero- 
suggestion", which latter is "the subconscious realization of an idea 
suggested by another, or, the act of suggesting an idea to another". Self- 
hypnosis is a term also flung about with considerable effect and little 
meaning. The Stigmatization produced by autosuggestion or self-hypnosis 
is regarded as, although in no way fraudulent, due to the dominant working 
of an exalte imagination. This is classed as "natural Stigmatization". 

We also find the term "false Stigmatization" used with a certain 
meaning, which is intended to denote a "Stigmatization" resultant upon 
any deep-seated nervous disease. It is purported to have occurred in the 
case of sufferers from hystero-epilepsy, and then is accompanied by 
writhing, by horrid convulsions, and uncouth distortions of the facial 
muscles and the limbs. (We are reminded of the foul fanaticism of the 
Camisards, whom Pope Clement XI styles "that execrable race of ancient 
Albigenses", a fanaticism which expressed itself in unholy raptures and 
demoniac extravagances. One of their leaders penetrated to England, 
and caused a great stir in London, a wave of madness which was agreeably 
exposed by the dramatist D'Urfey in his satirical comedy The Modern 
Prophets, produced at Drury Lane, 3rd May, 1709. "The abominable 
Impostures of those craz'd Enthusiasts" reached such a height that 
their leader was expelled the country as a common nuisance, and many 
of his followers flocked after him. Further, we should not forget the 
convulsionnaires of St. M6dard, concerning whom there will be some- 
thing to say later.) 

"False Stigmatization", it has been advanced, may also be induced 
by the exterior suggestion of a hypnotist, heterosuggestion, in fact, and 

119 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

it will be the more marked and more complete the more fully the patient 
is controlled by the directing will. Dr. Albert Moll in his work Hypnotism, 
English translation, 1890, p. 229, quoting the Berlin psychologist, Max 
Dessoir, writes: "I say to some one who is quite awake, 'A rat is running 
behind you*. The man can assure himself at once by turning round that 
there is no rat, but according to experience he will have a mental image 
of a rat for a moment, because I spoke of it; i.e., there is already a 
trace of hallucination/' This is just specious nonsense. The phrase 
"according to experience" is very artfully introduced, but actually is an 
obvious smoke-screen, whilst to write "there is already a trace of hallu- 
cination is deliberate sophistication, employed in hopes that the word 
hallucination may deceive and mislead the reader. We deny such a vague 
generality as "Modern Psychology, following such men as Dugald Stewart 
and Taine, for the most part supposes every idea includes an image, e.g., 
the idea of a knife includes the image of a knife". Half a dozen lines 
lower down, intercalated as a decoy, we have "in the case of the rat 
there is a transitory hallucination". The "trace of" has now been stretched 
to "a ^ transitory", and will be emphasized a little more and more. In 
Vergil's words "Viresque acquirit eundo". The whole proposition is just 
a flam. 

Although any opinion emanating from the same source (Moll) must 
be regarded as more than dubious, and carries scant weight, as a matter 
of interest it may be well to observe what he has to say concerning 
stigmatization. "Everybody" he writes, "will here remember the stig- 
matics of the Roman Catholic Church. Bleeding of the skin is said to 
appear in them, generally in spots (!) which correspond to the wounds 
of Christ. The best known is Louise Lateau, of Bois d' Haine, near Mons, 
who was much talked of in 1868," Louise Lateau, 1850-1883, will be 
dealt with in some detail later. "I will not," continues Moll, "enter into 
the question of stimulation which a Belgian doctor Warlomont, decided 
was impossible, after personal investigation." With Dr. Warlomont, 
Moll, who is very insufficiently informed, might have associated Dr. 
Crocq, an anti-clerical Professor of Brussels, who attested the same as 
his confrere. Professor Rudolph Virchow of Berlin "thought that fraud 
or miracle were the only alternatives' ' . Fraud was proved to be impossible. 
Moll goes on to assert that "the ecstasy of Louise Lateau has a great like- 
ness to the hypnotic state". This is an absolutely unauthenticated statement 
to make, and his chicanery is not helped by citing the long-exploded 
dictum of Professor Mantegazza that "Ecstasy and hypnosis have many 
points in common, and are, perhaps, identical conditions". 

^ Professor Elie M&ic of the Sorbonne very justly emphasizes that 
stigmatics are certainly not in an abnormal condition, but quite awake. 

Can hypnotism produce the stigmata upon a subject under control? 
The answer is, No: it is not possible. But it certainly can produce by 
suggestion upon an abnormal subject, who is morbidly predisposed, a 
number of pathological phenomena, some of which are not very pleasant 
to describe. 

It should be mentioned that experiments have been essayed upon 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

hypnotic subjects, who whilst under the influence are told that a blister, 
or mustard poultice or some sort of cataplasm or even vesicatory lini- 
ment was being applied to the skin, whilst actually simple linen or a 
piece of plain paper or pure water was thus being used. Carl du Prel 
notes how in 1819 a subject thrown into a somnabulistic sleep by a 
magnetizer was informed that a strong plaister must be clapped upon 
him, and although nothing but a clean square of fine lawn was employed, 
there resulted a sloughing and cutaneous scurfing in that very part. 
In 1840, an Italian doctor, Prejalmini, made trial of this experiment, 
and sometimes was partially successful, sometimes not. A chemist of 
Nancy, M. Focachon, in 1885, under the close inspection of Drs. Beaunis, 
Bernheim, and Ligeois, applied pieces of tissue paper to a subject 
under control, who was hypnotically made to believe these were astringept 
plaisters. In some cases the skin appeared slightly discoloured, and in 
some cases small serous pustules arose, but the experiments were by no 
means certain, in fact, the result proved very unequal and evanescent. 
This is very far from stigmatization, which is permanent and entire. 

J. Milne Bramwell in his Hypnotism, its History, Practice, and Theory, 
refers to several cases recorded by Forel, who claims to have produced 
"red patches" by suggestion. "In one instance this appeared at the end 
of five minutes; the subject being carefully watched at the time by Ford 
and other medical men. . . . Schrenck-Notzing cites an interesting 
experiment which he and Dr. Rybalkin of St. Petersburg made upon 
Camille, Li&bault's celebrated somnambule. They suggested to her in 
the waking state that the skin below her ear was red and inflamed and 
that she had evidently been bitten by an insect. In about three minutes 
there appeared a patch of erythema with a distinct rim." If this has any 
evidential value it merely points to diabolism, and is entirely alien to 
the true stigmata. 

These "red patches", produced by suggestion, are as much out of 
date and as valueless as Charcot's oedeme bleu des hysteriques "the blue 
mottling of hysteriacs"; and Dr. Krafit-Ebing's obsolete thermometrical 

experiments with the highly suggestive lima S , who was either an 

excellent actress or a clever impostor; Dr. R. von Krafft-Ebing, An 
Experimental Study in the domain of Hypnotism, English translation. 

Of no account and not worth detailing are the experiments of Dr. 
Biggs of Lima as reported in the S.P.R. Journal, May, 1887. Dr. Jen- 

drdssik further investigated the case of lima S , but the whole business 

is absolutely foreign to, and has no bearing upon, the phenomena of 
stigmatization. 

Since the experiments of Dr. Rybalkin at the Hdpital Marie, St. 
Petersburg, were much talked of in their day it is, perhaps, well to 
mention them here; Revue de VHypnotisme, June, 1890. The subject 

was Macar K , aged sixteen, who is described as "hysterical and 

almost anaesthetic". A pathological case, at once. "He was hypnotized 
at 8.30 a.m. and told: 'When you wake you will be cold. You will go 
and warm yourself at the stove, and you will burn your forearm on the 
line which I have traced out. This will hurt you, a redness will appear 

121 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

on your arm; it will swell and blisters will form/ On being awakened 
the patient obeyed the suggestion. He even uttered a cry of pain at 
the moment when he touched the door of the stove which had not 
been lighted. Some minutes later, a redness, without swelling, could be 
seen at the place indicated." The next day it was found that the arm 
had blistered, and by three o'clock one large blister had formed. Such 
experiments and such happenings can be paralleled in the pages of Remy 
and Delrio. 

This horrible fact is proved when we reach a case of actual haemorrhage 
by suggestion. The subject was Louis Vive, a hystero-epileptic who 
suffered from a complication of disorders, hemiplegia, anaesthesia and 
schizofrenia. On 5th August, 1885, Vive was hypnotized, and it was 
suggested that he should go to bed and fall asleep at 8 p.m., awaking 
at five o'clock the next morning. At precisely eight o'clock the patient 
fell into a profound sleep. The "Stigmatization" was then suggested. 
"V. a quarter of an hour after you wake there will appear on your arm 
a T' at the place which I am now marking. . . . You hear? I wish it 
to bleed." A quarter of an hour later Vive has the attack to which we 
are accustomed when stigmata are suggested to him. When the attack 
is over we examine his arm and find on it a "V" covered with blood. . . . 
The same phenomena have been produced twice in one night in the 
same region and by the same mechanism." Dr. M. Mabille, "Pathologic 
Mentale. Note sur les hemorrhagies cutanes par auto-suggestion", Le 
Progres Medical, 2Qth August, 1885. 

The underlying power which causes the results of such experiments 
as these essayed by Dr. Rybalkin and Dr. H. Mabille is not difficult to 
discover. It is simply demonianism. The "mechanism" is the fiend. 

Among these pathological phenomena is ecchymosis, which is a 
blotch caused by extravasation of blood below the skin. The subcutaneous 
cellular tissue is torn and there is haemorrhage, which however does 
not escape, being confined by the texture of the skin, and it is only 
indicated by the crimsoned or livid appearance of the injured place. Dr. 
Van der Elst, Les stigmatisations, Revue pratique d' Apologetique, I5th 
December, 1911, p. 428, maintains that there can be a spontaneous 
dripping of blood through the normal orifices of a perfectly healthy 
skin, although he hastens to insist upon the extreme rarity and unlike- 
lihood of such an occurrence, yet he avers it is possible. We can admit 
this, but it is very far removed from the stigmata which flowed from 
blood, and which were imprinted in certain fixed members, the hands, 
feet and side. Moreover Dr. J. Parrot in the Gazette hebdomadaire de 
medicine et de chirurgie, 1859, having apparently met with one of the 
cases, noted that after the blood had been washed away it was not 
possible to distinguish from which pores it had exuded, there was no 
swelling nor discolourment. All this is a vastly different matter from 
stigmatization, when the wounds remained fresh and open, and as in the 
case of Joanna de Jesus-Maria, the Poor Clare of Santa Clara at Burgos, 
when they bled every Friday at the hour of the Passion, a definite and 
specified time. Musgrave mentions a young man who was under his 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

care on account of a regular monthly haemorrhage from the thumb of 
his left hand. There were no headaches, or feeling of sickness, or any 
other symptoms of illness. In fact the young man in question enjoyed 
robust health until he was about thirty years old. Irked by and impatient 
of this curious loss of blood he was foolish enough to cauterize the place 
whence it issued with a red-hot goffering-iron. The flow of blood ceased, 
but the results proved most unhappy, since he fell into a rapid consump- 
tion. Latour in his Histoire des hemorrhagies refers to a very similar 
instance given by Doctor Carriere. A young man, by name Jacques Sola, 
was affected when about fifteen years old with a flow of blood from the 
little finger of his right hand. This took place every four weeks, with 
extraordinary regularity almost on the very same days, and lasted for 
forty-eight hours. The blood exuded in great drops, but when these were 
wiped away no puncture nor mark could be seen. There was no pain. 
One cold winter Jacques Sola had occasion to cross a brook or a little 
stream of icy water. He felt a shock, and the bleeding ceased, but a 
light attack of pneumonia followed. No sooner was he up and about 
than he fell ill with dysentery, which gave the doctors a good deal of 
trouble to treat successfully. He was eventually restored to complete 
health, and the haemorrhage never returned. 

Paul Radestock (died 1879) in his Schlaf und Trawn relates an odd 
happening vouched for by the physiologist Carl Friedrich Burdach 
(1776-1847). A friend of Burdach's was informed that one night his wife 
had been seen by the neighbours walking in her sleep upon a roof. 
Naturally he was considerably disquieted, and called in Burdach who 
hypnotized the lady. Then she gave him a full account of her nocturnal 
ramble, and added that she had hurt her left foot, an injury she had 
not previously mentioned. Upon waking she was questioned whether 
she felt any pain in the place of which she had spoken. With some surprise 
she answered "Yes", and upon the foot being examined it was found to 
be pierced or at any rate deeply marked by a wound for which she was 
unable to account. 

These, and similar other very rare cases, have from time to time 
been cited by writers of the materialistic school, who thence try to 
"explain" and parallel the stigmatization of mystics. Nothing could be 
more fruitless and more ridiculous. Yet they endeavour somehow to 
confuse the issue, and hence it seems necessary to expose their 
tactics. *, 

?V To give some idea of the extent to which hypnotic power can be 
carried a couple of examples may be cited, and it must be remembered 
that there are hundreds of cases of the same nature. Dr. Alphonse Teste, 
a famous hypnotizer and homceopathist of his day he was born at 
Gray in 1814 and a voluminous author tells us in his Le Magnttisme 
animal expliqu& how he ordered one of his "subjects" to have a big fire 
blazing in her room next day exactly at noon it was mid- July to light 
a couple of candles and to wait for him there for an hour, occupied with 
certain needlework. When he arrived he found that everything had 
been done as he directed. She was busy with her embroidery by the 

123 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

candlelight, a winter fire had heated the room almost to suffocation, 
although she was not in the least incommoded. The hour struck. She 
jumped up, threw aside her work, blew out the candles, and flung aside 
the window to admit fresh air. "We shall be stifled!" she exclaimed. 
But she had not the least idea why she should have kindled a fire, why 
candles should be burning, why she was so intent upon her crewel. The 
whole thing to her was a mystery. 

Professor Wilhelm Preyer of Berlin in his Der Hypnotismus (1882) 
gives in detail an account of an evening party at Norderaey, during the 
course of which social gathering a magnetizer compelled a lady to fetch 
a wet sponge from the bathroom and to wash the face of one of the 
gentlemen present with it. She was extremely abashed and ashamed, 
but in spite of her visible reluctance she felt obliged to obey and perform 
this ridiculous act. 

Ridiculous indeed! Although in execrable taste there does not seem 
to be much harm in the fact that a lady at a soiree should wipe a gentle- 
man's face with a damp sponge; and that a lady should light a fire and 
burn candles to see by at midday in July looks like a practical joke. None 
the less 

Oftentimes, io win us to our harm, 
The Instruments of darkness tell us Truths, 
Win us with honest Trifles, to betray us 
In deepest Consequence. 

and setting aside these fooleries, how would it be if an individual were 
compelled by this mysterious power to do some wrong, to commit an 
offence, even a criminal act ? Who is to limit this unknown empery, these 
despot commands? Matters would assume a very different complexion. 
In 1888, a case of hypnotic suggestion to the committal of a crime in a 
convent occurred in Hungary. The object was to rifle the treasury of 
the house, which was unusually rich in golden chalices, jewelled reliquaries, 
and other sacred vessels, the heirlooms of the ages, of unique value. 
A girl obtained admittance, feigning to make a retreat, and under the 
influence of the mesmerizer nearly succeeded in carrying out the robbery 
which had been so deeply planned. Details may be read in a pamphlet 
Eine experimental Studie aufdem Gebiet des Hypnotismus, Second Edition, 
Stuttgart, Ferdinand Enke, 1889, by Professor R. von Krafft-Ebing of 
Vienna. Another case is recorded where a hypnotizer, a diabolist, 
influenced some wretched creature over whom he had obtained control 
secretly to attempt to break open the tabernacle in the chapel belonging 
to a religious house. The object was to steal the hosts for the foul rites of 
a gang of Satanists. Happily, this was frustrated. There have, indeed, 
been not a few similar cases. 

But, it will be argued, hypnotism has been successfully employed to 
relieve and indeed cure nervous (and, it is claimed, physical) disorders 
and diseases. I answer with Tertullian: "When demons cure diseases, it 
it because they themselves caused the malady. They suggest effectual 

remedies, and thus it is believed that thereby the sickness is healed, 
124 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

whereas it is in fact because the cacodemons have ceased to cause it" 
(De prescriptionibus haereticorum, xxxv). 

I subscribe then to the solid opinion of that great and learned 
Professor Dr. Antoine Imbert-Gourbeyre of the School of Medicine at 
Clermont-Ferrand, who in an important monograph L'Hypnotisme et la 
Stigmatization, 1899, as well as in various articles in L'Univers and 
Le Monde proves that all these phenomena obtained by hypnotists, 
phenomena the reality of which there is no thought of denying, are 
manifestly diabolical. An eminent theologian, Sancha y Hervas, Cardinal 
Archbishop of Toledo (1838-1909), condemned hypnotism on precisely 
the same grounds. 

An extreme rationalist, Dr. Charles Baudouin of the Jean Jacques 
Rousseau Institute, Geneva, in his Suggestion and Autosuggestion (English 
translation, 1920, p. 100) speaks of dermographism, that is to say "an 
image existing in the subject's mind becomes outlined on the skin". The 
next sentence may be quoted as a monument of ineptitude. "The authors 
make a passing reference to the witches of the middle ages upon whose 
backs, it is asserted, the word 'Satan' was inscribed." One may ask who 
are "the authors"? In my reading of demonologists I can only say that 
I have never met with this statement nor indeed with anything in the 
least like it, and until further references are forthcoming I am con- 
strained to think that Dr. Baudouin has drawn upon his rather fertile 
imagination. I do not, for my part, remember such a detail in any witch 
trial, and it would be too striking and too rare easily to be forgotten. 

Dr. Baudouin proceeds to cite from Dr. Charles Richet of Paris a 
well-known instance of dermographism. A child, playing about the room 
idly loosens the catch which fastens a chimney draw-plate, and narrowly 
escapes being guillotined by the quick fall of the heavy steel-edged 
mechanism. The mother receives such a shock on seeing the danger that 
a flushing erythematous circle forms round her neck the corresponding 
part was threatened in the case of the child and tins remains swollen 
for several hours. Similarly, as recorded by P&re Coconnier O.P. in his 
L'Hypnotisme franc, a child's foot is on the point of being crushed by 
the swing-to of a heavy iron gate. Happily the accident is averted, but 
the mother, who saw it with horror, was seized with a pain in her ankle. 
The foot then became inflamed, and through lameness she was forced 
to keep her bed for nearly a week. A servant, devoted to her mistress, 
was present when a doctor lanced the lady's arm. The abigail, who 
seemed a little nervous, felt something like a prick with a sharp knife in 
her own arm, and ecchymosis temporarily supervened. A man in a very vivid 
dream imagines that a spectre clutched one of his feet and twisted his 
toe. He awoke with a sharp cry, and perceived that there was in the 
foot redness, and swelling with considerable pain. This was questionless 
gout, and I do not think that this example will hold. It was the attack of 
gout that gave rise to the dream of the malicious goblin, not the visionary 
goblin who was responsible for the pain. 

Dr. Baudouin proceeds: "From dermographism we pass to stigma- 
tization, the latter being merely a variety of the former." It is unnecessary 

125 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

to examine this irresponsible statement, which is absolutely* without a 
shadow of foundation, and which shows us how much reliance is to be 
placed upon the speculations and conjectures of Suggestion and Auto- 
suggestion. \Ve are the less surprised, then, to find that Dr. Baudouin 



with infinite satisfaction that even Shakespeare has been psychoanalysed ! 

It is as well to remark these eccentricities and vagaries since they 
throw considerable light upon the point of view adopted by too many 
writers who attempt to deal with and profess to explain stigmatization, 
without, indeed, having any idea of the meaning and implications of 
this phenomenon. 

Unfortunately many of the general books of reference and technical 
dictionaries are also apt to mislead. Stedman in his Medical Dictionary 
(i3th edition, 1956), says that in pathology a stigma is (a) any spot or 
blemish on the skin; (b) a bleeding spot on the skin of an hysterical 
person. He defines "major hysteria" as a condition in which there is 
anaesthesia, or contractures with well-marked stigmata, and in which 
convulsions or \iolent emotional attacks may occur. "Major hysteria" 
has rather an ugly sound, and accordingly the well-known Parisian 
neurologist, Dr. J. Babinski (1857-1932) to get rid of the unfortunate 
associations drew a red-herring across the trail by introducing the word 
"pithiatism", which is explained as "a morbid condition curable by 
suggestion". Pithiatism is altogether more suave and elegant. 

F. T. Roberts in his Theory and Practice of Medicine (3rd edition, 
1877, I, p. 37), writes that "cutaneous haemorrhages assume the form of 
stigmata, or minute points; petechiae, or rounded spots; and vibices, or 
lines". 

It may very justly be emphasized that these are all pathological 
definitions of stigmata, and do not concern us here. It is necessary, 
however, to insist upon and underscore this point, as the word Stig- 
matization has been wrested from its hagiological and mystic meaning, 
and so to speak, secularized. Writers, then, who try to explain Divine 
Stigmata, the only true Stigmata, by autosuggestion, or by pithiatism, 
or by any other save a supernatural cause, are either employing the 
term in a distorted and debased sense, or else deliberately attempting 
to inspissate and materialize spiritual things. In the former case a writer 
should at the outset define his terms. From the latter category we cannot 
excuse Dr. Baudouin I cite him merely as a typical example of the 
school when he writes (op. cit. p. 100): "In the case of Catharine 
Emmerich, the circulation was directly controlled by autosuggestion, the 
blood being distributed as it would have been distributed in an actual 
crucifixion." It is difficult to think that this erroneous statement was 
other than designedly enunciated and given this prominence to fit the 
author's preconceptions which he does not depart from, and in the face 
of such overwhelming proof to the contrary I do not find it easy to 
suppose that he was morally and philosophically concerned by what he 
posits. The bigotry of science is obstinate and blind. 
126 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

"Autosuggestion" is some sixty years old now. I believe the word 
in English is not found before 1890, whilst its equivalent "self- 
suggestion" would appear to be hardly earlier than 1899. 

Pietro Pompanazzi, who was born at Mantua in 1462, and who died 
at Bologna about 1525, having professed Philosophy at Padua, Ferrara, 
and Bologna, drunk with his own intellectual insolence and high-flying 
conceits, did not hesitate to spawn in his copious Works such horrible 
errors as the proposition that the curative power of Holy Relics consists 
in the faith of the pilgrim who comes to venerate them. That very learned 
and impartial doctor, Thomas Fyens, who occupied the Chair of Medicine 
at Louvain and was body-physician to the Archduke Albert of Brussels 
in his Tractatus de Viribus Imaginationis, the earliest work scientifically 
to examine and discuss autosuggestion and the extensive influence of 
the mind, snubs the presumptuous old philosopher pretty sharply for this, 
and sends him sprawling. For Pompanazzi a miracle is the effect of some 
natural cause which may in future be discovered, although as yet we 
do not know the material reason. Nor, I will add, are we likely to know 
it, until God in His own good time reveals it. Which will not be here. 
Pompanazzi is very eloquent, not to say verbose in expatiating upon the 
Power of the Will, and maintains that man within himself is a perfect 
battery of marvellous force, which he can (if he knew how) energize 
with amazing results. 

No one will be at all surprised to hear that the sorcerer Cornelius 
Agrippa exactly follows the sceptic scoffing philosopher, and the atheist 
Giordano Bruno, who was executed for his crimes at Rome in 1600, 
companions them well in his subversive ideas. I have mentioned these 
three men, who proclaimed that the psycho-physical parallelism of such a 
sublime phenomenon as the stigmata was but the intensified effect of a 
too vivid and fructuous imagination, in order to show how respectable 
an ancestry have the misnomered rationalists of to-day, who with their 
wearisome reiteration of such sibylline tags as "psychosensorial hallucin- 
ations" and "abnormal motivation" but echo the long since exploded 
fantasies of the sixteenth century. 

That the Divine Stigmata could be produced through the force of 
the emotions acting upon a lively subject is altogether impossible. The 
utmost that physiological science can urge is that it has not advanced 
far enough to explain the Stigmata, to which we add and never will 
it advance far enough. 

Haemophilia, a tendency to bleeding, either spontaneously or from 
any slight injuries, has no connexion whatsoever with the Stigmata, but 
must be mentioned here since the more ignorant have been known to 
speak very much at random of "hsemophilic tendencies". 

Certain stigmaticas, for example St. Lutgarde of Tongres, the Cis- 
tercian nun who died in 1246; the Capuchiness St. Veronica Giuliani, 
1660-1727; Blessed Catherine of Racconigi, a Dominican of the Third 
Order, 1486-1547; and many others suffered the sweat of blood in 
Gethsemane. There is a pathological condition, haematidrosis, in which 
occurs what is seemingly a blood-sweat. But as Dr. Imbert-Gourbeyre 

127 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

and Dr. Lefebvre have shown, this blood-sweat, arising from a specific 
malady is not an exudation of blood. The red humour which oozes out when 
microscopically examined, is shown not to be blood, since it does not 
contain red globules, and its coloration is derived from certain bacilli. 
Since this extravasation is always coincident with some lesion of the 
sudoriparous glands, haematidrosis, in spite of its name, must be classed 
among the many varieties of sweats, which are of several shades of hue. 

It is only of comparatively recent years that hsematidrosis has been 
medically inquired into and understood. 

The immensely learned Abbot of Senones, Dom Augustin Calmet 
O. S. B., who was born at Menil-la-Horgue, 26th February, 1672, and 
died at his Abbey of Senones, 25th October, 1757, at the request of 
Benedict XIV collected from the observations registered by the doctor- 
regent of the Faculty of Paris, Allicot de Mussey, a number of cases of 
haematidrosis, and these he described in a memorial which the Sovereign 
Pontiff found intensely interesting, conveying his warmest congratulations 
to the author. This particular malady had not then been so thoroughly 
diagnosed from a medical point of view as in more recent years, but 
none the less Pope Benedict was not in any sense misled. He weighed the 
evidence, and his enlightened perception led him to the authoritative 
pronouncement that there is no case of actual action upon the tissues, 
far less of any permanent action, De Canonisatione, III, xxxiii, n. 31. 

Incidentally it may be remarked that we shall not of course classify 
under stigmatization, counterfeit stigmatization which is simply an 
imposture, wounds or cicatrices deliberately and craftily produced by 
cutting, piercing, or stabbing with some weapon, by blistering with a 
caustic or in some other subtle way, in order to deceive, generally for the 
sake of bolstering up a spurious revelation or pretended visions, some- 
times feigning for propaganda and politically directed, sometimes for 
mere publicity monstrari digito, as the poet has it for bastard honour 
and personal gain. 

To sum up then, there are (it may be repeated) only two kinds of 
stigmatization, sacred or divine Stigmatization; satanical or diabolic 
stigmatization. 

Satanical or diabolic stigmatization is that imprinted and produced 
through the medium or by the aid of the demon, whether it is actually 
recognized and known that the agent is a dark power, or whether it be 
that he is masquerading and disguised as a celestial messenger. Such 
simulation is easy for an evil entity. St. Paul writes that "Satan himself 
is transformed into an angel of light", and Tertullian shrewdly enough 
remarks that it is no hard matter for Satan to blind the eyes of the body 
once he has sealed the eyes of the soul. 

It will be useful here to enumerate the characteristics of true or 
Sacred Stigmatization. 

In True Stigmatization the wounds are spontaneous, that is to say 
not caused by any external or physical injury or accident, and, as 
imprinted upon the bodily members of the stigmatic, they are very 
definitely restricted to the Wounds of the Passion of which they are 

1*8 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

the replica. From these wounds, flows, more or less freely, new pure blood 
in contradistinction to the haemorrhage normally extravasating from 
ordinary wounds, such as are lacerations and stabbings humanly inflicted. 
Thus the blood of true stigmatization is entirely clean and uncontaminated 
by any peccant humour or by that sero-purulence, which accompanies 
exulceration and obstinate unhealing hurts. The flow of blood from true 
stigmatization is not due to any defect in the coagulating power of the 
blood. There is, then, non-suppuration. 

Moreover, it is known that in not a few instances where the blood 
flowing from the wounds of a stigmatic has been collected and carefully 
preserved in a glass phial or ampulla or some similar suitable vessel, 
hermetically stoppered and sealed, although as consonant with the 
ordinary natural law it coagulates to a crassament, and solidifies to a 
darkish hue, dull and opaque, yet this blood from time to time has been 
observed to liquefy and assume a ruby red colour as though full of life 
and vital [2]. 

This phenomenon, the ebullition of stigmatical blood, has been freely 
submitted to the most searching scientific examination, and it is demon- 
strated beyond question or shadow of doubt that the blood has acted in 
a manner impossible to any ordinary blood as known to physiology. 
Every delicate test under the most rigid conditions has been applied, the 
result being it is proven that the liquefaction does not in any way depend 
upon and is not in the least influenced by light, air, heat or changes of 
temperature, position, or any other conceivable circumstances. 

The most famous, and perhaps in some ways the most remarkable, 
of all such recorded stigmatical phenomena is the case of St. Clare of 
Montefalco [3], whose incorrupt and exquisitely beautiful body sleeps at 
Montefalco, a little old hillside town from whose lofty walls one may 
overlook the outspread panorama of the luxuriant Umbrian plain so 
sweetly sung in Vergil's inspired line. 

Born in 1268, Clara di Damiani from her very infancy was called at 
home "the little nun". Her life seemed scarcely stained with the shadow 
of sin. As a child, at her earnest desire, she was received as a member 
of the strictly contemplative community living under the rule of St. 
Augustine whose Superior was her own sister, Giovanna, "la leata 
Giovanna' 9 . To her dismay upon the death of Giovanna in 1291, Clara 
was elected Abbess of Holy Rood. Her virtues, her charity, her raptures, 
her revelations, her miracles, are told at length by her biographers, and 
it is noteworthy that the first to write her life was a contemporary, 
Berengario di Donandei, who commenced the Process necessary for her 
official canonization in the very year of her decease, 1308. The cult of the 
Lady Clara may be said in some "sense almost to have begun whilst she 
was yet alive, so venerated and loved was she for her goodness by her 
fellow townsfolk. Very early is she authoritatively spoken of as the Blessed 
Clara, but so diverse and so extraordinary were aU the circumstances to 
be investigated, that Pontiff after Pontiff, from John XXII, who reigned 
1316-34, to Pius IX, 1846-78, ordered more and more searching and 
scrupulously careful examination into these phenomena, which thiough 
I 129 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

five centuries were again and again accurately observed, medically 
tested, proven, confirmed and re-confirmed, and it was not until 8th 
December, 1881, that, after a final investigation formally initiated on 
27th August, 1846, and covering the whole ground in every detail, 
Leo XIII canonized St. Clara of the Cross, professed nun of the Order 
of the Hermits of St. Augustine, of their house at Montefalco. 

The record drawn up by Berengario, who acting as Commissioner of 
Pietro Paolo Trinci, Bishop of Spoleto a city some twenty miles from 
Montefalco visited the Holy Rood Monastery with the express object 
of inspecting all documents, hearing witnesses, and collecting first-hand 
information, and who was writing in 1308-9, is of primary importance. 
There are numberless other processes, chronicles, and attestations. Of 
great value is the Work, composed in the pontificate of Innocent X, by 
Gianbattista Piergigli; who, as historian and critic enjoys a considerable 
reputation for the most minutely industrious scholarship, impartiality, 
and solid judgement. Bevagna, of which town he was Vicario, that is to 
say Rural Dean, something more than Vicar or Rector, is only three 
miles from Montefalco, and this gave him every opportunity for the 
most exhaustive research into the Life of the Saint whose History he 
wrote in the year 1645. When we add that he was also Confessor to the 
nuns of St. Clara's own monastery, it is hardly too much to say that he 
had unique facilities for the freest access to the manuscript archives. 

So learned and careful a writer, for example, as the Most Reverend 
Mgr. Lorenzo Tardy, O.S.A. [0, who published the standard Life of St. 
Clare of Montefalco, Rome, 1881, largely relies upon Berengario and 
Piergigli. 

In the Cornhill Magazine, October, 1881, John Addington Symonds 
describes a visit to Montefalco [5j. His account is so beautifully written 
and phrases in such exquisite taste that at least a partial quotation 
therefrom cannot come amiss. 

The reason why he, in company with his friend and fellow traveller, 
Christian Buol, had climbed the long gradual road which leads to this 
little hillside town was, he says, a wish to inspect the many fine frescoes, 
especially the legends of St. Francis and St. Jerome, from the brush of 
Benozzo Gozzoli. "Full justice had been done to these, when a little 
boy, seeing us lingering outside the church of S. Chiara, asked whether 
we would not like to view the body of the saint. This privilege could be 
purchased at the price of a small fee. It was only necessary to call the 
guardian of her shrine at the high altar. Indolent, and in compliant 
mood, with languid curiosity and half-an-hour to spare, we assented. 
A handsome young man appeared, who conducted us with decent gravity 
into a little darkened chamber behind the altar. Then he lighted wax 
tapers, opened sliding doors in what looked like a long coffin, and drew 
curtains. Before us in the dim light lay a woman covered with a black 
nun's dress. Only her hands, and the exquisitely beautiful pale contour 
of her face (forehead, nose, mouth, and chin, modelled in purest outline, 
as though the injury of death had never touched her) were visible. Her 
closed eyes seemed to sleep. She had the perfect peace of Luini's S. 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

Catherine borne by the angels to her grave on Sinai. I have rarely seen 
anything which surprised and touched me more. The religious earnestness 
of the young custode, the hushed adoration of the country-folk who had 
silently assembled round us, intensified the sympathy-inspiring beauty 
of the slumbering girl. S. Chiara's shrine was hung round with her relics; 
and among these the heart extracted from her body was suspended. The 
guardian's faith in this miraculous witness to her sainthood, the gentle 
piety of the men and women who knelt before it, checked all expressions 
of incredulity. We abandoned ourselves to the genius of the place; forgot 
even to ask what Santa Chiara was sleeping here; and withdrew, toned 
to a not unpleasing melancholy. I have often asked myself, who, then, 
was this nun? What history had she? And I think now of this girl as of 
a damsel of romance, a Sleeping Beauty in the wood of time, secluded 
from intrusive elements of fact, and folded in the love and faith of her 
own simple worshippers." 

This impression put on paper by so cultured a scholar and so fine 
a poet as John Addington Symonds, who frankly confesses that he 
knew nothing of St. Clara of Montefalco, is very remarkable. It was not 
until twenty years after that I myself was privileged to visit the shrine 
of St. Clara, but as I knelt there his sweet English words were sounding 
in my ears, and I thought then, as I think now, that for loveliness and 
delicacy and the beauty of natural reverence the music of his sentences 
could hardly be improved. 

Her own order, the Augustinians, observe the feast of St. Clara upon 
the i8th August, and upon the soth October is kept a second feast, 
the Impression of the Crucified and the Marks of His Passion in the 
heart of St. Clara of the Cross, Virgin, of our Order. The two masses, and 
the two offices, August and October, of St. Clara are proper. 

During her last illness, on the evening of the gth August, whilst good 
Sister Joanna of St. Giles was watching by the bedside of her much 
loved mother, moved by some sudden impulse, this nun raised her hand 
and made a great sign of the Cross over the dying Saint. "Why do you 
bless me thus, dear Sister?'' murmured Clara, "why do you bless and 
sacre me thus? Know then that in my very heart I have and hold Christ 
crucified. All is well with me, exceeding well." These last words she 
repeated many times, and for pure glee and joy she sang blithely in a 
soft voice. 

Although at the moment what she said was not fully understood, 
upon the evening after her death, whilst the body was being composed 
now the members still remained flexible, for there was no rigor mortis 
it was decided to extract and open the heart, and herein, in a concavity 
was bisected by the razor of the operator, all wrought out of the flesh, 
filaments, muscles, and nerves, were indeed discovered the Crucifix and 
other Instruments of the divine Passion. All these were modelled and 
ensculptured, clearly represented, by means of hard nerves of flesh, each 
in its own cellule. Thus in the moiety of the heart were contained the 
Crucifix, the three nails, the spear, and the reed with the sponge; in the 
other ventricle were the pillar of scourging, the scourge itself with five 

131 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

thongs, and the crown of thorns, all most plainly to be seen. Such minute 
details for naturally each separate object is figured in little as the 
five knotted cords of the scourge; the Figure on the Cross, and a gaping 
wound in the right side of that Figure; can each be unmistakably 
distinguished. 

It should be remarked that the Crucifix and the Scourge, the only 
two Emblems which are still venerated at Montefalco, are entirely 
separate from and not in any way connected with the heart, which 
was so to speak the casket of these objects. 

Even though a miniature, the scourge most accurately depicts the 
Roman "flagellum". Of that there can be no question. The Crucifix is 
tiny, about two inches in length, but in detail perfect. Of course, after 
the passage of more than six hundred years, after the various medical 
and scientific examinations and handlings, the uncoverings and replace- 
ments and continual exposure to atmospheric action, it cannot be expected 
that these Emblems should to-day appear quite as freshly coloured and 
vitally vivid as they were when Berengario saw them, and as he describes 
them. Not that there is the slightest taint or tinge indicating the approach 
of putrefaction or decay. The heart, rather irregular in contour, but 
entire, is reddish, one might almost say a murrey. The Crucifix and the 
scourge appear somewhat faded in hue, and, as it were, ansemial. It is 
more than possible that this is solely a result of the infinitesimal particles 
of finest dust which have spread a grey film or coating over them, an 
accident impossible to prevent when one considers how delicately these 
sacred relics must be touched and how infrequently it is advisable that 
they should be moved about. 

Parenthetically there may be mentioned here another extraordinary 
phenomenon. Berengario relates that there were found in the gall-bladder 
of the Saint three hard pellets, like stones, exactly of the same dimension, 
weight, colour, and appearance, each one being of the size of a very 
small hazel-nut, and the three were set in a triangular form. The physicians 
attested that these were no ordinary calculous formations, and the Com- 
mission appointed to inquire into this prodigy had no hesitation in 
acknowledging that the three spherical globes were emblematical of the 
Most Holy Trinity. This Commission sat in the autumn of 1308, less 
than four months after the death of the Saint. 

At the bisection of the heart that Sunday evening there were present 
four senior members of the community, Francesca, Lucia, Catharine and 
Margaret. To collect the considerable rush of blood they had carefully 
prepared a glass vessel or large phial, that had been most scrupulously 
washed and purified. When the flow was a little staunched, the Crucifix 
with the other Emblems lay revealed. Recognizing that there was some- 
thing here beyond the ordinary, the sisters with that practical common 
sense which distinguishes nuns, at once locked up in a chest the heart 
and the phial. Early the next morning they requested the attendance 
of the leading citizens of Montefalco, before whom they opened the 
chest, exhibited the phenomena, and swore a solemn affidavit as to what 
had precisely occurred. There were present the Podeste or Chief Magis- 
132 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

trate, Gentile di Giliberti, with his deputy; the leading physician in the 
town, Messer Simone da Spello ; and a public notary, Angelo di Monte- 
falco; all four men of note, influence, and the highest integrity. To these 
was added a very important visitor, the Father Guardian of the Franciscan 
house at Foligno, who happened to be staying in Montefalco for a few days. 
It was decided that the Bishop of Spoleto must be at once informed, and 
the officials withdrew to indite, sign, and seal the necessary documents 
for transmission to his Lordship. 

But, as Mgr. Tardy says, the devil will have his finger in every pie, 
and by some breath of gossip nobody quite knew how rumour began 
to fly about with amazing stories and busy whispers of mysterious 
happenings at the Convent of Holy Rood. The visit of several important 
personages at so unusual an hour to the nuns could hardly have escaped 
remark. The fruit-women on their way to the market square had sharp 
inquisitive eyes and long tongues; the burghers wives as they came from 
mass lingered in the porch to drink in with greedy ears the tale of Holy 
Mother Clara. Speculation was rife; a word or two dropped here and there 
was soon buzzed in every corner of the town. Early that afternoon, 
before the report, which had to be drawn up with meticulous exactitude, 
could be completed, much less dispatched to the Palace, off sped to 
Spoleto an idle and indiscreet busy-body, not merely a Paul Pry but a 
clerical Paul Pry, and a fellow of scant fame beside, who waking the 
porter from his siesta demanded an instant audience of Mgr. Donadei. 
It was imperative but imperative! His frock gained him admittance, 
and in a very few minutes with greasy unction he was pouring out before 
the astonished prelate a disquisition on supposed miracles, blatant 
imposture, cozening nuns, and matter for gravest scandal. With such 
cunning and address did the mischief-maker play his part that the good 
Vicar General became extremely uneasy and disturbed. In such a case 
it was his plain duty to act, and to act at once. There is nothing of which 
ecclesiastical authority is more suspicious than the report of a miracle 
or some extraordinary phenomenon. In recent times the histories of 
Lourdes and Fatima, for example, have displayed a policy of procras- 
tination, of actual discouragement, long chilling silences, rebuffs, retard- 
ment, deterrence. Such discipline is hard, no doubt, but it is the vital 
testing, and it is essential to the truth. Donadei dismissed his visitor, 
merely cautioning him to be prudent and to avoid all tittle-tattle con- 
cerning such deep and difficult mysteries. 

The next morning the Sisters of Holy Rood were not a little startled 
when the portress shaken out of her usual calm, came hurrying to 
announce that a very important company had halted at the gate. The 
street outside was full of unwonted bustle and noise; stalwart grooms 
and slim pages in those brilliant parti-coloured jerkins and hose with 
which the Trecentisti have made us so familiar, were jostling and running 
to hold the stirrups of their grave and reverend masters as they alighted 
from their horses and caparisoned mules; whilst the whole mobile of 
Montefalco crowded behind, agape, with goggling eyes. In order that 
there should be no possible grounds for a rumour that things had been 

133 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

clandestinely managed or that there had been a private and partial 
inquiry, tie Vicar General of Spoleto without giving any previous notice 
or warning of his intention, had come not merely openly, but with some 
state and formality of pomp, to make a strict visitation of the convent. 
Since the community lived under the rule of St. Augustine, and since 
(as he had learned) the Guardian of the Friars Minor at Foligno had 
already entered the testimony on the nuns' behalf, Mgr. Donedei brought 
with him the Prior of the Augustinians at Spoleto and the Guardian of 
the Franciscan convent there. They were attended by religious of the two 
orders. A canon theologian, two doctors of divinity, an eminent physician, 
a master surgeon, Monsignor Tignosi from Rome, and a secular dignitary, 
Messer Teodorico of Orvieto, were of the company. Not the least imposing 
figure was the representative of civil law, Messer Bartolo, a justiciar of 
Perugia. 

In his quality of Vicar General and Episcopal Delegate, Donadei 
with his assessors entered the enclosure. They seated themselves in the 
chapter house, whither was summoned the whole sisterhood. Without 
any word of greeting or preliminary Mgr. Donadei began to rebuke and 
reprimand the frightened women in the sternest and most menacing 
tones. Here was grave matter toward, a scandal already gossiped in the 
common market-place. He was himself willing to believe that perhaps 
they had acted from a giddy enthusiasm rather than from any ill design 
prepense, but none the less their rashness, nay, their flaunting folly was 
like to cast a slur upon the honour of the Lord Bishop, and were it noised 
abroad in so sad and unbelieving Days 'twere odds it might besmirch 
on blasphemers' tongues the holy Catholic Faith itself. Punishment must 
follow, and no light penalties would suffice. The nuns pleaded that they 
had but spoken truth. Would not his Excellency deign to see the Relics 
and assure himself? Certes, yes, to that end was His Excellency come 
with the Reverend Fathers and Doctors at no small cost and incon- 
veniency, and attended by his theologians, his physicians, his lawyers, 
and his friars, Donadei proceeded to view the body of the late Abbess, 
and to examine with most scrupulous care the Relics. 

The result was, that, falling on his knees before the whole company, 
he there and then gave thanks to God in a loud voice that he had lived 
to see this day, and he vowed to devote himself to the task of declaring 
and making known the eminent sanctity of Lady Clara of blessed memory, 
swearing upon the crucifix that none other than himself with his own 
hand should draw up all those documents and attestations which were 
necessary to initiate the process of canonization. 

This solemn oath was to take him more than once a long and toilsome 
journey, to Avignon, to the court of Pope John XXII [5] and it is to this 
oath that we are indebted for the contemporary record of St. Clara's 
life, the witness to these phenomena, Codex A, as palaeographers would 
call it, to which reference has already been made. 

When the four senior nuns so reverently and lovingly bisected the 
heart of their much venerated Abbess, the blood (as has been stated) 
was collected in a large glass phial, and this was most carefully preserved. 
134 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

In the year 1608, Cardinal Visconti, Bishop of Spoleto, gave orders that 
a portrait of St. Clara, then generally known as the Beata Clara, should 
be painted, and he commissioned an artist of great local celebrity, 
Ascensione Spracchi, whom he especially patronized, to undertake the 
work. 

Upon the 2ist July, whilst preparations were being made for this, 
and the holy body was being lifted from its shrine, a nun observing that 
the vessel containing the Saint's blood had in the course of years become 
very dusty took it up and wiped it round with a fine linen towel, when 
by some mischance the fragile object slipped from between her fingers 
and broke all to pieces on the marble pavement. Sobbing bitterly, she 
at once gathered up every tiniest particle of the blood, and every splinter 
of glass, all of which was deposited in a larger glass vase. The accident 
is noted by Piergigli, who ascertained the precise details, and he adds, 
"So this is just as we see it to-day", about the middle of the seventeenth 
century. 

The blood, says Piergigli, appears red in colour, like a rich ruby. 
That also is as we see it to-day, only the second beaker has been at 
some time cracked it would seem to be the result of a sudden sharp 
knock and for safety sake it has been placed in a larger glass vessel, 
which is thus actually the third vitrine. It should be remarked here that 
the three containers are crystal clear on all sides and perfectly transparent, 
without the least opacity which might prevent the closest inspection of 
the blood. This lies in mass coagulated at the bottom of the second 
beaker. A little however has oozed through the cracks. 

What is very remarkable is that this blood of St. Clara of Monte- 
falco, normally concreted and coagulated, has been known during the 
years not only to liquefy, but even to boil up and bubble disciogliersi 
e bollire, is Mgr. Tardy's striking phrase. Instances of these ebullitions 
are historically recorded and attested. 

Unfortunately no exact and consecutive chronicle has been kept, a 
negligence in the past Piergigli very justly blames, since obviously it 
would have been of great value had the archivists of the convent noted 
in order the various dates when this phenomenon occurred. One Saturday 
in October 1495, the blood was observed to have become fluid, and 
presently it began to spume and froth in so marked a manner as seriously 
to alarm the watchers, who knew that traditionally this movement of the 
blood prognosticated some very untoward and serious events. In less 
than forty-eight hours the combined forces of the Baglioni and of the 
Orsini had swooped down, and for two months continued to pillage and 
harass the whole countryside, whilst the departure of Charles VIII of 
France from Turin on 22nd October and his return to his own realm, 
was the direct cause, says Guicciardini, "of changes in states, downfalls 
of kingdoms, desolation of many a fair province, destructions of noble 
cities, the most barbarous butcheries". 

Five years later, in 1500, the Duke Valentino, better known as Cesare 
Borgia, established himself in Montefalco and the environs with a host 
of eleven thousand soldiers. He had determined that, when on the point 

135 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

of departure, he would issue orders the town should be sacked and 
despoiled. However, be the reason what it may, he suddenly changed 
his plans, gave his captains and commanders strictest injunctions that 
there should be no looting or plunder, and, hastening his departure, as 
it seemed, the Duke left Montefalco in peace. During the time that he 
was stationed in the town the Saint's blood remained in a state of lique- 
faction, and bubbled in its glass. 

Ebullitions of the blood are recorded in 1508, and again upon the 
20th March, 1560. In both cases these proved the presage of warfare and 
other misfortunes. In the year 1570, yet again the blood was observed 
to boil up, which signified the loss of Cyprus to the Turks in the following 
year. 

Several remarkable ebullitions are recorded during the seventeenth 
century. In 1601 the blood boiled before a crowded congregation, upon 
which Monsignor Castrucci, a noble canon of Lucca, who was present, 
taking the vessel into his hands, exhibited it to the people, and delivered 
a solemn address. The same phenomenon was repeated in July, and 
October, 1608; and once more in October, 1618, during the exorcism in 
the church of a man who was demoniacally possessed. 

All these liquefactions are attested and proven by persons of the 
highest quality and unquestioned integrity, by prelates and professors 
and doctors, men of scientific mind, trained to observe and discriminate, 
to weigh and pronounce. In the mid-seventies of the last century, that 
is to say about seventy years ago, three experts, each of whom investi- 
gated independently of the others, and no one of whom was aware that 
any other opinion had been called in, were deputed to conduct a thorough 
examination into the phenomena that occurred in connexion with the 
body and blood of St. Clara of Holy Cross. 

In 1880, two of the leading medical men of the day, specialists at 
the very head of their profession, were commissioned jointly to draw 
up a full and detailed report, every facility being offered for the 
strictest inspection and inquiry. Their finding, as well as the three 
previous testamurs, all agree in stating quite unequivocally that here 
is something unexplainable by, and to all appearance outside and 
beyond, the ordinary course of natural law. Monsignor Tardy draws 
a striking analogy between these happenings and the phenomenon 
of the flow of blood from the Relic of the arm of St. Nicolas at 
Tolentino. St. Nicolas who was born about 1245, died at Tolentino 
(Marche) in 1309. An ecstatic of a very high and extraordinary 
kind, he was so distinguished by his burning devotion and amazing 
austerities that it has been said of him "he did not live, but languished 
through life". Whilst yet a young student he joined the Order of Augus- 
tinian Eremites, of which he is regarded as one of the chief glories. Upon 
his death crowds thronged the church if only to touch his body or his 
garments. 

In accordance with the feeling of the fourteenth century, a custom 
which perhaps to the English way of thinking has something of a 
barbaric complexion, relics of the venerated friar, already canonized 
136 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

in the hearts of the townsfolk, were distributed by his brethren to certain 
other houses of the Order. The right arm of the Saint was detached from 
the trunk and is to-day preserved separately at Tolentino with great 
honour. The limb, although incorrupt is desiccated, but upon occasion 
it is known to gush with fresh blood, a portent which is taken to foreshow 
some impending calamity. More than five and twenty effusions of liquid 
blood from the arm of St. Nicolas are recorded, and some of these are 
recent in date. 

It may be objected here that these blood marvels are not, strictly 
speaking, the liquefaction of stigmatic cruor, that is of blood which has 
flowed from mystical body wounds during the lifetime of a stigmatist, 
which has carefully been gathered there and then by attendants and 
bystanders into some vessel, and having in due course coagulated in 
perfectly normal fashion, becomes fluid even to the extent (at times) 
of ebullition. The blood prodigy of the arm of St. Nicolas may be more 
conveniently considered in reference to the famous miracles of St. 
Januarius of Naples and others, but the phenomena in the case of St. 
Clara of Montefalco are justly to be classified as stigmatical. 

Another instance of blood flowing from the stigmata and after con- 
gelation becoming liquid on occasion is that of the Venerable Passitea 
Crogi, a Capuchin nun of Siena [7]. Passitea, who was born on the I3th 
September, 1564, from the very first exhibited such unusual sanctity 
that her father declared to a friend: "My little daughter is indeed a 
child of God. She leads us all in the paths of holiness." When she was 
five-and-twenty, Passittea felt a particular inspiration to observe the 
Lent of that year, 1589, as a season of more than ordinary rigour and 
fasting. Upon the morning of Palm Sunday, she received Holy Com- 
munion according to her wont, at the old church of St. George in the Via 
Ricasoli, and forthwith fell into ecstasy. Thinking that she had been 
suddenly taken ill, her mother and sisters carried her home in their 
arms and laid her on a bed. A physician, who was hurriedly called, at 
first sight exclaimed: "Ah! She has passed away", but on a closer examin- 
ation he pronounced that this was no ordinary sickness. Day after day 
she lay there upon her bed, motionless, and, as all believed, at death's 
door. Good Friday came, when suddenly between two and three o'clock 
she rose up on her knees with outstretched arms, a dazzling ray like 
lightning flashed through the room, a sharp loud clap as if of thunder 
was heard, and with a piercing cry, Passitea, her face radiant with some 
unearthly glow, fell swooning in utter collapse. Her two sisters who were 
in the room, alarmed, ran to lift her up when to their astonishment they 
saw that blood was pouring from her hands, her feet, and her head, 
whilst her white night-rail was crimsoned all down the left side with 
blood welling through as if from a deep wound. As quickly as they could 
they mopped up the stains with towels and ewers of fresh water; they 
changed the coverlets which were all spotted with blood, and even 
scoured the floor round the bed. The chaplain of the famous thirteenth- 
century hospital and church, Santa Maria della Scala in the Piazza del 
Duomo, a Sicilian Father, Domenico Marchi, a priest of much experience 

137 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

in mysticism, was urgently sent for. Upon Ms arrival he at once recognized 
that Passitea had received the stigmata. In reply to his questions, which 
if delicately and gently put were searching and exigent, as so extra- 
ordinary an occasion demanded, Passitea under obedience described that 
she had seen as it were in a vision, Christ crucified, livid and bruised, 
and covered with wounds streaming with red blood. She heard the words 
"Daughter, drink of My Chalice", whereupon there darted out rays of 
transparent glory which struck her hands, her feet, her side, and for a 
second's space encircled her head. The pain was so acute that she lost 
all consciousness. The wounds in her hands and feet did not pierce through 
those members, but were deep round incisions in the palms and on the 
upper part; her side was gashed in three distinct places; her head was 
ringed with a series of punctures from which trickled drops of blood. 
In the course of a few days the suffering was much mitigated, and there 
was no extravasation, but all the skill of the physicians did not avail to 
close these wounds, although they experimented with every healing 
balm, unguent, and cataplasm known to pharmacy. Four years later, 
in 1593, on Spy Wednesday, when Passitea was rapt deep in contemplation 
before the altarino in her own room, there appeared a Seraph aureoled 
with light, but crucified, and covered with wounds. The vision came 
quite close to her, when suddenly with a loud noise like a thunderclap 
flames of fire darted forth and pierced her hands and feet completely 
through, at the same time stabbing her left side and lacerating her head. 
At the noise, which re-echoed in every corner of the house, her two 
sisters ran quickly to Passitea's room whence it seemed to come, and 
there they found her in a swoon, covered with blood. These stigmatic 
wounds, inflicted a second time, marked her all her life long, and whereas 
the former stigmata sometimes appeared to be only on the surface, the 
second stigmata was very deep, boring right through the hands and feet, 
so that the openings on either side reached one another. On certain days 
in the year and during Holy Week they bled profusely, and caused her 
agonies of pain. At other times the effusion was staunched, and they 
throbbed less achingly. 

The Ecclesiastical authorities more than once insisted that these 
stigmata should be examined by the most skilful doctors and surgeons 
of the day, and that Passitea should submit to any course of treatment 
the faculty might prescribe. In this respect she obeyed implicitly and 
without a murmur all that her superiors commanded. Otherwise, in her 
profound humility she endeavoured to conceal as far as possible these 
supernatural manifestations even from the nuns, her closest companions, 
whilst if any secular extern, of whatever rank or dignity, ventured to 
question her, or show an indiscreet curiosity, she would abruptly break 
off the conversation and withdraw, evincing the greatest displeasure. 

^ None the less, both during her life and immediately after death, the 
stigmata were seen on her body by numerous witnesses, the most con- 
siderable of whom gave their official testimony to the fact and set their 
hands to all necessary formal documents. The blood which flowed from 
the wounds was on various occasions, for example, Good Friday, the 
138 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

Friday in Passion Week, on the Feast of the Stigmata of St. Francis 
(i7th September), carefully collected in phials of various shapes and 
sizes, which were hermetically fastened, sealed, and which have been 
preserved intact. This was done entirely without her knowledge, since 
generally at the extravasation of blood she passed into ecstasy and 
was absolutely unconscious of her surroundings. 

The phial which I have had every opportunity of inspecting is in 
height two and a quarter inches, of thick clear crystal glass, authenticated, 
stoppled, having the stopple covered with parchment which is tied down 
and sealed, air-tight. The cruor, which does not occupy an eighth of an 
inch, normally lies at the bottom of the phial. It is desiccated, dark in 
colour, and resembles minute particles of grit. On occasion this blood 
has been known to liquefy, and in a fluid state of a roseate hue almost 
to fill the small phial. Precisely the same phenomenon is recorded in the 
case of other vessels containing the blood which has flowed from the 
stigmata of the Venerable Passitea. 

Although an enclosed nun, a sublime contemplative, and a mystic 
of a very high order, Passitea Crogi, who in this as in many other ways 
closely resembles St. Catharine Benincasa and St. Teresa of Avila, 
proved herself an admirable organizer, and an excellent woman of 
business, and became the trusted counsellor of Popes and Kings. In 
1599, after encountering many difficulties, she founded at Siena under 
the strictest rule of the Capuchinesses and following the primitive 
observance of St. Clare of Assisi a convent, of which she was the first 
abbess. In this she was strongly supported by the Archbishop of Siena, 
Cardinal Tarugi, one of the first companions of St. Philip Neri, and by 
St. Giovanni Leonardi, a fervid soul who was canonized as lately as 
Easter, 1938. Very soon after she was called upon to make a foundation 
of Capuchin nuns at Piombino, and in other towns. In 1602 she was 
summoned to Florence by the Grand Duke Ferdinand I [8], and here 
she learned with dismay that his sister, Maria de' Medici, who had been 
married less than a couple of years previously to Henri IV of France, 
was beseeching: her to visit the French court. The royal request it was 
impossible to refuse. Moreover Christian charity obliged her to consent, 
since the poor Queen stood sadly in need of comfort and cheer. Even in 
so short a time the King had not only proved openly unfaithful, assigning 
without regard to the barest appearance of common decency a rich suite 
of apartments in the Louvre to his maitresse en litre, but was treating 
his consort with a cold neglect, if not with actual contumely. 

Passitea, as was becoming a religious, travelled in a closed litter, 
accompanied by a nun of the convent, her own sister, Maria Francesca. 
The Grand Duke provided a suitable escort of gentlemen, guards, out- 
riders, and grooms. "Altezza," she protested, "this is too much, this is 
unfitting for a poor nun." "Nay, nay, Mother," he pleasantly replied, 
"you must remember that the poor nun is my ambassadress to a great 
Queen." One of the suite kept a diary of the journey, which is full of 
piquant and familiar passages. Being mid- July it was suffocatingly hot, 
and "we two" said Maria Francesca, "are baked in our litter like two 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

loaves in an oven". As they drew near Modena they were refreshed by 
grateful showers. \\Tien they were approaching Turin the rain came down 
in drenching sheers. The nuns were about to commence the recitation of 
Divine Office, and as they opened their Breviaries Passitea, hearing the 
drops splashing and pattering on the roof of the litter, said with a smile: 
"Well, well, Heaven is sending us plenty of holy water." At Paris, where 
they stayed several months, Passitea was received with the greatest 
honour and respect, and the Queen found infinite consolation and support 
in her company and counsels. But her heart all the while was with her 
beloved convent at Siena. "My body is in Paris; but in spirit and in 
desire I am with you, Sister Felix," she wrote to the nun who was acting 
as Superior in her absence. On one occasion, when some very complicated 
business had to be decided, and Sister Felix felt sadly perplexed which 
course to adopt for the best, as she was sitting all alone, after a long 
weary day, worrying over her responsibilities, she murmured with a 
sigh, "0, dear mother, if only you were here to tell me what to do!" 
The door opened, and the abbess entered. She took a chair at the table, 
and calmly discussed the difficulties with Sister Felix, pointing out the 
best line to take, what papers to sign, and how to set about it. Not until 
she had withdrawn did the Sister realize that Mother Passitea was in 
Paris. It was all so natural that she did not feel the slightest surprise or 
fear. 

On several occasions, whilst she was absent in France, Mother 
Passitea was seen by nuns of her Siena house kneeling in the chapel, 
in the choir stall, or walking down the corridors. In the Lives of the 
Saints such instances of bilocation are not uncommon. Many examples 
of this phenomenon are recorded in occult writers, and Mrs. Crowe has 
an important chapter "Dopplegangers, or Doubles". Double-ganger is 
defined by the Oxford English Dictionary as "The apparition of a living 
person; a double, a wraith". 

With much reluctance Maria de' Medici parted from Passitea during 
the late autumn, and to her joy the Abbess was back in Siena in November, 
1602. But she was not allowed to remain in the seclusion of her loved 
cloister. The Duke and Duchess of Bavaria dispatched a pressing invita- 
tion, tantamount to a command, requesting her presence. She was also 
sent for by the Duke and Duchess of Lorraine. In 1609, she found herself 
unable to refuse the entreaties of Maria de' Medici to visit Paris a second 
time, when (it is said) her firm, but perfectly respectful remonstrances 
brought Henri IV to a very lively sense of his dissoluteness. Two Popes, 
Clement VIII (1592-1605) and Paul V (1605-1621), received Passitea 
in private audience and gave her much encouragement in her work of 
founding convents of Capuchinesses. To Paul V she was introduced by 
a very great lady, the Duchess Leonora Orsina Sforza, shortly before 
she set out on her second journey to Paris. The Pope held her in con- 
versation more than half an hour, asking her many questions and when 
he dismissed her it was with the kindliest words and a warm blessing. 
After she had retired, he said to the Duchess: "Of a truth here we have 
a humble and holy soul/' 
140 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

Passitea died at Siena on the I3th of May, 1615. She was surrounded 
by her weeping nuns to whom until the last with a smiling face she spoke 
words of comfort and cheer. When the body was laid out in the conventual 
chapel the Archbishop, Monsignor Alessandro Petrucci, with all his 
Chapter and a long train of priests came to pray by her bier. He himself 
saw and touched the stigmata with which she was marked and in order 
that no question should be raised at any future date he gave instructions 
to have the body examined by the most skilful physicians and surgeons 
of the city, under whose directions a memorial, which all signed under 
oath, was drawn up by two notaries. These papers are still preserved in 
the archives of the convent. 

The two cases of stigmatization of St. Clara of Montefalco, and the 
Venerable Mother Passitea of Siena, are so complete, so amply authen- 
ticated and attested beyond any doubt or question, so fully recorded, 
and I may add, comparatively speaking, so little known, that it has 
seemed worth while to consider them in some detail, more especially as 
both present the unusual feature of the liquefaction of blood which has 
flowed and been collected from the stigmatical wounds. 

The Capuchin Order, founded by Fra Matteo da Bascio in 1524, 
originated in the ardent desire of that holy man to return to the primitive 
observance in all its simplicity, in all its austerity, of the Rule of St. 
Francis of Assisi. Throwing himself at the feet of Pope Clement VII [9] 
he pleaded: "Holy Father, it is well known to you that in these days of 
the Rule of St. Francis is not strictly observed; but I yearn to observe 
it most rigidly, yea, to the very letter." The Pope was much moved, 
and graciously answered: 'That you may observe the Rule to the very 
letter, as you so greatly wish, we grant you all you ask of us" [10], 

The Capuchins maintained, and one may well say, rejuvenated the 
Serephic Tradition, that system of prayer and meditation, which St. 
Teresa says, is the foundation of the Contemplative Life, and which 
must precede and prepare for those higher mystical graces which heaven 
bestows as and where and when it will. The Capuchins went back to 
mediaeval sources, to St. Bernard with his burning love of Mary, to the 
Seraphic Doctor, St. Bonaventura, to the Meditationes Vitae Jesu Christi 
and the Stimulus Amoris. They were the specialists in the Interior Life. 
The note of Capuchin mysticism was love before learning. They threw 
wide the gates of mysticism to all. "La spirituality franciscaine," writes 
the Abb< Henri Bremond, "paralt plus affective . . . plus libre, plus 
Spanouissante" than, that of many others. Others, I hasten to add, of 
the highest excellence and indeed of perfection. "Come unto the Marriage", 
the King invites. He even sends forth His servants, saying, "As many as 
ye shall find bid to the marriage". But, when the wedding is furnished 
with guests, among the company is found a man "which had not on a 
wedding garment". 

It is no exaggeration to say that the zeal and fervour of the Capuchins 
swept through Europe, one might write through the known world, 
resistlessly like a great prairie fire. At the age of twenty-four, in September, 
1587, Henri de Joyeuse, Comte de Bouchage, the handsomest youth and 

141 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

most brilliant star of the luxurious court of Henri III of France, who 
loved him tenderly, threw off his soft silks and satins, his lace of Valen- 
ciennes and his three-piled velvets; cast aside his jewels and his gems, 
his sweet pomanders and pouncet-boxes of gold, his rings of diamond 
and emeralds, his collars of balas rubies and orient pearls, to don the 
rough brown frieze frock, to gird himself with the harsh knotted cord, 
and wear the hard tanned sandals of a Capuchin, thenceforth to be 
known as P6re Ange. It is said that the King swooned away when they 
broke the news to him, and whispered that Henri de Joyeuse had gone. 
Pfere Ange became an angel indeed. He advanced far along the way of 
"la vie unitive et extative" [12]. 

Behind the towering figure of His Red Eminence, Armand Jean 
Duplessis Richelieu, there stands in the shadow the Capuchin P&re 
Joseph le Clere du Tremblay, "the grey Cardinal" of history, moulding 
the destinies of Europe. "That P&re Joseph aspired to sanctity and the 
life dedicated to the holiest purpose none can doubt", writes a great 
authority [13]. He founds the Order of the Daughters of Calvary. He 
writes Traitts, Exercices spirituals, Constitutions. For all his politics, for 
all his power, crumbled to dust and lost in forgetfulness, Mysticism is 
his sole achievement. 

Names less generally known, but of far greater importance in the 
study of Mysticism are the Capuchins Fra Mattia Bellintani da Salo [14] 
who wrote the Practica dett' orazione mentale, owero Contemplativa ; Fra 
Constantine de Barba^on, Guardian of the Cologne convent, who published 
at Cologne in 1626 the treatise Amoris Divini Occultae Semitae [15], 
and whose precept was "Do not be anxious for many rules provided 
than canst love much". In 1637 Zacharie de Lisieux, printed his La 
Philosophic Chrestienne with a Dedication to the consort of Charles I of 
England, Queen Henrietta Maria, one of whose chaplains he had for a 
time been. In the last chapter of his work he describes how a soul striving 
after higher things can so spiritualize the body, that it actually becomes 
a sharer in the spirituality of the soul. La Thtologie naturelle of P&re 
Yves de Paris has been praised as a masterpiece for "profundity of 
thought and sheer beauty of style". We have here a spiritual classic 
written by a spiritual genius. The great Bonaventuran, Valeriano Magno, 
great by name, and great by fame, an encyclopaedic author [16], published 
at Vienna in 1645, his De Luce mentium, which (it has been shrewdly 
observed) gave the Capuchins a unique opportunity of reinstating Bona- 
venturan teaching as a dynamic force in the intellectual world, an oppor- 
tunity too unhappily let slip by. In 1658, at Paris, Pfere Paul de Lagny 
issued his UExercise mdthodique de Voraison mentale en faveur des dmes 
qui se retrouvent dans Vital de vie contemplative. The tradition was main- 
tained. In 1680, at Paris, Alexandrin de la Ciotat publishes his Leparfait 
Dinuement de I'dme contemplative. 

One name, although earlier in time, I have, as perhaps the greatest of 
all, kept unto the last. William Fitch of Canfield in Essex, where he was 
born in the third or fourth year of the reign of Queen Elizabeth, was a 
countiy gentleman of a good estate, and as gallant young squires with 
142 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

comely faces and full pockets wont, he soon made his way to London 
town. "Alas! alas!" he cried, in the very speech Greene or Dekker used, 
"how oft was I an idle lounger, ruffling it through the streets, how prone 
was I to run after all manner of games and pleasurings, how gladly did I 
frequent the theatres, how many times did I brave it up and down the 
middle walk of Paul's pity, pity, for the profane desecration of London's 
cathedral church! how swiftly did my feet bear me right nimbly to the 
schools, schools forsooth! schools of vaulting and fencing, of music and 
the dance, the brawls, the galliard, and light lavolta." 

The chance if chance it can be called the chance reading of a 
mystical treatise struck to his very soul. In a lightning flash he realized 
the worthlessness of the world. From England he crossed to France, 
and there he found the haven where he would be. With the Psalmist he 
cried: "Lord, I have loved the beauty of Thine house, and the place 
where Thine Honour dwelleth." In 1586 Squire William Fitch was 
professed as a Capuchin at the Paris house, thenceforth to be known as 
P&re Benoit de Canfield. His supernatural life was extraordinary. Even 
as a novice he passed into ecstasies so exalted and so prolonged that the 
good fathers were amazed and knew not what to think. One of his ecstasies 
endured uninterruptedly for two whole days. Physicians were called in 
who after the somewhat rough usage of the time, when all their remedies 
availed nothing thrust great pins into his arms and legs "to bring him 
back to life". But he remained utterly insensible to any cut or wound. 
It has been said that "the cloisters were the true field of his garnering, 
and it is known to God alone how many religious, monks, friars and 
nuns attained the highest perfection under his guidance" [17]. The 
Master of the Masters, as he was named, Benoit de Canfield was the 
spiritual director of such chosen souls as Cardinal Pierre de Brulle, 
Founder of the French Oratory; of the Benedictine abbess Marie de 
Beauvillier; of the Carmelite, Madame Acarie, beatified in 1791, as 
Blessed Marie de I'lncarnation, foundress of the Discalced Daughters 
of St. Teresa in France. Benoit de Canfield died in Paris in 1611. 

The bibliography of this great mystic is intricate, due to the fact that 
manuscript copies of his works were used in convents, and often trans- 
scribed, perhaps sometimes none too faithfully, and given to others. 
His masterpiece, however, was published by the author in Latin, French 
and English (Latin, Cologne, 1610), The Rule of Perfection . . . reduced 
to this only point of the Will of God, a treatise which served as a manual 
for generations of mystics [15]. Benoit de Canfield regards the sum and 
whole of Christian Perfection as consisting in one thing, the conformity 
of man's will with the Will of God. As revealed in external law it is the 
exterior Will of God; as indwelling in man it is the Interior Will of God. 
But over and beyond, far beyond these, there is yet another and completer 
conformity, the life of contemplation, the mystery of the divine union 
of the human soul with God, which is the most intimate possible union 
with God to which man upon earth can attain. It is, in fact, the Mystic 
Marriage. The earliest editions of the Rule of Perfection contain an 
allegorical frontispiece, the centre of which is a luminous Sun, the Will 

143 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

of God, to which are attracted and in which are absorbed symbolical 
figures or faces in three circles, of which the outer and furthest represents 
those souls who are engaged in an active life for God; in the second circle, 
nearer the Sun, are those who are in their degree contemplative; in the 
third circle, inscribed lehoiia, are those caught up and enraptured by God. 
But the eyes of all are fixed intently on the Sun, which according to the 
due measure of their proximity, irradiates all. 

"TJie Rid* of Perfection" comments Father Cuthbert, "is not easy 
reading, hardly the book for the novice in the spiritual life" [18]. Very 
truly said, but he to whom the teaching of Benoit de Canfield does not 
grow clearer and clearer as he studies it more closely and absorbs it will 
always remain a novice in the spiritual life. As Father Faber [19] so 
admirably writes: "The spiritual life is quite a cognizably distinct thing 
from the worldly life; and the difference comes from prayer. ... To 
pray always is to feel the sweet urgency of prayer, and to hunger after 
it. ... The peculiar trial of hard work is that it keeps us so much 
from prayer, and takes away the flower of our strength before we have 
time for prayer, and physical strength is very needful for praying well." 
There must be a certain uninterrupted gravitation of the mind to God. 
The Carthusian, Dom Beaucousin, a great master of the spiritual life, 
gave it as his considered opinion that Benoit de Canfield's Rule of Per- 
fection was "especially helpful and suited to all those who wish to tread 
the path of perfection, whether they be but beginners, or those who 
have advanced a little way, or those who have reached the goal/' The 
treatise may not be easy reading at first. What mysticial book can be 
easy reading? The point is that the novice must ask himself whether he 
finds it becoming more easy, more simple, more plain as he reads on. If 
not, assuredly there is something wrong somewhere. We cannot read it 
as some light volume of mere entertainment. If rightly read, the 
difficulties soon disappear, and all is clear in the light of the central 
Sun. 

Sbastien de Senlis in his Philosophie des contemplatifs contenant toutes 
les iefons fondamenfales de la vie active, contemplative et sureminente, Paris, 
1621, went so far as to say that "if the duty of charity or of obedience 
calls us to any external activity at a time when Ecstasy would lift us 
into the third heaven, we must leave all and quickly descend." This 
seems to me highly debatable, I hesitate to say that it is a temerarious 
proposition. God must come first. 

Few, of course, few indeed should venture to pronounce the vows 
made by St. Teresa and the Theatine St. Andrea Avellino always to 
do what is most perfect. 

We must not try to run before we can walk. The very attempt means 
failure and discouragement, and sometimes in the dejection hope is 
abandoned, and the battle lost ere begun. Let us walk warily, slowly, 
but surely, step by step. The exercise of humility is necessary at every 
step and nothing is more invigorating than humility. 

Those who are beginning a devout life, that is to say a life of more 
than ordinary devotion, those in fine who aspire to the mystical way, 
144 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

cannot at the very first moment of this resolution expect to find them- 
selves transported to the summit of Cannel. The novice must wean himself 
gradually from the world there have, of course, been sudden and 
altogether exceptional cases, but nobody has a right to expect miracles 
and the world has its just and lawful claims in their degree. For instance, 
no religious Order would admit a subject who had an aged parent 
depending upon him as a sole support. The aspirant may truly live the 
interior life, and yet in so far as is lawful, quite laudably conform to the 
duties of that state in which God has temporarily set him for such time 
as is necessary. He should endeavour not to be singular in his conduct. 
There is a sentence of Father Faber's which at first sounds rather 
startling, but which is profoundly true, "What is all very well for 
Camaldoli can hardly be the thing for Piccadilly 1 ' [20], 

A pure and perfect love of God may be independent of any particular 
station or form of life. Thus whilst Giiiliano Adorno and his wife Catharine 
were still living outside the hospital of the Pammatone in their little 
house at the junction of the Via S. Guiseppe and the Via Balilla, they 
were on one occasion visited by Fra Domenico de Ponzo, an Observant 
Franciscan of great repute for sanctity. This good man, either to test 
her spirit or else because he was truly mistaken in his argument, during 
their talk observed that, since she was in the secular state and a married 
woman, it was impossible for her to love God so perfectly as a religious, 
as himself for example, who belonged to an Order and who had accordingly 
renounced the world. So long as he contented himself with showing the 
undoubted superiority of the religious over the secular state Catharine 
agreed with him and listened dutifully, but when he began to argue 
that the love of God was more free to a Religious and must necessarily 
be experienced in far greater degree by a monk or a friar than a secular, 
the Saint springing to her feet with sparkling eyes and a joyous coun- 
tenance, so that she seemed almost in ecstasy, warmly opposed him, 
saying, "Father, if I thought the habit you are so blessed as to wear 
could add one tenth to the love of God I would strip it from you and 
wrap myself in it. That the religious state may well enable you to acquire 
far more merit than myself I do not dispute, I gratulate you on your privilege 
and great happiness therein, but that I cannot love God as much as you 
is a thing you will never never be able to make me understand. For 
verily such is not the case." And the Saint spoke with such force and 
fire, enraptured with love, that her beauteous hair came undone, and 
falling down, was scattered upon her shoulders so that she looked like 
a bride rejoicing upon her nuptial day [21]. 

Upon which Baron von Hiigel comments: "There is probably no scene 
recorded for us, so completely characteristic of St. Catharine of Genoa 
at her deepest: the breadth and the fulness, the self-oblivion and the 
dignity, the claimlessness and the spiritual power all are there" [22]. 

We are reminded how Saint Bonaventura said to the humble old 
cottager's wife: "My daughter, believe me, a poor ignorant woman can 
love God as truly and every bit as well as Fra Bonaventura." 

In his The Scale of Perfection [23], addressed to a nun in the cloister, 
J *45 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

Walter Hilton the Carthusian mystic, instructs his votaress: "Worship 
(i.e. respect) in thy heart such as lead active lives in the world, and 
suffer many tribulations and temptations which thou, sitting in thy 
house feelest nought of; and they endure very much labour and care, 
and take much care for their owne and other men's sustenance: and 
many of them, had rather, if they might, serve God as thou dost, in bodily 
rest and quietnesse. And nevertheless they in the midst of their worldly 
businesse, avoyd many sins, which thou, if thou wert in their state, shouldst 
fall into; and they do many good deeds, which thou canst not do. There 
is no doubt that many do thus; but which they be, thou knowest not; 
and therefore 'tis good for thee to worship (respect) them all, and set 
them all in thy heart above thyselfe as thy betters, and caste thyselfe 
down at their feet." Thus strongly does the good monk urge humility. 
It is, he practically says, a question of vocation. The contemplative life 
is the highest of all, but it is not everyone who is bidden to the mystical 
estate, and if a man in whatever walk of life he be placed loves God 
perfectly, the same is a perfect man in the sight of God. 

Guigo, the fifth Prior of the Carthusians, in his brief Meditations 
makes it clear that Peace sought, and it may be found in temporal 
things, is as transitory and fragile as they are. Man's real Peace is only 
to be found in those things which are eternal. Herein is the spirit of the 
Carthusian Order, which Pius XI praised as the "most perfect life", 
and in every deed that "better part" chosen by Mary of Bethany. There 
can be, a learned Benedictine observes, commenting upon the Apostolic 
Constitution of loth August, 1924, no more perfect way of life than is 
to be found in the silence and solitude of the cloister, where dwell those 
who seek for an intimate union with God and strive after the highest 
degree of interior sanctity. 

That many should very mistakenly deem a wider and more liberal 
exercise of active virtues more suited to the present day is an error 
condemned both by Leo XIII and Pius XI, the latter of whom does 
not hesitate to say that "This mistaken idea is harmful and destructive 
to the theory and practice of Christian perfection." 

It is hardly to be expected that the world can or will see this. We 
are not surprised to find that a man of bastard culture such as Matthew 
Arnold, in his Stanzas from the Grande Chartreuse under the guise of 
pseudo-romantic verse, betrays and lays quite naked and unashamed 
his utter lack of spirituality, without which quality no poetry can be 
written. He prattles dryly of himself as 

Wandering between two worlds, one dead, 
The other powerless to be born. 

In fact he is a waif and stray, he confesses himself "forlorn", he is just a 
nonentity. He tells how "rigorous Teachers seiz'd my youth" and "shew'd 
me the pale, cold star of Truth". Was he truly deceived? Did he not at 
times suspect, yet fear to acknowledge that this "pale cold star of Truth" 
was a vain and empty lie? Had he no questionings, no doubts? 
146 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

Another romantic writer, Robert Louis Stevenson, in similar fashion 
betrayed himself as lacking the supreme quality of spirituality. He 
writes himself down unmystical. In Our Lady of the Snows he shouts 
somewhat brazenly for action. The Carthusians to him are life's 
malingerers. Whereas they are life's victors. Is there not something 
hectic, something morbid, in this cry for the "the uproar and the press" ? 
Is not Stevenson the sick man trying to boast his superlative health? 

In contradiction how truly does Ernest Dowson sum up the 
Carthusian ideal: 

beatific life! Who is there shall gainsay, 

Your great refusal's victory, your littte kss, 
Deserting vanity for the more perfect way, 

The sweeter service of the most dolorous Cross. 

Ye shall prevail at last! Surely ye shall prevail! 

Your silence and austerity shall win at last: 
Desire and mirth, the world's ephemeral lights shall fail, 

The sweet star of your Queen is never overcast. . . . 

Move on, white company, whom that has not sufficed! 

Our viols cease, our wine is death, our roses fail: 
Pray for our heedlessness, dwellers with the Christ! 

Though the world fall apart, surely ye shall prevail. 



NOTES TO CHAPTER IV 

1. The Feast of the Stigmata of St. Francis of Assisi, I7th September, is a 
Universal Feast, kept by the whole Church, and in the General Calendar. The 
Augustinians keep the Feast of the Stigmata of St. Clare of Montefalco on 
30th October; the Carmelites on the 27th August, keep the Feast of the Trans- 
verberation of the Heart of St. Teresa; the Dominicans on ist (formerly 3rd) April 
keep the Feast of the Stigmata of St. Catharine of Siena. In various offices of 
Saints and Beati, proper to their several owners, mention is made of the Stigmata 
which they bore, e.g. among the Domicicans, St. Margaret of Hungary, iQth 
January; St. Catharine de Ricci, I3th February; Blessed Stephana de Quinzani, 
2nd January; Blessed Osanna of Mantua, i8th June; Blessed Lucia da Narni, 
I9th November; and many more. Among the Augustinians, St. Rita of Cascia, 
22nd May; among the Carthusians, Blessed Beatrix d'Ornacieu, I3th February; 
among the Mercedenians, Blessed Marianna de Jesus, xyth April; among the 
Trinitarians, St. Miguel de los Santos, 5th July. These are only a few examples 
from many. 

2. Such is the case with the relics of stigmatical blood of the Venerable 
Passitea Crogi of Siena, as will be noticed below. 

3. There is an account of St. Clare of Montefalco in the A eta Sanetorum, 
B. Clara de Cruce, virgo prope Montefalconem in Umbria, under i8th August. The 
Life of St. Clare of the Cross, by E. A. Foran, O.S.A., 1935, is a popular, but useful, 
little book. An American priest in 1886 adapted for general reading from a French 
version, Fr. Lorenzo Tardy's Vita di Santa Chiara. 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

4. Vita di Santa Chiara di Montefalco, O.S.A., sentta dal Rmo. Maestro 
Lorenzo Tardy, Roma, Tipografia della Pace, 1881. 

5. Reprinted in the various editions of J. A. Symonds' collected Sketches and 
Studies in Italy and Greece. New edition, 1898, Second Series. 

6. 1316-1344. 

I. Vita della Ven. Madre Passitea Crogi Sejtese Fondatrice del Monasterio della 
Religiose Cappiiccine nella Cittd di Siena, scrita da Lodovico Marracci Lucchese, 
Sacerdote professo della Congregatione de' Chierici Regolari della Madre di Dio. 
In Roma. Nella Stampa di Fihppo ^laria Mancini. 1669. Con Licenza de* Superiors 

8. Ferdinando I, Grand Duke of Tuscany, born i8th July, 1549. Created a 
Cardinal, 1563. Abdicated 1608. Henri IV of France married Maria de' Medici, 
his second wiie, October, 1600. 

9. Clement VII (Giulio de' Medici) reigned 1523-1534. It was his niece, 
Catharine de' Medici, who encouraged the Capuchins to make a foundation in 
France. Actually, under her influence, they had come to France at the invitation 
of her son Charles IX, who died 3ist May, 1573. Pending the arrival of Henri III 
from Poland, Catharine, Queen-regent, most warmly received them, and gave 
them a house in the suburb Saint-Honore" . 

10. There was, of course, opposition, and technical difficulties had to be 
smoothed. See Mario da Mereato Seracino, Delle Origini dei Frati Minori Cappucini 
Descnzione Seconda, edited by P. Giuseppe da Fermo, Ancona, 1927. 

II. Histoire Litteraire du Sentiment Religieux en France. II. L'Invasion 
Mystique. Paris, Bloud et Gay, 1925. Chapitre III. La Tradition S6raphlique. 

12. For further details see La vie du R. P. Ange de Joyeuse ... by M. Jacques 
Brousse, Paris, 1621. 

13. The Capuchins, by Father Cuthbert, O.S.F.C., 2 Vols. London, 1928. 
Vol. II, p. 307. 

14. 1534-1611. 

15. It is probable that The Secret Paths originally appeared in French. Before 
1657 an English translation had been made by Dom Anselm Touchet, O.S.B. 

16. He died 25th July, 1661. His life was harassed and sad, and darkened 
with the most intricate and difficult problems. 

17. Brousse, op. cit. p. 593. 

18. The Capuchins, II, p. 424. 

19. Growth in Holiness, 1854. Fourth Edition, 1872, p. 257. 

20. Ibid, p. 98. 

21. B. Caterina da Genova . . . illustrata. By Giacinto Papera, Oratorian. 
Genova, 1682. 

22. The Mystical Element of Religion as studied in Saint Catherine of Genoa 
and her Friends. Second Edition, London, 1923; Vol. I, p. 141. 

23. Dom Walter Hilton died in 1396. I quote from the old edition of The Scale 
of Perfection, London, 1659, pp. 21-22. There is a more recent edition, edited 
with an introduction by Father Dalgairns, London, 1908. 



CHAPTER FIVE 

The Spiritual Diary of St. Veronica Dominican Mystics The Sufferings of Anne 

Catharine Emmerich The Stigmaticas of the Tyrol Miss Collins St. Gemma 

GalganiThe Saint of the Impossible. 

ONVOLATE ad urbes refugii, ad loca videlicet religiosa, ubi possitis 
de praeteritis agere poenitentiam, in praesenti obtinere gratiam et fidu- 
daliter futuram gratiam praestolari." Those are the profoundly wise 
words of St. Bonaventura in his tractate On the Worthlessness of the 
World (De Contempts Mundi). 

The Seraphic Tradition as taught by the Capuchins, is essentially 
one of contemplation. We find it therefore in its fulness in the strictly 
enclosed convents of Capuchin nuns. The Capuchinesses, a branch of 
Poor Clares, were instituted by the Spanish noble lady, Maria Lorenza 
Longo [I], and originally developed from a community of Tertiary Sisters 
of St. Francis, at Naples. The nuns were approved by Paul III, who on 
loth December, 1538, appointed Capuchins to serve the convent as 
chaplains and spiritual directors. 

The glory of the Capuchin nuns may we not say of the whole 
Capuchin Order? is that sublime ecstatica St. Veronica Giuliani. We 
are fortunate enough to possess her Diario written under obedience, one 
of the world's great spiritual masterpieces [2], 

Born on ayth December, 1660, at Mercatello, a small township in 
the ancient Duchy of Urbino, Ursula for thus she was named on the 
following day at the font of the Collegiate Church came of a gentle 
house. Her parents, Francesco Giuliani and his wife Benedetta Mancini 
of San Angelo in Vado, a lady much revered by her friends and neighbours 
for her simple piety and tender charities, were persons of position and 
no little distinction. From her earliest years Ursula, who lost her mother 
when she was but a child of three, showed every sign of an altogether 
remarkable and forceful character. She something resembles St. Teresa 
of Avila, since her surpassing holiness was never separated from that 
dignity which derives of true nobility, both of soul and of race. Whilst 
yet quite young, Ursula Giuliani read a Life of St. Rose of Lima [3], 
and as she read she marvelled, half-afraid, at the mortifications of 'The 
Flower of the New World". She lifted her eyes from the Book, scarce 
daring to turn the page, and then suddenly her heart burned within her 
with a fire of flame, and she whispered, heard only by the Angels, "If 
this Peruvian maiden did thus, why may I not also do the same?' 1 

Wherefore secretly she penanced herself, and a smile always on her 
lips she trod the path of pain. In 1669, her father was appointed to an 
office of great honour and responsibility, at Piacenza, whither he went 
taking his little daughter with him. Her two elder sisters, Anna Gertrude 

149 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

and Lodovica, were left behind. They had taken solemn vows, and wore 
the habit of Poor Clares in the convent of Santa Chiara at Mercatello. 

Presently Francesco plans a splendid match for his daughter, little 
knowing that she was already spoused to a Heavenly Bridegroom. He 
could not read the secret which lay in those sweet clear eyes that met 
his so lovingly. He did not know the inscrutable thoughts behind that 
pure white forehead. He saw his daughter, dressed as became her station 
in velvet petticoat or rich brocade, wearing the jewels he fondly lavished 
on his darling, and he rejoiced to think of her as the wife of some wealthy 
noble, for already many a knight had offered for her hand. And at his 
bidding she braided her hair with pearls, and robed her body in satins 
and silks he bought her from the mercers, but he little kenned that 
beneath all the rough hair-shirt chafed and rasped that delicate skin. 
'Tor whilst in my father's house," she writes with sweet simplicity, 
"I thought it my duty to be obedient to my father, and cheerfully to 
do his will in all things/' 

One morning, then, Francesco called his daughter to him she was 
only sixteen and told her of the nuptials which were preparing and of her 
many suitors, bidding her choose him whom best she could love. And 
so he would live to see his grandchildren clustering around his chair, 
and the house of Giuliani would be continued in the world. Tenderly 
she embraced him, and standing there on the loggia in the hot Italian 
sunlight, she spoke then of another Lover to whom she was promised, a 
Lover for whom she must forsake all, even her own people and her 
father's house. His head fell upon his breast, and as the tears rained 
down his cheeks, she fell upon her knees before him, when laying his hand 
in blessing upon her lovely hair, he said with a deep sad sigh, 'The Will 
of God be done." 

She had chosen, that lovely patrician girl, one of the most severe, 
one of the most humblest, one of the poorest, of all Orders. "Farewell, 
sweet world, I leave you for ever!" she cried. Genoa velvet with purfling 
miniver were cast aside for the habit of course brown frieze girt with 
knotted cord; a thick black choir mantle covered the head in lieu of 
gemmed coif or golden coronet; three grates with a dark curtain between 
shut off all externs; for the rule was uncompromisingly taut, similar to 
that of the Farnesiane nuns of the Rione Monti at Rome, the Sepolte 
Vive. On 28th October, 1677, she made her profession into the hands of 
a holy Carmelite, Monsignor Giuseppe Sebastiani, Bishop of Cittk di 
Castello [4], and vowed herself as a barefoot Capuchiness of the strictest 
observance in the Convent of Santa Chiara of Citt di Castello. 

As I remember it, this Convent of Capuchin nuns is an austere 
building, remote and recluse. The little baroque church is singularly 
attractive. 

Because of her burning devotion to the Passion Ursula Giuliani in 
religion took the name Veronica, in memory of that holy woman, who 
gave her linen napkin to comfort the Christ and wipe the sweat and blood 
from His eyes as He passed on the way to Calvary. 

But convent life is not a bed of roses for God's chosen souls. He did 
150 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

not intend it to be. There are crosses and chagrins. Veronica found that 
the Abbess, a good and even holy woman as she was, often showed herself 
strangely capricious, in temper uncertain and often indiscreet. The 
Novice Mistress, a Florentine lady of high rank, Suor Teresa Ristori, 
seemed reserved even to moroseness, unhelpful in difficulties, slow of 
understanding. The nuns were unsympathetic and cold; her fellow 
novice there was only one proved openly inimical to the "bambina" 
as the community, half in scorn, used to call Veronica. "My only hours 
of peace/' writes St. Veronica, "were those spent in choir whilst we 
psahnodied the Office." Heaven strewed thorns in her path. It is often 
thus. We may compare the convent trials of St. Margaret Mary Alacoque, 
and of many another, made perfect in the furnace of frets, and antagonism, 
petty jealousies, maybe, and bitter tongues. 

However, as the years passed the sweet patience of Veronica was 
amply recognized by the whole community, who grew to love her dearly. 
She was elected Abbess on 5th April, 1716, and she died gth July, 1727. 

The greatest of spiritual experience of her life, the Mystic Marriage 
and the holy stigmata which she received on 5th April, 1697, must be 
told in her own words, or at least summarized from the Diario. 

Upon the night of 3rd April, 1697, Veronica, some little while before 
going down to choir for the Office of Matins, was praying in her cell, 
when on a sudden there seemed to fall upon her soul a great darkness, 
a darkness of Egypt which could be felt. She was drenched and saturated 
with sorrow. After a short space she beheld Our Lord crowned with 
thorns, who said to her: "I am come to ask somewhat of thee, yea, and 
to give thee a gift of much price, but thou must accept it not only 
willingly, nay more, with joy and gladness. Thou shalt be crowned with 
this My crown/' At these words I burned with exceeding fierce desire to 
be crowned with the Holy Crown of Thorns. And our Saviour said "What 
dost thou thus yearn for, Veronica? What dost thou ask of Me? What 
wilt thou?" And I made reply: "Lord, I seek only to do Thy will, I am 
ready, Lord, to suffer all with Thee." Whereupon there stood by me 
my Guardian Angel, radiant as the sun. With awful reverence he took 
in his hands the Crown of Thorns. Our Lord, then, Himself with His 
own hands pressed the Crown upon my brow, and I felt an agony of pain, 
not only in my head, but an ache which thrilled throughout every limb, 
so that I was nigh to swooning. And the Divine Voice said in accents of 
tenderest love: "All this is nothing to the anguish I felt when they 
crowned Me with thorns. The agony that racks thee is but a shadow of 
My sufferings. If thou lovest Me, needs must thou suffer all with Me, 
so shalt thou be transformed wholly and gathered unto Me." Veronica 
could but whisper, "Lord, Thou knowest I love Thee/' And the Vision 
faded from her sight. But when she would have risen to her feet, she 
tottered and nearly fell, so great was the pain of the Crown of Thorns 
which encircled her head. But she offered to the Eternal Father the Blood 
and Passion of Christ, and cried aloud: "Blessed be God! More pain! 
A heavier cross to come !" She trembled in every limb, and tears streamed 
from her eyes. Yet she went her way to choir, and performed every duty 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

of the day. And that night, when after Compline, she had returned to 
her cell, there appeared to her Our Lord and Our Lady in great glory, 
with a choir of Angels who sang Victory! Victory! 

Thus St. Veronica Giuliani in mystic wise was crowned with the 
Crown of Thorns. 

During the evening of 5th April, two days later, St. Veronica passed 
from contemplation to the heights of ecstasy, in which supernatural 
state she was entranced for above two hours. When her senses returned 
from the rapture she beheld a glorious vision of the Risen Lord and 
Our Lady with Angels, upon which she cried aloud: "Lord, have mercy 
upon me, for I am a miserable sinner!" It seemed to be that miraculously 
assisted by the Angel choir she made a confession of all her sins, and 
then Our Lord Himself absolved her, and showed her the red wounds 
in His hands, feet, and gashed side. "Oh God! Oh God! Such were the 
raptures of divine love which consumed me that I can neither speak 
nor write of my burning desire/' "Thou also shalt be wounded as I am 
wounded with five wounds," said the Divine Voice, as the Vision faded 
away. "Oh, Spouse of my heart, my one and only love/' cried Veronica, 
"crucify me with Thyself." With these words she flung herself on her 
knees before the Crucifix and taking it in her hands she gently kissed 
the wounded hands, the feet, and side, saying, "Oh, Spouse of my heart, 
my one and only love. Thou didst suffer and wast nailed to the Cross 
for love of me, vouchsafe that I may suffer and be crucified for love of 
Thee." 

She then replaced the crucifix on the altarino, and was lost in prayer, 
when she saw Our Lord nailed to the Cross, at the foot of which stood 
Our Lady, just as She had once stood on Calvary. St. Veronica, remem- 
bering the words: "Needs must thou suffer all with Me, so shalt thoube 
transformed wholly and gathered unto Me" [5] besought the Blessed 
Virgin, the Addolorata, that through the sword which pierced the 
Immaculate Heart and the infinite merits of Her Sorrows, the promise 
might straightway be fulfilled. There immediately ensued an extraordinary 
psychological crisis preceding the physical phenomena. The Blessed Virgin 
fixed Her gaze more intently upon Her Son, and as their eyes met there 
came into the field of consciousness of Veronica, as though energized by 
some irresistible force [], a conviction profounder far than any intellectual 
concept or persuasion that outside God nothing had any existence at 
all. Veronica had in that instant sensibly contacted the Ultimate Reality. 

At that moment God drew her soul to Him (all' unione amoroso, con 
Essolui) in that most intimate and divine Union, that sublime state in 
which, as St. Teresa of Avila explains, God and the soul are knit together 
in mystic marriage, and mutually enjoy their corresponsive love in the 
depths of silence, since such nuptials are not to be expressed in words, 
and can attest only be vaguely described by the metaphor of the closest 
and most indissoluble of human relationships. 

Our Lady then said to Her Son: "Let Thy bride be crucified with 
Thee." 

"In an instant I saw five brilliant rays of light dart forth from the 
152 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

Five Sacred Wounds, and all seemed to concentrate their force upon 
me. And I saw that these rays became small flames of burning fire. 
Four of them appeared in the form of great pointed nails, whilst the 
fifth was a spear-head of gleaming gold, all a-quiver as thrice heated hot. 
And this, a levin flash, lancing upon me, pierced my heart through and 
through, and the four sharp uails of fire stabbed through my hands and 
my feet. I felt a fearful agony of pain, but with the pain I clearly saw 
and was conscious that I was wholly transformed into God [7], When I 
had been thus wounded, in my heart, in my hands and feet, the rays 
of light gleaming with a new radiance shot back to the Crucifix, and 
illumed the gashed side, the hands and feet of Him Who was hanging 
there. Thus My Lord and My God espoused me, and gave me in charge 
to His Most Holy Mother for ever and ever, and bade my Guardian 
Angel watch over me, for He was jealous of His honour, and then thus 
He spake to me: "I am Thine, I give Myself wholly unto thee. Ask what- 
soever thou wilt, it shall be granted thee." I made reply: "Beloved, only 
one thing I ask, never to be separated from Thee." And then in a 
twinkling all vanished away. 

"When I came to myself I found that I was kneeling with my arms 
wide outspread, benumbed and sore cramped, and my heart, my hands 
and my feet burned and throbbed with great pain. I felt that my side 
was gashed open and welled and bubbled with blood. I tried to open 
my habit and see the wound, but I could not because of the wounds in 
both my hands. After a while, with much suffering, I succeeded in loosing 
my habit, and I then saw that the wound in my side purled forth with 
water and blood. I wished to trace a few lines but I could not hold the 
quill in my hand for very agony. Whereupon I prayed to my Spouse, 
begging Him that my fingers might at least have power to guide the pen, 
since being under obedience I wished to write a screed for my confessor, 
and for him alone. And with the ink of my blood I wrote upon a paper 
the name Jesus. Then again I tried to lift the quill, and I found I was 
able to do so and to inscribe fair letters upon the virgin parchment." 

St. Veronica proceeds to tell of other wonderful and mysterious 
experiences. She has, in fact, in her unfolding of the spiritual life few 
equals among the Saints, and she takes her place with the greatest, with 
the Gothic Princess, St. Birgitta of Sweden, with St. Teresa and St. 
Maria Maddalena de' Pazzi, St. Catharine of Siena, St. Gertrude, Blessed 
Angela of Foligno, Anne Catharine Emmerich, Heaven's most radiant 
stars. 

The successive stigmatization in the case of St. Veronica, who first 
received the Crown of Thorns and a couple of days later the imprint of the 
five Sacred Wounds can be not infrequently parallelled in the accounts 
of other stigmaticas. Thus, Blessed Osanna Andreasi of Mantua [*], a 
votaress of the Third Order of St. Dominic, being mystically espoused 
to Christ on 24th February, 1476, received from His hands the Crown 
of Thorns which He placed on her head saying: "Receive, my beloved, 
the gift I give thee, this heavenly and most worshipful Diadem, for 
which thou hast besought Me so instantly and so long. Shrink not from 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

the pain thereof, for thus I give thee a sure token that shalt be one of 
the virgin quires in Paradise." The Beata made reply: "Sweetest and 
secret Lover of my soul, not only do I not shrink from the pain Thy 
adorable gift must bring me now, for certes, cruel is the anguish of Thy 
thorny Crown, nathless 'tis that for which my heart craveth and burns 
exceedingly." As she knelt the Divine Hands encircled her forehead with 
the Crown whose thorns dripped with great gouts of Blood like rubies 
set there, and such was the agony that she fell into a deep swoon and lay 
stretched lifeless on the cold ground. 

In the following year, upon the 5th June, when a holy woman, her 
friend Maigherita Serafina, was present Osanna was rapt in ecstasy. 
Upon returning to herself she cried: "I have been raised up, ay, unto 
the seventh heaven, and there I saw Our Lord in exceeding great glory, 
and the Wound in His side shone with a light like unto the sun at hottest 
noon." At that same moment she had received the wound in her left 
side, as though it had been pierced by a spear. 

A year later, on Friday in Passion Week, during which sacred season 
Osanna had withdrawn to her little country house, Bigarello by name, 
not far from Mantua, in order that she might spend all Passiontide and 
Holy Week in absolute seclusion, whilst she was praying fervently in 
her oratory and weeping over the sufferings of Calvary, there appeared 
to her Our Lord, the Wounds in whose Hands and Feet were as four 
radiant crimson jewels, and as He said "My spouse, beloved spouse, fear 
not the pain; the more thou dost suffer on earth the nearer shalt thou 
be to My Heart in heaven," lo! from the four red Wounds there darted 
four forked flambent rays which pierced through, like the thrust of 
white hot daggers, her feet and hands. She swooned, half-dead, moaning 
piteously, "like the lament of the turtle-dove" says the old chronicle. 
All her life long the stab of the stigmata endured. On Wednesdays and 
Fridays she felt as if huge twopenny nails were being remorselessly 
hammered through the tender flesh, whilst during Holy Week so fierce 
was the agony that she herself declares, "Had I not been miraculously 
holpen of Heaven I had surely died." Under the tenuity of the skin the 
four wounds crimsoned and flushed as if about to pour forth a great 
gush of blood, nor could they be concealed from her servants and those 
who were her familiar friends. 

Blessed Osanna died on i8th June, 1505. Her body still remains 
showing the marks of the holy stigmata, for it is miraculously preserved 
incorrupt throughout the centuries. 

The Dominicaness, Blessed Stefana Quinzani [9] of Soncino (near 
Bergamo), who lived 1457-1530, on every Friday experienced the agony 
of the sweat of blood in Gethsemane and the pains of the Cross of Thorns 
which was often plainly seen encircling her head. Joanna Maria della 
Croce [iff] (1603-1673), a Poor Clare of Rovereto (Italian Tyrol), received 
the Four Wounds and the Crown of Thorns, which latter she used to 
conceal beneath her veil. When her body was exhumed many years after 
her death it was found that not only was it incorrupt but that the wound 
in the side was fresh, and blood issued thence. In an earlier instance, 
154 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

St. Christina of Stommeln [11] (1242-1312), the wounds both in her 
hands and her feet were seen by many, and on Good Friday, 1269, 
whilst she was in ecstasy the maidens who tended her saw rivulets of 
blood running down from her forehead, and some days later they 
remarked that her shift was stained on the left side in the region of the 
heart with a large patch of newly-shed blood. She had received the 
stigmata for the first time in 1268, and year by year during Passiontide 
and Holy Week they dripped with blood. It was thus the wounds were 
discovered, for the Saint expressed her displeasure by silence when any 
reference to them was attempted or any hint injudiciously thrown out. 
The skull of the Saint which is venerated at Nideck is surrounded by 
a curious formation in the bone, which about a finger's breadth at the 
back sensibly increases as it is carried on towards the ears. There are a 
series of regular marks which seem as though they must have been made 
in life, and would be accounted for by a number of wounds made by a 
nail or sharp thorns piercing the flesh. 

In 1879, Teresa Helena Higginson (1844-1905) joined the school 
staff at St. Alexander's, Bootle, and at first lodged with a Mrs. Nicholson, 
whose little daughter entering the kitchen one day said: "Oh, Mother, 
there is blood trickling from the lady's head and hands, and she seems 
in a kind of trance." When later Teresa joined the Misses Catterall and 
some other teachers at No. 15, Ariel Street, the marks of blood could 
not long escape their notice. One morning Miss Catterall met her coming 
out of church and saw that her white scarf was stained with the blood 
that dripped from a number of little marks like thorn-punctures round 
her brow. Often the school-children would say: ''Oh! Teacher, you must 
have hurt your forehead and your hands. Oh! how you have scratched 
your forehead!" She used to try to cover up her forehead with a veil, 
but the blood welled through. 

Among those ecstaticas who have received the stigmata severally, 
that is to say after a lapse of time and at intervals occurring between 
the woundings, which may be first, the diademing with the Crown of 
Thorns, and then the piercing of one hand or one foot, or the lateral 
wound, or, perhaps, in some varying order until stigmatization is 
complete, is the Dominicaness Blessed Helen of Hungary of the Convent 
of St. Catharine at Veszprim [!&]. So many extraordinary, one might 
say unique, phenomena, all most certainly verified so far as human 
evidence is worth anything at all, are chronicled in regard to Blessed 
Helen that she assuredly claims special notice. 

The Convent of St. Catharine was of the Second Order, that is to 
say contemplative and most strictly enclosed. St. Dominic desired that 
his daughters should be totally separated and cut off from the world. 
Himself, he erected grilles in the Church and locutory. The rule of the 
enclosure was most rigid and absolute. Only Cardinals, Bishops, reigning 
Kings and Queens, might enter without desecration, and even for these 
permission from the Supreme Pontiff was deemed desirable. In the cases 
of urgent necessity, an approved doctor, "a grave man of reverend 
years", and the confessor might be admitted. Once a year the Master- 

155 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

General, the Provincial or his Vicars, were allowed to pass in for their 
Canonical Visitation. So high are the walls built which surround Dominican 
Convents of the Second Order that the nuns are frequently spoken of 
as "Immured" or "Enwalled" Pope Innocent IV (1243-1254) describes 
these convents as "fortified citadels, having neither egress nor regress/' 

Little wonder, then, that these enclosed Dominican Convents became 
centres and schools of the highest mysticism. In the Lives of the Dominican 
Sisters of Unterlinden, near Colmar in Alsace, which was one of the most 
fervent of all the Second Order houses, it is related that not merely two 
or three nuns but the whole were mystics who had attained to the highest 
contemplation. "Their hearts burned with the most ardent love, their 
thoughts were never for an instant diverted from God. Unterlinden was 
a house of rapture and joy." Unterlinden, indeed, was known as "Heaven 
begun". 

The date of the birth of Blessed Helen of Veszprim and the date of 
her death are not exactly known, but P&re Lechat, an authority of the 
first class, in the recent November volume of the A eta Sanctorum (Bol- 
landists), where Blessed Helen is given under the gth of that month, 
argues almost to demonstration that she must have died at some date 
shortly before 1250 [13]. The manuscript Life of Blessed Helen, which 
the Bollandists now print, is transcribed from a copy of the early fifteenth 
century, but it is certain that it must have been originally written at 
Veszprim before 1260, at the latest, and this little biography was composed 
by nuns who were her contemporaries, who lived with her in daily and 
intimate intercourse. The ninth of November has been assigned to her 
on account of an entry under that day in a work of immense and most 
carefully sifted research by two eminent Dominican scholars Jean Baptiste 
Feuillet and Thomas Soueges of Paris, Annie Dominicaine, ou les vies 
des Saints et Bienhereux, des Martyrs et autres personnes illustres, recom- 
mandables par leur piete, de Vun et de I'autre sexe, de VOrdre des fr&res 
Prfrkeurs, 13 vols., quarto. Paris, 1678 [14] et seq. 

It may be remarked that although Blessed Helen is so termed, and 
justly, on account of cultus immemorial there has not yet been any 
official beatification nor a formal recognition, confirmatio cultus, by the 
Holy See. Her feast is not kept in the Order, but immediately after her 
death she was honoured as "Beata Helena" in the convent of Veszprim, 
her relics were preserved there and venerated with episcopal approval, 
and what is a very important point [J?5], she was depicted with the halo 
amongst other saintly Dominicanesses, as she appears in the painting by 
Fra Angelico in the London National Gallery. 

The Life, written before 1260 by the Veszprim community, does not 
follow any methodical arrangement, but begins, somewhat abruptly to 
our thinking, with an account of the stigmata of Blessed Helen. The 
good nuns, deeming this the most extraordinary and memorable fact 
associated with their Sister, commence simply enough by at once recording 
it without preface or preamble. It is very understandable, and is dear 
proof of the absolute sincerity of the biographers. Cavil and criticism are 
completely disarmed. 
156 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

And so they open their honest self-proven relation: "We, the Sisters 
of the Convent of St. Catharine of Veszprim relate and place on record 
all that we have seen with our own eyes touching the Lady Helen, our 
Sister, and we cannot be mistaken nor err, because for many years did 
we live most familiarly in her company. She had wounds in both hands, 
and in her feet, and her breast was also wounded. The first wound was 
made in her right hand, upon the night of the Feast of St. Francis (4th 
October). And this maugre her oppugnancy and for all that she resisted 
crying out: "Lord, refrain; do not this thing my Lord and God." In 
very sooth we heard her utter these words, although we did not see 
with whom she wrestled nor unto whom she spoke. The second wound 
was made at noon, upon the Feast of the Holy Apostles Peter and Paul 
(aQth June). In the wound of her right hand there budded a thread or 
stalk of fair gold, and this golden filament, intertwining, bourgeoned, 
and so increased in length. Also we saw a fragrant lily grow with fair 
white petals and a stem of gold. This we saw, but to prevent them 
being seen by any other eyes the Lady Helen uprooted and dug them 
out of her hands. Which flowers were religiously kept by us for a long 
while after she had passed to Paradise." Moreover there grew from the 
wound, the ferita, low down in the bosom, a lily of exquisite purity and 
marvellous perfume. This flower she tore out as from its very roots, 
but it was carefully preserved by the nuns. Not only did the whole 
community see this but it was shown to King Bela IV, the father of St. 
Margaret of Hungary, as also to several other externs. 

The stigmata of Blessed Helen gradually assumed the form of golden 
circles, and it was remarked that at certain times, particularly upon great 
Feasts, her hands shone with a soft radiant glow. 

The stigmatization of Blessed Helen is a very early example. St. 
Francis of Assisi in retreat on Monte Alvernia, received the stigmata on 
Holy Cross Day in September, 1224. 

He died at sunset on 3rd October, 1226, and, less than two years 
later, was canonized by Gregory IX on i6th July, 1228. Blessed Helen 
must have received the first wound, in her right hand, not later than 
1237, an( i probably at an even earlier date. That the phenomena which 
accompanied her mystical experiences are literally true and most faith- 
fully reported is not open to question. Seek to explain them as some may, 
the facts remain. 

Wherever Blessed Helen went some strange beauty followed and 
surrounded her. Often flowers would spring to life beneath her feet as 
she trod the cloister garth. Fresh flowers fell from her scarred and pierced 
hands. A mysterious and lovely light accompanied her, The Veszprim 
convent was very humble and poor, too poor for the community to have 
candles save at Mass. Once when her duties detained Blessed Helen in 
the kitchen where she had been chopping up kindling wood, she perforce 
came later to choir, not indeed until Compline was ending and the Salve 
Regina was about to be sung. As she took her wonted place two tapers 
were seen aglow upon the altar, and these continued to shine until the 
last notes died away. More than once, in her presence, the altar candles 

157 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

lit of their own accord, and remained burning without being consumed. 
Not a splash or dropping of wax was lost. 

The same phenomenon occurred during the Mass of St. Herman 
Joseph, the Premonstratensian of Steinfeld. At the consecration he passed 
into an ecstasy, which lasted an hour, but the candles which were care- 
fully measured and compared did not diminish. Other cases might be 
cited, for example that of St. Philip Neri. 

Clare de Bugny [16] seemed to be especially devoted and predestined 
to the Friars Minor. She was born on 4th October, the Feast of St. Francis, 
1471, and she died at Venice in 1514, upon the I7th September, the Feast 
of the Stigmata of the Saint. A Tertiary of the Seraphic Order, she led 
a life of extraordinary holiness, preserving a cloistral retirement from 
the world. \Yhilst in ecstasy she received the ferita, the Wound in the 
side. Her experience is remarkable on account of the well-attested fact 
that from this wound there poured such quantities of gurgling blood 
that the physicians were baffled and amazed. Professors of the School 
of Medicine at Padua examined her, and tormented her with every 
remedy and stringent drug in their pharmacopoeia. She suffered all with 
exemplary patience, until at length they frankly confessed that such a 
phenomenon belonged to the supernatural order, and was beyond all 
human skill. Moreover the blood emitted a most delicious fragrance, 
and not unseldom spiteful gossip accused her of secretly bathing in 
costly perfumes, a luxury which would have been clean contrary to the 
austerity of the rule, and have betrayed her as an impostor. She bore 
the slander cheerfully. Later there was complete stigmatization, but she 
was so overcome by this signal favour that upon her earnest prayer the 
visible stigmata disappeared. This was about a twelvemonth or rather 
more before her death. When she was laid upon her bier a vast concourse 
of people came to see the Holy Clare, and upon her body the stigmata 
shone forth with a sort of quiet radiant glow. Popular opinion at once 
declared her a Saint. Many who had doubted, and even calumniated the 
gentle maiden went away in tears, sadly striking their breasts. 

Maria- Josepha Kiimi [17] was born at Wollerau, in Switzerland, on 
20th February, 1763. At the age of twenty she was professed in the 
strictly enclosed Dominican convent at Wesen near Lake Wallenstadt, 
in the diocese of Saint-Gall. In 1803, she received the ferita, her heart 
being pierced in the form of a cross. A little later her head was encircled 
with the Crown of Thorns. In February, 1806, during an ecstasy she 
beheld a vision of Our Lord, Who raised His hands in blessing over her 
at which moment rays of intense light darted forth from the Sacred 
Wounds, stabbing through her hands and feet, which effected complete 
stigmatization. She died on 7th February, 1817. 

Incidentally it may be mentioned that the last case of stigmatization 
among nuns of the Second Order of St. Dominic is that of Mother Dominic 
Clare of the Cross, foundress of the convent of Limpertsberg in the Duchy 
of Luxembourg. For nearly thirty years she was rapt in ecstasies of the 
Passion, and, after her death in 1895, the Stigmata, shining and trans- 
parent, appeared upon her body. 
158 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

In addition to her own Revelations, the Sorrowful Passion, and the 
Visions, a whole literature surrounds the name of Anne Catharine 
Emmerich [18], perhaps the profoundest and certainly the most widely 
discussed mystic of the nineteenth century. This "Living Crucifix", as 
she has been aptly called, was born on 8th September, 1774, at Flamske, 
a miserable hamlet, about a mile and a half from Coesfeld, a very old 
insignificant little town in Westphalia. Religion in Germany was then at 
its lowest ebb. It was a zero time of sore distress. Joseph II had done 
his bad work thoroughly, and sown the cockle far and wide. "The 
inscrutable decrees of Divine Providence," writes George Goyau [19], 
"suffered the hierarchy to be lost and disappear." A bitter bureaucracy, 
the harshest form of tyranny, suppressed the episcopal sees. The Church 
was looted, and officially robbed of all property. Religious Orders were 
banished, and their houses one after another closed down. The monastic 
libraries, the treasuries of centuries of scholarship, had been plundered 
and dispersed. The Universities were moribund, practically defunct. 

Bernard and Anne Emmerich were poor peasants, miserably poor. 
Their home was but a dreary red brick barn, a mere cabin, where the 
family and their beasts all huddled up together for shelter and warmth. 
Even as a child, Anne Catharine saw visions and was endowed with 
extraordinary spiritual graces. God taught her from His own picture-book. 
From the first her one desire was to enter a convent, but how could she, 
a mere rustic, hope for admission? She took a post as servant in the 
house of the organist Sontgen, since she hoped to learn how to play and 
with this accomplishment more than one community would welcome her. 
So faithfully did she fulfil her duties often without wages, and fare of 
the scantiest that when the Augustinian nuns of the convent of Agne- 
tenberg at Diilmen wished to receive Clara Sontgen, a clever organist 
anxious to correspond with her vocation, the girl's father would not 
allow his daughter to go unless the Sisters would take Anne Catharine 
as well. With considerable reluctance the nuns consented. They were in 
extreme poverty and another subject meant another mouth to feed. 
At last, on 13th November, 1802, both Clara Sontgen and Anne Catharine 
Emmerich were admitted as postulants. A year later Anne Catharine 
was solemnly professed. But convent life meant a routine of hard work, 
which was made all the harder since the novice-mistress, if not actually 
unkind was at least unsympathetic and distrustful, whilst the community 
became more than suspicious of their new Sister, who seemed to enjoy 
extraordinary gifts and graces they could not understand. They felt 
uneasy in her company, and scarcely cared to conceal their dislike. 

It is perhaps only fair to remember that they were all living on their 
nerves. Within there was carking poverty. They were undernourished, 
half-starved. From without there came, almost daily, news of the gravest 
kind, first one convent suppressed, then another Order prohibited and 
compelled to leave their home, driven from the country, penniless and 
without hope or surrour. 

The blow fell on the 3rd December, 1811, when under the govern- 
ment of Jerome Bonaparte [20], King of Westphalia, in the convent of 

159 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

Agnetenberg was suppressed, the church closed, and the community 
scattered far and wide. Anne Catharine, destitute and ill, was left. A 
servant, belonging to the nuns, out of charity attended to her, and she 
was ministered to by an aged emigrant priest, the Abb6 Jean Martin 
Lambert, of the diocese of Amiens, who had officiated as chaplain to the 
nuns. These three, however, were compelled to vacate the buildings in 
the spring of 1812, and the Abbe found a lodging with the Widow Roters, 
in whose house a wretched little room on the ground-floor was given to 
Anne Catharine. 

Her ecstasies were of such frequency and duration that it was 
impossible they should pass unremarked. She went out of doors for the 
last time on All Souls Day, 2nd November, 1812, and afterwards was 
obliged to keep her bed. The fact that she was wounded with the stigmata 
could now no longer be concealed. They were discovered, almost acci- 
dentally, on the 25th February, 1813, by Clara Sontgen, who had returned 
to her father's house at the dissolution of Agnetenberg, and who was 
paying her former convent-companion a neighbourly visit. Actually on 
28th December, previously, Fraiilein Roters had found their lodger in 
ecstasy, praying with outstretched hands from which fell a stream of 
blood. The girl thought she had met with an accident and spoke of it to 
her afterwards, but Anne Catharine begged that nothing should be said 
about it, and the Fraiilein honourably respected her confidence. On 
3ist December, her confessor, Father Limberg, a Dominican, then living 
at Diilmen in his brother's house, whilst giving Anne Catharine Holy 
Communion saw the stigmata in her hands. He sent for the Abbe Lambert. 
The two priests talked the matter over, and decided to keep it secret. 
Father Limberg was young. He was untrained in mystical theology, and 
he appears quite candidly to have been utterly bewildered by what he 
saw. Nor is he altogether to be blamed. The Dominican Priory had been 
closed by secular authority some months before, and the routine of studies 
was thus inevitably broken off and disrupted. Naturally the young priest 
had not taken the higher course. Nor did the Abb Lambert care to say 
much. In the first place he was an imigrt, and as such he felt it an 
embarrassing position. Exiled French priests who had refused the oath 
of allegiance were not over-readily received in other countries. They 
were. tolerated, scarcely more. The ecclesiastical crisis was acute enough 
without any complications being superadded by the presence of intruders. 
Moreover he did not speak German with any fluency, nor did he under- 
stand it very well, and the Westphalian dialect was yet another difficulty. 
He contented himself with the one remark: "Above all my sister, you must 
not imagine that you are a second St. Catharine of Siena." 

This was, at least, discreet. Clara Sontgen was wildly indiscreet and 
a gossip of the first water. Life was more than a trifle monotonous in a 
little provincial town such as Dulmen. Here was a chance of some excite- 
ment. She flew home to her father's, and with considerable elaboration 
and surmise most dramatically related what she had seen. Then the 
next door neighbours would (she felt sure) be interested, and then other 
friends must be let into the secret, tinder a pledge of holding their tongues 
160 




PLATE \ 7 : BLESSKD ANNA MARH TAIGI, A "ROMAX MYSTIC 




PLATE VI: ST. ROSE OF LIMA 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

about it, of course. The consequence was that by the middle of March 
the extraordinary phenomenon was being discussed in every house in 
Diilmen. It was clacked at street doors; it was scoffed at in the beer-bars; 
it was debated by the serious; pious folk accepted it most fervently. 

The local doctor, a youngish man, and full of enthusiasm for his 
profession, felt that it was high time for him personally to inquire into 
the matter. On the 23rd March, 1813, Dr. Frantz Wilhelm Westener 
paid a visit to the little room, and compelled the patient to submit to a 
close medical examination. He was very formal and starchy, a little 
overbearing maybe, and determined to put an end to this hysteria or silly 
imposture. But he had a completely open mind. At the end of his visit 
he was absolutely convinced of the genuineness of the stigmata. He drew 
up an official report of what he had observed. He became Anne Catharine's 
doctor and friend, and he remained so always, defending her from insult 
and obloquy. 

Ecclesiastical authority now took up the matter. The administrator 
of the diocese of Miinster, Mgr. Clement Augustus von Droste-Vischering 
[21], deputed Dr. Wesener to draw up a yet more detailed memorandum, 
and colleagued with him an eminent surgeon, Krauthausen, whose 
special business was to heal up the wounds. Two priests accompanied 
the doctors, Bernard Overberg, Dean of Minister, and Rensing, Dean of 
Diilmen. The result of the inquiry proved entirely favourable to the 
stigmatica. But Mgr. von Droste-Vischering, who has been described as 
a cold business-like prelate, highly suspicious of anything tending to 
romanticism, thought it his business to investigate the phenomena himself. 
The whole business was widely talked of, and if there was any deception, 
even if it were unconscious deception, the church would be involved. 
Accordingly on 28th March he visited Diilmen and after a stay of three 
days, during which he put Anne Catharine through a most searching 
catechism, he determined, that no loophole might be left, that an even 
more thorough investigation should be entered upon, an inquiry which 
lasted from 28th March until 23rd June. During the last ten days twenty 
doctors were commissioned not to leave the sufferer for one minute, 
either by day or night. In relays they kept her under observation, and 
on 23rd June signed a report to certify that during the whole time she 
had taken no food, and that nobody had touched her wounds. 

What the agony of these investigations meant to the poor patient 
mystic can hardly be imagined. On 23rd October, 1813, she was moved 
to another and better lodging, yet a very humble little room. But Diilmen 
was by now infested by a horde of sightseers, curious to gaze upon the 
poor suffering nun. This in itself became a terrible trial. Then there were 
bickerings and jealousies among her friends. Her sister Gertrude, a rather 
rough busy bustling woman appeared on the scene and attempted to take 
sole charge. Clara Sontgen was more than importunate and arrogant, 
evidently priding herself on having set the whole business afoot. "Always 
spied upon and worried and suspected," writes the Redemptorist, Father 
Schmoger, "Anne Catharine could never keep the door shut, never suffer 
alone and in peace/' 

K 161 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

There were some few visitors who came with reverence and respect 
as pilgrims to a shrine. Hither came the noble Count von Stolberg, and 
the holy Bishop of Ratisbon, Johann Michel von Sailer. Mgr. Overberg 
on zgth September, 1813, brought to the bedside the daughter of the 
Princess Galitzin. This lady of distinguished piety, not only repeated 
the visit, but later, when she had become Princess of Salm, used openly 
to declare that Anne Catharine was verily and indeed a Saint. 

And hither on Thursday, 24th September, 1818, came the famous 
poet and romanticist, Clemens Brentano [22], who was to remain at 
Diilmen for five and a half years as an amanuensis, daily taking down 
the enraptured visions of a bedridden nun, which visions, be it noted, 
are no Danwierzustunde, twilight states, when the patients imagine 
themselves elsewhere, since as Gorres wrote: "I know no Revelations 
which are as rich, profound, marvellous, and gripping as those of Anne 
Catharine Emmerich/' Moreover, the great Abbot of Solesmes, Dom 
Gu&ranger in 1860 declared that Anne Catharine was fulfilling a Divine 
mission, and Cardinal Gibbons of Baltimore tells us that the visions were 
approved by a multitude of holy men and learned theologians, and, 
what is more conclusive than all, the Supreme Pontiff, Pius IX of blessed 
and immortal memory, so highly regarded them that he ordered an Italian 
translation to be prepared which should appear simultaneously with the 
German original. 

The sufferings of poor Anne Catharine increased. The stigmata con- 
tinually welled blood, whilst her body was racked with indescribable 
pain. Her spiritual life was one of agony, and yet she was patient, kind, 
and loving through it all. "The task I have to endure/' she herself said, 
"is to bear the Cross to Calvary." 

Towards the conclusion of the year 1819 the blood began to flow 
less frequently from her stigmata, which disappeared on Christmas Day 
leaving white scars. But there was no diminution of the pain. On certain 
occasions such as Good Friday, soth March, 1820; 3rd March, Holy 
Cross Day, 1822; on Maundy Thursday and Good Friday, 27th and 28th 
March, 1823, blood gushed out of the marks of the wounds, but usually 
it was staunched. "I have prayed for this/' said Anne Catharine, "and it 
is a forewarning of the end/' "About two o'clock in the afternoon on gth 
February, 1824," Father Limberg records, "she lay groaning piteously 
because of the agony caused by the wound in the side. I wanted to shift 
her pillows and to arrange them so that she should perhaps find a little 
ease. But looking up with her gentle patient smile, she said: 'What does 
it matter? There is so little time left'/' Dr. Wesener, who was present, 
says that she did not lose consciousness until the end, and although she 
could only speak a few words in a whisper she affectionately pressed their 
hands. The scars, Brentano noticed, were shining with an extraordinary 
lustre. Eight o'clock struck. Her breathing became more laboured. She 
murmured the name of Jesus, and with one deep long-drawn sigh she 
passed to Paradise. 

The burial took place on the I3th February. All Diilmen mourned, 
and the whole population of the town followed in the funeral train. 
162 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

Some six weeks after her intermfent the grave was twice opened, once 
privately, and once officially. The reason for these exhumations was a 
persistent rumour that the body had been stolen. It was found, however, 
to be without the least fleck of corruption. 

On 6th October, 1856, at the instance of a religious who had a great 
veneration for the holy stigmatica, for the case was already being discussed 
in Rome, and at the request of the Vatican, the grave was once more 
examined, and there was then erected over it the monument which may 
still be seen in its place there, surrounded by a strong silvered railing. 

Having thus briefly sketched the life of one of the most amazing 
ecstaticas and seeresses of all time, it were well to add a few brief details 
with regard to the impression of the stigmata, and in what manner she 
received the mystic charisms of Christ. 

In 1798, that is to say some four years before she entered the convent 

of Agnetenberg, Anne Catharine, one day at noon, was kneeling absorbed 

in meditation before a crucifix in the Jesuits' church at Coesfeld. Suddenly 

she felt in her head "a strong but not unpleasant glow of warmth/' Then, 

in her own words, "I saw my Divine Spouse under the form of a young 

man, gloriously aureoled in radiant light, come towards me from the 

tabernacle of the altar of the Blessed Sacrament. In his left hand he held 

a garland of fragrant flowers, in his right a crown of thorns. He bade me 

take from Him which I would wear. I stretched out my hand to the 

crown of thorns. He placed it on my head, and as He withdrew, I pressed 

it firmly on my forehead. At that moment I felt my brows circled with 

pain. Since the church was going to be closed, I was obliged to leave, 

and I retired together with one of my friends who had been praying near 

me. I quietly asked her, in a way not to arouse her curiosity, if she had 

noticed anything in church, but she merely said 'No, nothing'. The next 

day my forehead and temples throbbed terribly, and I saw that they 

were greatly swollen. Several at home remarked on this. The pain and 

swelling would disappear for a short while, and then return, continuing 

whole days and nights together. I suffered sadly. A little while after one 

of my friends said; 'You must put on a clean cap. The one you are 

wearing is covered with red spots'. After that I took care to arrange my 

cap and mutch so as to hide the blood which now began to flow in greater 

quantities from my head. I took the same precaution when I entered 

the convent. One of the nuns, however, saw the blood and questioned 

me about it. I answered as best I could, but I think she guessed what had 

happened. None the less she never betrayed my secret." In later years, 

when Anne Catharine was bedridden, and when Dr. Wesener and other 

physicians examined her, the impression of the Crown could not be 

concealed. Many persons saw blood dripping from her head, and it welled 

through the linen bandages and her cap. When in ecstasy she was 

revealing the successive scenes of the Passion and had described the 

Death upon the Cross she fell inert and blood streamed from her head 

saturating the pillows and staining the sheets. 

In 1812, upon 28th August, the Feast of St. Augustine of Hippo, 
the founder of the Order, Anne Catharine, ravished in ecstasy, beheld 

163 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

a young man, wounded in hands and feet, with His right hand He signed 
her with the Cross, and there was marked upon her bosom, as if from 
a burn, a cross about three inches long and wide. On certain days the 
skin rose in blisters, wilich broke, exuding a colourless lymph of extra- 
ordinary heat, and in such great quantities as to soak through her 
nightgown to the very sheets. It \vas for some time thought that this 
was due to a violent perspiration, but medical evidence proved such 
could not have been the case. One Christmas a smaller cross appeared, 
rather above the previous marking. The smaller cross was red, and on 
some Wednesdays and most Fridays blood copiously poured from 
it. 

She received complete stigmatization, the Five Wounds, on 2Qth 
December, the Feast of St. Thomas of Canterbury, 1812. She was lying, 
extremely weak and ill, on her bed in the little room at Frau Roters, 
when about three o'clock in the afternoon she saw a supernatural radiance 
in the midst of which appeared Our Lord whose "wounds shone like so 
many furnaces of light' 1 . At the moment she felt endowed with super- 
natural strength. Then triple rays, pointed like arrows, darted from the 
Hands and Feet, and Side of the sacred Apparition. No word was spoken, 
but these rays stabbed through her own hands and feet, and lanced her 
side. She swooned away with blissful agony. When she returned to herself 
she saw blood flowing from her hands, and she felt a violent pain in her 
feet and her side. At that moment Fraiilein Roters came into the room, 
and seeing the blood ran to tell her mother, who at once hurried to 
the bedside, and most anxiously asked what accident had happened. 
Anne Catharine, however, begged her not to call for help, and was so 
earnest in her request that they contented themselves with bandaging 
her hands and feet, and putting fresh linen to her side. Later, when 
questioned by ecclesiastical authority, she avowed that all the blood 
in her body seemed to flow to the stigmata. "No words can tell," she 
said, "what I endure." 

The choice of the two crowns can be paralleled in the experiences 
of many mystics. Primarily, we can cite the case of the Seraphic Mother 
St. Catharine of Siena. Another Dominicaness of the Third Order. Blessed 
Catharine of Racconigi [23], who lived 1486-1547, when only a child of 
ten, saw a vision of Our Lord who offered her a garland of flowers or the 
Crown of Thorns. Heroically she stretched out her hands to the thorny 
Cross, but the Saviour gently smiling said: "My child, I am happy in 
the choice which thou hast made, and thou art all the dearer to My 
Heart therefor. But thou art as yet a little child, and haply thou canst 
not measure thy strength with thy exceeding great love. I will not now 
crown thee with the Diadem of Pain. It shall be laid up for thee until 
the hour cometh." When she had reached her twenty-fourth year Blessed 
Catharine on Easter Wednessay did in fact receive the stigmata, the 
Five Wounds, and the Crown [24]. 

Gian Francesco Pico della MLrandola, Count of Concordia and Quaran- 
tola, platonic philosopher, mystic, occultist, one of the most profoundly 
learned scholars of the golden age of humanism, who during a short 
164 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

sojourn at Racconigi met and talked with Blessed Catharine, says: "She 
had, encircling her head, a depression large and deep enough for a child 
to have put its little finger into it, and this was punctured (as it were) 
and clotted with blood. She told me that these indents often shed copious 
blood. I myself saw her suffering agony from this Crown, and her poor 
eyes even seemed full of blood." 

Maria-Domenica Lazzari, the youngest child of the miller Lazzari, 
who was born at Capriana in the Tyrol on i6th March, 1815, was stig- 
matized with the Five Wounds on New Year's Day, 1834, and three 
weeks later was given the Crown of Thorns. The case aroused immense 
interest, and there took place most detailed and protracted investigations, 
both ecclesiastical and medical. Professor Leonardo del Cloche, director 
and senior physician of the Great Hospital at Trent, visited her and 
used every scientific test, prescribing various courses of treatment [25]. 
There further followed a searching inquiry by the civil authorities. But 
all were obliged to acknowledge that the phenomena were genuine and 
humanly inexplicable. From near and far, as happens at Konnersreuth 
to-day, crowds flocked to Capriana. Some, no doubt came in a spirit of 
curiosity, mere sightseers. Others were animated by very different motives. 
They were serious and reverent pilgrims; dignitaries of the Church, 
patricians and the optimacy of many lands, all palmers devout. Thus 
Capriana was visited by John, Earl of Shrewsbury; A. L. M. P. De Lisle, 
Esq. [26]; the famous Rev. W. T. Allies; and many more. In 1847 this 
latter gentleman, the Rev. W. T. Allies, who had carefully collected 
information on the spot, especially from Signor Yoris, a surgeon of 
Cavalese, the principal town of the district in which Capriana is situated, 
in 1847 gave the world an account of the phenomena he had witnessed. 
"In August, 1833, Maria-Domenica had an illness, which, persisting, 
confined her to her bed. On loth January, 1834, she received on her hands 
and feet the Sacred marks of Our Lord's Five Wounds, whilst her left 
side was gashed as by a spear. Three weeks afterwards her family found 
her one morning covering her face in a rapture of great delight a sort 
of trance. (It seems obvious that she had been in ecstasy.) Upon gently 
removing the handkerchief, characters were found on the linen inscribed 
in blood, and her brow showed a complete impression of the Crown of 
Thorns, in a regular line of small punctures about a quarter of an inch 
apart, and from these fresh blood was flowing freely. They asked her what 
had scratched and torn her forehead. She replied: "During the night a 
very beautiful lady came to my bedside, and set a crown upon my head." 
From the day (ist January, 1834) when she received the stigmata, to 
the present time (1847) the wounds have bled every Friday with a loss 
of from one to two ounces of blood, beginning early in the morning,and 
on Friday only." Maria-Domenica died at Eastertide, 1848. 

This case is particularly interesting, since the Crown of Thorns was 
bestowed by Our Lady. It may be observed that St. Alphonsus de* 
Liguori was Maria-Dominica's especial patron and protector, and that 
his devotional works were her favourite reading. 

It may further be observed that after April, 1834, Maria-Domenica 

165 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

rejected and was unable to eat any kind of food whatsoever. This extra- 
ordinary and supernatural abstinence is not at all unusual in the case 
of stigmatized mystics. Thus it is a matter of common knowledge that 
since September, 1927, Teresa Neumann of Konnersreuth has lived without 
food or drink. The phenomenon is known as inedia, and Benedict XIV 
laid down some very stringent rules to prove the authenticity of such 
cases [27]. The mere fact is to be made the subject of a most rigorous 
canonical and medical inquiry. Not only the duration of the abstinence 
but the physical effects upon the individual must be established. Then 
the examiners have to be satisfied that it is not pathological. The Church 
required there should be health, or at any rate no symptoms of unusual 
weakness. Then it must be asked whether the one fasting has been 
sustained by the Blessed Sacrament? Does natural hunger disappear 
before divine hunger, the longing for Holy Communion, which invigorates, 
sustains and supports? Further precautions are taken, regulations into 
which were needless to enter here. If all conditions are proven to have 
been scrupulously fulfilled, then and then only can the inedia be pro- 
nounced mystical and miraculous. 

To mention but a few cases out of many. St. Catharine of Siena at 
the age of twenty declined all food, even bread and water. Whenever 
she was forced to eat anything she was sick with violent retching pains. 
St. Rose of Lima passed weeks without nourishment, and may be said 
to have lived on the Blessed Sacrament. In Norfolk, a devout anchoretic 
maiden, Jane the Meatless, was sustained by her Communions alone 
for fifteen years. Sister Louise of the Resurrection, a Spanish nun, lived 
on the Host [28], Louise Lateau (1850-1883), the stigmatica of Bois- 
d'Haine, took no food after 30th March, 1871 [29}. In 1868 the complete 
abstinence of Soeur Esperance de Jesus pursuant to a most strict medical 
examination and six weeks supervision, by day and night, was officially 
confirmed by the Bishop of Ottawa, assisted by two physicians of the 
highest repute. Dr. Baubien, a Catholic, and a Protestant, Dr. Ellis. 
From 25th October, to 7th December, 1877, the abstinence of Josephine 
Reverdy was similarly tested, and proved to be without doubt genuine 
and absolutely authentic [30]. 

A Stigmatica, contemporary with Maria-Domenica Lazzari, was 
Maria de Moerl, a Franciscan tertiary, generally known as the "Ecstatica 
of Caldaro". Born at Kaldern, a townlet hidden away in an exquisitely 
beautiful Tyrol valley on the right bank of the Adige, Maria de Moerl 
first saw the light on i6th October, 1812, in one of those ancient stone 
houses which belong to the fifteenth or sixteenth centuries. In those 
happy days life in Kaldern was simple enough, but almost idyllically 
peaceful and content. At the age of fifteen Maria was obliged to take upon 
herself ^ the cares of the household, for her father was left a widower 
with nine children, of whom the youngest was a babe only ten days 
old. Father Eberle, who had been parish priest of Kaldern, but who, 
shortly after the death of Maria's mother, transferred to the rectorship 
of the largest church in Bozen, an important centre not so many miles 
away, had always regarded Maria as an example to all his flock. He 

166 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

admired her unfeigned and ingenuous piety, and approved the long 
hours she spent in meditation and prayers before the Blessed Sacrament. 
But it seems that it was the Capuchin, Fra Giovanni Capistrano, himself 
a master of mystic theology, who first recognized how far Maria had 
advanced along the supernatural path of perfection. He had come to 
Kaldern in 1825, a^d was soon the friend and adviser of the Moerl 
family. Accordingly he was the less surprised when he found her entranced 
in ecstasy, especially after she had received Holy Communion. In the 
late autumn of 1833 she received the stigmata, the Five Wounds, and 
on Thursdays and Fridays her hands, feet, and side often ran with 
blood. The prudent friar counselled his penitent to keep the secret as 
far as possible, lest remark should be excited and gossip stir. 

She was at the time confined to bed through illness. On Corpus 
Christi Day, 1834, there took place the usual procession through the 
streets of Kaldern, where the Feast was kept with great solemnity. 
Every house was decked with flowers, greenery, and bright bunting; 
candles and lamps were lighted along the route; the street was strewn 
with laurel and bay. Cannon were fired; and a military band accompanied 
the Host on the way. It so happened that from the windows of the 
Moerl house, and from Maria's bedroom, an excellent view could be 
obtained of the procession with its groups of winged angels and tableaux 
of Saints and seraphim. It was high holiday throughout the district. 
Friends and neighbours crowded the house of the Moerls. Maria's room, as 
she lay in bed, was full of young girls, laughing, talking, jostling for a 
place. As the Blessed Sacrament beneath its canopy, in fumes of frankin- 
cense, surrounded by myriad tapers, passed the window, one of the 
company in the room glanced round saying "Poor Maria! She can't see 

the " The sentence was broken by a cry. Maria had fallen into ecstasy. 

She was levitated from the bed, and transfigured with an angelic beauty 
radiant as a celestial spirit, her arms extended, her feet not touching 
the bed, and the stigmata shining with a clear crystal light. All witnessed 
the phenomenon, which could no longer be kept concealed. 

The countryside rang with the story. Groups of pilgrims began to 
pour into Kaldern. From near and far they came in orderly procession, 
often led by the parish priest. It was estimated that between the end 
of July and the I5th September more than forty thousand persons, rich 
and poor, peer and peasant, had palmered it to Kaldern. The clergy, 
for the most part held aloof, after the first outburst of enthusiasm, but 
in November, a great prelate, the Prince-Archbishop of Trent, came in 
his huge episcopal coach with outriders and a train of chaplains to inter- 
view the Stigmatica. For a while he would not formally decide upon the 
matter, beyond saying that Maria was of exceptional holiness and purity. 
In this attitude of reticence and reserve Monseigneur merely followed 
the line of discretion which the Church so warmly recommends. It may 
be remembered how St. Bernadette was contradicted and opposed, nor 
was it until four years after the apparition that the Bishop of Tarbes 
officially issued his Episcopal Letter declaring that the apparition had all 
the appearances of truth. 

167 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

That eminent and famous scholar Johann Josef von Gorres visited 
Kaldern and in his Die Christliche Mystik [31] has given us a long and 
detailed account of Maria de Moerl. He proves the absolute authenticity 
of the phenomenon beyond all question of doubt. Maria de Moerl died in 

1863. 

A little known case of the stigmata is that of Miss Collins (the Christian 
name is not given) which was described by Father F. Prendergast of San 
Francisco in 1871. Although actually born in England, Miss Collins at an 
early age emigrated with her parents to America, and after she had 
left school, with the consent of her father joined a friend, Miss Armer, 
and an elderly lady who kept house for them at San Francisco. Miss 
Collins and Miss Armer entirely devoted themselves to acts of charity, 
nursing the poor sick, clothing the destitute, rescuing little children, and 
doing innumerable works of mercy. Although not then bound by vows, 
they lived a quasi-religious life, as nuns of an active Order. This was 
approved by the Archbishop of San Francisco, who showed his apprecia- 
tion of and sympathy with their \vork in very many ways. They won 
the respect of all, and did an immense amount of good. During the spring 
of 1871 Miss Collins was seized with a violent pain in her forehead, which 
could be traced to no cause and baffled medical skill. These agonies passed 
away only to return, and then again suddenly to disappear. On Friday 
in the third w r eek of Lent, the Feast of the Five Sacred Wounds of Our 
Lord, she was further seized with terrible pains in the palms of her hands, 
her feet and side, but there was no swelling, and no marks could be seen 
on her body. However, upon Friday in Passion Week, the Seven Sorrows 
of Our Lady, the pain, which had been mitigated, was intensified, and 
the stigmata could now be distinctly discerned in those places, which 
oozed blood. The next day she was a trifle easier, but on Holy Thursday 
the same pains began in the afternoon, and continued until the Saturday 
morning. Blood flowed incessantly from hands, feet, and side. During 
Good Friday she passed into ecstasy, and seemed to be in Calvary where 
her anguish was terrible, whilst blood literally poured forth from the 
stigmata. Several doctors of the highest repute had been summoned to 
her bedside, but none could suggest any remedy or alleviation. Indeed, 
an eminent specialist, Dr. Polactri, who remained by the bed taking 
notes on his patient's condition, frankly confessed that the case was 
beyond the help of medical science. The agony passed away gradually 
on Saturday, so that on Easter Sunday she was able to attend an early 
Mass and received Holy Communion. The marks of the stigmata remained 
on her hands, feet and her side, but there was no pain, and, wrote Father 
Prendergast, she "has since been in the enjoyment of excellent health". 
I have been unable to discover with any certainty details of her later 
life, but there is reason to suppose that about 1872-3 Miss Collins and 
Miss Armer entered a contemplative strictly enclosed Order. I give this 
striking case since it has (I believe) only been recorded by that profound 
student of supernatural lore and master of mystical theology, Dr. 
Frederick George Lee [32]. 

When Dorothea Visser, who was born at Gendringen, a town of 

168 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

Gelderland in the Netherlands, lying about twenty-two miles from 
Arnheim, in 1820, was some fifteen years old, one forenoon whilst she 
was praying before the Blessed Sacrament, a young child, a complete 
stranger came up to her, and said, "You do well to pray, Dorothea, for 
when a few more years have flown, you will receive extraordinary favours 
from God." She had not the least idea what was intended, and after 
puzzling over it for a long while she practically dismissed it from her 
mind. In 1843, she received the Crown of Thorns, and during the same 
year at intervals of some weeks the Five Wounds on hands, feet, and 
in the side. Full details are to be found in Die Stigmatizirte zu 
Gendringen, an exhaustive study by the famous Doctor Te Welscher, which 
was published at Borken in 1844. 

Some mystics were stigmatized only with the Crown of Thorns, or, 
it might be more correct to say that the Five Wounds were not visible 
upon their bodies. Such was the case with the Dominicaness Blessed 
Emilia Bicchieri of Vercelli (Piedmont) who lived 1238-1278; also with 
Vincentia Ferrer, a Dominican tertiary of Valencia, who died in 1515; 
Blessed Christina d'Aquila, an Augustinian nun, who died in 1543; the 
Dominicaness Maddalena Caraffa, in the world Duchess d' Andria, who 
died in 1615 ; and Ursula Aguir, a Dominican tertiary of Valencia, 1554- 
1608. Ursula felt the spasm of the Wounds and the ferita, but only the 
Crown was visibly marked. A Franciscan tertiary, Caterina Ciaulina, who 
died in 1619, only felt the Crown. Hippolita of Jesus, 1553-1624, an 
enclosed contemplative in the Dominican convent of the Holy Angels 
at Barcelona, was crowned by the Hands of Our Lord in mystic vision. 
Louise de J6sus, a Carmelite of Dole, in the world Madame Jourdain, 
who lived 1569-1628, received the Crown about six months before her 
death. When she was ill the sister infirmarian and her assistants whilst 
changing the linen guimpe saw that her forehead was pierced and torn, 
and blood trickled from the wounds staining the white cloth and the 
pillows (33). 

Some stigmaticas received the visible Wound in the side only. A 
Dominicaness of the Third Order, Blessed Vanna of Orvieto [34], 
1264-1306, was thus marked. Prudenza Rasconi, a Sicilian Dominicaness 
of the enclosed Second Order, who died about 1620 ; and Martina de los 
Angeles, of the same contemplative Order, a Spaniard born near Sara- 
gossa, who died nth November, 1635, both experienced the ferita [35]. 
Gabriela Pizzoli, a Poor Clare, who died in 1472, had the wound in the 
side. The same is recorded of a Spanish Franciscan nun, of the enclosed 
life, Isabel di San Diego, who was born at Montilla, some twenty miles 
south of Cordova. She died in 1510 [36]. Francesca de Serrone, who 
was born I2th July, 1557, at San Severino delle Marche, the ancient 
Septempeda, in the Potenza valley, six miles north-west of Tolentino, 
received the wounds in the side at the early age of fourteen. She was 
already a Franciscan tertiary, and later entered an enclosed convent. 
Every Friday the wound gushed forth blood, which was fragrant with 
the odour of sweetest violets. Moreover the blood was so burning hot 
that it often cracked the vessels in which it was caught. The same 

169 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

phenomenon is recorded of many other mystics. St. Catharine of Genoa 
may be cited as a striking example [57]. Every case is fully attested by 
the sworn depositions of scientists and medical men, and cannot be 
legitimately disputed. Francesca de Serrone experienced inedia, and was 
often seen rapt in ecstasy. She died 7th April, 1600 [38]. 

A Franciscan nun of the Convent of St. Agnes at Foligno, Lucida, 
was only wounded in the hands. She died in 1440 [39]. Bianca Guzman, 
who entered the enclosed Dominican convent at Seville, taking in religion 
the name Sor Maria de la Corona, and who died I3th January, 1564, 
received the stigmata in the feet. Even after her death blood issued 
from the two wounds [40]. A Franciscan friar, a native of Scotland, John 
Gray, who on 5th January, 1589, was martyred at Brussels by the 
anarchical Gueux, a rabble of revolutionaries well described by Count 
Berlaymont, as "the veriest scum and offscouring of the filthiest gutter," 
was stigmatized through the two feet [41]. 

The Dominican ascetic, Blessed Matteo, of the noble Mantuan House 
of Carreri, who died at Vigevano in October, 1470, experienced the ferita 
about a year before. So great was his reputation for sanctity that his 
cult (confirmed with Mass and Office by Benedict XIV) was almost 
immediately authorized by the reigning Pontiff, Sixtus IV (1471-1484). 
When the body of Angolini of Milan was exhumed it was found that the 
alb under his vestments was stained with blood from his gashed left 
side. Seventy years after his entombment the body of Blessed Ugolino 
Zefirini of Mantua, Augustinian, was not only incorrupt, but the ferita 
was welling with blood. Another saintly Augustinian, Blessed Cherubino 
of Avigliana, who had during his life concealed the phenomenon from 
all, was found at his death to be wounded with the lance. A Spanish 
Augustinian, Melchior di Arazil, of the Valencia convent, also experienced 
the heart wound, which in life he hid beneath a hair shirt. Leonardo da 
Lettere, a Dominican of the monastery Santa Maria della Sanit&, Naples, 
whilst in ecstasy was favoured with a mystic vision of Our Lord, Who 
pierced the heart with a gold spear tipped with flame. Marchese says: 
"This was no imaginative experience, for when Leonardo died, I2th 
February, 1621, his heart was found to be transfixed as by a quarrel. 
The heart, without fleck of corruption, and the deep wound therein may 
be seen to-day at Santa Maria della Sanit, where it is preserved as a 
most precious relic." Blessed Carlo de Sezze (the Volscian Setia), a Fran- 
ciscan lay-brother of the Roman province, who died at Rome, 6th January, 
1670, experienced the ferita in 1648. At his death a deep scar was seen 
on his side, and his heart was pierced by a formation exactly resembling 
a long nail [42]. 

A Dominicaness of the thirteenth century, Helena Brumsin of the en- 
closed convent of St. Catharine at Diessenhofen, was visited with 
the stripes and weals of one Dolorous Mystery only, the scourging at the 
Pillar [43]. The daughter of a well-known physician practising at Piazza, 
a town seventeen miles south-east of Caltanisetta in Sicily. Archangela 
Tardera, a tertiary of St. Francis, during six-and-thirty years was not 
unseldom rapt in ecstasy and often favoured with celestial visions. Her 
170 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

bodily sufferings were very great, but she endured all with the most 
exemplary patience. There was always a smile hovering on her lips, and 
it was commonly averred that even to be in her company for a short 
time cheered up the hearts of all who conversed with her. She diffused 
happiness. "We serve a good God," she used to exclaim, "It is our duty 
to make others blithe and glad." Another of her sayings was: "We are 
doing God our humble service if only we lift the burden off somebody's 
shoulders." During the last four years of her life she lost her sight, but 
even that did not affect her unfailing joy. She lived in the sunshine of 
her heart, and refused to be depressed or give way to the dismals. 
Archangela experienced the Five Sacred Wounds, upon which she cried: 
"Yes, Lord, but let me also be bound to the Column with Thee." At this 
heroic demand she fell in a swoon and her attendants discovered that 
her body was covered with weals and contusions, with stripes and bruises. 
This phenomenon took place about 1608. When, several years after her 
death, her tomb was opened the body was supple and fresh, without 
decay. The stigmata were plainly visible as weU as the marks of the 
scourging [44]. 

St. Gemma Galgani, 1878-1903, participated in all the sufferings of 
the Passion. "Gemma was wont to meditate upon this painful mystery 
(of the Scourging) with tenderest love; she counted one by one those deep 
gashes with which she beheld the Body of her Divine Saviour covered, 
and kept repeating: "All these are the works of love." She often prayed, 
that if found worthy, she might have some share, however inadequate, 
in the torment of the flagellation. On the first Friday in March, 1901, 
when she was contemplating this ineffable Mystery, she passed into 
rapture and amid scenes of indescribable agony her prayer was granted. 
It was about two o'clock on a Friday that she felt the blows. That 
evening her adopted mother, noticing that she seemed to be suffering 
more acutely, insisted upon examining her arm which was furrowed 
with wide red stripes. Blood flowed, and the good woman discovered 
that Gemma was covered with deep gashes and weals, the blood from 
which saturated her underclothing, so that it was impossible to remove 
it without tearing open the wounds to which it had stuck, causing 
terrible pain. All this exactly accords with Anne Catharine Emmerich's 
visions. In the Dolorous Passion she vividly describes how the executioners, 
six dark swarthy gangsters of giant strength, malefactors from the 
frontiers of Egypt, who had been condemned to hard labour for their 
crimes, came bearing whips and rods and ropes, and appeared eager to 
commence their hideous business. "They resembled wild beasts or demons, 
and seemed half-drunk/' Two atrocious ruffians, having tied Our Lord 
to the Pillar, tearing off His garments, with horrid oaths and abuse 
knouted Him from head to foot. Their innocent Victim writhed as a worm 
under the lashes, and the air was full of their shouts and curses, and the 
swift hissing of the instruments of torture. The Jewish mob yelled in 
derision, and several servants of the High Priests not only gave the tor- 
mentors money but plied them with hot heady draughts of red wine 
which quite inebriated them and increased their fury tenfold. Two 

171 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

executioners made u^e of sticks covered with thorns, and two men 
wielded scourges of small iron chains and straps knotted with sharp 
hooks which tore off pieces of bleeding flesh at each blow. This was revealed 
to St. Birgitta of Sweden, who gives a harrowing picture of this awful 
scene of fiendish torture and divine agony [45]. 

St. Gemma, then, in some measure, as far as a human being may 
(Our Lady always excepted), participated in this profound Mystery of 
the Scourging on each Friday of March, 1901 [46]. 

St. Gemma also endured the Wound of the left shoulder caused by 
the weight of the Cross and the friction of the wood when Our Lord 
carried His Rood on the way to Calvary. In Gemma's case this particular 
wound was "very large and deep, and caused her so much pain that she 
was often obliged to lean to one side when walking." It often bled 
copiously. To the Cistercian nun, St. Lutgarde, appeared a vision of 
Our Lord bearing a heavy cross, and whilst she was weeping over the 
Sorrows of the Son of Man, He said: "Lutgarde, art thou willing?" To 
which she replied, "Yea, Lord, if Thou dost help me." Whereupon He 
placed the cross upon her shoulders, and it seemed to crush her to the 
very earth. That shoulder remained lower than the other, and as if 
slightly deformed and disjointed [47]. An almost precisely similar mystic 
experience was the lot of the Dominicaness, Blessed Catharine de Rac- 
conigi, one of whose shoulders was so notably lower than the other 
thereafter that she seemed hunch-backed. Her life, written by Serafino 
Razzi [48], is included by Domenico Maria Marchese in his great Diario 
Domenicano under 5th September. After the death of Maria Benigna 
Pepe, a Dominicaness, born at Trapani in 1590, died 1658, there was 
found (as if branded) on her left shoulder a cross surmounted by the 
Crown of Thorns [49]. 

When the body of St. Veronica Giuliani was examined on loth July, 
1727, thirty-four hours after her death, there was discovered "a very 
considerable curvature of the right shoulder, which bent and bowed the 
bone itself just as the pressing weight of a very heavy cross might well 
have done." Gentili, an expert surgeon, who performed the autopsy, 
stated in his sworn deposition that this abnormal deflexion could not 
possibly have been brought about by any illness, or any natural means 
whatsoever [50]. Colomba Trocasani of Milan, a member of the Third 
Order of St. Dominic, who died in 1517, not only received the Five 
Wounds when stabbed by five glorious rays of light, but she also endured 
the agony of the Scourging her body being marked with stripes and 
weals, and she also suffered the binding of the hands with cords, since on 
Fridays in Lent her wrists swelled with great pain and turned one over 
the other, as if fixed and manacled. Any attempt to separate them caused 
her intolerable anguish, and if held apart by force, directly they were 
released they at once automatically resumed their previous position [51]. 

Fra Benedetto da Reggio, a Capuchin from Calabria, who died at 
Bologna in 1602, used to spend long hours in ecstasy before a Crucifix, 
whereon the Crown of Thorns was represented in a very realistic manner. 
On one occasion it seemed to him that a long sharp thorn mysteriously 
172 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

detached itself from the Crown and thrust through his forehead causing 
him a spasm of intensest agony. The wound, which sometimes bled, could 
not be concealed and was plainly seen by many, although the stigmatist 
tried to hide it by wearing a linen coif or band. Physicians were unable 
to heal it, and after trying every remedy in vain and submitting Bene- 
detto to torturing experiments they were forced to conclude that the 
phenomenon was supernatural [52]. 

Among the greatest glories of the Augustinian Order is St. Rita of 
Cascia, "Sweet Saint of the impossible," as she is called, since her prayers 
seem to have a particular power of impenetration with God [55], In 
Italy, Spain, and France, her statue is to be seen in many churches. At 
Brussels she is much venerated in the Church of Sainte Madeleine, rue 
de la Madeleine. Rome keeps her Feast, 22nd May, at her titular church 
in the Via delle Vergini, and there is a great Solemnity at San Agostino, 
where she has an exquisitely beautiful side-chapel. But in more materia- 
listic England her shrines are few. 

Rita, that is Margherita (Margaret), was born in 1386 at Cascia, a 
small Umbrian town, of parents, who from their loving habit of composing 
quarrels and quietly settling differences between neighbours, were known 
throughout the town by the gentle name 'The Two Peacemakers of 
Christ." From her earlier years Rita was surrounded with the supernatural, 
and there are lovely legends of the childhood of one whose playmates 
were the Angels. A Convent was evidently her vocation, and it is strange 
that, deeply religious as they were, her father and mother should have 
insisted that she must marry the suitor they had chosen for her. One 
remembers how peremptory is old Capulet in Romeo and Juliet, and he 
is entirely typical of Italian masters masters, indeed of the household 
in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries. Rita, in spite of her own heart's 
longing, obeyed. Her husband, to whom she bore two sons, proved a hot- 
tempered youth with his hand ever on the hilt of his finely-tempered 
toledo ready to flash it out in the least provocation, often without any 
provocation at all. They were hot-blooded reckless fellows in those 
Renaissance days, gallants whose one argument, often whose one 
answer, was the swift stiletto and the sword. Within doors too Rita's 
husband was a domestic despot. How often we meet those husbands in 
Bandello, in Masuccio, in Giraldi Cinthio, and Le Cenel It says much, 
very much for Rita's gentle love and forbearance that during two-and- 
twenty years they lived together in perfect harmony. The blow, not 
unexpected but long feared, fell. Rita's husband was stabbed to death 
in a sudden street brawl, and lay a corpse upon the cobbled stones 'neath 
the glare of the golden noontide sun. A vendetta was inevitable, and 
furiously her two sons, lads in their teens, took up the feud. More blood- 
shed, more murders, enmity and fatal hate! Overwhelmed Rita fell on 
her knees and prayed to God. "Dear Christ," she cried, "were it not better 
that my sons, the children of my womb whom I love so tenderly, were 
it not better that they died clean of blood, rather than that they took 
the lives of those who verily have injured them sore, but, Lord, Thou 
didst forgive, and Thou hast said it, 'Vengeance is mine'. Lord, thou 

173 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

knowest best." Heart-broken she prayed, for whether God heard her or 
no, nothing but sorrow, bitter sorrow lay before her. Whence it came 
about that her younger son was suddenly taken with a malignant fever 
which soon burned in his brother's veins, although no other person in the 
house ailed or was in any way affected. And as they lay in their chamber 
death showed them the folly of life. They confessed to an Austin Friar, 
and passed hence, forgiving their enemies, pardoning those who had slain 
their father. And so they went to God. 

Rita then set in order all her affairs. She made due provision for 
those who had enjoyed her bounty and alms, and free of the world 
betook herself to the gate of the Convent of enclosed Augustinian nuns, 
Santa Maria Maddalena, and humbly begged to be admitted as a postulant. 
The Prioress, however, in rather cold tones answered that according to 
their custom "widows could not be admitted to the house. Only those 
who had never married might take the vows. The black curtain was 
drawn again over the grille, and Rita left, desolate, forsaken, and drenched 
in tears. Sadly she stumbled through the streets to her own home. All 
night she prayed, and at dawn there seemed to enter the room three 
glorious figures, St. John Baptist; a venerable Bishop, St. Augustine 
himself; and a barefoot friar in the black habit and pendent girdle of 
the Order, whom she recognized as the sublime ecstatic, St. Nicholas 
of Tolentino. "Come, my daughter," said St. Augustine, taking her by 
the hand, and the celestial three, unseen by all, led her through the 
streets to the Convent. St. Augustine then knocked thrice upon the 
grating and said, "Daughter, ask." In a few moments the curtain was 
drawn wide and Sister Portress looked out. "Ah," she said, "Mother 
Prioress is awaiting you," and opened the door. Rita turned to her 
companions and found herself alone. Tremblingly she entered, and threw 
herself on her knees before the Prioress, who raised her with kindliest 
words of welcome. "So you are come to join us." 

Not once did St. Rita falter on her way. Indeed her life may truly 
be said to have been lived on the supernatural plane. What wonder that 
in midwinter a rosebush over which she had passed her hands suddenly 
bore the most fragrant flowers, that a fig-tree, withered and barren, which 
she touched, was on the next morning, green and sapful, laden with the 
most luscious fruit. 

Her ecstasies were of daily occurrence, and as she was a model of 
observance and obedience, constant in prayer and mortifications, the 
community soon realized that a Saint dwelt among them. One day as 
she was meditating before the Crucifix, a rapture fell upon her, when 
there detached itself from the Crown a large thorn which pierced through 
the centre of her forehead, and disappeared leaving an unsightly malignant 
wound. This stigmatical wound is a unique phenomenon in the history 
of mysticism. I use that much overworked and misbestowed word 
"unique" in its true and quite literal signification. The wound of the 
thorn-spine upon St. Rita's forehead ulcered and suppurated, exhaling 
a most noisome fetor. Foeda sanies exhalabat, says the Breviary. In fact 
it stank extremely. The Sister Infirmarian and many of the nuns, for 
174 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OP MYSTICISM 

all their courtesy and good will, retched when they came near her. So 
far as possible she was obliged to live apart from the community, to 
withdraw to her own little cell and be alone, save when the rule and 
necessity compelled her to mingle with her sisters. (Unde ne sororibus 
nauseam moveret solitaria cum Deo versabatur.) This was yet one more 
mortification for the Saint, which she accepted most humbly and with 
exemplary patience. She knew that although she seemed to be alone 
in her retreat within retirement, she was companioned by God. 

The ferita, the wound in the side of the Franciscan Clare de Bugny 
diffused a most sweet perfume. The same fragrancy was observed in the 
case of the stigmata of the Dominicanesses St. Catharine de Ricci and 
Blessed Catharine de Racconigi; of the Franciscans Francesca de Serrone 
and Giovanna della Croce. In 1497, Pope Alexander VI sent his own 
physician, Bernardo de Recanati, accompanied by a Franciscan Bishop 
and the Master of the Sacred Palace thoroughly to examine and report 
upon the stigmata of Lucia de Narni [54]. The wounds were washed with 
medicated lotions, bandaged, and the hands enclosed in gloves which 
were fastened and sealed round the wrists. After a week the doctor 
opened the seals in the presence of several witnesses. The wounds were 
found still open, with no sign of peccant humour or fester. Moreover, they 
exhaled the sweetest perfume. The statement sworn to and signed by the 
doctor and his coadjutors was the only possible report, the thing was 
supernatural and of God. However, the very next year, the Pontiff 
summoned Lucia to Rome that he might himself see her. In March, 1502, 
Bernardo da Recanati, who had been raised to the hierarchy, with two 
other Bishops re-opened the case. The deliberations were slower, longer, 
and (if possible) more meticulous and exact. It was definitely established 
that the stigmata were divinely imprinted on Lucia, and that they gave 
off a most sweet, persistent, and lasting perfume. Blessed Bartolo of San 
Gimignano [S5], who lived about 1300, when fifty-two years old, was 
attacked with leprosy in its most virulent form. The holy man, "the 
Job of Tussany" as he was called, literally rotted to pieces with the inroads 
of the horrible disease. And yet there was no contagion. Moreover a most 
heavenly perfume exhaled from his poor body, the odor del paradiso as 
the Italian phrase goes. When he died his little hermitage became radiant 
with light, and the air was laden with the fragrance of beds of violets. 
The pus of St. John of the Cross and of the Blessed Did<e gave forth a 
strong scent of Madonna lilies. 

This especial and unique humiliation, then, fell to the lot of St. Rita. 
Her wound was inflicted in a prominent place, upon the forehead; it was 
loathly and malodorous. It is difficult to imagine anything more dis- 
tressing. Such a wound seemed to lack dignity, to be in a sense shameful 
and abject, almost a personal defilement. We know that Saint Christina 
of Stommeln was foully persecuted and deluged with ordure by Satanic 
agency, so that her story in its crudity is painful, and indeed in some 
passages revolting in the reading. But in the case of St. Rita we have an 
extremely poignant and ashaming stigma inflicted on His loved one by 
God Himself. It is a profound mystery. Her patience and her gentle 

175 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

acceptance of this suffering, as experience shows, and as was revealed 
to a very great Servant of God, have won her a particular glory in Heaven. 
She is the Saint of meekness, of complete and unswerving trust in God. 
She consoles the lonely and those who are weary and worn. She was so 
human. She knew sad and desolate days, when she was all forlorn and 
forsaken. She is the Saint who comforts and cheers in hours of depression 
and weariness, when the outlook seems so dark and dreary, when tears 
are in the eyes and the heart is very sick and tired. 

During the last four years of her life she was attacked by an illness 
which caused her excruciating pain, but although her strength failed 
utterly her patience never. At the last, on 20th May, 1457, there was 
seen standing by her bedside a Lady of surpassing beauty, Who taking 
the dying woman by the hand, said: "Daughter, dear daughter, well 
done. Come home with Me." The room was at that moment filled with 
an exquisite perfume, the wound upon St. Rita's forehead shone like a 
star, and (some accounts have it) the sweetest music was heard. 

Solitaria inter solitarias. A solitary among solitaries. And now, gloriosa 
inter gloriosas. Among the glorious she is most glorious. 



NOTES ON CHAPTER V 

1. St. Cajetan openly proclaimed that this holy woman was a Saint. She died, 
a strictly enclosed Capuchin nun in 1542, aged 79. 

2. Un Tesoro Nascosto ossia Diario di S. Veronica Giuliani, Religiosa 
Cappuccina in Citta di Castello, scritto da Lei Medesima, pubblicato e corredato di 
note dal P. Pietro Pizzicana, D.C.D.G. Vol. I, Prato. Tipografia Giachetti, Figlio 
e C., 1895; II, 1897; III, 1898, etc. Nine volumes printed. The Diario was written 
under the obedience imposed upon the Saint by Mgr. Luca Antonio Eustachi, 
Bishop of Citlii di Castello, and his successor in the see, Mgr. Alessandro Codebo. 
There are several lives of St. Veronica, e.g. Vita delta Venerabile Serva di Dio, Suor 
Veronica Giuliani, cappuccina nel monastero di S. Chiara di Ciltd di Castello, scritta 
da Gio. Francesco Strozzi della Compagnia di Gesit, Roma, 1763. An anonymous 
Vita was published the same year, 1763, at Piacenza; and in 1777 at Florence, 
another Vita appeared, the author of which was Canon Anton Francesco GiovagnolL 
In 1776 had appeared at Rome a Life from the pen of the Postulator of the Cause 
for Beatification, the Capuchin Padre Francesco Romano. In the year of the 
Canonization of St. Veronica, 1839, the Oratorian P. Filippo Maria Salvatori gave 
to the Press, Rome, his Vita della S. Veronica Giuliani. 

3. St. Rose was canonized by Clement X in 1671. 

4. A city of some 7,000 inhabitants. In the fifteenth century it belonged to the 
Vitelli; and afterwards to the Estates of the Church. The city is built in the form 
of a rectangle, and still surrounded by the walls erected in 1518. There are many 
churches and convents. The present Cathedral of S. Florido was begun in 1480. 
and finished sixty years later. 

5. "II Signore mi ha detto, che veniva, per transformarmi tutta in Lui, e per 
segnarmi coi sigilli delle sue piaghe." Diario, Anno 1697, III, p. 662. 

6. "Mentre Ella (La Vergine) ha pregato per me, mi e venuto un lume e 
conoscimento sopra il mio niente; equesto lume facevami penetrare e conoscere 
che tutto cid erano opere di Dio." Ibid. 

176 




PLATE VII: ST. CLARE OF MONTEFALCO, O.S.A. 




PLATE VIII: BLESSED BEATRIX D'ORXAGIEU, CARTHUSIAN NUN 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

7. Thus St. Teresa writes that in the Seventh Mansion "The soul is entirely 
transformed into the likeness of its Creator it seems more God than soul." "In 
such a one," that is one who has attained to this state, says Blessed Henry Suso, 
1300-1365, "God is the very essence, the life, energy, and vital force. The man is 
a mere instrument, a medium of God." Most mystics use the same or very similar 
terms in describing their experiences. The Benedictine abbess, St. Mechtild of 
Hackeborn (c. 1240), exclaimed: "My soul swims in the Godhead like a fish in 
water." She was literally absorbed in God, and God had so closely united Himself 
with her that she saw through His eyes, heard with His ears, and spoke with His 
mouth. St. John of the Cross teaches us that "the soul must wholly lose all human 
knowledge and all human feelings in order to receive in fulness Divine knowledge 
and Divine feelings." Further, the same holy doctor quite definitely says that 
God grants the soul "the favour of attaining to being deiform and united in the 
Most Holy Trinity, wherein she becomes God by participation." This state, which 
is known as Deification was foreshadowed in some sort in the Orphic Mysteries. 
Johann Tauler of Strassburg (c. 1300-1361), the Dominican, speaks of man 
abandoning use of self and flung deep down into the Divine Abyss, when God 
transforms the created soul, absorbing it into the Uncreated Essence, so that 
the soul becomes one with Him. Thus Teresa Helena Higginson describes how 
Our Lord appeared to her (at Sabden in 1878) and Himself gave her the Blessed 
Sacrament. This effected a complete annihilation of self, and "When I had received 
Him He drew me, so entirely into Himself that I was lost in His immensity and 
love." Delacroix, Etudes a" histoire et de psychologic du mysticisms. Les grands 
mystiques chreticns, Paris, 1908, calls this "the theopathetic state", which is perhaps 
not altogether a happy term. Of course the mystical doctrine of the Deification 
of the Soul must be carefully safeguarded, and rightly understood. 

8. Acta Sanetorum, i8th June. De B. Osanna Andrasia Virgine, Tertii Ordinis 
S. Dominici, Mantuae in Italia. 

9. Feast, 2nd January, Steill, Ephemerides dominicanosocrae, der ist, Heiligkeit 
und Tugenden voller Geruck der aus alien Enden der Welt Zusammen getragenen 
Ehe-Blumen des himmlisch-Fruchtbaren Lust-Gartens Prediger Ordens. DilKgen. 
1692. 

10. Fortunatus Hueber, Menohgium sen brevis et compendiosa illuminatio 
relucens in splendoribus Sanctorum, Beatorum, &c. ab initio Minoritici instituti 
usque ad moderna tempora. 2 vols., folio, Monachu, 1698. See also Greiderer, 
Germania Franciscana, 1781. Ren Weber's study of Joanna Maria has been 
translated into French by Charles Sainte-Foi, Vie de Jeanne-Marie de la Croix, 
traduite de VallemanA, Paris, Poussielgue Rusand, 1856. 

11. Wollersheim, Das Leben der ekstatischen . . . Jungfrau Christina. Also, 
Acta Sanetorum, 22nd June. 

12. 60 Miles S.W. of Buda (Ofen) Pest, and five miles from Platten Zee 
(Balaton Lake). 

13. 1270 has hitherto been given as the date of the death of Blessed Helen. 
But, for some months at least she trained St. Margaret of Hungary, who was 
born in 1242, and at the age of three and a half was sent to the Veszprim convent, 
where she shortly received the habit. Actually St. Margaret took solemn vows 
in the convent of St. Mary of the Isle, founded by her father and mother, King 
Bela and Queen Maria Lascaris. St. Margaret, who was canonized in November, 
I 943 by Pope Pius XII, received the stigmata, and is thus depicted by Fra AngeHco 
in a painting now in the National Gallery. She died i8th January, 1270. 

14. The date 1670 has been assigned to the first Volume of this work into the 
rather intricate Bibliography of which space is lacking to enter in any detaiL 
It may be that some title-pages carry 1670 or that a preliminary compendium was 
issued in this year. The copy of the Amide Dominicaine which I have used is that 
cited in the text. 

15. One may compare the pictures of English Martyrs which Gregory XIII 
caused to be painted for the English College, Rome, a fact which was accepted as 
quasi-beatification by Leo XIII who formally beatified the Martyrs on 29th 
December, 1886. 

L 177 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

18. Luke Wadding, Annales Minorum, 8 vols., folio, Lugduni, 1647, 5 - and 
Hueber, Menologium, ut cit. supra. 

17. Die Gottselige Josepha Kumi Klosterfrait zu Wesen in Gaster. Biographic 
von P. Justus Landolt. Saint-Gall, 1868. A I2mo brochure of 76 pages. 

18. See particularly, Father K. E. Sehmoger, C.SS.R., Life of Anna Catharine 
Emmerich, English translation; and French translation by Mgr. E. de Cazales, 
Vicar-General, and Canon of Versailles, Vie d' Anne-Catharine Emmerich, traduite 
de 1'allemand, Paris, Bray, 3 vols., 8vo., 1868-1872. Also, Father Thomas Wegener, 
O.S.A., The Miraculous Inner and Outer Life of the Servant of God, Anne Catharine 
Emmerich, of the Order of Saint Augustine (English translation), Tournai, 1896. 

19. L'Allemagne religieuse. Le Catholicisme, 1800-1848. Tome II. 

20. 1784-1860. The youngest of the Bonaparte family, and the latest survivor 
of the original stock. 

21. Afterwards Archbishop of Cologne. Being opposed to the rule in West- 
phalia of Jerome Bonaparte, he was regarded with open hostility by the French. 
In November, 1841, the Prussian troops occupied Cologne and imprisoned the 
Archbishop at Minden on a charge of too faithfully obeying the mandates of Pope 
Gregory XVI, and refusing to admit civil jurisdiction in ecclesiastical affairs. 

22. 1778-1842. 

23. Twenty-three and one-half miles from Turin. 

24. Compendia delle cose mirabile della B. Caterina da Racconigi. Torino, 1858. 
Marchese, Diario Domenicano, t. iv. 

25. II Signer Dottore del Cloche wrote a long article discussing this phe- 
nomenon, Annotazioni intorno, etc., which appeared in the Annales de medicine 
universelle of Milan, Number, November, 1837. 

26. De Lisle wrote a pamphlet, published London, Dolman, 1841, with etchings 
by J. R. Herbert, R.A., giving an account of his visit to the Ecstatica. See also, 
John Talbot, Earl of Shrewsbury: "Letter from the Earl of Shrewsbury to Ambrose 
Lisle Phillips, Esq., Description of the Ecstatica of Caldaro and the Addolorata 
of Capriana ... to which is Added the Relation of Three Successive Visits to the 
Ecstatica of Monte Sansavino in May, 1842." London, 1842. 

27. De Canonizatione Sanctorum, IV, pars i, c. xxvii, n. 14. 

28. Faber, The Blessed Sacrament, 1855; Third Edition, 1861, pp. 530-534. 

29. Dom Francis Izard, O.S.B., M.R.C.S. Eng., L.R.C.P. London, Louise 
Lateau, pp. 20-22: "The Complete Abstinence of Louise." 

30. Apparitions de Boulleret, ch. v. There were, of course, impostors. James 
Ward's "Some account of Mary Thomas of Tanyralt in Merionethshire, Who Has 
Existed Many Years Without Taking Food, and of Ann Moore, the Fasting Woman 
of Tutbury," London, 1813. Alexander Henderson wrote "An Examination of the 
Imposture of Ann Moore, called the "Fasting Woman of Tutbury ..." London, 
1813. Again there have been 'professional* fasting men, Tanner, Succi, Merlatti, 
and others who for money have undertaken extraordinary abstinences, and who 
have been scandalously exhibited in great European capitals. In most cases these 
degrading experiments broke down, Succi's 'fastings', for example, ended in 
dementia. 

There are also cases of exceptional illnesses. "Twenty-one-year-old Kenny 
Swanson, of Oren, Utah . . . swallowed lye (a form of soda) which his mother was 
using for laundering when he was a baby. After that he had to be fed artificially. 
But now an operation at a Chicago hospital has opened a way from his upper 
to his lower food passage, and enabled him to swallow normally. Before the 
operation he had no memory of the taste of food and drink." Sunday Dispatch, 
nth May, 1947. 

81. 5 Bande, Regensburg, 1836-1842. French translation, by M. Charles Sainte- 
Foi, Deuxi&me Edition, 1861, tome II, pp. 287-306. See also Le"on Bore", Les 
Stigmatises du Tyrol, Paris, 1840; Veyland, Les plaies sanglantes du Christ repro- 
dmtes dans trois vierges chre'tiennes vivant actuellement dans le Tyrol, Metz, 1844, 

32. The Other World; or, Glimpses of the Supernatural. 2 vols., London, 1875. 
Vol. I, pp. 108-113. 

33* Blessed Emilia, Ada Sanctorum, 3rd May. Her Feast is kept on igth August 
178 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

Vincentia Ferrer, Stiell, Ephemendes domimcanosacrae . . . i8th April. Blessed 
Christina, O.S.A., Acta Sanctorum, i8th January. Feast, 3rd October. Hisfoire 
de la me de Notre Pere Saint Augustin, des Saints, Bienheureux et hommes illustres 
de Notre Ordre, par le Pere Simplicien Saint-Martin, O.S.A., folio, Toulouse, 1640-41. 
Maddalena Carafia, Marchese, Diario Domenicano, 29th December. Ursula Aguir; 
Steill, ut cit, supra, and Marchese. Caterina Ciaulina, Hueber, Menologium f 2yth 
January. Hippolita of Jesus, Marchese, 6th August; Louise de Je*sus, Chronique 
de Vordre des Carmelites de France, Troyes, 1850. Tom. II, p. 526; and Henri 
Bremond, Histoire Litte'raire du Sentiment Religieux en France, Paris, 1925, II, 
pp. 308, sqq. 

34. Vanna (Giovanna), Jane. There is a Vita by the Dominican Fra Giacomo 
Scalza. See also Acta Sanctorum, 2yd July. 

35. Prudenza Rasconi, Marchese, 5th April. Martina de los Angeles, Marchese, 
nth November; and P. Lopez, Vida prodigiosa de la venerabile Sor Martilla de los 
Angeles, Madrid, 1687. This Vtda largely draws from a previous Life by the 
Dominican Fra Maya. Both Maya and Lopez incorrectly write 'Martilla' which 
should be 'Martina*. See further Acta capituh generahssimi Romae . . . in conventu 
S. Mariae supra Minervam. Tornaci, 1645. 

36. Gabnela Pizzoli, Hueber, Menologium, iQth June, Isabel di San Diego, 
Hueber, op. c^t., yth November. See also, Arturus a Monasterio Martyrologium 
Franciscanum, foho, Pansiis, 1653; and Luke Wadding Annales Minorum. 

37. Vita e Dottnna (first edition, Genoa, 1551), thirteenth Genoese edition, 
a reprint of the 1847 edition. "In proof that this holy woman bore the stigmata 
interiorly a large silver goblet with a stem and a shallow bowl was brought to her. 
Now the cup was full of ice cold water for laving her hands, in the palms of which, 
because of the great fire which consumed her, she felt an agony of pain. And when 
she had dipped her hands into the bowl, the water became boiling hot, so that the 
stem and the shallow bowl were scalding to the touch." Baron von Hugel's attempt 
to explain away this passage and his subsequent rejection are unscholarly, and 
strike one as completely out of place and factitious in so learned and detailed a 
work as The Mystical Element of Religion (vol. I, p. 214 and p. 452). The Venerable 
Orsola Benincasa (1547-1618) dipped her hands in water to cool them and the 
water actually boiled, steam coming from it, whilst the vessel itself became so 
hot that it was hardly possible to hold it. This phenomenon was witnessed by so 
many as to be beyond any question. Nov^ssima Positio super Virtutibus, an official 
document of the Beatification Process. 

38. Memorie del'origine, fundazione, avanzatnenti, successi ed economi illustri in 
lettere e santita della Congregazione de'Clerici Regolari di S. Paolo, chiamati vol- 
garantente Barnabiti. P. Barelli da Nizza. Bologna. 2 vols., folio, 1703. 

39. Arturus a Monasterio, Menologium, I2th July. 

40. Marchese, Diario Domemcano. 

41. Historia ecclesiastica de martyr io fratrum Ordinis S. Francisci de observantia, 
qui partim in Angha, partim in Belgio, et partim in Hybernia tempore Ehsabethae, 
ab anno 1536 ad hune annum 1582 passi sunL Parisiis, 1582. By an English Fran- 
ciscan, Thomas Bourchier. 

42. Feast yth October. Marchese, Diario , under 5th October. Angolini of Milan, 
GSrres, French trans., ut cit. supra, II, p. 231. Blessed Ugolino, O.S.A., Feast 
22nd March. Blessed Cherubino, O.S.A., Feast i7th December. Avigliana is a 
mediaeval town fourteen miles west of Turin. Melchior d'Arazil, O.S.A. For these 
three Augustinians see Tempio Eremitano dei Santi e Beati dell' Ordine Agostiniano, 
folio, 1628, by Ambrogio Staibano; Elogia virorum illustrium ex Ordine Eremitarum 
S. Augustini, 4to, Antverpiae, 1658, by Cornelius Curtius; Historia de los 
Augustinos Descalzos de la Congregacion de Espana y de las Indias, folio, Madrid, 
1664, by Andres de San Nicolas, O.S.A.; and Pere Pierre de Sainte Helene, Abreg6 
de I Histoire des Augustins Dechaussts, 12 mo, Rouen, 1672. Leonardo da Lettere, 
Marchese Diario, I2th February. The Observant Blessed, Carlo de Sezze, Hueber, 
Menologium. Blessed Carlo was beatified by Pius IX. Feast iQth January. Sezze, 
among the Volscian Mountains is some 35 or rather more miles from Rome. 

43. Steill, Ephemerides dominicanosacrae, 28th October and 3ist May. Helena 

179 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

Brumsin died about the year 1285. The relics of the Sacred Column are preserved 
in the Chapel of that name in Santa Prassede, Via di S. Prassede, Rome, and here 
on the Fourth Sunday in Lent the Commemoration is observed with great 
pontifical solemnity. 

44. Luke Wadding, Annales, also Hueber, Menologium, igth September. 

45. Revelationes Caelestes Seraphicae Matris S. Birgittae Suecae . . . olim ab 
Eminentissimo Domino Joanne Cardinale de Turrecremata Recogmtae et appro- 
batae. A Revere ndtssimo Consalvo Duranto Episcopo Feretrano . . . eruditissimae 
illustratae. Folio. Monachii, 1680. Liber I, c. x, pp. 16-22, and Liber IV, c. Ixx, 
pp. 289-295. St. Vincent Ferrer, Ludolphus, De Vita Christi, Para, II, c. 58, and 
Lanspergius, Homily L, On the Passion, say that Christ at the Scourging was 
wounded with more than 5,000 blows, and He must have expired, were it not 
divinely decreed that He should suffer death on the Cross. Ludolph of Saxony, 
the Carthusian, a most prolific writer, died isth April, 1378. He is one of the several 
authors to whom The Imitation of Christ has been attributed. The Carthusian 
Lanspergius (family name Gerecht) was born in Bavaria 1589, and died at Cologne 
1539. He was a very copious writer and a mystic of a high order. 

46. Life of Gemma Galgani, by Padre Gennano di S. Stanislao, C.P., translated 
by Dom O'Sullivan, O.S.B., Sands (London and Edinburgh), and Herder (St. 
Louis) 1914, Chapter VIII, pp. 67-76. 

47* Liha Cistertiensia, sive Sacrae Virgines Cistertienses et earum Vitae, folio, 
Duaci, 1633. By Chrysostom Henriquez. (i6th June, De Beata Lutgarde.) 

48. Vite de' primi Santi e Beati dell' Or dine dei Predicatori, cosi uomini come 
Donne. 4to, Palermo, 1605. 

49. Marchese, Diario, 25th December. 

50. Vita di S. Veronica, Rome, 1839. By Filippo Maria Salvatori. Ut cit. supra. 

51. Vite degli huomini illustri dell' Ordine di San Domenico. 2 vols., Bologna, 
1620. By Giovanni Michaele Pio. 

52. Hueber, Menologium. 

53. Vita della B. Rita di Cascia, Cardi, Foligno, 1805. Breviarium Ord. S.P.N. 
Augustim, 22nd May. Breviarium Romanum, DescUe, 1909. Pars Aestiva, "Omcia 
pro Aliquibus Locis," die XXII. Mali. A eta Sanctorum, 22nd May, De Beata Rita 
vidua, Ordinis Eremitarum S. Augustini, Cassiae in Umbria. 

54. 1476-1544. Vita della Beata Lucia virgine di Narni, 1711, by P. Domenico 
Ponsi, O.P., 1711. In the Of&ce of Blessed Lucia, i6th November, granted by 
Benedict XIII, 1724-1730, the Pope sanctioned a special memorial of her stigmata. 

55. Feast, I4th December, Hueber, Menologium. 



1 80 



CHAPTER SIX 

Great NatnesSt. Francis of Assist St. Catharine of Siena St. Teresa d' 'Avila 

The Mystics' Mystic On the Border-LimThe Curious Case of Georges Marasco 

A Miraculous Cure Simulated Stigmata The Pretended Miracle. 

AT is generally accepted that the first recorded stigmatic was St. Francis 
of Assisi. There is, however, in the Epistle to the Galatians [1] (VI, 17) 
a very important passage which must be carefully considered in this 
connexion. St. Paul writes: "For I bear the stigmata of Jesus [2] in my 
body." In the first place, it is to be observed that the Greek word trans- 
lated "bear" is singularly emphatic, and indeed is not unaptly rendered 
by the phrase of the Revised Version "I bear branded". St. John Chryso- 
stom draws attention to this, and writes: "Note, he does not merely say 
'I bear' but 'I bear impressed', just as if it were somebody who was 
proudly vaunting a token or some trophy." Secondly, the Greek word 
"stigmata" in its original sense means a brand, or indelible mark of 
ownership and identification. Such branding was employed among the 
Greeks and Romans in the case of slaves, but it was very seldom resorted 
to, except as regards such rascal bondmen who had repeatedly endeavoured 
to escape or who had actually run away, or who it might be, had 
committed a crime. Thus the Romans often branded slaves who were 
notorious thieves on the forehead with the letter F, the initial of Fw, 
the Latin word for a Thief, and those punished so ignominiously were 
known as "three-letter men", which became a scurril term of abuse [3]. 
The brand was also occasionally employed in the case of captives, although 
this was disapproved of as having something of a barbarous complexion. 
In a fit of enthusiasm, soldiers would not unseldom brand the name of 
their general on some part of their body, which is practically equivalent 
to tattooing. 

Branding, and a branding which carried with it an honourable, even 
a mystic significance, was very frequently used in the case of slaves 
devoted to the service of a particular deity, to whose sanctuary in some 
one numerical hallowed spot they were attached. These "Sacred Slaves", 
as they were technically known, and the phrase occurs in a Galatian 
inscription [4], were often not slaves at all in the ordinary sense of the 
word, but self-dedicated votaries and ministers of the shrine, "voteens", 
as the Irish would say. 

The Galatians of Asia Minor, recent converts, to whom St. Paul is 
writing, were a mixed race of Phrygians, Gauls, and Greeks, and being 
an intensely "passionate and ritualistic" folk, as Bishop Lightfoot weU 
describes them [5], they were given to the darkest occultism and the 
most extravagant superstition. Here in Galatia, at Pessinus, a very ancient 

181 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

and almost legendary city, the modern Bala Hissar, dwelt with his flamen 
college, Attis for so the title ran the high pontiff of the Idaean mother, 
turret-crowned Cybele. Here, in its chariot drawn by tawny lions [6] 
stood her famous image ; here was the primal home of her exotic impure 
cult with its effeminated priests and their acolyths, the kedeshim [7], 
It was a worship of orgiastic rites, of mad dances to the clashing of 
cymbals and the tinkle of tambourines, of a frenzied ceremonial, of hideous 
mutilations [8], of slashing with steel and branding with hot iron. Lucian 
of Samosata, who w r as born about A.D. 120, in his treatise The Syrian 
Goddess [9] describes how all the ministers at the temple of the lady 
Cybele "are branded with a holy mark, some bearing it in the palms of 
the hands or the soles of the feet, some again in the neck. Now all the 
clerks and clergy who serve the Syrian goddess are branded with these 
sacred stigmas/' 

There can be little doubt that the Galatians, when St. Paul's letter 
was read to them, hearing of the stigmata of Jesus branded upon his 
body, would have at once thought of the priests with whom they had 
been so well acquainted, and the cult they had abandoned not so very 
long ago. Nothing could be more obvious than the parallel, and they 
would immediately understand that St. Paul was marked by and for 
his Lord and God in a very especial manner. It was almost a ritual 
technicality, we might say. 

How St. Paul received the stigmata, we do not know, but one might 
hazard the suggestion that it was when he was "caught up to the third 
heaven, caught up into paradise" [10]. 

It is plain from the reference to and application of the passage in 
Galatians, as quoted by St. Bonaventura in his Life of St. Francis [11], 
that this great Doctor believed St. Paul to have been stigmatized. St. 
Thomas Aquinas does not pronounce an opinion. Commentators have 
conjectured other explanations such as [12] : "The brands of which the 
Apostle speaks were doubtless the permanent marks which he bore of 
persecution undergone in the service of Christ", which seems singularly 
weak, and a wresting of the sense. Ram6n Nonnato [ 13], who died in 1240, 
whilst engaged upon the work of ransoming Christian slaves in Barbary, 
was seized upon by the Moors and terribly tortured. The scars and deep 
wounds of his multilations were indelible, but nobody has ever thought 
of speaking of him, hero and saint that he was, as stigmatized. 

A remarkable revelation of the Bavarian ecstatica, Theresa Neumann 
of Konnersreuth, confirms the belief that St. Paul was the first stigmatic. 
Dr. Fritz Gerlich, editor of the Milnchner Neuesten Nachrichten, relates 
how one day when she was in rapture she was asked: "Who was the first 
person to receive the stigmata?" The entranced girl at once replied: 
"Saint Paul." Whereupon Dr. Frantz Wiitz, a professor of Munich 
University, who was present, listening intently, whispered to the priest 
who was putting the questions: "Let her tell us if anybody ever saw the 
stigmata of Saint Paul." To which the answer was: "No, nobody ever 
saw them. The exterior marks were not visible on his hands and feet, 
but he felt the pain of the Five Wounds/' 
182 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

''How curious that is!" was the comment of Dr. Wiitz. "You know 
it is a point which is much disputed among theologians and Biblical 
commentators. There is a famous passage in the Epistle to the Galatians 
where St. Paul speaks of bearing the stigmata impressed on his body/' 
Dr. Gerlich adds, "Myself, I had never heard of anything of the sort. I 
always believed that the Poverello of Assisi was the first person who 
received the stigmata." 

On the occasion of another visit, Dr. Gerlich, who could not forget 
this, was in the church at Konnersreuth with Theresa. They were standing 
before a statue of St. Francis, and he inquired: "Theresa, do you know? 
Tell me, who was the first person to receive the stigmata?" She looked 
at him with her clear candid eyes, and then turning towards the statue, 
replied: "It was St. Francis, of course." "No, no, Theresa. Don't you 
remember? That's not quite right. Give it a moment's thought. St. 
Francis was not the first." "Not the first! What do you mean, Doctor?" 
"You know, Theresa. You know somebody received the stigmata long 
before him." "I am sure I don't know of anyone else, Doctor. Who 
could it be? I have always been told St. Francis was the first." "But a 
month ago, Theresa, when you were in an ecstatic state, you said St. 
Paul was the first person to be stigmatized. Possibly in his case the Five 
Wounds were not visible, or at any rate, not always visible. He felt them 
in his body, none the less. Does he not speak of them in one of his 
Epistles?" Theresa Neumann was startled, and a troubled perplexed 
look came over her face. She pressed her hand wearily to her forehead. 
"I don't know," she murmured. "I can't tell. I recollect nothing at all 
about that" [14]. 

It was early August, 1224, that St. Francis, longing to devote a 
season to tranquil contemplation, withdrew with certain of his friars 
in his company to the solitude of Monte Alvernia, that remote mountain 
which more than, ten years before the Lord of Chiusi, Orlando dei Cattani, 
had bestowed upon the brethren. Distant from the loneliest villages and 
hamlets, Alvemia, although clothed on its lower slopes with a hem of 
greenery and foliage, soon towers up into a bare and rocky aerie wholly 
cut off, and far from the haunts of men. The air is nipping, rare and 
keen. There is the unbroken and awful silence of the heights of the 
Apennines, of vast skies which canopy cliffs and dizzy craigs. 

It was in this loved spot, among the grottoes of Alvernia, dwelling 
in the little rude huts they had built, that Francis and his companions 
designed to keep the great feast of the Assumption, I5th August, and 
to prepare by a feast of forty days, "Angelic Lent", for Michaelmas, 
the solemnity of the gonfalonier of the hosts of Heaven, as he has been 
picturesquely called, Monseigneur St. Michael. 

Every morning, very early, Francis assisted at the mass said in their 
cave-oratory on a mere ledge of rock, by Brother Leo, "the little lamb 
of God", but when the fifteenth day of August was passed he withdrew 
to the furthermost hermitage of all, a little hut under a lone beech tree, and 
hither Leo was to come twice only in the four-and-twenty hours, once to 
bring him a pittance of bread and water, and again at midnight so that 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

they might recite matins together, and when Leo drew near he was to 
give a signal by crying aloud the words that commence that office: 
Lord, open then my lips, and Francis would respond And my Mouth 
shall show forth Thy praise. If there was no reply, Leo must turn and dis- 
creetly depart. 

Many beautiful and mysterious things are told of what happened 
in that lone retreat, but the most wonderful of all took place upon the 
Feast of Holy Cross in September [15], the fourteenth day of that month. 
Whilst it was yet dark, Francis, who had been meditating profoundly 
upon those words of St. Paul which are the refrain of the liturgy of that 
day, "God forbid that I should glory, save in the Cross of Our Lord 
Jesus Christ, by Whom the world is crucified unto me, and I unto the 
world", came forth into the open air and kneeling on the hard flint, 
with arms outstretched and hands lifted up, turned towards the east to 
await, rapt in prayer, the breaking of the dawn. And his heart, says the 
old chronicle, was all aflame with the love of Him who deigned to be 
crucified for us, and he yearned to suffer the agony of the Passion of the 
Cross. 

And as he prayed, there came towards him a very strange and 
wonderful thing, which struck his soul with awe. Full swiftly did it 
glide through the clear aurorean air. No delay or hovering, and upon a 
stone just above Francis stood one who had the form of a Man Crucified, 
and Who yet was a Seraph with six most radiant wings. Two wings were 
raised on high about His head; two wings were extended as poised in 
flight, and two covered His body. The face of Christ was of aspect gracious 
and benign as He looked at His servant. Moreover it was exceedingly 
beautiful; but unearthly sorrow mingled with the unearthly loveliness. 
So St. Francis was filled with great joy as he beheld that face upon 
which Angels scarce dare to look [Iff], that Face fairer than all the 
children of men; and yet he was full of sadness and of a pity passing 
all words to tell when he saw the anguish and the divine compassion 
of those eyes. Suddenly in a moment of vehement rapture, a moment 
which seemed a long space of time, it was made known to him that in 
sort he was to be transformed into the similitude of the Crucified, and that 
to him was it given to suffer, so far as man may, the bitter agony of the 
Cross and become a partaker of the Passion. 

It was at this mystic moment that the whole range of Monte Alvernia 
lit up with a glorious splendour, as it were the sun in his power at hottest 
noon, so that certain shepherds who were watching their flocks questioned 
one another what this might be, and were sore afraid. Likewise a company 
of muleteers who were going to Romagna, rose from their sleep at the 
radiance of the light which shone through the windows of the hostelry 
where they were lodged that night, and all made haste to saddle and 
load their burden-beasts and pass on their way. Now they had not gone 
far before the light waned, and presently the sun began to rise over the 
hill-tops. 

The vision faded, and Francis was left in ecstasy, kneeling upon the 
rock. When he came to himself he stood up [17], and began to ponder 
184 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

what the Celestial Vision could mean. Then in the flesh and body of 
Francis appeared the very marks and imprints of the wounds as he had 
seen them on the body of the Crucified Christ Who visited him in the 
form of a Seraph aflame with the fire of love. For the Saint's hands and 
feet were bored through the middle with nails, just as nails had pierced 
Him who hung upon a Tree. The round heads of these nails, black and 
protuberant, were plainly visible in the palms of the hands and on the 
insteps of the feet; whilst on the backs of the hands and on the soles of 
the feet were the clinched and bent back points of the nails, penetrating 
straight through and recurved. His right side, moreover, was pierced 
as if by the thrust of a lance. 

For a while St. Francis was minded to conceal this marvellous sign, 
this sealing of his hands and feet and spearing of his side, from all. 
But a little reflection showed him that it was impossible. And so, very 
shyly and under constraint he related (in great part, at least), to the 
brethren who had borne him company to Monte Alvernia the Vision he 
had seen. None the less he kept hidden, as well as might be, the marks 
in his hands and feet, covering them up with his tunic. It was to Leo 
alone, Leo "the little lamb of God", that he told his secret without reserve, 
since because of the pain and the blood which flowed from the wounds 
they needs must be swathed in bandages [18], 

The gentlest touch caused the stigmata to throb with agony, whilst 
the constant loss of blood often exhausted him. The wounds in the feet 
and the nails wrought in his living flesh lamed him. To walk but a few 
steps was agony [Iff]. In order to relieve the pain of his pierced feet 
St. Clara herself made a pair of sandals, which are still preserved at San 
Damiano, Assisi. 

When Francis died at sunset on 3rd October, 1226 [20], crowds came 
all night long to venerate the body, and it was there that many (even of 
the brethren) first saw the Stigmata. In fear and trembling they kneeled 
there, for it has been truly said that it seemed as though they were 
gazing upon the very Body of Christ. The Saint, less than two years after, 
was canonized by Gregory IX. The Stigmata of St. Francis is a fact so 
amply attested and proved again and again that it were superfluous to 
discuss this phenomenon any more fully here [21]. The Church has 
appointed the iyth September in the General Calendar as the day upon 
which the Feast of the Stigmata of St. Francis is universally observed. 

It is authoritatively stated that the record of stigmatization next in 
time is that of a recluse in Frisia, Blessed Dodo of Hascha, a Premon- 
stratensian Anchorite. Little is known of this Beato, but it is chronicled 
that at his death in 1231, it was discovered that his hands, feet, and 
side, were marked with the Five Sacred Wounds. He must, accordingly, 
have been a contemporary of St. Francis, since he died (at what age is 
uncertain) only five years after the Saint of Assisi. The learned Domenico 
Maria Marchese, writing in the seventeenth century, includes Blessed 
Dodo as a Dominican, but he is certainly at fault here. The Bollandists, 
Ada Sanctorum, soth March, "of Blessed Dodo of Hascha, of the Order of 
Pr&nontr6, a hermit in Frisia", clearly establish the fact that he was a 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

Nobertine. That he is not in the Nobertine Calendar is nothing, since 
there are many Saints and Beati of the Order who are not liturgically 
commemorated. The Bollandists, indeed, comment with some surprise 
upon the fact that there are so very few saints and Beati of this ancient 
Order solemnly honoured with Mass and Office. It is certainly to be 
wished that a public cult was restored to many Nobertines now not 
officially observed. Nor is Abbot Augustine Wichmans' Epigrammata de 
Viris Sanctimonia Illustribus ex Ordine Praemonstratensi (Epigrams on the 
Praemonstratensian Saints and other Illustrioiis Sons of St. Norbert), a 
book in which Blessed Dodo does not appear, of any significance in this 
respect. Abbot Wichmans only eulogizes a few of the more famous names. 
There were many Premonstratensian hermits, who dwelt as solitaries, far 
from the path of men. Such a one was St. Gerlac who was born in the 
twelfth century at Houthem (now called Houthem St. Gerlac), a village 
five miles from Maastricht. A nobleman in high favour with the Emperor, 
he abandoned the world for a hermitage, and passed many years in a 
secluded and almost inaccessible spot at some little distance from the 
very castle where he was born. He died 5th January, 1171, and his feast 
is kept on the Monday after Ascension Day, the anniversary of the 
Translation of his Relics. So blessed Dodo is by no means exceptional 
in his rigid anchoretism. 

Throughout the century following the death of St. Francis, more than 
twenty mystics probably the number might wellnigh be doubled 
received the overwhelming favour of the divine stigmata. In a brief 
survey it is not possible to name more than a few. Some, in fact, have 
already been mentioned, for example, Blessed Helen of Hungary, Blessed 
Emily Bicehieri, Helena Brusmin, Blessed Vanna of Orvieto, all five 
Dominicanesses; Blessed Angela of Foligno, the Franciscan; and that 
wondrous ecstatica, the glory of the Order of Holy Father Augustine, 
St. Clare of Montefalco. 

A Dominican contemporary of St. Francis is Walter, Prior of the 
Strasburg and Colmar houses, both in Alsace-Lorraine. This holy man 
who died in 1264 had the complete stigmata [23]. A Friar Minor, Blessed 
PhilKpe d'Acqua, who was born at AJLX in Provence in 1269, and who 
lived to be a centenarian, dying at Naples, 8th May, 1369, during an 
ecstasy saw a vision of the Crucified and received the Five Sacred 
Wounds [24], 

The Magdalen of Tuscany, the Poor Little Child of Christ, the Pearl 
of Pearls, whose legend has been so simply and so beautifully told by her 
confessor, Fra Giunta, St. Margaret of Cortona [25], she who to expiate 
spring-tide love of but a little while, lived long days of penitence in a 
poverty past belief, days of abject humiliation and shuddering austerity, 
whilst once half-distraught with compunction and self-reproach (only too 
little deserved!) she lay prostrate on the bare earth before the Crucifix, 
heard a Voice which comforted her saying that as she had shown great 
mercy so also she should receive great mercy, yea, more, hers was the 
reward of the poor in spirit, hers was the kingdom of heaven. And it 
seemed as though Our Lady Herself comforted her, for she was one of 

186 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

those who mourn, and in that moment Margaret in some sort mystically 
felt the stroke of the sword which pierced the Immaculate Heart and 
experienced some shadow of the suffering of the Seven Dolours. She died 
on 22nd February, 1297, but she lives forever in the hearts and on the 
lips of the dwellers in and around Cortona. They love her to-day, and 
they call upon her to help them as she was so ready to help their forbears 
all those centuries ago. In the quiet streets of the town as they go to and 
from their business, in the country lanes and in the Tuscan fields softly 
they sing to her: 

Lily of our fields, 

Violet of humility, 

little Sister of the Seraphim, 
Ora ora pro nobis! 

Dignified and gracious, a very great lady, as well becomes the Benedictine 
tradition, a very great Saint and supreme Mystic, St. Gertrude stands 
before us [26]. In that spiritual classic the Revelations [27] she relates 
how she felt in her burning heart the impression of the Sacred Stigmata, 
and throughout all her Works her intimate intercourse with Our Lord 
is amply apparent. An ancient hermit, to whom heavenly secrets were 
revealed, once said to her, "Daughter, know that thy heart is so pure 
it might well be venerated among the Holy Relics on yon Altar." A recent 
biographer quite definitely tells us that in 1281 "she received from our 
Lord the impressions of the stigmata His Five Sacred Wounds. These 
were imprinted interiorly on the heart and thus, unlike those of St. 
Francis and many other Saints were invisible to others; nevertheless, 
they united her intimately to the sufferings of Christ and hence forward 
she was to tread the Way of the Cross" [28]. Gertrude loved all living 
creatures, and when she saw animals in pain or sick she would tend 
them as a mother tends her child, and she would pray for them and comfort 
them. This is, assuredly, not the least attractive trait in one who was all 
gentle and loving and sweet. 

"A mystic, with a genius for politics", such is the admirable description 
one, himself a mystic, has given of Caterina di Benincasa, the dyer's 
daughter of Siena, "the greatest of all Tuscan saints, and one of the 
greatest women of all time". And yet politics were thrust upon her Heavenly 
Dream, invading the depths of her contemplation. But little she recked 
of that, for "God had taught her to build in her soul a private closet, 
strongly vaulted with Divine providence, and to keep her always enclosed 
and retired there. He bade her know that by such means she would find 
peace and perpetual tranquillity within her soul, a repose which no stress 
nor storm could disturb." And he showed her who longed so much for 
utter seclusion the neediness of the world. She addressed these four requests 
to the Supreme and Eternal Father [29]. The first prayer, in all humility, 
was for herself. Now the reason she first made petition for herself was 
simply this, because the soul cannot do any great thing for her neighbours 
or perform true service, unless she first serve herself, and do a great 
thing for herself, to wit the acquiring and being stablished in solid virtue. 

187 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

Secondly she asked ior the reformation of Holy Mother Church. For 
indeed those were evil days. 

The Pope's residence was at Avignon "the Babylonish captivity'* 
as Petrarca proclaimed it and although when Clement V [30] (Bertrand 
de Got, Archbishop of Bordeaux), established himself in the French 
city it may at the moment have been a prudent and even necessary 
precaution, in consequence great abuses and perils had grown up 
and were on the increase. The States of the Church were governed 
by Papal Legates, some of whom in the absence of the Pontiff, proved 
tyrants, hard and implacable, although perhaps no sterner than the 
state of things demanded. Rome itself was the prey of three princely 
houses; the Orsini, the Savelli, and the Colonnesi. Of these the Orsini 
and Colonna became so furiously impious and overbearing as to demand 
the allegiance of the Holy City. Other powerful nobles lorded it over 
Papal cities. Thus the Malatesti were the despots of Rimini and Pesaro; 
the Varani of Camerino; the Manfredi of Faenza; the Alidosi of Forli, 
and so on. The traditional sovereignty of the Pope was lip-acknowledged, 
but he dwelt far away in Avignon. Unless he was established in Rome 
itself at what danger to his own Sacred Person it seemed as though 
Christendom itself might crumble. Even such men as Cardinal Egidio 
Albornoz and the doughty Robert of Geneva could scarce curb the 
impetuosity and ambition of these tyrants. In fact it was not until the 
days of Sixtus IV and Alexander that they were brought to heel. 

Catharine, then, had much to pray for when she sought the domestic 
Reformation of the Church. Her third prayer was for peace and the 
reconciliation of the rebels without. There were grave anxieties here. 
The subtle and subversive preaching of Wycliffe; the foul doctrines of 
the Beghards and Patarini were corrupting thousands. Her fourth and 
last prayer was general, with particular petitions for a business in which 
she was concerned. "Her desire was very great and ever increased, yea, 
it grew far more when the First Truth showed her the neediness of the 
world, and in what a whirling tempest of offences against God it was 
storm-tossed and like to be wrecked." 

St. Catharine of Siena saved the social order, she saved Christendom. 

Born on Lady Day, 25th March, 1347, she was one of a numerous 
family, and her mother, a notable good housewife, seems to have loved 
her above the rest, whilst her father called her Euphrosyne, his "little 
joy". When she was but seven years old she resolved to devote herself 
wholly to God, and so promised her maidenhood to Christ. But Ser 
Giacomo and Monna Lapa his wife were already discussing some good 
match for their daughter, as Italian parents will. Giacomo was more 
than a bit of a Capulet, and Monna Lapa ruled her home in autocratic 
fashion. Catharine was twelve years old it will be remembered that 
Juliet was wed before she was fourteen and Lady Capulet talked of 
time wasted, 

Younger than you 
Here in Verona, Ladies of Esteem, 
Are made already Mothers. By my count 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

/ was your Mother much upon these Years 
That you are now a Maid. 

Monna Lapa already had a suitor in her eye, one of her own family, a 
di Puccio di Piagente, an excellent alliance. The youth had every 
recommendation. He was good-looking, bore a fair fame in Siena, and 
was (or would be) wealthy. Could any prospect be better? Ser Giacomo 
agreed. So with many a glad smile and tender caress her parents bade 
Catharine to prepare herself for her marriage. It was all nicely settled. 
The girl absolutely refused. Most firmly and unequivocally she utterly 
rejected the idea of a husband. To say that her father and mother were 
amazed is little. They were stunned and horrified. That their daughter 
should venture to question their will, to disobey, shocked them beyond 
belief. Their anger was terrible. Nevertheless their modest and quiet 
little daughter, their darling, their joy, remained unmoved by threat 
or argument, and Monna Lapa's tongue when let loose could be tart and 
biting enough. At last they appealed to a great friend of the family, a 
Dominican, Fra Tommaso della Fonte, a pious and austere man, to 
come and deal with the froward hussy. He talked to Catharine of the 
duty she must pay to her parents. He was stern and hard. But when 
he saw how she answered his arguments, and that she was resolute, 
he was convinced. Nobly had she come through the trial when he was 
testing her vocation. "My daughter," he said, "pursue your own way. 
Wait upon the will of God. This is of God." 

Ser Giacomo and Monna Lapa, however, proved unyielding, and were 
not to be moved. Catharine patiently endured what is one of the most 
difficult things in life to put up with, an organized family persecution. 

Presently her father relented, and with his blessing bade her follow 
the Will of God. In 1363 she received the habit of the Third Order of 
St. Dominic from a friar of that religion in the Cappella della Volta in 
San Domenico. For three years she led the life of an anchoress in her 
own home, dwelling apart in one room, wrapt in prayer and contemplation, 
mortifying herself and fasting with the most rigid discipline. She spoke 
to none save to God only and her confessor. In 1366 her public life began, 
loath as she was to leave her seclusion. Siena was in a state of something 
like anarchy. But Catharine went up and down, composing quarrels, 
ending feuds, bringing a great peace with her. Then other cities, Pisa 
and Arezzo appealed to her, crying out, "Come over and help us." The 
Florentines, who had been ready to rise against the Sovereign Pontiff, 
called upon her, and when she came to them the Chief Magistrates met 
her with all honour at the very gates of the town. Then follows the most 
incredible happening, a miracle in all truth, beyond thought, beyond 
belief. Alone, the ambassadress of Italy, she travelled to Avignon. Humbly, 
yet without fear, she faced Gregory XI, and kneeling at his feet she 
bowed, she bent him to her inflexible will. The whole College of Cardinals, 
diplomats, interested statesmen are against her, determined to thwart 
her purpose, and yet she with God prevails. The Pope echoes that sweet 
word which was ever on her lips, Peace. "I leave the whole affair entirely 

189 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

in your handb," he said, "only I commend to your good keeping the 
honour of the Church." Sending her before him to Genoa, he meets her 
there and with her returns to Rome. Her words are always echoing in 
his ears: "Be a brave man, and not a coward," words she could only 
have spoken if she herself had not first been brave. 

But, save for the sake of that Christendom which she had saved, 
all this means less than nothing to her. She now turned to her own 
business, and, as has been admirably said, "her whole life became a 
continual miracle absorbed in a Divine contemplation." Hers was the 
supreme experience of the Mystical Marriage [31], when in the presence 
of His Immaculate Mother, with St. John the Evangelist, St. Paul, St. 
Dominic, assisting, Our Lord placed upon her finger a ring of gold, and 
King David made music of Paradise upon his harp of celestial strings, 
as we may see in Professor Franchi's painting in the Saint's house at 
Fontebranda [32]. 

On a Sunday morning, when she was twenty-eight years old, Catharine 
received the Sacred Stigmata. The phenomenon was, so to speak, simple, 
which sounds a paradox, but then her whole life was on the surface simple, 
and yet she was the greatest force in the political world of her day, and 
she reached the highest heights of mysticism. Being at Pisa, Catharine 
was present at the mass of the Dominican, Blessed Raimondo da Capua, 
who offered the sacrifice in the church of Santa Cristina, which is on the 
Lungarno Gambacorti. After receiving communion she went to kneel 
before the crucifix and passed into ecstasy [33], when those present 
noted that after a short space her face was radiant with light and her 
hands outstretched. For a moment she remained thus as they gazed in 
awe, and then, as if struck by a mortal blow, she collapsed and fell prone 
upon the pavement. 

The good Sisters ran to raise her, and support her in their arms, not 
a little affrighted, since they realized some marvellous thing had happened. 
Thus Blessed Raimondo related the event: "Catharine came to me and 
said in a low voice, 'Father, know that I bear in my body the Five 
Wounds of Our Lord Jesus Christ', Whereto I made reply, 'Certes, my 
daughter, thy ecstasy was so admirable and so prolonged I felt assured 
some great gift had been granted thee. But, tell me, if it may be told, 
how didst thou receive this mystic grace of God/ She answered: 'I saw 
our Blessed Lord aureoled with exceeding glory. He was nailed to the 
Cross. At which sight my soul fainted within me and my heart burned 
with love. Forthwith I saw five brilliant crimson rays dart from the 
Five Wounds, and sharp as a spear, they severally pierced my hands, 
my feet, and my side. But I cried aloud, My God, my Lord and King, 
I beseech thee that these wounds of mine betray me not, and show that 
I have been found worthy in some sort to share Thy Passion. At my words 
the rays changed from crimson to a golden glow, and these five golden 
rays of lucent light transpierced my hands, my feet, and my side/ And 
I asked her: 'Did this ray wound the right side, my daughter?' To which 
she replied, 'No, father, it is my left side which is wounded, it is my heart 
which is wounded, for the spear of radiant light, shooting forth from 
190 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

the side of Our Lord, struck me unswerving in its course/ 'Dost thou, 
then, feel grievous pain therefor?' Catharine with a deep sigh made 
answer, 'O my father, so great is the agony that unless Our Lord sustain 
me I shall surely die/ With which words she slowly passed out of the 
chapel/' ^ y F 

Upon returning to the house where she lodged, Catharine went into 
her room, and falling on the bed, swooned away. Those who had followed 
her, and were ministering to her, burst into tears, and fell on their knees, 
praying that she might not be taken from them. "Not yet, Lord, not yet/' 
they lamented. "Lord, give us our mother for a while longer, if it be only 
a little while." But anon Catharine gently rebuked them, saying, "Pray 
rather that God's will be done." So she lay sick and ill. But when the 
Saturday evening came she sent for Fra Raimondo, to whom she whispered : 
"Father, God has heard your petition. Presently I shall be well again. 
My wounds indeed are wounds of suffering. But God will give me new 
strength and new courage." The next day she insisted upon rising, she 
heard Fra Raimondo's mass at Santa Cristina, and communicated when 
"health poured into her body and the blood was warm and young again". 

St. Catharine died at Rome on Sunday, 2gth April, 1380. Her last 
thoughts were of the welfare of the Church. She foresaw the agony that 
was to come. Her last words were those of Christ Himself, "Father into 
Thy hands I commend my spirit." Immediately upon her death the 
five wounds, which (at her prayers) had not been visible during her life- 
time, could be clearly discerned. The Prior of the Minerva Convent [34] 
in a letter to Fra Raimondo tells how not only he himself and the religious 
plainly saw the stigmata on St. Catharine's body when it was placed on 
an open bier in the church, but that the multitudes who came to honour 
her exclaimed aloud when they perceived that she bore the Wounds 
of Jesus. Moreover the stigmata appear upon her relics, and are impressed 
there in such a way that it is impossible the marks should have been 
made (by some erring if pious devotee) after death. Medical evidence 
attests this. The fact is beyond dispute. In the famous Dominican church 
at Venice, San Zanipolo (St. John and St. Paul [35] ), is preserved a 
famous relic, the foot of St. Catharine in which the wound is quite 
visible. The relic of the hand, also, venerated at Rome in the ancient 
Dominican convent of San Sisto, on the Via Appia and opposite the 
Baths of Caracella, can be seen to be pierced with a wound [36]. 

On Sunday, 4th May, 1940, the present Holy Father, Pius XII, amid 
scenes of unexampled splendour, at Santa Maria Sopra Minerva crowned 
the statue of St. Catharine with a gold and jewelled diadem, presented 
by the ladies of Rome, and proclaimed her Patroness of Italy. Making a 
departure from the usual ceremonial the Pope preached not from his 
throne, but from the pulpit, a glowing panegyric of the Saint. The Pontiff 
made this change so that he might be better heard by the majority 
of the vast congregation. This was a fitting climax to the celebrations 
which had begun on 28th April. Upon the Feast Day itself Cardinal 
Tisserant pontificated at High Mass at the Saint's altar-tomb. 

On 27th August the Carmelites keep the Feast of the Transverberation 

191 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

of the Heart of their Holy Mother St. Teresa of Avila. For the most part 
the stigmata, or it may be the wound in the side alone, are given instan- 
taneously, as one might say with a single sharp blow. Professor Allison 
Peers draws attention to the fact that the most famous of the mystical 
experiences of St. Teresa, the phenomenon known as the Transverber- 
ation of her heart, which may certainly be dated in 1559, was not a 
single and isolated vision, but one which was many times repeated, 
extending over several days. Teresa saw standing close to her, on the 
left hand side, an angel. He "was not tall, but short, and very beautiful, 
his face so aflame that he appeared to be one of the highest Orders of 
angels who seem to be all afire. They must be those who are called 
Cherubim" [37], This vision she was aware of not once nor twice, but 
again and again. In his hand the angel held a long spear with shaft of 
gleaming gold, which was tipped with red-hot iron. Time after time he 
thrust at her with this Celestial lance, piercing her heart, and penetrating 
her very entrails with a pain so excruciating that she moaned aloud [38]. 
Although her body suffered keenly, this agony of the wounding was 
psychical, though very real, and (the Saint writes) "so excessive was 
the sweetness caused me by this intense pain that one can never wish 
to lose it, nor will one's soul be content with anything other than God." 

St. Teresa adds how "during the day that this continued I went 
about as if in a stupor; I had no wish to see or speak with anyone, but 
only to hug my pain" [3P]. 

The heart of St. Teresa, a most holy Relic, is still preserved with 
great veneration at Avila, where her body remains incorrupt to this day. 
P. Francisco de Ribera in his Vida de Santa Teresa de Jestis gives a very 
detailed description of the perfect preservation of the body and its 
marvellous fragrance in 1588. Fray Jer6nimo Gracian confirms this. 
Various relics were distributed to Carmelite houses and others. Thus 
on isth October, the Feast of the Saint, the Relic of the right foot is 
venerated at Santa Maria della Scala (where there is celebrated a Ponti- 
ficial High Mass), Rome. This distribution of relics may seem a little 
strange, perhaps, to those who are ignorant of the full tradition of Relics, 
and it would require too much space to explain and defend it here. It 
must suffice to note that it is very amply dealt with by St. John 
Damascene, On the Orthodox Faith, and by later writers such as the 
learned Alban Butler, Ribera, Vida, v, i, ii, iii, deals with the heart 
phenomena of St. Teresa. On occasion, under episcopal sanction, and 
with all due precautions, the Reliquary has been formally unclosed to 
be sealed again by the Bishop after scrupulous examining. The heart is 
thrust through as if by a keen blade, the wound being about an inch 
and a half across. The edges of the wound are burned and charred as if 
by a red-hot iron. 

Vel pati vel mori t to suffer for Love's sake, or to die, thus St. Teresa 
exclaimed; whilst another Carmelite who, to my thinking, stands by 
the side of St. Teresa and St. John of the Cross, exclaimed Pati, sed 
non mori. To suffer for Love's sake, to suffer but not to die. There is no 
greater mystic in the whole history of mysticism than the Florentine 
192 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

nun, St. Maria Maddalena de' Pazzi. She is, it is true, not so well known 
in England as the Seraphic St. Teresa, and St. John, Doctor of the 
Church. This is practically due, I think, to the fact that she has not 
met with such scholarly and eloquent interpreters as the two great 
Saints of Carmel, but assuredly in the sublimity of her vision she falls 
no whit behind them. Hence it is, perhaps, her raptures and ecstasies, 
her visions and revelation, are far above the ken of ordinary folk. Her 
eyes are ever fixed upon the stars; her face is ever turned upwards to 
Heaven. She is a mystic for m5 T stical souls [40]. 

"We have St. Maria Maddalena de' Pazzi, that ecstatically voluble 
Carmelite, whose work is a series of apostrophes and divine eloquence. 
She shows herself a rhapsodically enraptured ecstatica, her inspiration 
can only express itself in similitudes and adumbrations, she is on the 
rarest heights. Her pages are embroidered with metaphor and hyperboles. 
There is no medium, nor mediety ; she talks directly with God the Father, 
the ineffable, the First Person of the Trinity, and so far as human 
tongue may in ecstasy she stammers out explanations of mysteries, 
which are revealed to her by the Ancient of Days. Her revelations 
contain one sovran passage upon the Circumcision ; another magnificent 
passage, built up of antitheses, upon God the Holy Ghost; others, which 
to any but a mystic soul, seem exceeding strange, upon the Deification 
of the human soul, the closest and most intimate connexion with Eternal 
God, upon the union of the soul with Heaven, and on the essential part 
played in this supernatural phenomenon by the Wounds of the Only- 
Begotten, the Word. 

The Wounds are abiding-places and nests wherein Christ dwells; the 
Eagle, type of soaring faith, has his home in the eyrie of the left foot; 
in the wound of the right foot, sighs the melancholy sweetness of the 
gently cooing turtle-dove; symbol of completest trust and self-surrender, 
the dove is homed in the wound on the left hand ; whilst in the wound 
of the right hand dwells enharboured the pelican, emblem of perfect 
love. 

These birds wing their way, softly hovering from their nests, and 
come forth to seek the soul that they may lead her to the nuptial 
chamber which is the wound that gushes with the Precious Blood, the 
Wound in the side of Christ" [41]. 

It was this Carmelite who was so interpenetrated and overwhelmed 
with grace that she desired not but despised that certitude which comes 
from the evidence of the senses. It was she who said to God: "Lord, if 
I saw Thee always with mine eyes here on earth I should lose the sovran 
gift of Faith, because Faith must cease to be when certitude is attained, 
and that soothly is in Paradise." 

St. Maria Maddalena de' Pazzi with her Dialogues and Contemplations 
sees horizons, nay, surveys boundless vistas the mere human eye cannot 
reach. The ordinary soul, even the soul of one striving to do better, 
yet limed and clogged with sin, cannot follow her up the slopes of Carmel 
to those dizzy heights which she treads with foot unfaltering and unafraid. 
Where she stands and whence she gazes upon eternity only the greatest 

M 193 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

of mystics can stand by her side, and look forth unwinking with clearest 
sight. The air upon the summit is too radiant and rare for us to breathe. 
We may but lift our longing eyes to the goal, as in our weakness we 
stumble even on the lowest rises and acclivities of the mystic mountain. 

It was in 1585, on 24th March, after First Vespers of the Annunciation 
had been sung, that the full flood of supernatural experience and super- 
natural suffering inundated and resistlessly overflowed both soul and 
body of the Saint. In a vision, a vision poignantly true, there appeared 
to her St. Augustine of Hippo who wrote upon her heart in letters of 
crimson and gold the words Verbum carofactum e$t. The Word was made 
flesh. It was on the nth April that she participated in the sufferings 
of Calvary and first received the stigmata. So intolerable was her anguish 
that she cried aloud: "Ah, my God, surely if Thy Passion is so bitter 
to me, I must die!" On the Monday in Holy Week the stigmata were 
more deeply impressed, and on Shrove Thursday "I felt all the sufferings 
of Christ/' says the Saint. Her face was deadly pale, her lips white, her 
person bowed to the ground, every limb ached with an immense fatigue, 
whilst she broke out in a sweat of blood, and seemed about to swoon 
away to death. 

A few days later she beheld in a supernatural way all the sins of 
the world and the malice of them, in some measure as Christ beheld the 
offences of mankind as He prayed in Gethsemane. St. Maria Maddalena 
was drowned in tears, which could not be staunched until the glorious 
appearance of St. Augustine and St. Catharine of Siena, to whom she 
had a particular devotion, turned her sorrow into joy. On 4th May, 
Our Lord Himself crowned her with the Crown of Thorns, whilst Our 
Lady Who appeared with Her Son held a coronal of dazzling light and 
said, "Lo! this, and more than this, shall be thy crown in Heaven." 

St. Augustine, St. Catharine of Siena, and St. Angelo the Carmelite, 
were present at this mystery. Thenceforth, on every Friday, St. Maria 
Maddalena suffered the agony of the Crown. 

On the following /th May the Saint was absorbed in contemplation 
meditating the descent from the Cross and the Burial. Suddenly she 
saw Our Lord and Our Lady. She was instantly rapt in ecstasy, when 
occurred the supreme mystery of the Change of Hearts. Our Lord taking 
His sacred Heart from His breast placed it within the bosom of the 
Carmelite, and exchanged her heart for His own. So ineffable a Union 
cannot be described in any words which are aught but simple and 
shadowy, indirective and analogical. Cor ad cor loquitur. For sheer delight 
her breath was stifled, and she sighed most tenderly. Then the Eternal 
Father looking with the utmost complacency upon the Sacred Heart 
enshrined within her bosom, spake and said: "Bride of the only Begotten 
Word, My Son, ask of Me whatsoever thou wilt." 

"The Five Red Wounds of Jesus are my sure anchor of salvation amid 
the stress and shipwreck of the world, they are my shadow of a great 
rock where I rest me and cool in the burning heat and sirocco winds that 
sweep the arid Saharas of temptation/' These are the words of St. Maria 
Maddalena. But how inadequately have I presented her beauty, mistress 
194 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

of mystical science! Her life was one long ecstasy. On 25th May, 1607, 
she passed from Paradise on earth to Paradise in Heaven. 

The astounding phenomenon of the Exchanged Heart, although very 
rare, is not unique in the history of mysticisn. It is recorded of San 
Miguel de los Santos (St. Michael of the Saints). San Miguel, whose 
family name was Argemir, was born at the little town of Vich in Catalonia 
on 29th September, 1591. Before he had reached his twelfth Birthday he 
entered the Order of the Most Holy Trinity for the Redemption of 
Captives (Discalced Trinitarians), which had been founded by the royal 
hermit, St. Felix de Valois, and St. John de Matha, and approved by 
Innocent III by a bull in 1198 [42}. San Miguel is one of the most amazing 
ecstatices in the whole range of mysticism. It has been truly said of him 
that throughout all his days he seems never to have passed out of the 
state of rapture. It will be understood that this mystical experience 
ebbed at times, very infrequently, and seemed less vehement than at 
others, since he perfectly performed every obligation of his religious 
life. He was, for example, assiduous in the confessional. But, as an old 
writer has it, even whilst he dwelt on earth Heaven was Miguel's home. 
He appeared an angel not a man. "Wherefore Our Lord was pleased to 
bestow a very great and singular grace upon His faithful servant, and 
on a day when Miguel was in ecstasy He deigned to make the mystical 
Exchange of his Most Sacred Heart with the heart of the Saint." Miguel 
de los Santos died at VaUadolid on loth April, 1625. He was canonized 
by Pius IX on Whit Sunday, 8th June, 1862, and his Feast is kept upon 
the fifth of July [43]. 

The exact number of mystics who have received the stigmata, whether 
it be the complete stigmata, or the Crown of Thorns alone, or the heart 
wound, or the shoulder wound, cannot be precisely computed. There 
are very many difficulties in attempting any list which could be pre- 
sented as statistically accurate and comprehensive. A painstaking and 
very researchful recent investigator, writing in 1933, says "in the history 
of the Church, there axe reckoned up to the present three hundred and 
twenty-one known cases of stigmatization." I am confident that at least 
thirty more cases could be added, and then I am very sure that the tale 
would yet be far from complete. 

For example, I have never met in any catalogue of Stigmatization 
the Venerable Serafina di Dio [44], the Carmelite nun of Capri. Born on 
24th October, 1621, at Naples, she passed most of her life at Capri, where 
she built with her own fortune a convent, San Salvatore (generally called 
Santa Teresa), which in 1678 was solemnly blessed by the Archbishop of 
Benevento, Cardinal Orsini, afterwards to be raised to the Chair of 
Peter as Benedict XIII. Other foundations were at Massa Lubrense in 
the Sorrento Peninsula in 1673, and here is still venerated the Crucifix 
which spoke to her, whilst she was in ecstasy. Two years later a convent 
was opened at Vico Equense, a small town on the road from Castellmare 
to Sorrento. In 1680, another house was founded at Nocera de' Pagani, 
where to-day sleeps St. Alfonso de' Liguori. In 1683, a larger convent 
was built at Anacapri, and dedicated to St. Michael. Torre del Greco, 

195 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

near Pompeii, was the next site. The seventh and last convent Serafina 
raised was in 1691 at Fischiano, hard by the city of Salerno. This great 
and holy woman died in the attitude of one crucified on lyth March, 
1699. She was seventy-eight years old. 

The Venerable Serafina received the stigmata, which were clearly 
to be seen by all on her hands and feet, whilst her heart was pierced 
through by a golden dart lanced by a vision of the Divine Child, Who 
appeared as if about twelve years of age. She participated, it seems, to 
some little extent in the agony of the Third Dolour, the loss of Our 
Lord in Jerusalem. On one occasion when the Madre Serafina was kneeling 
enraptured before the Cross, a little novice had crept close, croodling to 
her, and prayed for some spark of fervour. Doubtless the novice, whose 
name we are not told, had advanced far on the mystic way for there- 
upon darted forth five rays of radiant light from the Five Wounds of 
the figure on the rood, and these five rays mingling in one as a lance 
tipped with golden fire pierced her heart, so that she felt "as if she had 
passed out of a great shadow of darkness into a fair champaign bathed 
in sunshine, where it was most excellent and healthful to be". 

I do not venture to say that the Venerable Serafina is not included 
in the list of Stigmaticas which some diligent author has compiled, but 
to the best of my recollection I have not met with her name in such a 
mystic poll, and although her memory is green in Capri she is so little 
known elsewhere that this case may well have escaped enumeration. 
There must, one feels sure, be many similar exceptions. 

Another such instance is that of Blessed Beatrix, who was born at 
the CMteau d'Ornacieu, DauphinS. At the age of thirteen she entered 
the Chartreuse de Parmnie, Is&re. Her life, which was truly hidden with 
God, was distinguished by humility, obedience, charity, and above all 
by a fervent devotion to the Passion. Blessed Beatrix was stigmatized 
with the Five Wounds. With two other nuns, Louise de Graisivaudan 
and Marguerite de Sassenage, she was sent to found a Convent near 
Valence. Here she lived most holily, dying on 25th November, 1303. 
Blessed Beatrix is painted [45] in company with the other Carthusian 
Saints in fresco upon the walls of the Charterhouse of St. Hugh, Patridge 
Green, Sussex, and she is figured in other Certosas, but I think outside 
her Order, and where her Relics, which are very miraculous, are preserved 
at Parm<nie, the Beata is very little known [46]. 

It is obvious that any list of stigmaticas which omitted the names of 
Blessed Beatrix the Carthusian, the Venerable Serafina di Dio of Capri, 
and the Carmelite novice of San Salvatore, would be far from complete. 

Again, another factor which militates against an entirely compre- 
hensive tale of stigmatization is that many cases are under consideration, 
and have not been definitely pronounced upon by authority. Moreover 
cases are continually becoming known as occurring in various parts of 
the world, and scrupulously careful investigation is made into each one 
of these. Such official processes naturally take time, and so meticulous 
is the caution employed, so searching the inquiry, that months and 
years go by whilst the matter is in abeyance, and should there be the 
196 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

least particle of doubt judgement may be almost indefinitely suspended. 
There is medical evidence to be weighed, and often specialists are con- 
sulted, physicians from quite other towns and countries, so that there 
cannot possibly be any prepossession, however involuntary and uncon- 
sciously shown. Again, a case is not unseldom put back, to be resifted 
from the very beginning. Just this brief outline may serve to indicate 
how prudent and how guarded is Rome in pronouncing upon a case of 
stigmatization. 

Be it well borne in mind that I am not speaking of canonization. 
That is another thing, and hedged about with even more elaborate 
investigations. The best way to gain some idea of the proceedings entailed 
is to consult the Encyclopaedic and authoritative work of Benedict XIV, 
De Servorum Dei Beatificatione el Canonisatione [47]. It may be remarked 
that before his accession to the Papal Throne in 1740, Cardinal Prospero 
Lambertini (1675-1758) was Promoter Fidei, commonly known as the 
"Devil's Advocate", that is to say the official whose duty it is, when 
the Cause of a holy person comes under consideration, to advance any 
arguments which may tend to show that the subject of investigation 
and inquiry is not so pre-eminently holy, and has not exhibited the 
"heroic virtues" (a technical term) to such a degree as to be raised to 
the Altars of the Church, the supreme honour. The "Promoter Fidei" 
under obedience performs a difficult and in some sense an invidious 
task. He is arguing against a person who is, no doubt, extraordinarily 
holy and gifted, and yet who may not be on purely technical grounds 
"a candidate for canonization". When all that he advances, that it has 
been his duty to advance, falls to the ground nobody is more rejoiced 
than himself. 

Doubtless many cases of divine stigmatization have occurred through 
the centuries and occur to-day which are not recorded. It may be some 
innocent country girl in a remote district, the Swiss valleys or Calabria, 
who in wonder and shame has concealed the Sacred Marks, never deeming 
herself worthy of the Seals of Christ. She has lived and died unknown. 
If, after her death, the Wounds were seen, the family and friends, the 
simple priests of the hamlet, unwitting, would not speak of the pheno- 
menon. They did not understand how a spouse of Christ could have dwelt 
in their midst. Thus whilst the cause of Blessed Anna Maria Taigi, who 
died in 1837, was being officially commenced in 1852, among the witnesses 
examined was her aged husband Domenico Taigi, who when various 
questions were put to him could only answer: "She was a very good 
wife, an excellent wife, but a Saint ! Oh, no, I never guessed she was a 
Saint." 

It may be it is the case which has never been chronicled of some 
enclosed ecstatica, a Poor Clare, a Dominicaness of the Second Order, 
a Carmelite, a Benedictine, the mystery of whose stigmata was never 
known to any save her Superiors and perchance her sisters, whose name 
is only written in the annals of her convent, for ever sheltered from the 
world. 

Very difficult, far-reaching and intricate problems are raised by what 

197 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

we may call "the border-line" cases of stigmatization. In this field we 
encounter those examples of stigmatization which may quite probably 
be in the origin of divine impressing; and at the other extreme instances 
of stigmata, or rather pseudo-stigmata, which prove upon investigation 
to be altogether fraudulent and fictive markings, artificially imitated by 
some agent, or deliberately self-inflicted; or, to plumb the lowest and 
darkest depths of all, made by satanical operations, consequent upon a 
diabolical contract and agreement with hell. 

Accordingly the most scrupulous care must be employed in dis- 
cussing "border-line" cases, and any pronouncement has to be made 
with diffidence and the nicest reserve. 

About five-and-twenty years ago a great sensation was caused by an 
extraordinary case in Brussels, which gave rise to considerable discussion 
and was the subject of many articles, both in Belgian and other 
journals and newspapers. Bertha Mrazek was born in Brussels on nth 
December, 1890, her father being a Czechoslovak and her mother a 
Belgian. During the war of 1914-1918, Miss Cavell, with whom she 
worked and who was her firm friend, aptly suggested that she should 
adopt a somewhat less unusual name in Belgium, and accordingly Bertha 
Mrazek called herself "Georges Marasco", the nom-de-plume under 
which she had contributed verses and some short articles to various 
newspapers. It may perhaps be as well to emphasize that this alteration 
of name, the idea of which came from so wise and admirable a source, 
was in the circumstances a prudent and wholly laudable precaution. 

The first time that Georges Marasco came before the public was on 
27th July, 1920, when the Libre Belgique printed a long account of "A 
Cure at the Shrine of Our Lady Hal". Briefly, on Monday igth July, 
1920, a very sick young lady, scarcely thirty years old, living at Forest, 
a suburb of Brussels, was brought in a motor-car to the Church of Our 
Lady of Hal [48], where is venerated the Miraculous Statue. There 
accompanied the sick girl the Parish Priest of Forest, a nurse, and a 
soldier who had fought in the war. It was feared that she would die on 
the way, but without any sign of life she was lifted on to a stretcher, 
carried in, and laid before the shrine. All joined in fervent prayer, when 
the invalid, who had been paralysed for a year and blind for a couple 
of months, after a little struggle rose up, mounted the steps leading to 
the altar unaided, and kneeling down prayed earnestly. Turning to her 
parish priest she cried in a voice of thrilling joy: "I am cured ! I am cured ! 
I can see!" M. le Cur in thanksgiving intoned the Magnificat. The whilom 
sick girl, Georges Marasco, left the church with a firm step, and her 
arrival at her home caused an immense sensation among the neighbours 
who had seen her carried out in a state of utter collapse. None were 
more surprised than the specialists and doctors ; who had been attending 
her and who had pronounced the case incurable, declaring that it must 
inevitably have a fatal ending since both hands and feet were affected 
by creeping paralysis, bones were dislocated, seven vertebrae were out 
of place, and the jaw injured and awry. 

So far, so good. That the cure was miraculous was proved beyond 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

any manner of doubt, but it does not in the least follow that a person 
who has been miraculously cured at some shrine, Hal, or Lourdes, or 
Fatima, or Beauraing, is in any sense a saint, or anything like a saint. 
The miracuU or miraculee is generally speaking a pious person, or at any 
rate one who decently fulfils the religious duties of his (or her) state. 
Yet even this may not be the case. Thus, Benito Pelegri Garcia, an 
avowed anarchist of Barcelona, who had married a Belgian wife, was a 
red-hot revolutionary and an infidel of the most aggressive and inimical 
extreme. Exceptionally skilful and a great strong man, he earned high 
wages, but on the explosion of a boiler at the factory in November, 1931, 
his right arm was so severely injured that thenceforth he was utterly 
incapacitated, and so thrown out of employment. Compensation was, 
of course, awarded him, yet this did not go very far, especially when in 
hopes of a complete cure he drained it to undergo medical treatment, 
not only at home, but also in Italy and Germany. He trusted before 
long to be able to resume work again, but in the end the case was declared 
to be hopeless, and the family were left in poverty with no outlook for 
the future. It is little to be wondered at that he became cankered at heart 
and broken down, a mere wreck. At the age of thirty-six his life was 
finished. Where could he turn ? 

His good wife, who in spite of her husband's atheism, had always 
preserved her simple faith, in 1933 heard of the apparitions of Our 
Lady at Banneux [40], an inaccessible and sequestered hamlet in the 
diocese of Li&ge, but at no very considerable distance from Dolhain, a 
modern place in the valley of the Vesdre, on the site of the lower part 
of the ancient city of Limburg, under the heights, whereon towers the 
Castle of Limburg, the ancestral seat of the Dukes of that name. Now 
Dolhain was Senora Garcia's native town, so she was especially interested 
in these Apparitions by whose healing power, invoked as La Sainte 
Vierge des pauvres, so many cures had been wrought through the little 
spring which ran there. Je viens soulager les malades, the Lady had said. 
Would she not heal her husband also? Inspired with a new hope the pious 
woman entreated him to have recourse to Our Lady of Banneux. At 
first he was enraged at the very idea. But she persisted, and he was 
worn down with pain and grief. Yet he held out. "Well, then," his elder 
daughter said, "if you will not make this one effort and we will ask 
no more I must go into domestic service, or to anyone who will take 
me as a drudge, since we have no other way to live." The man gave way. 
"I don't believe a word of it," he cried, "not a word. But I am a mere 
useless log. Carry me where you will." 

The children being left in a neighbour's care, the pilgrimage was 
undertaken by Garcia and his wife in two very different kinds of spirit. 
She prayed, and as they went knitted little things which she could sell 
for a trifle to purchase bread. He grumbled and cursed the weariness, 
the privations, the heat, for they had set out on 4th July, and the way 
was long and toilsome. They went on foot, and their bed was often under 
the hedges, or at best a truss of rotting straw in an empty barn. When 
they drew near Banneux, the man's anger blazed out: "I am just being 

199 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

fooled," he bawled, "you have made a fine ninny-noddy out of me. 
Trapesing here like a couple of priest's mugs ! And we get there I'm going to 
plant you down in your dear old home, and cut." Within half a mile from 
Banneux he actually slipped away, and it was only by the aid of the police 
that his devoted wife discovered him. With much difficulty she persuaded 
him that he would be making a far greater fool of himself to have come 
all this way and not bathe in the water. That at least seemed common 
sense, so muttering and frowning he took his place and waited his turn 
among the pilgrims by the spring. A doctor, a materialist, who was 
standing by and taking notes, when Garcia came up examined his arm, 
and said: "If you go putting that in the pool we shall have your wound 
even more septic. Come along, let's have a fresh bucket of water. We don't 
want to run any risks." The bucket was brought, and Garcia immersed 
his arm. He drew it out quickly with a cry. "Whew!" he exclaimed, 
"Oh! Ouch! The water's boiling hot!" The doctor smiled, and Garcia 
seeing this felt the water in the bucket with the tips of the fingers of his 
left hand. The water was icy cold. Amazed and quite dumbfounded, he 
dipped his right arm into the bucket again. "Here I am," he said, "a 
poor fellow who has tramped all the way from Spain. If you are, 'the 
Virgin of the poor', prove it!" A tinkle was heard. The tube which was 
inserted by the doctors in the suppurating arm had fallen out, and 
there and then before the eyes of all present the wound healed. A 
medical examination was at once held, every test was applied, and 
presently inquiry was made of all the doctors and specialists whom 
Garcia had consulted. No vestige of doubt remained. There is no possible 
explanation except that a miracle had taken place [50]. 

Garcia returned to Barcelona a whole and sound man, in perfect 
health. Unflinchingly he confronted his former associates. He openly 
told how he was cured, and thenceforward there was no stouter champion 
of la Sainte Vierge des Pauvres, Our Lady of Banneux, Immaculate. 

From this we see that the favours of miraculous cures are granted, 
as the sun rises "on the evil and on the good", to the just and to the 
unjust alike. Hence we cannot argue that any person who has been 
supernaturally healed is particularly pious or devout, although humanly 
speaking, unless there be circumstances out of the ordinary, it may 
without rashness be surmised that only those who believed would seek 
Heaven's aid at some holy shrine. 

Georges Marasco [51} (Bertha Mrazek), then, was miraculously cured at 
the church of Our Lady of Hal. It was inevitable that she should become 
"a centre of attraction", so to speak; that visitors, some out of pity, 
some out of curiosity, some (no doubt) in a spirit of unbiased yet 
scrutinizing inquiry, should flock to her little villa in the Avenue De 
Nayer, Forest. A number if not of disciples at least of devoted admirers 
began to gather round her; it was said on excellent authority that many 
conversions had been the result of her admonitions, and that through 
her sufferings and prayers many cures had been obtained. The highest 
mystic phenomena exhibited themselves. She received the stigmata, the 
Five Wounds, and also the Wound in the side. She was believed to be 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

the victim of mystical substitution [52], which is to say that she could 
vicariously take the mental sorrows, the anguish and distress, even the 
physical pains of others upon herself, and suffer in their place. There is 
nothing new, and, to a student of mysticism, nothing startling in this. 
'Cette substitution d'une cime forte debarrasant celle qui ne Test point, 
de ses perils et de ses craintes, est une des grandes regies de la Mystique/ 1 
St. Teresa d' Avila took upon herself and bore without flinching the 
temptations of a priest wellnigh driven to despair. Blessed Maria Barto- 
lommea Bagnesi, the Florentine Dominicaness of the sixteenth century, 
was well known throughout the city for relieving, by taking on herself, 
the illnesses and troubles of her neighbours and of the wretched who had 
recourse to her. She became a complete invalid, and died, a victim of 
love, in 1577. Blessed Anne Maria Taigi, the Roman matron, who was, 
perhaps, the most illumined seer of the nineteenth century, often bore 
the sufferings both interior and physical of those who sought her aid. 
During several weeks every symptom of consumption, the racking cough, 
continual sputation, excessive sweats which drenched her whole bed, 
and unintermittent fever, tore the wasted body of Anne Catharine 
Emmerich. Her death was hourly expected. Suddenly she said to one 
who was in the room: "Let us say the prayers for those in their last 
agony/' A little later there came in a neighbour to ask her to remember 
his sister who had just expired. He related the details of her illness, which 
exactly resembled in every minutest particular the sufferings of Anne 
Catharine herself. "But, thank God," he added, "during the last two 
weeks and more, she was, although slowly sinking, free from pain, and 
made her peace with any she might have offended, and passed away in 
perfect tranquillity." The profuse sweating, the constant cough, the fever 
within an hour had left Anne Catharine. A good priest, who was attending 
her, divined the truth. "Ah, daughter/' he said, "this is all your doing. 
You took this sick woman's agony on yourself, and so she died quietly, 
in good dispositions." The holy nun did not deny it. She merely bowed 
her head and whispered gently: "Father, we are all one body in Christ." 
So Sceur Bernard de la Croix, who died in 1847, and Barbara of St. 
Dominic, a Spanish votary, who in 1872 offered her life for the cure of a 
sister, an important member of the community, long confined to bed by 
a complication of agonizing disorders, were both wont to take upon them- 
selves the mental anguish and miseries of others [53]. 

Mystical substitution is a very high claim, and by the end of the 
year 1922 the stigmatized Georges Marasco was regarded by increasing 
numbers of pious people as a figure of something like extraordinary 
sanctity, one who received constant revelations from Heaven, who had 
almost uninterrupted intercourse with the Angels, one to whom a 
mysterious message had been entrusted by God, a message which she 
must announce to the world. Moreover, these individuals who so entirely 
believed in her surpassing holiness were by no means simple peasants 
and blind enthusiasts, but persons of high social standing, men and 
women of the world, as the phrase goes, not likely to be deceived, and 
themselves in absolutely good faith. A distinguished French abb, who 

201 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

held an important position in his home diocese, and who had long been 
a student of mystical theology, was approved as her Director. He was 
satisfied that she was indeed a chosen vessel, one guided from on High. 
Most of the Belgian clergy, it was observed, rather markedly declined 
to express any view, save in one or two instances, a prelate and several 
canons, who did not hesitate to voice their grave suspicions. 

The stigmata of Georges Marasco have been photographed, the wounds 
in hands and feet, the gashed side; and one thing is very certain, they 
were not in any way artificially made, they were not, in colloquial 
English, "a fake". 

None the less curious rumours were afloat. It was hardly to be 
expected that a stigmatica who had been so widely discussed in the 
public streets should not meet with malice and detraction as well as 
reverence and respect. But something more than mere gossip and scandal- 
mongering seemed to be bruited. It was (as far as may be ascertained 
truly) said that the parents of Georges Marasco were loose-living and 
disreputable, that they harshly drove her from home at a very early 
age. A number of people distinctly remembered how she appeared as a 
performer, a lion tamer, in the circus of Van Been fr&res. Further she gave 
a very skilful contortionist turn. She also sang in more than one cafe- 
chantant, at the "Chat Noir" and at the "Minerva" in the Rue Haute. 
All thjs is quite possible, and it may even be in some measure praise- 
worthy; a young girl's gallant attempt to earn an honest livelihood under 
extraordinarily difficult conditions. That the little girl, aged about 
eleven (in 1924), who lived with Georges Marasco and who was called 
Ir&ne Ad&e Mrazek was not her sister, as she universally declared, but 
her daughter, she was eventually compelled to admit. Again, it may be 
urged that St. Margaret of Cortona, the Franciscan Ecstatica, was the 
unmarried mother of a son [54]. St. Margaret, the Magdalen of Tuscany, 
the "lily of the Valleys", attained to heights of supreme sanctity. 

During the War, 1914-1918, and it must be recorded to her credit, 
Georges Marasco rendered splendid service to Belgium. She was, as has 
been mentioned elsewhere, a co-worker with Miss Cavell, whose death 
proved a heavy blow. Herself, twice she only escaped being executed by a 
clever ruse which both times deceived the enemy. After the Armistice she 
continued her patriotic work, and made more than one expedition into 
Germany to report upon conditions there. It was this twittery life of 
perilous excitement that broke down her health, until after she had 
passed through several hospitals and the hands of many doctors she 
was cured at the shrine of Our Lady of Hal. 

None the less, it is quite certain that soon after 1920 the higher 
ecclesiastical authorities were regarding her with mistrust, which, as 
various circumstances came to their knowledge, dictated some very 
severe measures amounting in fine to insistence upon a complete sub- 
mission on her part, and a pledge no longer to exhibit herself in such 
culpable extravagances, which were giving and had given much scandal 
to the faithful. The French abb6 who was her director was instructed to 
withdraw and informed that he must for the future hold no further 

203 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

communication with her either by letter or by word of mouth, a pro- 
hibition he loyally obeyed, for needless to say the discipline required was 
more than amply justified. 

A proceeding which appears to have been by far from the least 
injurious to her good fame and to have seriously damaged her integrity 
of purpose, was the fact that she systematically levied from her admirers, 
many of whom quite honestly believed in her claims to a mystic sanctity 
and eagerly swallowed her revelations and prophecies, large sums of 
money, and since the persons who thronged around her, hanging on her 
words, were for the most part cultured and very wealthy, she was soon 
able quietly to make up a pretty comfortable purse for herself. Perhaps, 
over-confident, she screwed too tightly, for in the late winter of 1924, 
Bertha Mrazek (Georges Marasco) was arrested on a charge of obtaining 
money by means of a trick. It was then that under a searching cross- 
examination by the magistrate many of the incidents in her life, as I 
have related them, were brought to light. An extraordinary hubbub 
ensued, for she was still supported by the majority of her clientele who 
obstinately refused to believe her guilty, whilst others in anger at having 
been so gulled (as they declared) turned round to assail her with boundless 
rancour, and heaped upon her virulent abuse, which mere decency, not 
to mention Christian charity, would have refrained from hurling at an 
unfortunate, blameworthy though she must have been. 

The climax of the whole matter came when she was pronounced to 
be mad, as a Brussels newspaper flared out in great headlines, "Bertha- 
Georges Marasco est folle". But the pronunciamento of the specialists 
cannot be summed up quite so crudely. The doctors, after a long and 
most careful investigation, gave it as their opinion that it was a marked 
case of schizofrenia complicated by acute mythomania. She was 
undoubtedly, they said, in a state of inculpable aberration when the 
acts upon which the prosecution was instituted took place. It was advised 
that she should be placed in a home, and accordingly she was removed 
to an asylum near Mons. La Libre Bdgique, 4th December, 1927, remon- 
strated with some vigour. Specialists, it said, have attested that she is on 
occasion not a responsible agent. But this state is only intermittent, and 
she unquestionably enjoys long periods of normal lucidity. She is a sick 
woman and should be treated as such. To confine her in an asylum can 
only result in exciting the frequency of any morbid crises. She will be 
reduced to sheer lunacy. It is a barbarous and most pitiable doom. 

Without further comment we ask in what category are we to place 
the stigmatization of Georges Marasco? That she did not bear divine 
stigmata is certain. It is equally certain that in this case the stigmata 
was not artificially produced, a fake. When we review the facts of her 
career, so far as they are known to us, we cannot disguise that there is 
much evidence of eccentricity, of foolishness, of irregularities, and forward- 
ness and cunning. I am quite willing to accept the fact that her cure 
by Our Lady of Hal was miraculous. Indeed, I do not see how this can 
be questioned. But instead of amending, or at best regulating her life, 
the unhappy woman fell into the snare of excess of spiritual pride. Some 

203 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

very ugly traits begin, to be exhibited, traits in comparison with which 
the frivolities to use no harsher name of her appearance in caf- 
chantants, as a lion-tamer, as a contortionist, the illegitimacy of her 
child, and whatever else, are nothing at all. She became a false prophetess, 
a pretender to sanctity; she laid claim to the gift of mystical substitution; 
she had mysterious revelations; she was marked with the stigmata. She 
trafficked in these things, collecting around her a numerous clientele whom 
she blackmailed, if they did not voluntarily give. What is all this but the 
sin of Simon Magus? Moreover, "witchcraft is as the sin of rebellion", 
and Georges Marasco certainly did rebel in refusing to listen to the 
admonitions and obey the counsels of the Church. Here, then, we have 
the clue. Here the cloven hoof is plainly to be seen. 

She certainly was not mad. The verdict of the specialists was 
admittedly unsatisfactory. It was, as we are not at all surprised to learn, 
much criticized. There is one obvious explanation. To me it appears 
quite plain that she must have entered into a formal or tacit compact 
with the fiend. Her stigmata then were demoniacal. I am the more 
confirmed in my opinion since, as I took especial note at the time, the 
lower pseudo-occult and spiritistic press made loud lament concerning 
the persecution and martyrdom of Georges Marasco. 

A simulation of sanctity aggravated and advertised by a pretence 
to revelations, mimic visions, the exhibition of the stigmata, and the 
like, Holy Church regards in the gravest light and deals with very 
severely. There are recorded a number of such cases, which inevitably 
have in their day given most unhappy scandal. It will amply suffice to 
mention but a few. 

John Gerson [], the famous Chancellor of the University of Paris 
and mystical writer, in his De Examinatione Doctrinarum, Consid, vi, 
mentions the case of a woman who gained a very ample livelihood, by 
falling into ecstasy and asserting that by her intercession she could 
release souls not merely from purgatory, but from hell. She also promul- 
gated certain revelations, which (she claimed) were granted her by 
Heaven in extraordinary circumstances. In 1424, she was living at 
Bourgen Bresse, Savoy, and this became a centre of much resort. 

Such extravagances were soon dealt with by ecclesiastical authority. 
Upon interrogation she was remanded to be medically examined, and 
the verdict came that she was an epileptic, with distressing delusions. 
Whereupon the tribunal, which had at first and with reason regarded 
the whole business very seriously, relegated her to a fitting hospital, 
adding that, if possible in order to atone for the scandal she had given, 
it were well she should undertake certain mild penances to show her 
contrition. 

In 1591, the Holy Office at Toledo sentenced to a condign punishment 
Maria de Morales of Alcizar for feigning ecstasies, divine revelations, 
and practising all kinds of trickery to acquire the reputation of a saint. 
The Inquisitor-General, Andres Pacheco, sometime Bishop of Cuenca, 
at a Seville auto of 1624, put an abrupt end to the profane performances 
of Juan el Hennito, who claimed to heal the sick, to have released by his 
204 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

prayers thousands of souls from purgatory, to dwell continually in 
the unveiled presence of God, to have celestial revelations, and a great 
deal more. It will hardly be credited that he had an immense following 
in the city, and was welcomed, nay, entreated to the houses and tables of 
blue-blooded grandees. When this lewd impostor was unmasked he was 
sentenced to be soundly scourged, to be confined for life in a monastery 
or a hospital, where he was to work for his board, and to recite daily five 
decades of the rosary [56]. 

In 1618 the house of Sor Lorenza Murga of Simancas, a religious 
tertiary, who dwelt at Valladolid, began to be a centre of pilgrimage. 
Her clientele increased as the years went on, and since none visited her 
without a gift in hand, sometimes even of jewels and gold, from the most 
grinding poverty she rose to a state of considerable affluence. In fact 
she was an oracle and a power in the city. Ecstasy succeeded ecstasy, 
and she was always ready to reveal the secrets of Heaven. The higher 
the fee, the more wonderful the revelation. In the winter of 1633 all 
this attracted the attention of the Holy Office. When Sor Lorenza was 
arrested on the following 2oth April, Vallodolid seethed with excitement. 
At first she stoutly maintained that she was a saint, but the inquisitors 
soon convicted her of fraud, and after a while she confessed. It was 
further proved that she had been leading an impure life. It was a bad 
business, but she was dealt with lightly, her sentence including six years 
banishment from any place, town or village, where she had ever lived [57]. 

Grandelot in his Histoire de Beaune, 1772 (p. 191), relates how at 
Autun in 1674 && impostress, Jeanne Gros, in penitential sackcloth, 
made a solemn and public confession in the porch of the Cathedral 
before the Bishop and Chapter. She openly acknowledged that a sweat 
of blood which she feigned to have experienced on Good Friday, three 
years before, deluding many people, was mere cozenage; that the blood- 
stains, supposedly supernaturally produced, which appeared on her shift 
had been smutched on the garment with the blood of an animal; and 
that the stigmata which she had exhibited in her hands, feet, and side, 
were cunningly contrived by herself, false and fraudulent. 

At Seville on i8th May, 1692, Ana Raguza, a Sicilian, was sentenced 
to seclusion in an enclosed convent, and two years exile. This is very 
lenient treatment since she denied the efficacy of Masses and Fasting. 
Moreover she termed herself the Bride of Christ, declared that she could 
detect sinners by the sense of smell, and prated of her visions and 
revelations [58]. 

When Dona Agueda de Luna entered the Carmelite convent of Lerma 
in 1712 she already enjoyed the reputation of a saint. A crowd of devotees 
told of her miracles; her ecstasies were repeated several times a day; 
and each morning the chapel was thronged by nobles and their ladies 
who besought her intercession. Happy was the person who might speak 
a word with her at the grille. Soon a convent was founded at Corella, of 
which house she was elected Prioress, A manuscript life of Madre Agueda 
was in circulation and copies were multiplied. It was full of the most 
extraordinary happenings, and it was this which first roused suspicion 

205 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

on account of the unorthodox and even impious relations. Close inquiry 
was made, and with difficulty a terrible record of malpractices and 
licentiousness, not unmixed with sorcery, was unripped. The Holy Office 
did not spare to strike sweepingly, far and wide, to eradicate the evil. 
Madre Agueda died, but the tribunal of Logrono prosecuted her disciples 
and accomplices with the rigour their criminality deserved. The convent 
of Corella was shut down. The community was dispersed singly, one by 
one, to other convents throughout Spain. All copies of the manuscript 
Life were ordered to be destroyed, as well as such periapts as medals, 
papers, little pictures and the like which had purportedly been blessed 
by the Prioress, and distributed to be venerated almost as Holy Relics [59]. 

During the reign of Benedict XIV, 1740-1758, a girl named Vittoria 
Bondi acquired a considerable reputation for sanctity, and was much 
venerated by those amongst whom she dwelt. She was supposed to fast 
for weeks and months together, living only on the Host which was 
brought her by an angel. Moreover she exhibited the stigmata impressed 
during one of her frequent ecstasies. There were other phenomena, and 
not only poor folks but persons of rank and wealth declared their belief 
in her surpassing holiness. Ecclesiastical authority stepped in, and she 
was soon convicted of imposture and delusions. The girl made ample 
confession of her tricks, and was dealt with very mercifully by the Holy 
Office. After she had performed certain very mild and salutary penances, 
absolution was granted her, the Pope himself directing that she should 
be treated thus leniently (Annali Universali di Medicina, Vol. cxxiii, 
pp. 541-2). 

One of the most notorious cases of the eighteenth century was that 
of Maria de los Dolores Lopez, whose career as a feigned Saint commenced 
when she was only twelve years old, and continued until she was well 
over thirty. At Seville, where she resided, supported in luxury by a krge 
clientele, it seemed almost an open secret that she was leading a life of 
flagrant immorality under the cloak of religion. She widely boasted of 
her familiar conversations with Our Blessed Lady, and declared herself 
to be truly the Bride of Christ, to Whom she had been wedded in Heaven 
whither she was transported in ecstasy. The witnesses were St. Joseph 
and St. Augustine of Hippo. There was a good deal more shocking 
blasphemy, and it seems certain that the woman was a witch. At last 
the Holy Office was compelled to act, since one of her confederates 
denounced himself to the Seville tribunal. In 1779 s h e was P ut on ^al 
and interrogated, but confronted her judges with the utmost impudence. 
For nearly a couple of years the pious Fray Diego de Cidiz laboured to 
bring her to a sense of shame and guilt. It proved a bootless task, and very 
reluctantly on 22nd August, 1781, the Inquisitor declared that the law 
must take its course. Almost to the end she yelled out her blasphemies, 
but at the last moment penitence touched her heart. She confessed, was 
absolved, and then as justice demanded she was strangled by the execu- 
tioner, her body being thrown into the flames [60]. 

In his valuable study Critique et Contrdle mddical des Gutrisons sur- 
naturettes, Paris, 1920, Dr. Le Bee, sometime Director of the Bureau des 
206 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

Constatations at Lourdes, relates how with three other doctors, at the 
especial request of the then Archbishop of Rennes, Cardinal de Bonne- 
chose, he had a few years previously examined into the case of a reputed 
stigmatica, living near Dieppe, who claimed to enjoy extraordinary 
favours from heaven. This girl told long tales of celestial visions and divine 
voices. There were wonderful revelations. The stigmata with which she 
was marked bled every Friday night. She was very frequently to be seen 
rapt in prayer in a side chapel of the village church, and so often would 
she pass into ecstasy that it became quite a regular thing for numbers of 
people to assemble and watch her admiringly. The parish priest was greatly 
embarrassed, since such publicity in itself proved that all was not tight. 

The committee of four specialists arrived rather late one Friday 
evening, but as the girl was in bed and asleep they decided not to awaken 
her, but adjourn. This they did, going no further however than the 
next room. Before dawn they heard murmurs and deep drawn sighs, upon 
which, returning to the bedchamber they discovered the girl apparently 
entranced, with blood upon her hands, feet, and side, and encircling her 
head. No very searching examination showed plainly enough that the 
marks had been made with her own fingers, upon which she was questioned 
closely and soon brought to confess her tricks. The blood she obtained 
by scratching her left side deeply with a pin, and thus she counterfeited 
the stigmata. On the whole of the left side of her body she suffered from 
a complete anaesthesia. 

In 1849, the year after the foul murder of Count Pellegrino Rossi, 
when Pope Pius IX had retired to Gaeta, Caterina da Sezze, a peasant 
girl from Caselvieri, Sora, appeared in the role of a prophetess, and pre- 
dicted that the Holy Father would soon return in triumph to Rome. 
The Supreme Pontiff was persuaded to admit her to a private audience, 
but although he dismissed her with his blessing he said to those about 
him, "Up till now there is no harm done. But that girl will need to be 
carefully watched." In 1850 Pius IX re-entered his City, and many who 
should have known better began to regard Caterina as inspired. Amongst 
these was Commandatore Filippani, steward to the Papal household, 
who was perhaps rather too much under the influence of his wife, a 
highly imaginative and enthusiastic woman. She took Caterina to live 
in the house, and lost no occasion of proclaiming the girl's heavenly 
gifts. Her head turned with vanity, the wench secretly entertained a lover, 
who scenting that money might be made, with two or three confederates 
began to tutor her in all sorts of pseudo-phenomena. She allowed herself 
to be "discovered" rapt in ecstasy; declared that she saw visions; acted 
as a clairvoyante; and carried the thing off with such adroitness that 
the Roman aristocracy began to flock to her receptions. She netted quite 
considerable sums, but her revelations became so extravagant and so 
bizarre that not a few of her admirers were startled and even alarmed. 
The thing was reported in detail to the Holy Office, and searching inquiries 
began to be made into these extraordinary proceedings with the result 
that in February, 1857, Caterina was sentenced to twelve years imprison- 
ment. The charge runs: "For studied inventions of Apparitions of the 

207 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

Most Blessed Virgin Mary and of Our Lord Jesus Christ; for professing 
to have the spirit of prophecy; and for claiming to be a saint, whilst she 
was living in very gross immorality." 

Holy Church is rigid, it may appear, in these matters, and most 
scrupulous, but as a little consideration will show, they are of the gravest 
and indeed fundamental importance. Sin being in its essence an intellectual 
act, spiritual sins are quint essentially evil in a degree of which other sins 
do not partake. The sin of Satan in the beginning was spiritual. 

Pride, it has been said, is "the most corrupt and corroding, the most 
hideous of all sins". The great test, then, that Stigmatization is divine, is 
humility. 

In his authoritative IlDirettorio Mistico (published 1574), Gianbattista 
Scaramelli lays down that the source and place of origin of the Divine 
Stigmata is the soul. The wounds are primarily spiritual, and simul- 
taneously produce their effect upon the body visibly marking it. The 
tests by which any case of true Stigmatization can be appraised are, 
first : That a notable spiritual progress along the mystic path should have 
been made, and hence that the subject should have endured the purgation 
of the senses, which, broadly speaking, consists in aridity and desolation, 
a dry and sandy desert to cross; natural troubles, illness, misunder- 
standings, the loss of friends or money, ill-treatment, obloquy and 
defamation, whence scandals arise and there results persecution even 
from well-meaning and good-intentioned persons, ay, even from authority 
itself, since all these things cause a supernatural detachment from the 
world. There may also be diabolic assaults and a regular besiegement by 
Satan. All men, of course, are liable to attacks from the demon, but for 
the most part such are intermittent, and not so intensified. 

The second test of true Stigmatization is that some degree of infused 
contemplation must have been attained, and infused contemplation 
depends solely on the will of God, although we presuppose a certain 
disposition thereto, for example, an intense love of divine things, a 
vocation, as we might term it. Thirdly, true Stigmatization is inevitably 
accompanied by great physical pain, which, however, is absorbed in a 
far intenser spiritual delight. Without suffering, the Five Wounds would 
be little more than empty symbols, and even, perhaps, conducive to pride. 
Fourthly, the pain and the heavenly joy as constantly as they recur 
must result in interior recollection and an extraordinary elevation of the 
mind to God, which gives a supernatural strength enabling to endure 
the physical anguish and to partake to the full of the gladness of God. 
So far Scaramelli [62]. It surprises me that he omits a fifth test of true 
stigmata, a test which seals all Humility. 

Not one of these five tests must be wanting. To return to Georges 
Marasco, it is evident that although one or perhaps two of these tests 
may have seemingly been exhibited others were certainly not to be 
observed. Above all, the crowning grace of humility was conspicuously 
absent. 

Contrariwise, in the case of that sublime mystic the Venerable Orsola 
Benincasa [63], treated with merciless severity and even brutally handled 
208 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

by her antagonists and detractors, who were many, high-placed, and 
powerful, throughout the long period of incredibly harsh testing, when 
she was openly assailed as an impostor so that a rumour bruited abroad 
how she had been discovered to be a witch and was going to be sent to 
the stake, the holy ecstatica manifested from first to last a degree of 
resignation, perfect obedience, and humility, which cannot but have been 
of God. 

In July, 1937, Padre Raffaele Codipietro, parish-priest of the tiny 
village of Paganico Sabina, a few miles from Rome, was visited with 
severest penalties, being excommunicated and unfrocked, for "an act of 
sacrilege and simulation". On Wednesday, 23rd July, 1936, the feast of 
San Apollinare, Padre Codipietro asserted that during Mass, when after 
the Agnus Dei, he proceeded to the fraction of the Sacred Host, breaking 
It into three pieces, blood flowed from the smallest particle, eight drops 
falling upon the corporal, whilst some sprinkled the altar-cloth' and the 
veil of the tabernacle. He unvested in due course but without leaving 
the altar, and remained there until the arrival of the Bishop of Rieti, 
Mgr. Massimo Rinaldi, who was immediately requested to come to the 
church. The Bishop placed the linen marked with the red spots in the 
tabernacle, of which he himself retained the key. When he had heard a 
full account of what had occurred from Padre Raffaelle and also from 
others present, he submitted the whole matter to the Supreme Pontiff, 
who directed the Holy Office to institute a strict inquiry into this alleged 
miracle. The Inquisitors after a long and patient examination of every 
detail, and hearing the various witnesses, delivered into the hands of 
the Holy Father their unanimous verdict, and when ratified by the 
Apostolic authority sentence was pronounced [4]. 

From these, and many other examples could be cited throughout 
many centuries I cannot insist upon the point too often we see how 
closely and with what meticulous care the Church watches the manifesta- 
tions of any unusual phenomena, generally held to be indicative of an 
extraordinary holiness of life, how searching are the inquiries made, how 
severe the test, with studied discouragement and calculated disappoint- 
ments to mortify the least spark of pride and to purify as if in a refiner's 
fire so that the gold may shine the brighter and be more esteemed in the 
end. 

We see, moreover, that any simulation, or traffic in supposed spiritual 
gifts, is utterly condemned and abhorred, judged worthy of severest 
penalties and swift punishment. Ecclesiastical authority indeed, is rarely 
cognizant of any darker offences than so deliberate and devilish a mockery 
of the Most High God. 



N 209 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTIC ISM 

NOTES TO CHAPTER VI 

1. Bishop Lightfoot argues against the commonly received view that this 
Epistle was written from Ephesus, and is of opinion that it is to be dated in the 
winter or spring of the years A.D., 57, 58 in which case it would be dispatched 
from Macedonia or Achaia. Saint Paul's Epistle to the Galatians, with Introductions, 
Notes, and Dissertations by T. B. Lightfoot, D.D., D.C.L., LL.D., Bishop of 
Durham. First Edition, 1865. Twelfth Edition, 1896, pp. 36-56, "The Date of the 
Epistle". 

2. Vulgate; Domini Jesu. Douai, A.V., "the Lord Jesus." R.V. "the marks of 
Jesus". The majority of the older MSS. read roB 'L7<roD not ro5 Kvptov 'ii}<ro$. 

3. Thus Plautus, Aulularia, II, IV, 47. 

tun' trium litterarum homo 
Me vituperas? fur, etiam fur trifurcifer, 

4. iepds 5o?Xoj. Te"xier, Asie IMineure, I, p. 135. 

5. Lightfoot, op. cit., p. 16. 

6. Catullus, Attis. Cybele to her lion: "Rutilam ferox torosa cervice quate 
jubam." "And fiercely toss thy brawny neck that bears the tawny mane." Burton. 

7. T. A. Dulaure, Des Divinites Generatrices, Paris, 1805, Ch. ix. Dr. S. R. Driver, 
Deuteronomy, Third Edition, Edinburgh, 1902, pp. 264-65. See also Apuleius, 
Metamorphoseon, XI, the procession of Isis, edition, Lugduni, 1614, Vol. I, p. 1022, 
the excursus of Philip Beroald. 

8. Catullus, Attis: "Devolsit ilei acuto sibi pondera silice." Apuleius, Metamor- 
phoseon, VIII, has a vivid description of a wandering company of priests of 
Cybele. 

9. De Dea Syria, 59. 

10. 2 Corinthians XII, 4. Lightfoot, op. cit., pp. 44, 49, 64, emphasizes the 
similarity between the Epistle to the Galatians and the Second Epistle to the 
Corinthians. 

11. XIII, 4. 

12. Lightfoot, op. cit., p. 225, note. 

13. Life by Pinius the Bollandist, for which see the Bollandists under 3ist 
August; Vol. VI, August, p. 729, Helyot, Histoire des Ordres Monastiques, ed. 1715, 
Vol. II, pp. 282-3. Alban Butler, Lives of the Saints, 3ist August. 

14. Die Stigmatisierte Th. Neumann von Konnersreuth Erster Teil: Die 
Lebensgeschichte der Theresa Neumann, von Dr. Fritz Gerlich. Munich, 1929. 

15. The Fioretti distinctly says: "Vieni il di sequenete, cio& il di della san- 
tissima Croce." This seems decisive, although St. Bonaventura (Legenda Major 
XIII, 3) writes "circa festum Exationis sanctae crucis." 

16. I follow St. Bonaventura (Legenda Major). He says it was Christ sub specie 
Seraph Who appeared to St. Francis. 

17. Thomas of Celano, Legenda Prima, 1229, is emphatic that the Marks of 
the Stigmata appeared after St. Francis had risen from his knees and was 
meditating upon the mystery. 

18. Fioretti: "Being compelled thereto by necessity, he chose Brother Leo, 
the most single-minded, and most pure in heart of the companions, and to him 
Francis revealed all that had befallen; and so he suffered him to see and touch 
those holy wounds of love and to wrap them round with kerchiefs to assuage the 
pain and staunch the blood which welled there from and ran down in abundance." 
See also Glassberger's Chronicle, written about 1508, and published in Annales 
Franciscanae, III, p. 68. It may be noted that the pictures of St. Francis receiving 
the stigmata which show Brother Leo gazing with wonder at the mystic event, 
such, for example, as the extremely fine canvases by Domenichino and Badalocchi, 
although artistically justifiable, are actually incorrect. 

19. Thomas of Celano, Legenda Secunda. The Tractatus de Miraculis. See also 
Salvatore Vitalis, Chronica Seraphica Montis- Alverniae, 4to, Florentiae, 1630. 

20. According to our computation of time. According to ecclesiastical usage, 
reckoning from vespers, 4th October. 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

21. The Franciscan literature is, of course, enormous, and to be really useful 
a very long note would be necessary here. There are many quite recent translations, 
for example, of the Fioretti. The Italian text in a convenient form was published 
Milano, 1907, I Fioretti di S. Francisco e il Cantico del Sole. There are English 
versions, The Little Flowers of St. Francis, by Cardinal Manning, 1864, 1887; by 
the Upton Fathers revised by T. Okey, 1894, 1899, 1905, 1909, 1910, 1912, 1917'; 
by T. W. Arnold (Temple Classics), SLxth edition, 1903. St. Bonaventura's Life 
of St. Francis was translated 1904 (Temple Classics), English translation of Thomas 
de Celano, by A. G. Ferrers Howell, 1908. The Nuncio Apostolic to Eire, Arch- 
bishop Paschal Robinson, O.F.M., has given us a very valuable A Short Intro- 
duction to Franciscan Literature, 1907. The Life of St. Francis of Assisi, by Father 
Cuthbert, O.S.F.C., 1912; 6th edition, 1925, is an admirable biography of the 
Saint, with notes and appendices for those who wish to follow the Franciscans 
further. 

22. He died nth February, 1661. 

23. Steill, Ephemendes domimcanosacrae. Dilligen. 1692, 27th March. 

24. Arturus a Monasteno, Martyrlogium Franciscanum, Paris, 1653; Hueber 
Menologium, Monachii, 1698, Luke Wadding; and the A eta Sanctorum, i8th May. 

25. A eta Sanctorum, 22nd February. Capuchin Breviary, 23rd February. 
A Tuscan Penitent, by Father Cuthbert, O.S.F.C. In his Siena and Southern Tuscany, 
1910, Edward Hutton has some delightful pages on St. Margaret. 

26. Revelationes Gertrudiants ac Mechtildiance. 2 Vols. Poitiers & Paris, apud 
Henricum Oudin. 1875. The Life and Revelations of St. Gertrude, by a Religious 
of the Order of Poor Clares: London, 1865. Ste. Gertrude, by G. Ledos, Paris, 1901. 

27. Legatus Divines Pietatis II, iv, ed. cit. pp. 66-8. "De Impressions Sanctissi- 
morum Vulnerum Christi." 

28. Wilfred H. Woollen, S*. Gertrude, A Saint of the Sacred Heart, n.d. (1927). 
St. Gertrude is given among the lists of stigmaticas both by Rayssius and d'Alva. 
The Office of St. Gertrude for Catalonia, where the Feast was kept as a Double 
of the Second Class, I7th November, has: "Coelestis sponsus in ejus purissimo 
corpore delicias suas collocavit, cui suorum etiam stigmata igneo amoris stylo 
divinus Coelator inussit," Matins, Second Nocturn, Fifth Lesson. 

29. See the beginning of the Dialogo. 

30. His immediate predecessor, Blessed Benedict XI, O.P. (Nicolas Bocassini 
di Treviso, formerly General of the Dominicans), was poisoned at the instigation 
of Philippe le Bel. 

31. The date of the "mistico sposalizio" is 1364. 

32. The painting is modern, 1896. 

33. The crucifix is a painting on panel by Giunta Pisano, about 1260. Mrs. 
Jameson in her Legends of the Monastic Orders notes that by a special decree of 
the Pope it was removed to Siena, and (she adds) "placed in the Oratory of St. 
Catharine of Siena, where I saw it in 1847." 

34. The great Dominican church in Rome in Santa Maria sopra Minerva, so 
called because it stands near the site of a temple dedicated to Minerva by Pompey. 
The body of St. Catharine lies under the high altar. 

35. The martyrs St. John and St. Paul were officers in the service of Constantia, 
daughter of Constantine. They were put to death by Julian the Apostate in 
A.D. 362. 

36. In art St. Catharine of Siena is always represented with the stigmata, as 
should rightly be the case. It has been foolishly, and a little profanely argued 
that since the stigmata were invisible during the Saint's life they should not be 
depicted. But St. Catharine's contemporary and disciple, the painter, Andrea 
Vanni, depicts her with the stigmata. The literature dealing with St. Catharine 
of Siena is immense. (She even figures in fiction.) First, there are her own writings, 
UOpere della Seraphica Santa Caterina da Siena, Lucca, 1721; and N. Tommaseo's 
edition of the Letters, Le Lettere di Santa Caterina de Siena, 4 Vols., Firenze, 1860. 
Two useful collections. There is no satisfactory English translation as Algar 
Thorold's versions are tampered with and incomplete. A scholarly and unabridged 
version is badly needed. The Life, auctore F. Raimundo Capuano, is given in the 

2XX 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

Acta Sanctorum, Aprilis, Tom. III. There is also a Vitasanctae Catharinae Senensis 
et Phihppi Beroaldi, per Joannem Pinum, 4to, Bononiae, 1505. The work of P. 
Chavin de Malan, Italian translation by Pietro Vigo Storia di Santa Caterina 
Da Siena, Siena, 1906, is valuable. Edward Hutton has delightful sketches of the 
Saint in his Studies in the lives of the Saints, 1902, and Siena and Southern Tuscany, 
1910. Among the older Lives The History of St. Cathanne of Siena and her 
Companions, 2 Vols., 1887, by Mother Francis Raphael, O.S.D., is highly esteemed. 
Amongst the more recent biographies Edmund Gardner's St. Catherine of Siena, 
1907, is generally considered the best. Benedict XIV warmly commends a Vie de 
Ste Catherine by F. Touron. Giovanni Lombardelli's Diffesa dette sacre stimate 
di Santa Catarina da Siena, 4to, Siena, 1601, is an excellent treatise on the stigmata 
of St. Catharine. Various interpolations made in the Saint's Works and unauthentic 
passages which were fraudently inserted are dealt with and exposed by Hippo- 
lytus Maraccius in his Vindicatio Sanctae Catharinae Senensis a comentitia 
revelatione contra Immaculatam Conceptionem B.M.V., 4to, Puteoli, 1663. A work 
dealing with the Dominican Rule of the Third Order, with especial reference to 
St. Catharine, is La Regla que professan las Beatas de la Tercera Orden de Predica- 
dores, item la vida de san Catalma de Sena y ostros deste stado. 

37. The radiant Cherubim, says the Archdeacon of Evreux, Henri-Marie 
Boudon, in his great work Devotion to the Nine Choirs of Holy Angels (English 
translation, 1869), are among the highest angelic intelligences. Divine light is 
especially attributed to this Order. Two cherubim shadowed the mercy seat with 
their wings. The prophet Ezechiel had visions of the cherubim. The Old Testa- 
ment Hebrew is K'rub, K'rubim. In early Christian art these angels were coloured 
a lovely red. 

38. In the left transept of the Carmelite church, S. Maria della Vittoria, Via 
Venti Settembre, Rome, is Bernini's exquisitely beautiful group of St. Teresa 
and the angel. 

39. E. Allison Peers, Mother of Carmel, S.C.M. Press, 1945, pp. 27-28. 

40. So far as I am aware there is (recently at any rate) no study of St. Maria 
Maddalena de' Pazzi in English. The Life of St. Mary Magdalene of Pazzi a 
Carmelite Nun, newly translated out of Italian, by Vincent Puccini, by the Reverend 
Father Lezin de Sainte Scholastique, Provincial of the Reformed Carmelites of 
Tourraine, Paris, 1670. And now done out of French, London, 1687, is a scarce book. 
This has an appendix, A brief discourse about discerning and trying the Spirits 
whether they be of God, pp. 85-134. The Oratorian Life of St. Mary Magdalen de' Pazzi 
is not altogether satisfactory. La Santa di Firenze . . . da Una Religiosa del Suo 
Monastero, Firenze, 1906, is an excellent and most informative little work. 

41. J. K. Huysmans, En Route, Premiere Partie, Ch. x. 

42. Annales Ordinis SS. Trinitatis by the Minim, Bonaventura Baro, folio, 
Rome, 1684. Compendio Historico de las vidas de San Juan de Mata y San Felix 
de Valois Patriarcas y fundadores de la Orden de SS. Trinidad, by Gil Gonzalez 
Davila, 4to, Madrid, 1630. 

43. On 1 7th July, 1862, a proper Office was granted for San Miguel de los 
Santos, the feast ranking as a Double of the Second Class with an Octave. 
Lections iv, v and vi, of the Second Nocturn of Matins give a short life of the 
Saint. Since the Trinitarians have no house in England San Miguel is not very 
generally known here. 

44. Vita di Venerabile Serafina di Dio, Napoli, 1723, and the authoritative 
documents, Positiones supra dubio . . . which were compiled in connexion with the 
beatifaction of Venerable Serafina di Dio. 

45. Only one other Carthusian nun has been raised to the altar, St. Roseline 
des Area de Villeneuve, who lived 1263-1329. Feast i6th October. A useful study 
of this Saint, Sainte Roseline des Arcs de Vlllustre Famille des De Villeneuve, Aux 
Arcs (Var) and Avignon, 1913, is from the able pen of Le Chanoine A. Arnaud. 

46. Feast I3th February. Collect: "O God, Who in imitation of the Passion 
of Our Lord Jesus Christ, did cause Blessed Beatrix to be so conformed thereto 
as to be made a victim of love; grant, we beseech Thee, that by her intercession 
and example, we may so become partakers of the Passion of the same Thy Son 

212 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

whilst we are now here on earth, that we may be found worthy to receive the 
guerdon of eternal happiness in heaven. Through the same. . . ." 

47. There is no English translation. It is well to emphasize this since Heroic 
Virtue, 3 Vols., 1850, 1851, 1853, respectively, Thomas Richardson, London, 
Dublin, and Derby, however useful commences with Book III, c. xxi, and concludes, 
Vol. Ill, c. xiv, with the chapter "Of Revelations". Heroic Virtue is frequently 
(but erroneously) spoken of as though it were a complete version, which misleads. 
Moreover Heroic Virtue is a little old-fashioned. Annotations are required. A full 
translation with commentaries of the De Canonisations is badly needed. 

48. Hal is about nine miles from Brussels. The Church of Xotre Dame de Hal 
was begun in 1341, and consecrated in 1409. The wonder-working statue of Our 
Lady is celebrated throughout Belgium and the whole world. 

49. Les Apparitions & Banneux, by Armand Gerardin. Editions Rex, Louvain, 

1933- 

50. Full details of the pilgrimage, and the incontrovertible evidence of the 
cure, can be read in La Libre Belgique, 24th August, 1933; and in Les Anndles de 
Beauraing et Banneux, ist November, 1933. 

51. In a note I should state that my knowledge of the Georges Marasco case 
is mainly derived from Belgian newspapers, which at the time were sent over to 
me from Brussels by friends residing in that city, and also from private letters 
that gave me such details of the afiair as were being much discussed. I cannot 
claim to have known any "followers" of Georges Marasco, or any who came in 
contact with her. From the very first I received the impression that there were 
features connected with the case which seemed, to say the least, suspicious. 

52. See "Mystical Substitution," pp. 159-165, Essays in Petto, by Montague 
Summers, 1928. 

53. Both Sceur Bernard and Barbara of St. Dominic were stigmaticas. 

54. He became a Friar Minor, and died a martyr's death. 

55. 1363-1429. 

56. Bodleian Library, Mss., Arch. S., 130. 

57. Cartas de Jesuitas, Mem. hist, espanol., XIII, 42, 51, 457. 

58. MSS. of Archiva municipal de Sevilla, Seccion especial, Siglo XVIII, 
Letra A. Toma. IV, n. 52, cited by H. C. Lea, Inquisition of Spain, ed. 1922, vol. IV, 
pp. 69-70. 

59. Juan Antonio Llorente, Histoire critique de I'Inquisifion d'Espagne. . . . 
Traduit de 1'espagnol par Alex. Pelliez, 4 Vols., Paris, 1817-18. Cap. xl, art. ii, 
n. 1-14. 

60. Menendez y Pelayo, III, 405. 

61. 1687-1752. 

62. Scaramelli is incorrect when he writes that the vision of an Angel, or a 
celestial messenger, or of Christ Himself, inflicting wounds which mark the body is 
merely symbolical of that which is taking place in the soul. This is a very temer- 
arious and ill-sounding suggestion, and can be shown to be definitely erroneous. 
The vision, whatever it may be, is an intense reality. One is justified in this comment 
when we note how, as is remarked, Scaramelli omits so important a test as humility 
perhaps, the most important test. 

63. Vita della Madre Orsola Benincasa, Fondatrice delle Monache Theatine 
per il Padre Francesco Maria Maggio, folio, Rome, 1655. Also Compendium ejusdem 
vitae, Brussels, 1658. See further, Ponnelle and Bordet's St. Philip Neri and the 
Roman Society of his Times, English translation. Later the attitude of Mgr. Charles 
Erskine (1759-1811), who in 1803 received the Red Hat from Pius VII, as Promoter 
Fidei when the cause of the Venerable Orsola was under discussion, is very 
remarkable, and, speaking with all respect, I for one find his conclusions unwar- 
ranted and distasteful, as was indeed felt and expressed by many of the Sacred 
College at the time. 

64. The case was noticed in The Universe, Friday, i6th July, 1937- 



213 



CHAPTER VII 

The Reverse of the Medal Diabolic Stigmata The Witch Magdalena de la Cruz 

Virgime and the Satanists of AgenRose Tamisier Demoniacal and Poltergeist 

Molestations Divine Stigmata in the Nineteenth Century and To-day Sor 

Patrocimo Louise Lateau Theresa Neumann. 

SIMULATED sanctity is truly a heinous and horrid thing, yet even a 
lower, a far lower depth is plumbed in the cases of diabolic or satanical 
stigmatization for it is not to be supposed that the demon will stamp 
the imitative marks of the Sacred Wounds upon his creature unless 
indeed the wretch is already bound to him by some compact, and is 
already the sworn slave of hell. So here we trench upon witchcraft, which 
may be aptly called the mysticism of evil. 

Satan is the ape of God. And as God has delighted to seal His most 
favoured servants with the signature of His own Five Wounds, so the 
adversary, the demon, in foul travesty and bitter deceit will seek to 
seal his bondslaves with a miraged semblance of those Founts of Mercy 
whence Redemption was poured forth so bounteously upon the human 
race. 

Far back among the Gnostics we already catch some whisper of 
these horrid mysteries. 

Cardinal Bona (1609-1674), General of the Cistercians, in his cele- 
brated treatise De discretione spirituum (On the discerning of Spirits), 
Rome, 1672, Chapter VII, says that "Persons who assert and noise it 
abroad that they have in a vision received crowns of roses, or necklaces 
studded with rich gems, or golden wings, from the hands of Our Lord 
Himself or from His Most Blessed Mother, or else have been given such 
gauds by a radiant Angel, ought to be sharply reproved as victims of 
a too lively imagination, or, worse still, as foully deceived by a diabolic 
illusion, unless indeed they are persons of most rigid life, of proven 
humility and holiness, lovers of retirement, contemplatives, shunning 
the world, in which case of course, they will be the last to speak of such 
charismata, heartily endeavouring to conceal the secrets of Heaven, 
deeming themselves utterly unworthy." The Cardinal continues: "The 
same rule applies to stigmatists and stigmaticas, since the marks of the 
wounds can be imitated and impressed by the fiend, as many sad examples 
too painfully have proven." 

In the year 1533, Father Reginald, a Dominican learned in mystical 
theology, a very grave and revered religious with a great reputation 
for holiness of life, who was then Prior at the Convent of San Domenico 
at Bologna, came to Rome for the express purpose of consulting St. 
Ignatius in regard to a nun of the Second Order, of which he was spiritual 
214 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

director. This nun was completely stigmatized in hands, feet, and side. 
She also had the Crown of Thorns, and frequently blood flowed from 
these wounds. She suffered much, and was very often rapt in ecstasy, 
when she spoke of wonderful and most profound things. While she was 
thus entranced she was absolutely unconscious, and any attempt that 
was made to arouse her failed. Feathers were burned under her nose; 
doctors applied blisters, and even lanced and cauterized. She felt nothing. 
Yet, under obedience, when the Prioress or a Superior commanded, she 
at once came out of her ecstatic state. "Father Reginald," answered 
Ignatius, who had listened with close attention to the good friar, "of 
all the signs and phenomena you have related to me, there is one, and 
one only, I count at a penny's worth. That is, her obedience. This in 
truth argues that the rest may be, I do not say are, of God." And so 
the Dominican went away, confirmed and much comforted, for so also 
had been his own private judgement in the matter. Ribadaneyra who 
relates this (Ada Sanctorum, in Vita S. Ignatii, 3ist July, p. 767) goes 
on to say that afterwards when they were alone he questioned St. 
Ignatius concerning these mysteries. To whom the Saint replied: "Whilst 
it is very true that God may endow His chosen souls with especial graces, 
yea, and fill them even to overflowing so that what is within erupts, 
as it were, and cannot be hid, unmasking itself and being made manifest 
visibly imprinting itself upon the body, yet this is a rare gift of God, 
who bestows it as He will. Let us always bear in mind that Satan, 
although he has no power over the soul may yet perplex and disturb 
the imaginative faculty of man, yea, and sorely bewilder and distress 
us, insomuch that he will lead astray the best, and tempt them into his 
own sin, spiritual pride, in which once enmeshed and englued he will 
danger them yet more by visible and exterior signs, feigning such to be 
the very Wounds of Christ. So subtle is the fiend; so nice his craft. I 
have alas! known many fallen into this snare." 

And, says Ribadaneyra. "I have heard that this very nun of Bologna, 
being rebuked and humbled by good Father Reginald for her greater 
edification, rebelled and was so puffed up with pride that in the end it 
was seen to be no brightness of divine fire that enlightened her, but 
rather was she suffocated in the blackness of a demoniacal smoke." 

That very acute and learned physician Paolo Zacchia, chief medical 
attendant of Pope Innocent X, in his Questioner medicolegales, first edition, 
1630; third and complete edition, folio, Amsterdam (1651), a book which 
Benedict XIV quotes with warm approval, cautions exorcists, directors, 
and others that it is a far easier thing to simulate an ecstasy than it is 
to simulate such disorders as apoplexy and epilepsy and carry it off 
well. Zacchia speaks of a Sicilian girl who would have been taken for a 
saint, and who deceived many by her feigned ecstasies and raptures, 
which she acted with such effect and with such attention to detail that 
a crowd came to see her, and asking her prayers made offerings and 
presented her with gifts. So that she did famously, and happy was the 
devotee who might touch her garments, and leave a gold or silver ducat 
behind him, all unaware that she was laughing up her sleeve at his 

215 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

simplicity. But the doctor observed her shrewdly for a while, and exposed 
the cheat. 

In France, during the turmoil caused by the League, impostors 
flourished. A girl who came to Paris from Rheims, by name Nicole 
Tavernier, acquired an extraordinary reputation for sanctity. Daily she 
passed into a trance when she spoke at great length, her words being 
taken down as divine revelations. She was supposed to have the spirit 
of prophecy, and it was widely bruited that her predictions were infallibly 
true. 

On one occasion when in the Church of the Capuchins at Meudon, 
she was kneeling not far from Madame Acarie (Blessed Mary of the 
Incarnation), this latter remarked that Nicole had withdrawn, and 
remained absent for nearly an hour. Madame Acarie did not notice her 
return, but saw that she was in her former place. After Mass the saintly 
woman asked: "Where did you go, Nicole, and remain away so long?" 
To which Nicole mysteriously replied: "I have been to Tours to warn 
certain noblemen who were met to plot and cabal that they must abandon 
their projects, since their intentions are very hurtful to the true faith, 
and, if carried into effect, will work terrible mischief." At Paris Nicole 
was indeed daily consulted by statesmen even and patricians, as well as 
by priests and religious. 

Two prominent persons, however, Madame Acarie and the Cardinal 
de Berulle, placed no faith in Nicole Tavernier. Madame Acarie openly 
said that she feared that the girl was terribly deluded and deceived, 
that it must be an evil spirit who had taken possession of her and was 
simulating all kinds of mystic phenomena to draw many into error, and 
hence the prediction could be very well explained. The sudden voyage 
to Tours was far from being proved to be a fact, and even if it were, 
it is well known that these aerial transvections are by no means impossible 
to the demon, as so many witchcraft trials have shown times without 
number. Moreover Nicole was found out in a good many lies and some 
cozenage. So she was questioned by two Capuchins, experts in these 
matters, and they found the whole thing was trickery and obsession. 
When the girl was freed from these dark influences and the devil cast 
out, she proved to be in herself a rather stupid and ignorant rustic. 
In spite of all persuasion she married a low churl, and soon entirely ceased 
to practice her religion. All Paris was scandalized and deeply shocked 
at such an exposure. However, eventually, Nicole was reconciled by 
Pre de Lingendes. A detailed account of these extraordinary events is 
given by the Bishop of Orleans in his study La Bienheureuse Marie de 
I' Incarnation, new edition, Paris, 1854. 

One of the most notorious cases of diabolic stigmata, a case upon 
which it is not necessary to dwell in detail so often has the history been 
repeated, is that of Magdalena de la Cruz, which has been admirably 
summed up in his full-flavoured Caroline English by the pious Richard 
Baxter, who more than once tells us of "the Witch Magdalena Cmcia, 
who got the reputation of a Saint". In his Historical Discourse of 
Apparitions and Witches, 1691, pp. 102-103, he writes: 'The Story of 
216 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

Magdalena Crucia (cited elsewhere by me, and by Dr. H. More) was, 
saith Bodin, famous through the World, cited by many; who being 
suspected, to save her life, went to the Pope himself (Paul III) as 
a Penitent, and confessed her Sins, that at twelve years old the 
Devil solicited her, and lay with her, and that he had layen with 
her thirty Years; yet she was made the Abbess of a Monastery, and 
counted a Saint. And she confessed that the Devil, among all the 
people, brought Christ's Body (the Wafer) to her Mouth, none seeing 
what carried It; whereby she was taken for a Saint, as done by some 
good Spirit." It was not, of course, the Consecrated Host which the 
demon conveyed to the wretched woman, but an unconsecrated host (as 
Baxter duly distinguishes, 'the Wafer') which he had privily filched. 
Those who witnessed this marvel would have been entirely deceived. 
"De fraische memoire Tan 1545", Bodin tells us, "Magdelaine de la 
Croix, native de Cordove en Espagne, Abesse d'un monastere, se voyant 
en suspicion des Religieuses d'estre Sorciere, & craignant le feu, si elle 
estoit accusee, voulut prevenir pour obstenir pardon du Pape, & confessa 
que des 1'aage de douze ans un malin esprit en forme d'un More noir 
la sollicita de son honneur, auguel elle consentit . . . Elle obtint pardon 
du Pape Paul 3. estant repentie comme elle disoit. Mais i' ay opinion 
qu'elle estoit dediee 4 Satan par les parens des le ventre de sa mere . . . 
Ceste histoire a este publiee en toute la Chrestiente." [/j. 

Magdalena de la Cruz, whom Benedict XIV calls a saga famosa "a 
most notorious witch-woman/' was born of poor parents at Aquilar in 
1487. According to her account at five years old she attempted to 
imitate the Crucifixion by nailing herself to a wall, but she fell and 
broke two of her ribs [2], She soon professed to see visions of angels, 
and her trances began to be more and more frequent. In fact when at 
the age of seventeen, in 1504, she entered the Franciscan Convent of 
Santa Isabel de los Angeles she already enjoyed a great reputation for 
sanctity. For thirty-nine years Magdalena successfully exhibited a series 
of pseudo-mystical phenomena, ecstasies, apparitions and prophesyings, 
which deluded practically all Spain, and caused her to be regarded as 
a saint by the highest and the lowest in the land. She was stigmatized, 
and lost few opportunities of showing her visitors the bleeding wounds. 
St. Ignatius Loyola, however, entirely distrusted these exterior signs, and 
rebuked her ardent followers with unwonted severity. Blessed Juan 
d'Avila, one of the directors of St. Teresa and a profound master of 
the interior life, never faltered in his opinion that these trances and the 
stigmata were of no heavenly origin. In 1543 Magdalena fell dangerously 
ill, and was given over by the physicians. She then made a long and 
terrible confession. Her seeming sanctity was not only a feint, but from 
the first she had been aided by and acted under the influence of two 
demons, Balban, a familiar of the fifth order of evil spirits, "the Deluders", 
and Patorrio (or Python), to whom she had delivered herself over at the 
early age of twelve, sealing her bondage with the black pact of hell. 
Magdalena recovered, and the Holy Office inquired into these abomina- 
tions. It was not until 1546 that judgement was given, so numerous were 

217 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

the witnesses to be examined, so complicated and detailed the evidence 
which had to be sifted and weighed. 

At the auto-de-fe in the Cathedral of Cordoba on Holy Cross Day, 
3rd May, 1546, the public recital of her crimes and her sentence, 
announced by relays of officials, occupied from six o'clock in the morning 
until four o'clock in the afternoon. The sacred building was thronged. 
Magdalena, meanwhile, was exhibited on a scaffold, her mouth lightly 
gagged, a halter round her neck, and a burning taper in her hand, as 
signs of true repenting and public shame. This unhappy woman was 
most mercifully consigned to perpetual seclusion in the convent of 
Santa Clara, at Andujar, where she passed her days in the most exemplary 
penitence. She died, full of sorrow and deeply contrite, in 1560. It may 
be remarked that on her confession of imposture and guilt, seventeen 
years before, the demoniacal stigmata disappeared [3], 

It is very doubtful whether at this date the truth can ever be known 
about the case of the Dominican Madre Maria de la Visitacion of the 
Convent of La Annunciada at Lisbon. That she was vilely calumniated 
seems certain. Superficial historians have been only too eager to repeat 
the alleged scandals, without pausing to inquire upon what actual 
foundation these stories were bruited. That she was condemned and 
penanced by an Ecclesiastical Commission is in the circumstances not of 
itself sufficient to be proof positive. It is known that many of the 
assessors were politically prejudiced, and we may recall processes which 
(to me) seem very similar, for example, the trials of and judgement 
delivered upon St. Joan of Arc. 

Born in the year 1556, Maria, at the age of eleven entered the Convent 
of La Annunciada. and since she showed every sign of a fervent vocation 
she was professed some five years later. In 1572 her mystical experiences 
were already profound. About 1580 there appeared to her a marvellous 
vision of the Crucified Christ, His Wounds all glorious. A ray of fire 
suddenly lanced from the Wounds in the side and pierced her bosom, 
leaving a deep wound from which on Friday there trilled drops of blood. 
This caused her exquisite agony. In 1583 Maria for her very holiness 
was elected Prioress of the Convent, an office she was obliged to accept, 
although she knew she was opposed by a small but obstinate party of 
the older sisters who could scarcely conceal their mortification and 
jealousy. The following year upon yth March, the Feast of St. Thomas 
Aquinas, another radiant vision of the Crucified comforted her, and 
four red rays darting from His pierced hands and feet transfixed her 
hands and feet. There also appeared to her Dominican Saints, St. Dominic, 
St. Thomas, and above all St. Catharine of Siena, who, Maria averred 
always looked upon her with a sorrowing face and eyes full of tears. 
Such phenomena could not be hid, and the fame of the saintly nun was 
noised abroad, not only up and down the Peninsula, but throughout 
Europe as well, and as far as the Indies. 

In 1584 Albert, Archduke of Austria and Cardinal of Santa Croce in 
Gerusalemme, addressed a detailed account of the Spouse of Christ to 
the Supreme Pontiff, Gregory XIII, who replied saying that he indeed 
218 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

blessed God for what he heard of this holy Dominicaness, and that he 
prayed Heaven to fulfil her with its grace to the edification of the faithful 
and the confusion of all enemies of the Church. He also wrote to the 
Prioress herself, bidding her in spite of all difficulties to be strong and of 
good courage, to press forward upon the mystic way without faltering 
or pause in her path. About the same time the Portuguese Provincial, 
Fray Antonio de la Cerda, addressed two letters respecting Madre Maria 
to his delegate in Rome, Fray Hernando de Custro, O.P., who was to 
lay them before the Pope. Gregory read them with indescribable joy. 

That sublime mystic, the Venerable Fray Luis de Granada, also 
wrote a long letter, detailing his close observation of these phenomena, 
to the Patriarch of Valencia. These letters (as the custom then was) were 
printed in Italy, and immediately translated into French by the 
Dominican scholar, 'Etienne de Lusignan, who incorporated them in a 
mystical treatise which he dedicated to the pious consort of Henri III, 
Queen Louise de Lorraine, Les grands Miracles et les Tressainctes Playes 
advenuz d la R. Mere Prieure auiord* huy 1586 du Monasteire de I'Anonciade 
en la mile de Lisbonne, au Royaume de Portugal, approuvez par R. Pere 
Frere Loys de Granade et autres personnes dignes de foy, come se verra 
d la fin du discoiirs. A' Paris, par Jean Bressant, 1586. A contemporary 
Italian study is Relatione del Miracolo delle Stimmate, vemite nuovamente 
ad una Monacha dell'Ordine di S. Domenico, in Portogallo, nella Cittd 
di Lisbona, Rome. 1584, also printed at Bologna and Venice. These two 
works are by far the best, and (as I think) the only reliable histories of 
Madre Maria de la Visitacion. 

Fray Luis de Granada investigated the stigmata with much care and 
gave it as his opinion that they were divinely imprinted. He further 
states how on every Thursday, at the hour of Ave Maria, two-and-thirty 
punctures which extravated blood appeared surrounding the head of 
the Prioress, and this which was accompanied with intense pain endured 
until Ave Maria on the Friday. Christ had bestowed upon her the Crown 
of Thorns. When she prayed the community not unseldom saw her raised 
in ecstasy from the ground. Pieces of linen which she had pressed to her 
wounds and which were stained with stigmatical blood, often mystically 
assuming the form of a cross, were sought for as gifts by grandees and 
their noble ladies, and from tie application of these illnesses were cured 
in an extraordinary way. The most pious Countess of Urrea, wife of the 
Viceroy of Sicily, the Conde d'Alba, treasured such a cloth which she 
had obtained from La Annunciada. A lady of very high estate had 
suffered long from a gangrened lip, and her physicians decided a surgical 
operation was necessary. The day before Dona Vincenzia gave her a 
small piece of linen stained with blood from the stigmata of Madre 
Maria. The invalid placed it over her mouth, and on the following 
morning when the doctors came, to their amazement they found the 
flesh whole, and firm, and well. There was but one explanation. It was 
a miraculous cure. This was attested by a notarial certificate. The Holy 
Father himself accepted one of these cloths. The evidence is so ample 
and so convincing that I cannot believe these things are fictive, delusions, 

219 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

cogging, or clever sleights. It is impossible. Ugo Buoncompagni, before 
he ascended the Papal throne as Gregory XIII, was renowned as one 
of the shrewdest of Bolognese lawyers. On account of his extraordinary 
keen knowledge of canon and civil law he had been appointed by 
Pius IV, the uncle of San Carlo Borromeo, as jurisconsult to the Council 
of Trent. The author of Introduccidn del Simbolo de la Fe t Fray Luis 
de Granada, was an acknowledged master of the spiritual life. Such men 
are not deceived. 

The political situation in Portugal and Spain was critical to a degree. 
1588 was the Armada Year. Philip II was heartbroken, overwhelmed. 
He distrusted every counsellor. He distrusted himself. Men in Spain 
were living on their nerves. At such an hour of tension, strange inex- 
plicable things can happen. Her enemies and holiness always makes 
enemies seized the opportunity. There was a party, small but full of 
rancour, within the cloister of La Annunciada itself. Curious gossip was 
retailed, exaggerated, and repeated again. Scandal sought a victim. 
It was said that the sanctity of Madre Maria was a sham, that her 
stigmata were faked. An Ecclesiastical Commission was appointed to 
inquire into these phenomena. Not only the Peninsula but all Europe 
was stunned by their findings. They gave their verdict that Madre Maria 
was an impostor. They even professed to explain how the miraculous 
effects had been produced. To my mind their proceedings are obviously 
impregnated with the most vicious political bias, their judgement reeks 
of falsity and abuse. We know they threatened Madre Maria that the 
devil would carry her off. We know she was unmoved by their menaces. 
We know little more. We are told that she made a long and full con- 
fession of deceit. I do not believe a word of it. This sort of thing has 
happened before and since, when a pack of politicians men frightened 
for their own lives were in full cry. To me the vaunted Relazion de la 
santidad y elagas de la Madre Maria de la Visitation, Seville, 1589, bears 
the hall-mark of falsity. It is obviously written to order. 

It so chanced that Fray Luis de Granada died about this time, and 
it was instantly rumoured that he had been unable to survive the agony 
of finding how he had been imposed upon and deceived. This is the 
veriest canard. Later it was reported that the discovery of the feigned 
sanctity and the exposure was due to the Carmelite Fray Jer6nimo 
Gracidn, the sometime Vicar-General of the Discalced Province and 
counsellor of St. Teresa of Avila. "An able young man of exceptional 
precosity whose charm and apparent saintliness delighted the woman 
of nearly sixty/' says Professor Allison Peers. There is, so far as I 
can find, not the least foundation in fact for Mannol's assertion in his 
Vida del P. Jerdnimo Gracian, but the business had to be bolstered up 
somehow. 

It is a sad story, and on 6th December, 1588, the sentences of the 
Commissioners was read to Madre Maria, being published two days later 
from the Cathedral pulpit at High Mass. She was relegated to perpetual 
seclusion in an enclosed convent, but be this carefully noted not in 
the house of her own Order. Various penances were added in the harshest 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

spirit, and it is to say the least incongruous that, even supposing 
she were culpable, her sentence should be so much more cruelly severe 
than that of an avowed and notorious witch, if happily repentant, as 
was Magdalena de la Cruz. 

Lodovicus de Paramo De Origine et progress^ Sanctae Inquisitionis 
ejusque dignitate et utilitate, Libri tres, Apud Joannem Fiandrum, Matriti, 
folio, 1598, says that Madre Maria died a most blessed death, a saint 
indeed. 

A modern historian writes: "The Dominicans had not been much 
given to mystic extravagance, but in her [Maria de la Visitacion] they 
had a saint whom they exploited to the utmost, and the disgrace in 
which her career ended served them as a salutary lesson to preserve 
them in the future from similar erratic zeal." It would not be easy to 
parallel so misleading and so misunderstanding a sentence. The writer 
quite evidently had an entirely erroneous preconception of what is 
meant by Mysticism, and indeed throughout his pages he seems to 
imagine that the Dominicans are professedly inimical to Mysticism. 
It were a lengthy task and, perhaps, labour lost to put him right in 
every detail. Let it be sufficient to quote a great authority and a great 
mystic. Father Faber, the Oratorian, tells us (The Blessed Sacrament, 
Third Edition, 1861, p. 568): "Father Squillante, of the Naples Oratory, 
[wrote] the life of the Sister Mary of Santiago, of the Third Order of 
St. Dominic, which rivals Carmel as a mystical garden of delights to the 
Heavenly Spouse." He further adds: "We possess now the Third Order 
of St. Dominic in England. Those who are conversant, indeed who find 
the strength and consolation of their lives, in the Acts of the Saints, 
well know that there is not a nook of the mystical paradise of our 
Heavenly Spouse where the flowers grow thicker or smell more fragrant 
than this Order of multitudinous child-like Saints* Nowhere in the 
Church does the Incarnate Word show His 'delight at being with the 
children of men* in more touching simplicity, with more unearthly 
sweetness, or more spouse like familiarity, than in this the youngest 
family of St. Dominic." To revert I believe the only trustworthy book 
dealing with Madre Maria de la Visitacion is the study by 'Etienne de 
Lusignan, O.P., and upon the available evidence I feel convinced that 
this stigmatica was the victim of a great wrong and terrible injustice, 
so that her name and her memory are even to-day calumniated and 
sadly traduced. 

During the first half of the nineteenth century the quiet little cathedral 
city of Agen was what may be termed a tranquil backwater of piety, 
lapped in peace, unruffled and undisturbed by the storms which raged 
abroad. A number of religious associations were formed by persons 
living there, the members of which obeyed a few simple rules, and from 
time to time met to discuss various charities, to edify themselves by 
mutual conversation on holy things, or to listen to spiritual reading and 
instruction. One of these associations had as its secretary and leading 
spirit Mme. Jeanne Belloc, a doctor's widow, who after the early death 
of her husband had led a most secluded life, entirely devoting herself 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

to the education of her son and to good works. Naturally she was the 
friend of the wretched and the poor to whom she was always ready to 
Five a helping hand, and her name was daily pronounced with blessings 
by hundreds of lips. One afternoon in 1835, a stranger, a woman of about 
thirty-five, who must be known as Virginie, since the surname does not 
appear to be recorded, asked for and was granted an interview by Mme. 
Belloc. Virginie who exhibited the utmost distress, mingled with terror, 
unfolded a terrible tale that appalled her hearer. In floods of tears and 
with moans of anguish she confessed to Mme. Belloc that for more than 
twenty years she had belonged to a secret band of Satanists, who under 
the guise of religion, made Agen their headquarters, and who were 
actively engaged in every abomination of devil-worship. In a secret 
chapel a renegade priest celebrated black masses for this gang, whose 
unspeakable orgies included the profanation of the Host stolen from 
various churches. To Virginie and some few others was assigned the 
blasphemy of procuring Hosts for this fearful ceremony of hell. This 
was done by the satanical women receiving Communion every morning 
at various churches, and then slipping the Host from their mouths into 
a handkerchief, and carrying it to the infernal rendezvous. Virginie 
declared that not infrequently she visited four or five churches of a 
morning, assisting at the early masses for this horrid purpose. At last 
she realized the enormity of her guilt, and had resolved to break for 
ever with the diabolic crew. 

Mme. Belloc well-nigh swooned at so fearful a recital. "But why 
come to me?" she asked. "Would not a good priest help you in the 

confessional. M. 1'Abbe " "Madame," answered Virginie, "I have 

never even been baptized. If the diabolists discover I have betrayed 
them and they will discover and I fall into their hands, they will 
kill me. That is the penalty for 'traitors'/ 1 "Remain here. You will be 
safe", Mme. Belloc assured her, for the woman trembled like a hunted 
animal. "Meanwhile . . ." But she felt stunned. She summoned to her 
aid the Abb Degans, a priest who was reputed a master of mystic 
theology. He heard the tale with amazement. Yet nothing was beyond 
Satan's malice and cunning. 

In her anxiety to save the poor woman from the toils Mme. Belloc 
took Virginie under her especial care, whilst the abb6 visited her daily. 
Virginie was baptized, whereupon she fell ill with a complication of 
strange disorders which the doctors pronounced beyond their skill to 
cure, and which, it was concluded, were caused by black magic. In the 
course of her sickness the stigmata appeared on her body. She avowed 
that these wounds which drenched her in blood, had been made by the 
archfiend himself who materialized under a visible human form, Hke a 
tall black man of menacing aspect. This apparition further had the 
effect of paralysing her in every limb, whilst she suffered the most 
excruciating pains. The Abb Degans proceeded to exorcism, and after 
a long and painful struggle, extending over many months, into the 
details of which it is not necessary to enter, she was freed on the I5th 
August, the Feast of the Assumption, 1838. Ecclesiastical authority now 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

took action. It was not to be supposed that these extraordinary 
revelations did not cause an immense commotion throughout the city. 
Everyone was asking: "Where is the rendezvous of these Satanists? Who 
may not be secretly one of the gang?" Something like a panic reigned. 
The Bishop of Agen, who had privately received a full series of reports 
on the case from Abbe Degans ordered that Virginie should be closely 
examined and tested by two of the leading members of the Chapter, 
Canon Serougne and Canon Pierre Deyche, two priests of great experience 
and solid learning. Their report was scarcely favourable, but the Bishop 
watched without making any gesture or uttering any word. 

Virginie now set up as a kind of clairvoyante, one who, wrested from 
Satan's clutches, was as a reward especially favoured by Heaven. In 
1840 she announced that she enjoyed frequent visions of Our Lord; she 
could exhibit the stigmata; and large numbers of devoted followers 
were most lavishly supporting her with presents of no inconsiderable 
value, and regularly contributing sums of money, "alms 1 ', in return 
for her prayers, her good word with Heaven. She was gifted with 
prophecy, and her "Revelations" were taken down by her admirers. 
It seems to have been in August, 1839, that she established relations 
(secretly, at first) with that enigmatical and, as it proved, impious 
figure, the pseudo-prophet Pierre-Michel-Eugene Vintras, whose per- 
formances at Tilly-sur-Seulles gave rise to such grave scandals that his 
teachings were condemned by the Bishop of Bayeux upon the 8th Novem- 
ber, 1841, and by a Brief of Gregory XVI two years later, 8th November, 

1843- 

In the matter of Virginie, the Bishop of Agen, a prelate of a great 
name, was slow to move. It was not until 1846 that IVIgr. Jean Aim6 de 
Levezon de Vezins issued his weighty and solemn admonitions, in which 
he thoroughly exposed the folly and deceptions of Virginie and con- 
demned her as an impostor and common cheat. An impostor, yes, but 
a diabolic impostor. That Virginie had belonged to a coven of Satanists 
is hardly to be disputed; that her "confessions" and seeming repentance 
and the wild stories she related were merest flummery wickedly to 
mislead and deceive a number of good-living and religious persons, to 
involve them in error, is attested by the Bishop of Agen. She was deeply 
concerned in a diabolic plot. The demon helped her throughout. It was 
he who inspired her "Revelations", who marked her in bitter travesty 
with the stigmata [4]. 

The celebrated writer upon occult subjects, Marie-Victor-Stanislas, 
Marquis de Guaita, [5] in his Essais de Sciences Maudites [6] has a note 
of some fifty lines upon "L'affaire Rose Tamisier" which occurred in 
1850 at Saint-Saturnin-les-Apt, Vaucluse. 

Rose Tamisier is not mentioned by so encyclopaedic a writer as 
Canon Ribet in his authoritative La mystique divine distinguie des con- 
trefafons didboliques, 4 volumes, 1879-1883, and subsequent editions. 
Neither is there any reference to her in Gougenot des Mousseaux, Mceurs 
et pratiques des Demons, "nouvelle edition", 1865, "ouvrage trfes 
document^"; nor yet in P&re Joseph de Bonniot, S.J., Le mirade et ses 

223 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

contrefagons, 1888, and other editions, 1889, and 1895; nor in I'abb6 
Lecanu, Histoire de Satan, sa chute, son culte, 1861, and reprint, 1882; 
nor in the six vast volumes ("cet enorme travail") of Joseph Bizouard's 
Des rapports de I'homme avec le Dimon, 1863-4; nor in Eliphas Lvy. 

Neither J.-K. Huysmans nor Jules Bois knew the strange history of 
Rose Tamisier. 

M. Maurice Garfon, after immense research, was able to trace the 
source of de Guaita's note. He says: "Une brochure quasi introuvable 
nous parvint entre les mains/' This pamphlet is Affaire Rosette Tamisier, 
prdcedie d'une notice sur Pierre Michel Vintras et sa secte, par l'abb< 
J. F. Andr<. Carpentras, Imprimerie de L. Devillario, Septembre 1851, 
in-i8, 151 pages. He then looked up the files of such contemporary 
newspapers as L'Univers, Le Charivari, La Gazette des Tribunaux, and 
le Droit, where full accounts of the case were given. Moreover, the Arch- 
bishop of Avignon, Mgr. de Llobet, permitted him free access to the 
diocesan archives, and here he discovered a quanity of material, letters, 
reports, medical certificates, official findings, and the like, which were 
of the utmost value to him in writing his study, Rosette Tamisier , ou 
La Miraculeuse Aventure. 

The Abb6 Andres Affaire Rosette Tamisier is so rare and unknown 
that it is not even listed in the Bibliographies of Caillet and Yve-Plessis. 
There is, however, a contemporary English account of Rose Tamisier, 
which appears to be entirely overlooked. It is detailed and occurs in 
A Tour of Inquiry through France and Italy, illustrating their present 
Social, Political, and Religious Condition, two volumes, London, 1853, 
by Captain Edmund Spencer. 

Captain Edmund Spencer was a fairly prolific writer of travel-books, 
which had a well-deserved popularity in their day, although now they 
seem altogether forgotten. He gives a very ample account of "The Saint 
of St. Saturnin", as he dubs her, and he relates how "by the intensity 
of her devotion she caused the representation of a cross, a heart, a chalice, 
a spear, and sometimes the image of the Virgin and Child, to appear 
on various parts of her body, at first in faint lines, and afterwards so 
developed as to exude blood, thereby exciting the amazement and pious 
admiration of every beholder". 

On Thursday, ist September, 1853, The Leisure Hour, a very widely 
read journal, under the title A Miracle of Modern Times! printed a lengthy 
article upon the subject. 

Captain Spencer, it is interesting to note, had a copy of and quotes 
from the AbbS Andres rare brochure, which is also referred to by the 
writer in The Leisure Hour as the "life" of Rose Tamisier, "written by 
the Abb6 Andrg", and which "continues to be circulated". 

Rose Tamisier was born at Saignon, Vaucluse, in 1818. Her parents 
were in very modest circumstances, none the less they gave their five 
children of whom Rose, generally known as Rosette, was the eldest, 
a good education, sufficient indeed for the girl when she was fifteen to 
open a small kindergarten for the village children. As many as forty to 
fifty attended her classes, which did not go beyond reading, writing, 
224 




PLATE IX: THE VENERABLE MADRE SOR JOANNA RODORIGUEZDE 

JESUS MARIA 

"Poor Clare", from an old print 




PLATE X: BENEDICT XIV 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

and a little arithmetic, with sewing and plain embroidery. Towards 
the end of the year 1836, when Rose was eighteen, some Presentation 
nuns [7] came to Saignon to take charge of the local hospital, and at once, 
giving up her school, she applied for admission as a postulant. She was 
allowed to assist the sisters in their work, but the Mother Superior for 
some reason chose to postpone any form of admittance to the Order, 
however preliminary. She remained merely a lay helper. Perhaps a little 
suspicion was aroused since she began to complain of unusual pain in her 
hands and feet, and more than once she spoke of the Wounds of Christ 
when she mentioned the throb and smart she was experiencing. After 
a period of six months she was transferred to the house of the Presentation 
at Salon, and here she fell ill, whilst she appeared to be the subject of 
extraordinary phenomena. A sharp watch was kept, unknown to her, 
but nothing suspicious could be detected, although at the end of eighteen 
months, acting upon medical advice, she decided to give up the idea 
of entering the Order. Her father was sent for and took her back home 
with him to Saignon, where she lived quietly for the next eight years, 
entering into a kind of partnership with her sister who was a dressmaker, 
but who specialized in vestments and church linen. She was thus brought 
into continual contact with priests and sacristans, and she showed such 
fervent piety that 1'Abbe Sabou, one of the clergy of the parish church, 
was heard to remark of her, "Here we have in Saignon a young woman 
of most edifying life. I believe that her example will effect many con- 
versions. Indeed it would not surprise me if one day she went far, and 
was a shining light of faith." 

In 1845, Rose's brother, Fran9ois, a handsome young fellow, won by his 
good looks the hand of Delphine Jean, who with her sister Thergse 
kept an excellent inn at Saint-Saturnin-les-Apt, a hostelry which did a 
pretty brisk business. Rose often used to visit her brother, and one day 
when she appeared ailing it was suggested that she should pay them a 
prolonged visit. The air at Saint-Saturnin was particularly good, "and", 
remarked the prudent Delphine, "if she can help us in the house, and 
Heaven knows we can do with an extra hand, it will amply pay for her 
board and bed." So the arrangement was made. Rose only wanted to go 
out once in the day, first thing in the morning, to the earliest mass, 
after which she was content to stay indoors and do any job she was 
asked to undertake. She won golden opinions from l'Abb Cake, the 
parish-priest, and there were few in Saturnin who did not look upon her 
as an exceptionally holy person. She was attractive enough with her 
chestnut hair, soft brown eyes, and clear complexion, but she would 
not so much as listen to a word from any of the young men. The only 
fault that her sister-in-law had to find was that often on her return from 
mass she would be taken with strange fits of illness which obliged her to 
keep her room for four-and-twenty hours. 

It seems to have been one day in the summer of 1850 that Delphine 
in great distress sent a lad to ask l'Abb( Caire to call at the house as soon 
as possible. The good priest lost no time in hurrying to the inn, but he 
could get nothing out of the hostess save "Rosette is in bed, and I don't 

O **5 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

know what ever is the matter/' "Why not send for the doctor?" asked 
the Abbe. "No, mon pere, she said a priest." "Ah! She is indeed a chosen 
soul. Do not be alarmed, my daughter, I will go up to her." 

Rose was in bed, and when the Abbe gently questioned her without 
much difficulty she replied: "I am stigmatized. My feet are pierced 
through and my hands. I have the wound in the left side. There are 
other wounds which seem to picture a chalice, a cross, the Heart of Mary, 
the Heart of Jesus, and also the Heart of Mary transfixed with seven 
swords. When I press pieces of linen to these wounds the white linen is 
stained with the blood that drips from them." The good priest could 
not hide his astonishment, but being a very discreet man he said little, 
and after a few words of caution withdrew. This did not suit Rose's 
book. She felt sure he would have fallen on his knees in rapture and 
declared her a saint. She was piqued, and determined on a new move. 

She returned for a time to Saignon, but here too she found the parish 
priest by no means so sympathetic as she had hoped. The fact was that 
1'Abbe Caire had sent him a private word of warning, advising him to be 
very cautious. None the less in order to convince himself that she was 
really a stigmatica he tested her in several ways, not very thoroughly, 
perhaps, and when he saw the chalice, the cross, and a crown of thorns, 
imprinted upon her body he was profoundly moved. The assistant- 
priest M, Lucas, could not entirely rid himself of some lingering doubts, 
but he was afraid lest he should be culpably incredulous and seem to 
doubt the supernatural charismata of Heaven. 

On the 2nd November, Rose returned to Saint-Saturnin and resumed 
her usual duties at the hostelry. She learned that a priest, 1'Abbe Grand, 
in charge of an old gothic chapel, built in 1050, a short walk from the 
town, having heard the story of the stigmata and being informed on 
every hand of her edifying life, had constituted himself her champion, 
and almost openly contradicted TAbb Caire who went so far as to say: 
"If it is not all a clever trick I suspect it is something worse, in fact I fear 
the devil himself may be mixed up in it." 

In company with a friend, a firm believer in her sanctity, one Josephine 
Imbert, Rose visited the old chapel, which had once been the chapel of 
the Castle of Vauduse, a mighty fortress, now a heap of picturesque 
ruins. The two girls knelt down before the High Altar, the reredos of 
which was formed by an ancient picture depicting the Descent from the 
Cross, not a masterpiece, but very realistically and strikingly painted. 
The wounds on the hands, feet, and side of the Christ were most vividly 
portrayed. Their prayers ended, Rose went up to the altar, and mounting 
the steps, pressed her lips in fervent devotion to the hands of the Crucified. 
She uttered a cry! Her lips were wet with blood! She beckoned to JosS- 
phine, who advanced timidly, and bade her kiss the picture. She did so 
with awe, and started back. Rose then took the white kerchief from 
her head, and touched the wounded side. The linen was stained with 
blood. After a few moments of stupefaction the two friends hurried to 
the presbytery and told TAbb6 Grand what had happened. He hastened 
to the church, and at once exclaimed "A miracle! a miracle! But my 
226 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

children/' he added, "we must go slowly. My old friend Dr. Bernard, 
shall examine this prodigy." Dr. Bernard, a most pious physician, was 
summoned. He collected and analysed the liquid, and declared it was 
unmistakably human blood. On the I3th December following, Josephine 
again fetched FAbb6 Grand to the chapel. Rose was in ecstasy before the 
altar, gazing at the picture in which the wounds were undoubtedly covered 
with fresh blood. In order to be reinforced by a second opinion they sent 
for a clever young practitioner, Dr. Clement, to examine the phenomenon 
and give his written opinion. Dr. Clement, taking a piece of spotless linen, 
put it to the painted wounds, and analysed the stains on the linen. In 
his report he states that it was undoubtedly human blood, but he asked, 
"How did it get there?" He would not say that he considered it a miracle. 
A tremendous sensation followed, for 1'Abbe Grand soon spread the 
astounding news. It was the talk of the whole countryside, and hundreds 
of pilgrims thronged the chapel. The civil authorities were obliged to take 
cognizance of these happenings. Rose was everywhere acclaimed a saint, 
and a great saint. Happy were the favoured few who might speak to her, 
and kiss her stigmatized hand, or even the hem of her dress. The most 
extraordinary scenes of frantic emotion and the wildest enthusiasm took 
place. Offerings were rained upon the chapel, and upon the saint. 

On Thursday evening, igth December, His Grace the Archbishop of 
Avignon with his chaplains arrived at the presbytery. A man of prompt 
action Monseigneur resolved to investigate the matter for himself. He 
first ordered everyone to leave the chapel. When it was empty the doors 
were locked, and the keys brought to the house. All night long, crowds 
were praying outside, and at dawn there began to arrive in coaches, 
carriages, tax-carts, hay-wagons, priests and people from near and far. 
About half-past seven in company with Josephine Imbert there appeared 
Rose Tamisier, walking slowly with her eyes nearly closed as if almost 
in ecstasy. The crowd reverently made way for her, and hundreds knelt. 
She prostrated herself in prayer, and then said she must be allowed to 
enter the chapel to intercede at the very altar. When TAbb Grand was 
informed of this, he entreated the Archbishop to grant her request. For 
a few minutes Monseigneur, who had not as yet left the presbytery, 
seemed to hesitate, and then, as several priests pleaded earnestly with 
him, he yielded. The key was handed to Rose who entered and closed 
the door behind her. Josephine remained in the porch. 

M. Grave, the sous-prdfet of Saint-Satumin, was present on behalf 
of the civil authorities to regulate with his gendarmes the huge concourse. 
Everything, however, was perfectly orderly and quiet. Himself, he firmly 
believed in Rose Tamisier's divine inspirations. When the chapel was 
opened to the public all entered without scuffling or noise. Rose was 
seen kneeling entranced before the altar. In a very few minutes the 
solemn procession of the Archbishop and his train appeared. Monseigneur 
knelt at the faldstool and surrounded by his household engaged in prayer. 
At a sign from His Grace one of the chaplains ascended to the altar and 
held a piece of fair linen to the wound in the side as depicted on the 
reredos. He drew it away, and handed it to the Archbishop, who perceived 

227 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

there were seven or eight distinct blood-stains marked on it. They folded 
it, and gave it in charge to another chaplain. All engaged in prayer. 
During this time Rose seemed rapt in a trance. After some fifteen minutes, 
the chaplain applied in the same way a fresh piece of linen to the canvas. 
The stains were now very faint, hardly visible. This was shown to M. 
Grave, who rising to his feet began in a clear voice: "I can explain 

why " A gesture from the Archbishop stopped him, and realizing the 

impropriety he had committed he sat down in some confusion. "She 
seems tired. Take her home and let her rest," said Monseigneur, turning 
to Rose, who was accordingly led out, half-swooning and hardly able 
to walk. The Archbishop then took his place upon an improvised throne, 
and to the surprise of afl, two carpenters with their workmen entered and 
proceeded to remove the picture from the wall. It was carried away 
through the Sacristy, and the prelate with his procession withdrew. 

At eleven o'clock High Mass coram pontifice was celebrated, and the 
Archbishop addressed the overflowing congregation. It was noticed that 
although he took for his text the words Memoriam fecit mirabilium 
suorum (He hath been mindful of the Miracles which He wrought of old), 
his sermon dealt almost exclusively with the Blessed Sacrament. 

Later, the Archbishop granted Rose an interview of some thirty 
minutes* He was kindly but entirely non-committal, although he remarked 
that it was a mistake for her to have insisted upon visiting the chapel 
alone that morning. "There should be others present," he observed. And 
so he dismissed her. Just as he was on the point of departure Mr. Grave 
came hurrying up, but Monseigneur entering his coach with his chaplains 
rather dryly declined to hear any more. "What we have seen and heard 
to-day will amply suffice for us to form our judgement," he said. And so 
he drove away. 

After the visit of the Archbishop of Avignon the whole countryside 
seemed divided into two camps. The majority regarded Rose as one of 
God's most favoured souls. A minority declared that it was all cunning 
imposture. L'Abb6 Caire and a few feared it was diabolical. An Ecclesias- 
tical Commission of five dignitaries was appointed to inquire into the 
alleged miraculous phenomena. Rose herself, Josephine Imbert, and 
Delphine Jean were closely interrogated. Authorities in mystic theology 
visited the district, examined witnesses, consulted with other experts. 
The Abbe Grand was privately warned that some very ugly facts had 
come to light, and he was instructed to use the utmost circumspection 
in his dealings with Rose Tamisier. The Bishop of Rochelle, a prelate of 
great learning and a keen intellect, did not hesitate to write as follows to 
the Archbishop of Avignon: "Having thoroughly gone into the whole 
business I am convinced that the alleged miraculous phenomena are at 
best absolutely fraudulent. I recognize Rose Tamisier as none other than 
a cunning impostor. We only have to call to mind how she insisted 
upon being left alone in the church before the 'miracle' ; how after the 
wounds in the picture had been lightly touched with a piece of linen 
two or three times the blood ceased to flow; with what pride and anger 
she spoke when anyone ventured to doubt the 'miracle', which she 
228 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

asserted would occur yet again to humble her enemies, as though a 
miracle were ever worked for so unworthy a reason. God does not act 
thus. Nor must we forget the harvest her sister-in-law has been reaping 
through the immense concourse of strangers, many wealthy and generous, 
from all parts, who have literally besieged the" hostelry. Their profits 
have been enormous. One cannot blind oneself to these facts, and there 
are other more than dubious circumstances in the case." 

Mgr. Caval, rector of the diocesan seminary, and an important figure 
among the commissioners, gave his opinion even more plainly. "I firmly 
believe/' he declared, "that all these bizarre phenomena are demoniacal. 
Rose Tamisier, as I have discovered, belongs to a secret society whose 
aim is to astound and mislead the faithful by the exhibition of miracles, 
miracles which are, I say, worked by the Prince of Darkness. In fact this 
society is a coven of satanists. The members are nothing other than 
Manichees although they may go by a different name." 

There can be no question, then, that the stigmata of Rose Tamisier 
were demoniacal. It was further proved beyond a doubt that Rose belonged 
to the followers of the pseudo-prophet Vintras, with whom, as was noticed 
in the history of the Agen sorceries, the satanist Virginie was allied. The 
Ecclesiastical Commissioners delivered their report to the Archbishop. 
Although, in order not to arouse more scandal it was couched in very 
moderate terms, their decision could not but be most damnatory. They 
glanced, as lightly as possible, at the ill repute of the person principally 
concerned, they emphasized the exaggerations and eccentricities of the 
whole business, and gave as their opinion that the events were not 
miraculous in any true sense of the word, that is to say they were not 
of Heaven. In a phrase they hinted at something evil which so to speak 
counselled and conducted the imposture, there were phenomena which 
at the moment they preferred to leave unexplained. A far fuller and 
more detailed report was sent by the Archbishop of Rome, to the Holy 
Office, in order that it might be submitted to the Holy Father. The text 
of this naturally is not available. 

The procureur de la Rtpublique, the Public Prosecutor as we may 
term him, now stepped in since there had been a serious offence. Rose 
Tamisier was committed on two charges. Firstly, she had acquired con- 
siderable sums of money by means of a trick, that is to say by deluding 
a number of persons in the belief that she was the recipient of divine 
favours. Secondly, she had by her conduct gravely offended and outraged 
by her roguery and dishonesty both morals and religion. It was necessary 
for the preservation of social order and decorum that such knavery 
should be punished, and it was in fact punishable by the law. 

On the loth February, 1851, she was brought before the local magis- 
trate, who cross-examined her at great length. He treated her with much 
kindness and forbearance, encouraging her to make a full acknowledgement 
of her guilt when she would be leniently dealt with, but she stuck to her 
story. However, there was forthcoming most incriminating evidence. It 
was proved, for example, that on two separate occasions Rose and her 
brother Francois had been seen slipping out of the house long before 

229 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

dawn and walking stealthily in the direction of the chapel. A neighbour, 
who happened to be looking out of his window since he was about to 
rise on some early business had caught sight of them, and again a chance 
traveller, staying one night at the inn, who was aroused by a door softly 
closing, saw the brother and sister steal out, but as it was none of his 
business he thought nothing more of it at the moment. A few minutes 
later Delphine Jean followed them. Other witnesses deposed that long 
before sunrise, Rose had been seen within a few yards of the chapel. 
It was certain that she had procured a set of false keys. It may well be 
that a coven of diabolists met in hellish rendezvous within those sacred 
walls. Incidentally, it should be remarked that Josephine Imbert, an 
impressionable girl, was a simple dupe throughout the whole black 
business. 

Upon the I3th February, 1851, the Pope who had instructed Cardinal 
Lambruschini at once to inform him of every new detail of the affaire 
Rose Tamisier, wrote with his own hand to the Archbishop of Avignon, 
whose prudence and cautious conduct he praised in the highest terms. 
This, said His Holiness, will be an excellent lesson to many, and serve 
to show them with what circumspection and mistrust even, the Church 
regards the report of any miracle or supernatural phenomena. We propose 
to publish, if not officially, at least with our sanction and good-will, a 
report pointing out how ready the laity were to accept these happenings 
as miracles of God, whilst Ecclesiastical Authority wholly repudiated 
any such explanation. Upon the next day, the Holy Office, acting upon 
the Pope's direction, formally transmitted to the Archbishop the con- 
clusions arrived at, and suggested the course which at any future date 
might be followed should repercussions of the scandal ensue. 

Rose Tamisier had meanwhile been medically examined by a couple 
of specialists who found no sufficient reason to advise any departure 
from the usual proceedings. Her trial took place at the Assize Court 
upon the first of September. All night long, crowds poured into Carpentras, 
and in the Court itself which was packed to suffocation many persons 
of high rank and great distinction were glad to find any inch of room 
were it but a stool or an old chair brought in from outside. The charge 
may be summed up as common swindling aggravated by sacrilege. The 
Abbg Andr proved the connexion of the accused with the followers of 
Vintras who had been prosecuted and punished by the Assize Court of 
Caen on 23rd November, 1841. In the witness-box the Abb6 Caire main- 
tained that these "miracles" were diabolic from first to last, an exposure 
which struck terror to the heart of the wretched woman and fearfully 
alarmed her fellow satanists. 

Eventually Rose Tamisier was sentenced to fifteen months imprison- 
ment and amerced in costs of 882 francs. She was gaoled at Carpentras, 
and since she declared herself unable to pay the money, her release did 
not take place until soth November, 1852, under the edict of Louis 
Napoleon, which abrogated the further detention of those who having 
fully served their sentence could not discharge additional costs or fines. 

She returned to Saignon, to find herself completely ignored and 
230 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

forgotten. Her day of hectic excitement was over. But the Church 
remembered still. It might well be that the diabolists would again 
make use of her to arouse fresh scandals, fresh bedevilments. On 
i6th December, 1852, the parish priest of Saignon wrote to the Arch- 
bishop, informing His Grace that on the previous day Rose Tamisier 
had taken up her residence there. He asked for detailed instructions, 
which were promptly transmitted. Briefly, as Canon Law required, until 
such time as the unhappy wretch had made open and ample acknowledge- 
ment of her impostures and her wickedness to the Archbishop himself, 
humbly begging pardon and receiving such penance as might be assigned 
her, in a humble and contrite spirit to attest her sincerity, she was to 
be deprived of the Sacraments. 

Every day Rose haunted the church, and shadowed the parish priest 
uttering protestations and reproaches. Her defiance became unbearable. 
There was something inhuman, something of abnormal malice in that 
figure which glided to and fro the aisles, suddenly confronting the Cure 
and his assistants. She refused, absolutely refused to submit. 'The 

miracles were true true true " was her constant cry, "they were 

miracles." Miracles, yes, but of hell. In April, 1853, the Archbishop 
deemed it necessary in a private letter to warn all the priests of the 
provinces against her, and a year later he was obliged to re-iterate his 
charge. The only concession he would or could make was that if she 
were mortally ill the priest might administer the last Sacraments, pro- 
vided that in the presence of two or three witnesses, she acknowledged 
her impostures. If she were unable to exert herself so much, absolution 
might be given sub tacita conditone* What more could Monseigneur 
concede? 

In 1858 Rose wrote a letter of remonstrance to the Archbishop, 
who returned no reply. She knew her duty if she really wished to be 
reconciled. At the very same time there was some trouble brewing at 
Saignon in regard to a Relic, which she was suspected to have stolen. 
The matter was quietly cleared up, but the good parish priest remarked 
that it bitterly grieved him to learn that she had confederates at Saint- 
Saturnin who seem to be prompting her and furnishing her with funds. 

A little later, in 1862, Rose Tamisier was living at Villeneuve-les- 
Avignon. There was some gossip to the effect that she was distributing 
pieces of linen stained with blood. A canon of the cathedral inquired 
whether this was the case. The parish-priest of Villeneuve-16s-Avignon 
wrote to say that so far as he can discover, and he has made searching 
inquiries, the rumour is untrue. She was leading a very retired life in utter 
obscurity, seemingly anxious not to attract attention. And so she 
disappears from sight. 

I have given these two cases of diabolic mysticism, Virginie of Agen 
and Rose Tamisier, at some length for the following reasons. Firstly: 
although all the great authorities upon Mysticism, for example, Schram, 
Gorres, and Canon Ribet, deal in detail with diabolic mysticism, too 
many of the more recent English writers upon the subject have entirely 
ignored the darker aspects, and hence their surveys cannot but be halting 

231 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

and lame. One author, indeed, no undistinguished name, goes so far as 
to parade his cowardly avoiding of what he is pleased to term "debased 
super-naturalism" as meritorious and a virtue. Such an ostrich-attitude 
in these writers appears to me self-illusory. Is there to be no warning-post 
of danger? There are few, if any, among the Saints and mystics who 
have not been attacked, it may be with open violence, it may be 
insidiously, by the demon and his angels. We know of the satanical 
persecutions of St. Antony the Great, St. Hilarion, St. Pachomius, and 
other holy anchorites. Blessed Christina of Stommeln was bruised by 
fiends, and subjected to almost incredible outrages and assaults. 
The Seraphic Mother, Catharine of Siena, wrested with and overcame 
immense forces of evil. Blessed Eustochium of Padua is hailed by her 
biographer the Augustinian Giovanni Maria Giberti as "L'Invitta 
Gueniera trionfante di Satanasso", "the Invincible Heroine who battled 
with and triumphed over the Archfiend" [8], The Cure d'Ars, St. Jean 
Baptiste Vianney was sorely plagued by the poltergeist phenomena 
of the grappin, a foul goblin [9]. 

In the Life of St. Paul of the Cross it is recorded how the devil was 
permitted to torment the Saint with terrible disturbances, horrid hissing, 
and frightful noises, as if many pieces of artillery had been discharged, 
and often awoke him thus in the night to his terror and dismay. Hideous 
fiends in the shapes of monstrous deformed cats leaped suddenly upon 
his bed. They often appeared as great black grimalkins with hellishly 
intelligent staring green eyes, or mastiffs of giant size, and frightful 
birds of prey, all of which shrieked and yelloched and yowled in mocking 
human voices [10]. 

St. Gemma Galgani, too, who died in 1903, was so hateful to Satan 
that he waged a continual war against her, and tortured her by bruises 
and blows, attempting the most abominable deceits to entrap her. 
Padre Germano, her spiritual director, relates how once when she lay ill 
in bed, after having prayed by her side, he seated himself to recite his 
Office. Suddenly there brushed past him an enormous dark-coloured 
cat which furiously leaped on to the bed and crouched there with savage 
looks. "I felt my blood curdle at the sight, while Gemma remained quite 
calm. She said: 'Don't be afraid, father; it is the vile demon who wants 
to annoy me/ I approached her trembling, with holy water and sprinkled 
her bed. The demon vanished away" [11]. 

In view, then, of these satanical assaults and artifices a writer on 
mysticism cannot ignore the darker side, and the devil is never more 
dangerous than when disguised as an angel of light, when he is counter- 
feiting the supernatural gifts of God such as ecstasies, the stigmata, 
levitation. 

Secondly: the cases of Virginie of Agen and Rose Tamisier seem to 
be little, if at all, known in England. They are fully documented, and 
very instructive in detail. We note that even pious and well-intentioned 
persons were deceived by these impostures. 

The greater the grace the more necessary it is that the utmost prudence 
should be used. All mystical theologians of authority are insistent in 




PLATE XI: THE TRAXSVERBERATIOX or THE HEART OF 

ST, TERESA 

Les Inverts fa la SalnU Mire Tertee J< Jisus. Paris: 1050 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

emphasizing this. Holy Church shows extreme caution before pro- 
nouncing upon the nature of these phenomena. 

It has been stated that during the nineteenth century at least thirty 
cases of true stigmata were recorded, but as has been already pointed 
out it is not possible to reach any exact estimate of the subjects of this 
divine phenomenon, and I feel sure that the number thirty could be 
doubled, or very nearly doubled, without any exaggeration. An arid list 
of names and dates is not very inspiring, and accordingly two or three 
typical examples must stand for many, nor is it possible to deal with these 
at any great length. The fact is that each stigmatist or stigmatized 
ecstatica demands a separate and detailed study. 

Maria Elisabetta Cecilia Gertrude Canori [12] was born at Rome on 
2ist November, 1774, some three months after the death of Clement XIV 
and a little before the election of Pius VI, sede vacante as the technical 
term goes. Her parents, Tommaso Canori and Teresa nie Primoli, came 
of good old stock, a house ranking just below aristocracy. As a child, 
Elisabetta attended the school of Santa Eufemia, where she was dis- 
tinguished by the quickness of her ability, her clear grasp of the subjects 
taught, and above all, as the good Sisters used to delight to report to 
her mother, by her natural piety, 'That little girl will go far," said the 
Superioress, Mother Riggoli. When she was eleven years old circum- 
stances obliged her father to withdraw her from the school and place 
her to complete her education with the Augustinian nuns of Cascia, the 
glory of whose cloisters had been Saint Rita. Elisabetta longed to take 
the vows, and the house she ardently desired to join was that of Monte- 
falco where sleeps the incorrupt body of St. Clara. She already showed 
so extraordinary a knowledge of things mystical, an intuition far beyond 
her years, that one day the spiritual director of the nuns asked her in 
surprise: "Little girl, how did you learn all this? Who has been talking 
to you?" Looking up with her clear limpid eyes Elisabetta replied in 
two words: "Jesus Christ." 

But her wish was not destined to be accomplished. Her father came 
to Cascia to bring her back home. She was through obedience to her 
parents obliged to mix in society, and Rome at that time was the city 
to which all the great and pleasure-loving members of society in Europe 
naturally gravitated. It has been truly said that the Papal Court in its 
most brilliant days was unique in Europe. Many princesses shone like 
stars, but the leader of them all was acknowledged to be the Princess 
Santacroce, whose palace was the centre wherein collected all the fashion- 
able and all the noble visitors to the eternal city. This lady delighted in 
receiving her friends with boundless hospitality. It was said that the 
Princess Altieri received on Sunday evenings, Princess Massimi on 
Wednesday, Don Marco Ottoboni on Thursday, and so on, but la 
Santacroce was at home every day in the week. The entertainment at 
such gatherings consisted of recitations, music by the best masters, 
singing by the most admired voices, and a good deal of conversation 
where the finest wits and keenest intellects in Europe struck fire. In 
those salons might be seen Cardinal de Bernis; Cardinal Zelada, the 

P 233 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

Secretary of State; the sometime Nuncio at Paris, Cardinal Bernardino 
Giraud, one of the most influential of the Consistory; Cardinal Giovanni 
Battista Rezzonico, and his brother the Cardinal Camerlingo. The Queens 
of Bosnia, Cyprus, Hungary, Sweden, Poland, Spain, Sardinia, Sicily, 
and Etruria, were entertained with the utmost magnificence, almost 
exceeding the splendour of their own courts, by the great hostesses of 
Rome. Many and many a foreign monarch found in these truly regal 
drawing-rooms the lavish welcome which etiquette precluded the Holy 
Father himself from offering them. 

There were also the literary clubs, or accademie, frequented by the 
elite of society. The "Arcadia" confined its membership to the highest 
nobility, although visitors were allowed on special occasions, which were 
not a few. The "Aborigines" met at the Villa Giustiniani with the Prince 
as its President. The "Forti" was an assembly under the patronage of 
Duke Sforza Cesarini. The "Colleges of Poetry" were thronged by young 
gallants of the first families since nobody could take any place in society 
who was not an accomplished litterateur. 

Performances of sacred music, the Oratorio introduced by St. Philip 
Neri, were given in the oratory attached to the Chiesa Nuova, S. Maria 
in Vallicella, in San Girolamo, Via di Monserrato; and at the Caravita. 
Often the music was illustrated by scenic representations, and invariably 
these gatherings were thronged with notables. 

This, then, was the social life to which Elisabetta Canori was pre- 
sented. But it must be remembered that Rome was also (as ever) a City 
of deep spirituality, and it was here that Elisabetta's heart was fixed. 
She had no care for dazzling diversions, the galas, the banquets, the 
conversazioni, the soirees and receptions, whereat in obedience to her 
parents' command she must needs from time to time appear and play 
her part. It was all, had she realized it, in the Divine plan, and she was 
acting according to the Will of God, since it brought home to her with 
intenser conviction that such a life could never satisfy the longing of 
her soul. Amid those brilliant fgtes she was the only reality in a world of 
shadows. 

There were many suitors for her hand, since she was very lovely. 
But she refused offer after offer, until when she was one-and-twenty 
her father grew impatient at this "nice procrastination" as he termed 
it, and she was constrained to betroth herself to Cristoforo, the son of 
an eminent and very wealthy physician, Dr. Francesco Mora. Her fianc 
was young, cultured, handsome, much admired for his talents and charm. 
He was deeply in love. And yet her mother had a presentiment that the 
match would not be for her daughter's happiness. She could give no teal 
reason for this foreboding. Her husband's word in the household was 
law. Cristoforo and Elisabetta were married on loth January, 1796. 

Teresa Canori had feared only too truly for her daughter. The 
intuition of a mother's love did not deceive. Cristoforo complained 
that his bride did not seem to appreciate the fine suite in the Palazzo 
Vespignani to which he had brought her. She took no delight in presents 
of rich dresses and jewels. She was reluctant to mix in society. She was 
234 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

silent and solitary, always retiring and shy. He had not bargained to 
marry a nun. So against her own will she strove to do her best to please 
him. Then he changed his tune. Why did she talk so long to so-and-so 
last night? Why did she keep all her good humour for such-a-one? He 
became insanely jealous. 

After the birth of their first child, a daughter who died, Cristoforo 
treated his wife with the utmost coldness, and now openly neglected 
her. The reason for this, as she soon discovered, was that he had indulged 
in a shameful intrigue with a common woman who was, leech-like, 
draining him of his estate. He seemed in fact to have lost all sense of 
decency, and did not trouble to disguise his infidelity from the patient 
and long-suffering Elisabetta. Never a word of reproach fell from her 
lips, but when this low trull demanded more and more money he vented 
his ill-temper at home. Things, indeed, came to such a pass that Dr. 
Francesco Mora insisted upon his son and daughter-in-law removing to 
much mere modest apartments, in the same house as he himself resided, 
hoping that this would at least prove some check on his profligate son, 
whose depleted purse did not allow him to refuse the new arrangement. 
But Cristoforo, of course, laid the blame on his wife's shoulders. She 
must have gone with some whining tale to his father or hers he declared, 
and her life was rendered miserable. As she afterwards avowed, 
she must have succumbed had it not been for her infinite trust in 
God. 

A second child had died in babyhood, but a third daughter, Marianna 
was born, and on 5th July 1801, was born her fourth daughter, Maria 
Lucina. In their two daughters she found much consolation, herself 
undertaking their education, the first lesson they learned being to love 
God. Thus her husband's neglect she turned to advantage. It enabled her 
to withdraw completely from society and to lead a secluded life. She was 
always willing and ready to share in the labours of the house, nay, cheer- 
fully to do the work of all, so that she became a great favourite with 
Dr. Mora who appreciated her worth, and was the more angry with his 
recalcitrant son, whom nothing seemed able to divert from his evil 
courses. 

Almost unknown to herself, Elisabetta in her patience, her meekness 
and humility, had already far advanced along the mystic path to per- 
fection. It was early in the morning of the yth September, the Eve of 
the Nativity of Our Lady, for which Feast she had prepared by fervent 
prayer, that she beheld a vision of the Mother of God. The radiant figure 
smiled upon her as well-pleased. In Her hands the Madonna held a snow- 
white dove, whose wings were marked with the Five Sacred Wounds 
aglow with crimson light. From one of these wounds there detached 
itself a nail, flaming with fire, which pierced like a sharp lance the heart 
of Elisabetta, overwhelming her with love, so that she passed into 
ecstasy. 

Her confessor, Don Gian Giacomo Pegna, a man of great prudence, 
said little to her when she related what had occurred, beyond encouraging 
her to persevere, but it came about that he was shortly leaving Rome, 

235 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

at least for a time, and meanwhile she must needs seek another spiritual 
director. Being one day in San Carlo alle Quattro Fontane, the church 
of the Discalced Spanish Trinitarians, she felt impelled to open her heart 
to a priest in a confessional there. This was none other than Padre 
Ferdinando di San Luigi, a mystic of the highest order. He questioned 
her closely, and at once recognized that she was far advanced in grace, 
one of God's holiest souls. From October 1807, he was her spiritual 
father and guide. "It was Heaven," she said, "that directly sent me to 
him/' We may remember a similar circumstance in the life of St. Teresa 
of Avila, who was completely misunderstood by at least five or six 
priests to whom she related her mystical experiences. They were "all 
great servants of God/' she says, but adds distressingly "they were all 
against me/' They left her, in fact, "quite upset and worn out, with not 
the least idea what to do". And then she was encouraged by St. Peter of 
Alcantara, the Franciscan contemplative, with whom she had "many 
talks", and her Jesuit directors were full of sympathy, and above all 
there came into her life "the father of her soul", that "Spirit of Flame"- 
whom the world knows as St. John of the Cross. 

Padre Ferdinando the Trinitarian moulded and directed the soul of 
Elisabetta Canori Mora until she attained the highest realms of mysticism. 
She truly needed a strong helping hand. Cristoforo, her husband, seemed 
to be going from bad to worse. He had already impoverished his family, 
his wife and daughters, by his licentiousness, gambling, and other 
depravities, and when his father died, heart-broken in 1813, he did not 
hesitate to try to embezzle a considerable sum of money. His sisters 
not unnaturally refused to help him unless indeed he completely altered 
his ways, and Elisabetta, deprived of her father-in-law's kindly aid, 
was obliged to move to a small house at a very low rent. 

In 1819, on Whit-Sunday, whilst she was rapt in prayer before the 
High Altar of San Carlo she heard a voice which said: "It is My Will 
that thou shouldest become a Tertiary of the Order of Barefoot Trini- 
tarians/' When, in fear lest she should be refused for the rule was of 
the strictest she falteringly spoke of this to Padre Ferdinando, to her 
surprise he answered that he also had received an inspiration that she 
must be enrolled, and he was but waiting for her to approach him with 
the prayer that she might be clothed in the habit. After the usual period 
of probation and testing, early in the following year she was solemnly 
invested and took the Tertiary name of Joanna Felix of the Most Holy 
Trinity. It may be explained that the Tertiary habit is generally worn 
only at the formal assemblies, and that at death the Tertiary is buried 
in the full robes of the Order. During life a scapular is worn under the 
ordinary dress, but it is enjoined that the clothes of a Tertiary, whilst 
fitting his or her station in life should be as far as possible simple and 
neat, without any superfluous ornament, and subfusc in hue. 

It is from this time that Elisabetta was especially devoted to Our 
Lord under the title Jesus the Nazarene. This is one of the great Feasts 
of the Trinitarians. 

The world treated Elisabetta hardly, but she overcame it with patience 
236 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

humility. She suffered, as the Saints have done, demoniacal perse- 
cutions and assaults of the evil one. She suaered and was silent. Great 
was her reward, for she was granted the supreme mystical experience 
of the Spiritual Marriage, when Our Lord appeared' to her with His 
Mother and St. Joseph amid a radiant company of Angels. Upon the 2nd 
July, 1823, the Feast of the Visitation of Our Lady she received the 
stigmata. Her life, it was said, was none other than one long ecstasy. 
In church, at San Carlo, in the house, in her own room, at table, even 
in the street the divine rapture would entrance her and her soul flew 
heavenwards on the wings of love. 

Modest, retiring as she was, such gifts could not be hid. Often and 
often her neighbours, if a child were ill, if they were anxious or in trouble, 
in the event of loss or any calamity, would say "Let us ask Signora 
Elisabetta to pray for us, and all will be well." She was known to be 
gifted with the spirit of prophecy, whilst the mysterious colloquies, full 
of mystic wisdom, which she uttered whilst in ecstasy were carefully 
committed to paper and are now being examined by experts in mystical 
theology in view of her beatification which is confidently awaited. " 

She died upon the 5th February, 1825, ai *<l is buried in her much- 
loved church, San Carlo alle Quattro Fontane, hard by the altar of San 
Miguel de los Santos. Padre Ferdinando wrote the epitaph which is 
graven on her tomb. 

The cause for beatification was introduced on 22nd June, 1876, and 
formally approved by Pius IX, whose successor Leo XIII on 22nd June, 
1892, declared that the official Process in the case of the Venerable 
Elisabetta Canori Mora was valid and good. 

Elisabetta Canori Mora is an example of a mystic who was compelled 
by circumstances not only to live in the world rather than in the cloister 
she" would have chosen, but as a girl to mix in society, to marry, to endure 
the martyrdom of an unhappy domestic life. She was the wife of a bad 
husband, a reckless and disloyal profligate, she was the tender mother 
of two daughters. Such was her exterior life. It was very commonplace, 
and often very sad. In one way she may seem the nearer to us therefor; 
she is more understandable, more ordinary. 

So this mystic has a marvellous message for ordinary people, for 
those who are weighed down by the dull burden of domestic care. Her 
interior life was lived on the highest plane. 

An entirely different figure from the Roman matron and mother was 
the "Little Arab", Marie Baouardie, in religion Soeur Marie de J6sus 
Crucifi^. Born at Abellin, a little village of Galilee near Nazareth, in 
1846, she died in the Carmelite convent of Bethlehem at the age of thirty- 
three. It was obvious from the first that Soeur Marie was a mystic of a 
very advanced order. Her austerities and mortifications were ever con- 
cealed under a radiant smile. The Carmelite nuns of Pau, where she 
spent much of her cloistered life, declared that she was a ray of sunlight 
in the house. She was a true daughter of St. Teresa who liked her nuns 
to be cheerful and detested gloomy faces. The sayings of Soeur Marie, 
whilst rapt in ecstasy, were carefully taken down, and as recently as I5th 

237 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

July, 1924, the Congregation of Rites at Rome pronounced a favourable 
judgement after a meticulous examination of those writings. 

Sceur Marie died at 5.10 in the morning, and five hours later an 

eminent surgeon, Dr. Carpani, removed the heart from her body. He at 

once perceived on this organ, a deep wound, triangular in shape, and 

appearing as though it had been inflicted by a broad sword. The monks 

and priests who were present carefully observed the cicatrice, whose 

two lips were dry, showing that it was impossible for it to have been 

inflicted during the post-mortem operation. "But might not some malady 

have caused it?" inquired Dom Belloni. "That is out of the question," 

replied Dr. Carpani, "the heart is perfectly healthy and sound." On 24th 

May, 1868, Sceur Marie, who was then living in the Carmelite convent 

of Pau, passed into ecstasy. It seemed to be even more extraordinary 

than her wonted raptures. She was thrilled by indescribable delight, 

and endured Love's completest martyrdom. Suddenly, addressing herself 

to St. Teresa, she cried out: "O Mother Teresa! Jesus has pierced my 

heart!" This, then, was the ferita, discovered ten years later, immediately 

after her death. The heart is treasured at Pau, but shut away until such 

time as the Little Arab has been beatified by the Supreme Pontiff. On 

I3th May, 1929, the Bishop of Bayorme assisted by two of the leading 

doctors of Pau made official inquiry into the condition of the heart. The 

cicatrice could be plainly seen, and both doctors signed a certificate to 

that effect [13]. 

Dr. Imbert-Gourbeyre speaks of a holy stigmatica of Ard&che, 
Victoire Claire of Coux, who died in 1883. Only a few details are told. 
She is also mentioned by Eug&ne-Auguste-Albert de Rochas d'Aiglun 
in his Recueil de documents relatifs d la Uvitation du corps humain, Paris, 
published P. G. Leymarie, 1897. Victoire Claire was frequently seen 
levitated in ecstasy. There is no published life of this mystic since that 
written by P&re Roussett, S. J., has not been given to the press. The 
Abb6 Combes, who was parish-priest of Coux during Victoire Claire's 
lifetime, carefully noted in a diary many of the phenomena, and gave an 
account of the stigmatica. But this also remains in manuscript. Victoire 
Claire suffered greatly from demoniacal persecutions, and seems to have 
reached a very advanced state in the supernatural life since she was 
(we believe) divinely comforted and sustained during the attacks of the 
fiend. 

It has been said of Louise Lateau of Bois-d'Haine that "Lapse of 
time has for the most part made the recollection of this interesting case 
of stigmatization a dim memory only, but Louise Lateau does not merit 
this oblivion, both on account of her unassuming, simple and captivating 
personality, and from the fact that all the supernatural phenomena in 
her case were subjected to the most rigorous investigation . . . she was 
a very tower of strength for the existence of the Supernatural, not only 
with regard to Belgium, her native country, but also for many who 
flocked to Bois-d'Haine to see her from France, Germany, and England." 

It is, I think, hardly true to say that Louise Lateau is "a dim memory 
only". She is a very striking figure in the history of mysticism, the 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

more especially so since her case was so rigorously investigated by 
specialists and doctors from practically every European country. There 
was not a test which was not applied, and amplest opportunity was 
given for the most scrupulously exact examinations, not once or twice, 
but repeated, again and again. 

Dr. Lefebvre, one of the most distinguished medical men of the day, 
and a professor of the University of Louvain, undertook a thorough and 
prolonged examination of the case. During the autumn-winter of 1868 
and throughout 1869 Dr. Lefebvre paid many visits to Bois-d'Haine, 
often (on purpose) arriving quite unexpectedly, and most minutely 
investigating the several phenomena of the ecstasies and the stigmata. 
He filled many note-books, and after most careful deliberation he pub- 
lished the results in Vol. XXVIII (1869) and Vol. XXIX (1870) of the 
Revue Catholique. In 1870-2, these important articles were collected in 
book form as "Louise Lateau of Bois-d'Haine. Her Life, her Ecstasies, 
her Stigmata. A medical Study. Louvain, Charles Peeters." During the 
fall of 1872 the Belgian Royal Academy of Medicine sent a commission 
to report the facts and their findings. 

At two o'clock on 2ist January, 1875, Dr. Warlomont and Dr. Duwez, 
before there was the slightest sign of bleeding from the stigmata, enclosed 
the right arm of Louise in a glass apparatus, which was carefully placed 
and bound by bandages hermatically sealed. Canon Hallez of Tournai 
and the Abb6 Niels, parish priest of Bois-d'Haine, were present but 
touched nothing. The next day the seals being found intact the apparatus 
was taken off by Dr. Warlomont and Professor Dr. Crocq, who was an 
agnostic. The stigmata had bled as usual. The doctors' report ran: "The 
haemorrhages appear most certainly to have been spontaneous and it 
seems that they must have occurred without the intervention of any 
exterior agency": Bulletin d V Academic Roy ale de Medecine de Belgiqiie, 
1875. Tome XV, No. 2, pp. 176-79. 

Already in October, 1868, the celebrated Dr. Imbert-Gourbeyre of 
Clermont-Ferrand had visited Bois-d'Haine, and in 1873 he published a 
most exhaustive study perhaps the completest study of the case. His 
conclusion was exactly that of Dr. Lefebvre: "The Stigmatization and 
Ecstasies of Louise Lateau are real facts, devoid of any suspicion of 
fraud, and Science can furnish no explanation of the phenomena." 

When the famous German Professor Virchow, an obstinate free- 
thinker, was consulted with regard to the stigmata of Louise Lateau 
he gave much care and attention to the case. At last he pronounced his 
verdict: It is either trickery or a Miracle. Not another word could be 
got out of him. We know that there was no trickery. 

The biography of Louise Lateau [14] has been written several times 
and there are so many studies of this amazing ecstatica it will (I think) 
suffice briefly to say that she was born of honest working class parents 
at Bois-d'Haine on 2oth January, 1850. From 1861-1864, with the 
exception of a couple of months when she was engaged in domestic service 
in Brussels, she took situations on small farms near her home. In April, 
1865, she joined her two sisters who were needlewomen, and showed 

239 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

herself an admirable sempstress. During the epidemic of cholera which 
devastated Belgium in 1866, and severely attacked Bois-d'Haine, Louise 
gave up her time to nursing the sick, who often were deserted even by 
their nearest relatives, so awful was the panic that prevailed. She certainly 
exercised heroic charity, and (as she herself acknowledged) divine illumin- 
ations flooded her soul. The stigmatical pains endured by Louise date from 
3rd January, 1868, although they were not exteriorized with bleeding 
until the following 24th April, a Friday. After that date, with two 
exceptions, they bled every Friday, in all 800 times. The widow Lateau 
and her daughter at first considered the phenomenon as a nuisance. 
They shunned the publicity which inevitably ensued, and regarded the 
concourse of visitors as a punishment. Other phenomena were what is 
known as the "Recall", that is to say however profoundly she was rapt 
in ecstasy, when no physical force had any effect, at the command of 
an ecclesiastical superior the trance immediately ceased. Extraordinary 
changes in her weight were recorded by the various specialists who 
examined her. She had a knowledge of languages whilst in ecstasy. A 
Belgian peasant girl, she could converse in Latin and English, whilst 
Mgr. d'Herbonnez, Bishop of British Columbia, who visited her in 1869, 
as a test, spoke in the tongue of the natives of his diocese, which she 
perfectly understood. There was superadded the phenomenon of complete 
abstinence from food. She lived on Holy Communion alone, a recognized 
fact in divine mysticism. From 1879 until her death on 25th August, 
1883, the sufferings of Louise sensibly increased. Times of peril for the 
Church always augmented her agony, although she did not know the 
cause. In 1871, during the funeral of the notorious atheist, Monteschi, 
and on Good Friday of that year when a banquet was held with diabolic 
rites, she lay as if at the point of death. The same week during the 
terrorism at Paris those who were watching thought that she had actually 
passed away in paroxysms of intolerable anguish. Her obsequies, which 
she desired should be as simple as possible were attended by more than 
five thousand persons. She was buried very plainly in the churchyard 
of Bois-d'Haine. 

It is interesting to remark that Louise prophesied the First Great 
War and said that Holland would be the only neighbouring country 
not involved. She further declared that Bois-d'Haine would be untouched, 
unharmed. The village escaped the forced deportation of men; no troops 
were ever quartered there; and whilst the surrounding country was 
terribly damaged by aviators Bois-d'Haile remained unscathed. 

From Belgium we pass to Spain to consider the case of a stigmatica, 
who was no less wonderful than Louise Lateau, who was misrepresented 
and reviled, whose story has (to my knowledge) never been truly told 
in English. 

Maria Rafaela Quiroga [15] who, upon taking the veil, was known in 
religion as Sor Maria Cipriana del Patrocinio de San Jos6 was born in 
1809-10. After the deaths of her father and a brother, when she was 
thirteen years old, she was placed by her newly widowed mother in a 
convent, and the community soon recognized that here was a child of 
240 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

no ordinary piety. They were careful not to betray the least sign of this 
impression. She was not in any way favoured, but rather the reverse. 
Nevertheless her vocation irresistibly manifested itself, and in January, 
1829, she took the cloistered vows in the house of San Jose, known as 
del Caballero de Gratia (Our Protector in Heaven), in Madrid. Shortly it 
was whispered that the saintly nun was an ecstatica, who in her raptures 
voiced mystic revelations. Upon a day Sor Patrocinio, entranced, beheld 
a vision of Our Lord Whose Five Red Wounds streamed with blood and 
shone with golden light. At that moment there darted forth five iridescent 
rays which lanced her feet, hands, and side. In great confusion and 
abashment she endeavoured to conceal the divine stigmata, but since 
she needed fresh linen to staunch the flow of blood this proved impossible. 
She revealed her wonderful secret to the spiritual director of the convent, 
a Capuchin profoundly versed in mystical theology, Fray Firmin de 
Alcaraz, who to her surprise did not seem in the least degree astonished or 
perturbed. He knew even better than herself, how far she had advanced in 
the spiritual life. He counselled discretion and obedience. It was not many- 
days afterwards that she received the Crown of Thorns. Her Superior, 
who had recognized that something extraordinary was happening, now 
questioned her, tactfully but searchingly, and in all humility she was 
obliged to avow the truth. The Prioress then consulted Fray Firmin, 
and was soon assured that in his opinion which carried no little weight, 
the stigmata of Sor Patrocinio were divine. He recommended prudence. 
But somebody, it may have been an extern sister, talked. It may have 
been a whisper through the grille. Madrid learned that in the Convent 
of San Jos del Caballero de Gracia there was cloistered a saintly nun, 
whom Christ Himself had marked with the Five Sacred Wounds and 
crowned with His diadem of thorns. The devotion of the people could 
not be restrained. Ladies of the highest rank, princesses and duchesses 
of the royal family; privileged prelates ; the cardinal and bishops; crowded 
the parlours of San JosS, and begged for even the smallest pieces of linen 
stained with her stigmatical blood. These they regarded (and truly) as 
curative. Such dignitaries were not to be denied. 

Fernando VII died on 2Qth September, 1833, and Spain was almost 
immediately plunged into a welter of internal revolts and anarchy, upon 
the details of which it is fortunately not necessary to enlarge. Suffice 
to say that the anti-clericals conceived and carried through a most 
daring plot. The very audacity of their conspiracies reached such a 
height of diabolic effrontery that for the moment it seemed as if they 
swept all before them. Sor Patrocinio was regarded by the subversives 
with especial dislike, and they had determined that at any cost, by 
perjury, by bribery, by bullying and deception, she must be got rid of, 
relegated to eternal obscurity and oblivion. A process was commenced, 
and in November, 1835, a partisan judge, well-primed and well-paid, 
with a posse of constables, made a sudden descent on the convent, forced 
his way in, and proceeded to interrogate the community. With the 
exception of one young sister who was half driven out of her wits by the 
confusion and the torrent of questioning and abuse so that she did not 

241 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

know what she was saying, the nuns, one and all, solemnly attested that 
the ecstasies and stigmata of Sor Patrocinio were supernatural; on one 
occasion it was proved that the gush of blood from her hands filled two 
coffee cups, nor in spite of all his menaces could the judge induce the 
sisters to be forsworn. In an access of rage he ordered his officials to drag 
Sor Patrocinio away, but by this time the news of this sacrilegious 
incursion had got abroad, and so threatening a crowd collected in the 
street that the ruffian and his gang were glad to escape as best they could. 
None the less a second visit was made more secretly, and Sor Patrocinio 
was taken off to a private house where she was kept prisoner. It was 
sedulously reported that she was under the care of her mother and a 
priest of great integrity. This, of course, nobody believed except those 
whose object it was to do so. Three physicians, corrupted by very con- 
siderable sums of money, Diego Argumosa, Mateo Seaone, and Maximiano 
Gonzalez, purported to have made a close examination of the stigmata, 
and unblushingly set their names to a lying certificate which declared in 
very considerable detail that there was imposture. Meanwhile, Sor 
Patrocinio, who was allowed no communication with anyone save perjured 
officials was conveyed to the Convent of Santa Maria Magdalena, the 
Recojidas, an enclosure which was complete. The authorities, without 
any fear of contradiction, were now able to publish a statement to the 
effect that she had confessed her mystical experiences were play-acting, 
the stigmata a fake. Even in nineteenth century politics there have been 
few more scandalous and shameless perjuries and intrigues. 

A prosecution was pompously initiated against Sor Patrocinio, the 
Prioress and Vicaress of the convent, and a chaplain Andres Rivas. 
Padre Firmin, who was denounced by the lawyers employed as fandtico 
i ignorante en sumo grado, "an ignorant and crazy fanatic", had been 
warned in time, and in obedience to the Capuchin Guardian had with- 
drawn to a retreat which could not be discovered. His name and fame, 
however, were covered with all the scurril obloquy a refinement of 
fiendish malice could invent. A mock trial was carried through, and he 
was condemned in contumaciam. In order to give more publicity to the 
affair it was dragged out and advertised, sentence not being pronounced 
until 25th November, 1836. The counsel for the defence entered an appeal, 
upon which the sentence was gloatingly increased in severity. The Madrid 
house was suppressed, the chaplain, Andr6s Rivas, was banished from 
Madrid for eight years; Sor Patrocinio, the Prioress, and Vicaress, were 
relegated separately to three distant convents of the most rigorous 
observance of their Order. 

Public excitement was intense. It was, indeed, not until 27th April, 
1837, that, at five o'clock in the morning a closed carriage drew up 
quietly at the gate of the Recojidas, and Sor Patrocinio was quickly 
hustled into it. She wore a secular dress, and was bidden on the journey 
under a heavy penalty only to answer to her secular name, Maria Rafaela 
Quiroga. The next day at eight in the evening her guards delivered her 
to the charge of the community of the Madre de Dios house at Talavera. 
She was to be forgotten, extinguished. Evil triumphed. 
242 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

Seven years passed. Governments rose and governments fell. Often 
a state of revolt and semi-anarchy prevailed. Later in 1843 a Cortes was 
elected, and on the 8th November of that winter the young Queen Isabel II 
was declared to have attained her majority, which is to say that she was 
called to play an impossibly difficult part. "Few sovereigns/ 1 it is said, 
"have been so popular as Isabel II in the early years of her majority/' 
Among her first acts was to build in Madrid* in 1845 the Convent" of 
Jesus, of which Sor Patrocinio was elected Abbess. The Queen felt that 
she could have no better adviser than the saintly nun, who, the royal 
command insisted, was to be received at the Convent with all the dignity 
befitting her rank. On the loth October, 1846, the Queen married Don 
Francisco de Asis, whose confessor Padre Fulgencio had always been a 
staunch supporter of the holy stigmatica. The King-Consort appointed 
Manuel Quiroga, Sor Patrocinio's brother, a groom of the Royal Bed- 
chamber. The Minister General of the Capuchins bade Fray Fermin 
Alcar&z come forth from his retirement, and the good friar was conse- 
crated Bishop of Cuenca. The notorious Dr. Argumosa was justly prose- 
cuted for his venality and malfeasance. 

In 1849, the Duke of Valencia, General Narvaez, a ruthless and 
brutal swashbuckler, was openly aiming at a dictatorship, when the 
Queen would have become a mere puppet in his hands. Barricades sprang 
up in the streets of Madrid, and the gutters ran with blood. On the 
morning of St. Ursula's day, 2ist October, he caused Sor Patronicio 
whose influence would (he feared) counteract his despotism, to be hurried 
into a postchaise and driven off to a convent in Badajoz. Fortunately his 
plans received a timely check, and Queen Isabel insisted upon the return 
of her best adviser. In 1850, Narvaez was succeeded as Prime Minister 
by Brabo Murillo, a hard harsh man, full of schemes for his self-aggrandize- 
ment. He also was fearful lest Sor Patroncinio should see through his 
designs, but he went more warily to work. He persuaded the Nuncio 
Brunei!! to send the saintly nun to Rome in order that she might have 
an audience with the Holy Father, hoping that there might be alleged 
some specious reason for detaining her in Italy until he had found time 
to gain a secure footing and well feather his nest. The scheme failed 
miserably. Pius IX indeed welcomed Sor Patrocinio with most fatherly 
kindness, and warmly gave her his blessing, but he whispered at the last 
audience, "My daughter, do not tarry here with Us overlong. Your place 
is at home." 

In 1868, the revolution which swept Spain, drove Queen Isabel to 
seek refuge in France, whilst her faithful subjects wept bitterly for the 
woe to come, and kneeling kissed the hem of her dress. It was a moment 
of poignant tragedy. Sor Patrocinio retired to the convent of Guadalajara, 
of which she was Abbess, and never again passed beyond the quiet cloister 
walls. She felt that her work was done, and at last she could give herself 
wholly to God. Yet even now calumny and lies pursued her. In his book 
La physique des miracles, Paris, Dentu, 1872, Dr. Wilfrid de Fonvielle, 
an unscrupulous but pretentious dabbler in third-rate journalism, had 
the audacity to assert that when Queen Isabel exiled herself from Spain 

243 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

Sor Patroncinio also hurriedly crossed the frontier, and was there estab- 
lished as a tobacconist at Montmorency, Seine-et-Oise. Such fabrications 
were continually exposing this humbug de Fonvielle to some very severe 
handling by the critics, and Charles Richet in a leading article said: 
"It is plain enough that II. Wilfrid de Fonvielle has complete confidence 
in his own knowledge of the subjects concerning which he writes with 
such vapid fluency, but it may be as well for him to learn and, if he can, 
realize that this confidence is not shared by his readers/' He was, in fine, 
summed up as an ignorant and bumptious charlatan [25], 

In her convent at Guadalajara Sor Patrocinio lived her life of the 
highest mysticism. She died most happily, surrounded by her sorrowing 
daughters, on 27th January, 1891, comforted in the last moments by the 
Apostolic Blessing of the Supreme Pontiff, Leo XIII [17]. There are few 
mystics who have been subjected through the years to such systematic 
and deliberately engineered persecution. Her genius had something of 
St. Catharine of Siena, something of St. Teresa of Avila. 

Early in March, 1945, there died at the Dominican convent of Sondrio, 
the capital (with some 4,000-5,000 inhabitants) of the Valtellina, Suor 
Tomassina Possi, who was described [18] a little incorrectly as "the last 
woman known to have been marked with the stigmata". Suor Tomassina, 
who was thirty-four years old, had received the wounds on hands and 
feet, and the ferita, the wound in the side. 

There are known to be other stigmaticas of the twentieth century, 
several of whom are still alive. Of these, several are nuns belonging to 
enclosed Orders, but the contemporary stigmatica who has been most 
widely discussed is without doubt Theresa Neumann of Konnersreuth. 
It is not too much to say that "the living crucifix" of Konnersreuth 
has attracted the attention of the whole world, and Theresa Neumann 
is already the subject of a library of books, mystical, theological, medical, 
critical, written by the most diverse pens from the most diverse points of 
views. Any account of the phenomena of Konnersreuth to be useful 
would have to be very full indeed, and it must not be taken that because 
I touch upon Theresa Neumann briefly (and inadequately) here that I 
fail to recognize her immense importance in the history of stigmatization. 
It is merely because there are easily accessible so many authoritative 
and indeed exhaustive studies of the case. 

Konnersreuth is a small village of about 1,500 people in the Bavarian 
mountains on the borders of Germany and Czechoslovakia. Life is or 
was very tranquil and remote in this far-away place, where the tele- 
phone, and the radio had not penetrated, and a motor-car in the little 
streets and squares used to be a thing to be gazed at as something novel 
and strange. It has been said that "daily toil forms the recreation and 
amusement of the people". The houses are grouped round the church, 
and a spirit of simple piety reigns supreme. It is the usual thing, not a 
mere Sunday or holyday observance, for everyone to assist at Mass every 
morning of the week. Simplicity, peace, and a profound piety are the 
characteristics of Konnersreuth. 

The Neumanns themselves are nothing more than plain peasant folk. 
244 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

The father is a farmer and a tailor; Frau Neumann an honest hard-working 
country woman. Born on 8th April, 1898, Theresa is the eldest surviving 
child. When twelve years old she entered domestic service, helping after 
school hours at a neighbouring farm, where, upon leaving school two 
years later, she was permanently engaged. As she herself says, "I learned 
long ago what a long day's work means." In 1918, whilst engaged in her 
duties, she unfortunately met with a couple of accidents which necessitated 
medical treatment, and eventually she was compelled to take to her 
bed, which distressed her deeply, since she felt that she was a burden 
on the poor household. Dr. Seidl of Waldsassen gave it as his opinion 
that no adequate medical explanation could be found to fit this baffling 
case. None the less Theresa was cured, as she believes miraculously, by 
her patron, the Little Flower, St. Teresa of Lisieux. 

The stigmata were impressed upon her during Lent, March, 1926. 
She had visions of several incidents of the Passions and felt the agony 
of the scourging, the carrying of the Cross, culminating on Good Friday 
with the whole drama of the crucifixion, the wound in the side, the 
wounds piercing hands and feet. Later the Crown of Thorns was given, 
and the wound on the right shoulder. On ordinary Fridays blood flows 
from the head and the eyes. On the first Friday in each month the ferita 
also gushes with blood. The stigmata of the hands and feet bleed regularly 
during Lent, and on each Good Friday the deep crimson weals of the 
scourging appear with intense pain. The blood which exudes has been 
analysed in a University laboratory and has been proved to be blood, 
pure and healthy. With the exception of the weals of the scourging, which 
appear on Good Friday only and shortly after fade, the stigmata are 
always visibly impressed upon her and can be plainly seen by anyone. 
Hence she always wears fingerless gloves on her hands, loose easy slippers 
on her feet, and is mantillaed in a thick black shawl. 

Theresa Neumann is also gifted with mystical inedia, that is, as has 
been explained in Chapter V, supernatural abstinence from food or liquid 
nourishment. On 5th January, 1940, The Universe noted: "Theresa 
Neumann, the stigmatized peasant woman of Konnersreuth, has declined 
to accept the German ration cards, pointing out that she does not need 
any food. Only the Blessed Sacrament passes her lips." This was the 
same with the Carmelite St. Maria Maddalena de' Pazzi, whose only 
food was the Host. For more than twenty years the Dominicaness, 
Blessed Colomba de Rieti, lived upon the Eucharist alone, "a banquet", 
she was wont to say, "in which I taste every delight". By order of Pope 
Innocent VIII a judicial inquiry was made into this case, and the inedia 
was proved beyond all doubt. The Holy Father expressed himself as 
very greatly edified, and sent the saintly woman his especial Blessing. 

Many other cases might be cited. 

Visitors, doctors and scientists, and priests and pilgrims have crowded 
to Konaersreuth, but they were not encouraged, on the contrary they 
were rebuffed. Ecclesiastical authority has acted with what may seem 
to many, who are unthinking and unwise, an excess of caution. On 4th 
May, 1926, Father Josef Naber, the parish-priest of Konnersreuth at 

245 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

the request of the Bishop of Ratisbon submitted a report upon the 
phenomena concerned with Theresa Neumann. The Bishop did not 
approve the conclusions arrived at, and the German hierarchy forbade 
any further visits to the village. In September, 1927, their Lordships 
sent a notice to the Press, asking that no opinions should be expressed 
with regard to the Theresa Neumann stigmata and other mystical 
experiences. Previously, the Cardinal Archbishop of Munich, Michael 
de Faulhaber, who had seemingly ignored the whole thing, publicly 
admonished his people from the Cathedral pulpit that no judgement 
must be passed on Konnersreuth. It was not until August, 1928, that the 
Cardinal paid his first visit to Theresa Neumann, and it is not concealed 
that he was profoundly impressed by her candour and simplicity. Pope 
Pius XI, it is believed, privately instructed Father Gemelli, the Director 
of the Sacred Heart University of Milan and an acknowledged Expert 
in mystical theology, to investigate and report on the phenomena. Father 
Gemelli visited Konnersreuth on 23rd March and 6th April, 1928. He 
made most searching inquiry into every detail. Upon leaving the village 
he went directly to Rome and had more than one audience with the 
Holy Father, who a few days later signed two special Apostolic Blessings 
and sent them, through Cardinal Faulhaber, to Theresa Neumann and 
to Father Naber. More cannot be said. The Church has made no definite 
statement. 

The Bishop of Ratisbon still regulates very strictly any visits to the 
Neumann household. In fact nobody is admitted without his authoriza- 
tion, which is far from easy to obtain. 

Scientists now honestly confess that they are baffled. Those who will 
not accept a supernatural explanation take refuge in silence. Indeed 
what else is there for the poor fellows to do? It may be useful to mention 
a very few of the numerous books which under various aspects treat in 
detail of the stigmatica Theresa Neumann and the phenomena of Konners- 
reuth. The editor of the MuncherNeuestenNachrichten, Dr. Fritz Gerlich, 
has published (Kosel and Puster, Munich), Die Stigmatisierte Th. Neumann 
von Konnersreuth and Die Lebengeschichte der Theresa Neumann. In 1928 
appeared Dr. Karl Keifer's Konnersreuth im Lichte des Christmums und 
der Wirklichkeit Prufende Uberlicke. An important work is Freidrich 
Ritter von Lama's Konnersreuth Kronik, 1928-1929, sqq. The theological 
point of view is examined by a Doctor in Theology, Martin Mayr, who 
has written L'Enigme de Konnersreuth. Le Stigmatisie Thdr&se Newman, 
Mulhouse, 1928. In the same year was issued von Lama's Ther&se Neumann, 
une Stigmatisie de Nos Jours. There is also Thirbse Neumann, 'Etude 
Critique by Father Dorsaz, Saint-Maurice, 1930. This study sums up the 
phenomena thus: "Konnersreuth is a divine message sent to the world." 
Kaplan Fahsel issued in 1931 Konnersreuth. Le Mystire des Stigmatises, 
Paris, 1933 (English translation, 1934), by Jeanne Danemarie gives an 
interesting and detailed account of visits to Emmerich-haus at Dulmen 
and to Konnersreuth. In English there is a very useful book, first edition, 
1936 ; reprinted, 1940 ; Theresa Neumann of Konnersreuth by two priests, 
Father Charles E. Roy of Gasp, Canada, and Father William A. Joyce 
246 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

of London. Dr. R. W. Hayneck wrote Konnersreidh, "A Medical and 
Psychological Study of the Case of Teresa Neumann", translated and 
adapted by Lancelot W. Sheppard. Friedrich von Lama was also trans- 
lated by Albert Paul Schimberg, Further Chronicles of Teresa Neumann, 
Bruce Publishing Company, Milwaukee. 

Some twenty or more years ago Mgr. Count Franciscus de Campos 
Barreto, Bishop of Campinas, Brazil, founded in his diocese the "Institute 
of the Crucified Jesus for Women Missionaries". One of the original eight 
sisters is Sister Amalia of Jesus Scourged, who has so faithfully trodden 
the mystic path to God that she bears upon her body the miraculous 
imprint of the Five Wounds of Christ. It was to Sister Amalia in 1929-30 
that a vision revealed the Rosary of the Tears of Mary, whose milky 
white beads (it has been beautifully said) encircle the world [19]. A 
contemporary stigmatica, who suffered much and was long misunder- 
stood, was the Breton peasant woman, born about 1853, Marie- Julie 
Jahenny of La Fraudais, near Nantes, who lived to be an octogenarian. 

Several cases of stigmaticas, now living, and who have beyond all 
doubt divinely received the Five Wounds of Christ, are known to me, 
but it will be appreciated that the utmost reticence is desirable, and 
these histories have been told to me in the strictest confidence and 
under promise not to divulge them, even if only initials and pseudo- 
place-names were given. In fact without the evidence of a full theological 
and medical investigation it might prove useless, were it allowable, to 
give any details, and therefore, I must content myself with recording 
these facts, which in the future no doubt, in many instances, will (when 
it is authorized) be made known to the world. 

I have not sufficient data to offer any opinion upon the case of the 
Jesuit novice in the Sicilian province who in 1885-6 was stated by trust- 
worthy witnesses and his own superiors to have been completely stig- 
matized whilst in ecstasy, and to have partaken in measure of all the 
sufferings of Christ's Passion. A Letter, dated 26th April, 1886, and 
written from the College of St. Ignatius, Malta, by the Rector, Father 
Henry Martin, S. J., has been printed, and a few details may accordingly 
be given. At the time extraordinary precautions were taken to guard 
against any publicity, and Fr. Martin's letter is addressed to the Pro- 
vincial. Already some rumour had leaked out, and "the young scholastic 
novice is now all the talk of the island (Malta)". I saw the five wounds, 
says the Rector, and upon Good Friday, when they were open and 
gushed with blood, the stigmatist was carefully examined by no less 
than twelve medical men. Whenever the youth received Holy Com- 
munion, blood poured copiously from the ferita, drenching linen cloths 
and kerchiefs. Great pain was suffered, and the lad was obliged to walk 
as best he could, upon his heels. The weals of the Scourging at the Pillar 
were plainly seen on his back. The novice showed true humility, and 
shrank from notice. When questioned, he answered under obedience 
with modesty and reluctance, evincing considerable distress and con- 
stantly declaring he was no saint. "It is," wrote Fr. Martin, "a very 
extraordinary case which is a source of great anxiety to his Superiors. 

247 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

Our enemies are saying that it is all a piece of Jesuit cunning to 
deceive." 

That the phenomena were genuine there can be no question. No 
suspicious circumstances occurred, and the lad was watched closely. 
Beyond this nothing appears to be known. It seems probable that the 
stigmatized youth was transferred to some distant house, where no doubt 
he lived and died for one may presume that at this date he is dead in 
obscurity. Gossip whispered that he left the Society, and under the con- 
scription laws was recruited into the Italian army. But this sounds 
remarkably like some fabrication to injure the Jesuits. 

Five-and-twenty years ago much discussion was aroused by the case 
of Fra Pio Pietrelcina, the saintly Capuchin friar of San Giovanni Rotondo 
in the diocese of Foggia. A short article in the T)aily Mail, igth June, 
1920, excited considerable comment and curiosity. "Extraordinary 
scenes/' it said, "are being witnessed in Foggia from day to day." In 
the same year, 1920, it was authoritatively stated that Fra Pio "is a man 
of remarkable sanctity". Miracles had been worked by his intercession; 
his ecstasies were frequent and prolonged; several instances, proved 
beyond all doubt, of bilocation were recorded. Moreover, since September, 
1918, he had been stigmatized with the Five Wounds. Entirely con- 
vincing and of great weight is the evidence of the Most Rev. A. J. Kenealy, 
O. S. F. C., Archbishop of Simla, who in 1922, writing in the Simla Times, 
gave an account of personal interviews with Fra Pio. "I have seen," 
wrote the Archbishop, "and spoken privately with Fra Pio. The Stigmata 
came in un colpo, that is, all at once, like a sudden and unexpected blow, 
during his thanksgiving after Mass. The marks on the hands are like 
dried blood. In the palm the perforation is perfectly circular with rays 
of dried blood going from one side to the other, and is about the size 
of a penny. It looks much redder than the palm. It is precisely as if a big 
nail had been driven right up to its head into the palm, and the point 
had come out on the other side, where a hole, which can be seen quite 
clearly is covered with a pink skin." The Archbishop goes on to say, "I 
did not press him to show me the wounds in the feet as he assured me 
they were exactly like those in the hands. But I really did wish to see 
the mark the ferita in the side. I failed. He did not refuse, but said 
with indescribable meekness and dignity 'mi dispensi', 'I beg you to excuse 
me'. I made another effort, but there was something in his face and eyes 
so strong and yet so humble, so remote and yet so friendly, that I simply 
had not the courage to insist." 

As the fact of these phenomena got known there was a rush of visitors 
and pilgrims to see the good Capuchin, who only desired to be left in 
solitude and peaceful retirement. The publicity was more than unwelcome, 
it distressed him exceedingly and embarrassed the whole community. 
Actuated doubtless by the best motives, many religious persons and 
persons of eminence came from Rome, dignitaries whom Fra Pio was 
forced to receive with humility and respect. 

The Pope ordered a most searching inquiry into these manifestations. 
It is interesting to remark that on more than one occasion the clinical 
248 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

thermometer used in medical investigation proved unable to register the 
high temperature of the young Capuchin, and was broken by the abnormal 
expansion of the mercury in the tube. The Holy Office now stepped in 
to prevent these intrusions upon Fra Pio. In the Ada Apostolicae Sedis, 
3ist May, 1923, this supreme tribunal under the Holy Father published 
a statement to the effect that the phenomena had not been definitely 
shown to be supernatural and divine. Wherefore it was injoined that no 
rash and unfounded statements should be bruited abroad to be mis- 
chievously exaggerated, moreover all sorts or kinds of pilgrimages 
whether undertaken by an individual alone, or by a palmer band, must 
cease. There was not the least censure of Fra Pio, he was merely protected 
from publicity and the importunities of the crowd. This judgement, be 
it noted, was given after the publication of a couple of reports signed by 
two distinguished doctors, who had been requested by the Capuchin 
Superiors to examine the stigmatist. One of these specialists was a free 
thinker, Professor A. Bignami of the Roman University, who, signing 
his certificate on 26th July, 1919, attempted but signally failed to 
explain the stigmata as having a neurotic origin. The second ^ report 
issued later in the same year, signed by Dr. Giorgio Festa, is very 
cautiously worded, but it emphasizes the flow of blood from the wounds. 
When Fra Pio says Mass, those who are near the altar can plainly see 
the stigmata on the hands, and that he suffers from the wounds in the 
feet is evident from his painful and laboured gait. He was, in fact, com- 
pelled to wear soft felt slippers instead of sandals. I have known the 
case of another religious who, being stigmatized in the feet, was similarly 
obliged to wear felt slippers. He also belonged to a discalced Order, 
that is an Order whose members are sandalled. 

Yet so difficult is it to guide and counsel that on 24th July, 1924, the 
Holy Office felt obliged to repeat the former admonitions in even more 
forcible terms [20]. Those who had not conformed to the ruling of the 
previous year, 3ist May, 1923, were now admonished absolutely to 
abstain from visiting Fra Pio for any devotional purpose, as also for- 
bidden to continue any correspondence with him, writing long letters 
and beseeching direction and mystical instruction. The fact is that in 
the unquiet and turmoiled world of to-day there is such fantastic and 
itching curiosity, such morbid inquisitiveness and fevered newsmongering, 
which boils over in scandalous and scatter-brained stories, all too 
eagerly swallowed and with grotesque additions irresponsibly broadcast 
in the cheapest catchpenny press [21], that it is to-day necessary for 
ecclesiastical authority to be doubly diligent, to be ever cautious and 
slow, and prudent in a degree which perhaps never before was needful. 
To have any effect prohibitions must be underscored; warnings must be 
peremptory and insistent. We should, then, be all the more careful 
not to read too much into the formal and meticulously considered language 
of the decrees. There is no reprimand, no condemnation. But circum- 
spection there decidedly is, Years go by, and no pronouncement is 
forthcoming. As has been well said, the mysteries of mystical phenomena 
are often "left to the implacable intervention of time, that acid which 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

separates the authentic from its contrary". There, then, the matter 
rests. 

It is instructive and significant to remember how St. Bemadette 
was reprimanded, menaced, and (we may well say) bullied by M. Jacomet, 
the local Commissaire de Police, whom some still regard as "a very 
worthy and conscientious functionary", a man who was only doing his 
duty; how the Procureur Imperial, M. Dutour, interrogated her with 
the utmost harshness and threatened her at the very first official 
examination that if she were found to be romancing or if it were dis- 
covered that either she or her family benefited by one penny through 
her story of the apparition, the law would surely intervene, and a severe 
sentence would follow. He did not disguise the fact that he disbelieved 
her and was of opinion that her father and mother hoped to reap con- 
siderable benefit from these visions, "even though they be no more 
than dreams, or, worse still, falsehoods" [22]. One of the Sisters at the 
Convent, where she was being prepared for her first Communion, told 
St. Bernadette that her story was all imagination, and added very 
tartly, "if you have seen Our Lady you had better ask Her to help you 
to learn the simple catechism which you do not seem able to grasp". 
The Cure of Lourdes, M. 1'Abbe Peyramale, was at first, at any rate, 
most discouraging and unsympathetic. For some while Mgr. Laurence, 
the Bishop of Tarbes, and the high ecclesiastical authorities maintained 
an unbroken silence. 

The way of the mystic is hard. It is not a path of flowers, but of 
thorns. 

We must remember, too, how often in his serene wisdom Benedict XIV 
insists that the phenomena of ecstasies, stigmatization, bilocation, 
levitation, are nothing, unless the fact of heroic virtue be first established 
beyond all question. The fact of heroic virtue is not established by 
wonderful happenings, but by testimony of quite another kind. Where 
this is proven, then the phenomena of mysticism are accepted in con- 
firmation. They are recognized as outward manifestations of sanctity. 
They do not prove sanctity. But it is certain there cannot be divine 
stigmata without heroic virtue. 

The Physical Phenomena of Mysticism are a visible radiation of 
sanctity. 

"I promise to make you happy, not in this world, but in the next," 
said Our Lady to St. Bernadette, and this is Her promise to all mystics. 

As St. Bernadette triumphed, so will all true mystics triumph in 
the end. 

I very well remember that a well-known scholar engaged upon some 
points of historical research in order to verify certain references read 
several passages from the great work of Benedict XIV, the De servorum 
Dei Beatificatione et Canonizatione. He was bewildered and amazed. 
"Upon my word," he cried, "I always took it for granted that it only 
needed a miracle or two, and that miracles were accepted practically 
at their face value without much examination, or questions asked. If 
there have to be these rigid investigations, this weight of evidence, 
250 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

I am beginning to wonder liow you accept the fact of any miracles at 
all!" 

"A Miracle," says St. Augustine, "does not happen in contradiction 
to nature, but in contradiction to that which is known to us of 
nature [23]. 

Mystical theology deals with those Physical Phenomena of Mysticism 
which are miraculous. They cannot be explained in any other way. Once 
more to quote Canon Ribet, "Mystical Theology is the science which 
treats of the supernatural phenomena, either interior or exterior, which 
prepare, companion, or follow the passive attraction of souls towards 
God and by God, which is to say Divine Contemplation; which classifies 
and justifies them by the authority of Scripture, the Doctors, and 
reason; distinguishes them from parallel phenomena due to the dark 
action of the devil, and from analogous facts which are purely natural; 
and which, finally, traces out practical rules for spiritual guidance in 
these sublime but perilous ascents" [24]. 

"L'Eglise reste sainte, immortelle, infaillible" [25]. 

"Si quis dixerit miracula nulla fieri posse, proindeque omnes de Us 
narrationes, etiam in Sacra scriptura contentas, niter fabulas vel mytfos 
aUegandas esse: aut miracula certo cognosei nunquam posse, nee Us 
divinam religionis christianae originem rite probari: anathema sit." 



NOTES TO CHAPTER VII 

1. De La D&monomanie des Sorciers, Lyon, 1593, pp. 243-4. The first edition 
of Bodin's DSmonomanie is Paris, 1580. Paul III reigned 1534-1549. 

2. During the horrible mania of the convulsionnaires of St. Medard at Paris, 
an outbreak, doubtless of demoniacal origin, which followed upon the death of 
the Jansenist Francois de Paris, who was buried behind the high altar of St. Mdard 
in May, 1727, la Soaur Francoise in 1759 underwent the test of a crucifixion for 
three and a half hours. The details are very blasphemous and revolting. See the 
Correspondance Litttraire, philosophique et critique, by Grimm, Diderot, etc., Paris, 
1877 . . . IV, p. 379. Dom Bernard de la Taste, O.S.B., in his Lettres Thfologiques, 
1740, recognized that the St. M6dard mania was clearly satanical. At Fareins, 
near Lyons, during a similar epidemic of evil fanaticism, on I2th October, 1787, 
a peasant girl named Etienette Thomasson was for the space of three minutes 
actually nailed in the attitude of crucifixion to a wall. A resounding scandal 
resulted. See A. Dubreuil, Etude Ustorique sur les Fareinistes, 1775-1824, Lyons, 
1908, pp. 96 sqq. Cases of self -crucifixion are recorded such as that of Matteo Lovat, 
9th July, 1805. Such happenings are reported to have occurred at Turin in 1910 
and at Berlin in 1927. A similar case was recorded in 1943. 

3. The British Museum has a MSS. account (Egerton 357) of the process of 
Magdalena de la Cruz, Sucesso de Madalena de la Cruz, monja professa del Monasterio 
de Santa Isabel de los Angeles de la or den de Santa Clara, y natural de la villa de 
Aguilar, y $u sententia dada por el Santo Tribunal de la Inquisition de Cordoba 
en 3 de Mayo de 1546. Another MSS. is to be found in the Bibliotheque Nationale, 
and there are many printed sources. See the contemporary, Simone Maiolo, Bishop 
of Asti (1520-97), Dies caniculares, ed. Moguntiae, 1610. Also Johann Weyer 
(1515-88), Histoire, Disputes et Discours des illusions et Impostures des Diables . . . 

25* 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

Geneve, 1579; Acta Sanetonim, 3ist July, in Vita S. Ignatii (p. 767), by Riba- 
daneyra; Martin Delrio, S. J. (1551-1608) Disquisitionum ruagicarum Libri sex, 
Louvain, 1599; Francesco Torreblanca Daemonologia, Moguntiae, 1623, and 
Epitome delictomm, Sive de magia, Hispali (Seville) 1618. Many other demonologists, 
e.g. De Lancre, Paris, 1612, p. 215; Collin de Plancy, Dictionnatre Infernal; 
mention the case in more or less detail. Of recent date see Montague Summers, 
The History of Witchcraft and Demonology, 1926, pp, 69-70; also the same author's 
The Geography of Witchcraft, 1927, pp. 605-612, where the history is discussed 
at some length; and further the same author's Witchcraft and Black Magic, 1946, 
p. 104. 

4. The case of Virginie and the demoniacal scandals of Agen is little known. 
M. Maurice Garcon in his Trois Histoires Diaboliques, Paris, 1929, has given an 
excellent account of the proceedings, deriving his information from original 
documents, which he discovered at the Bibliotheque Nationale, a long and detailed 
MS. entitled "L'Affarre d'Agen," F.R. nouv. acq. 11,053. This MS. which 
M. Garc.on identifies as having been written by a Sieur Albpuys, who was living 
at Cahors in 1842, well repays a full and intensive examination. 

5. Born 6th April, 1861, at the Chateau d'Alteville, Lorraine. He died at the 
Chateau on i8th December, 1897. His library of occult works is authoritatively 
stated to have been the largest and nchest in rarities (including many MSS.) of 
any known private library, at least during the last century and a half. See Charles 
Berlet, Un Ami de Barrls, Stanislas de Guaita (640 copies only), Grasset, Paris, 
1936. The Catalogue de la Bibhotheque occulte de Stanislas de Guaita, Dorbon, Paris, 
1899, a reference work of great value does not appear in the Bibliotheque Nationale. 

6. Le Serpent de la Genbse, livre I, Chamuel, 1891 ; and Durville, 1916: livre II, 
Chamuel, 1897; and Durville, 1915. For Guaita's note on Rose Tamisier see the Edition 
Durville, p. 448. 

7. Sisters of the Presentation of Mary, a Congregation founded on 2ist Novem- 
ber, 1796, by the Venerable Mere Marie Rivier, whom Pius IX called "the Apostolic 
Woman". The Congregation is numerous in France and Belgium. The Sisters are 
an Educational Order, and also undertake such active works of charity as nursing 
and superintending hospitals. 

8. This is the title of Giberti's biography of Blessed Eustochium, published 
at Venice, 1672. 

9. Life of the Blessed Curl d'Ars, with a Preface by Henry Edward Manning, 
Cardinal Archbishop of Westminster, n.d. (1906), Chapter VIII, "The sufferings 
inflicted upon him by the devil". This Life is a translation of Le Cure d'Ars, par 
TAbb6 Alfred Monrin, 2 v., Paris, 1861. 

10. The Life of the Blessed (Saint) Paul of the Cross, 3 Vols., London, Richardson, 
1853. VoL II, Ch. XXIV, "Of the Vexation of Devils", pp. 296-305. 

11. The Life of Gemma Gdlgani. Father Germanus, C. P. 1914. Ch. XIX. 

12. Material for the Biography is to be found in the Processus, that is to say 
the official sworn documentary evidence for the Cause of Beatifaction. A useful 
work is Compendia della Vita Ammirabile della Serva di dio Elisabetta Canori Mora, 
Romana, Terziaria dell' Ordine de' Trinitari Scalzi, Rome, Tipografia degli Arti- 
gianelli di S. Giuseppe, 1896. 

13. There are several lives of the "Little Arab". The latest, Vie de Sceur Mane 
de Jfeus CrucifiS* by the Abbe" Buzy was published in 1927 with the approbations 
of Cardinal Camassi, Patriarch of Jerusalem, and Cardinal Sevin. 

14. There is a French biography by Madame Maria Didry, Religious of the 
Cross in collaboration with the parish-priest of Bois-d'Haine, A. Wallemacq, 
S.T.B., the second edition of which was translated into English by Dom Francis 
Izaxd, O.S.B., M.R.C.S. Eng., L.R.C.P., London. Dom Izard, has also written a 
short but useful biography, n.d. (1932), Louise Lateau. Earlier works are, an 
important article, Louise Lateau, a biological study by Dr. George E. ^Day, 
Macmillan's Magazine, April, 1871 ; La StigmatisSe de Bois d'Haine by M. TAbbe* 
de Menneval, Dillet diteur, Paris, 1871 ; Louise Lateau, the ecstatica of Bois-d'Haine 
by J. S. Sheppard, London, pub. Richardson, 1872 : Louise Lateau von Bois-d'Haine, 
een studiebeeld voor de positieve wetensvhap by A.J. Riko, pub. van Langenhuysen, 
252 



THE PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF MYSTICISM 

Amsterdam, 1872, a study strongly emphasizing the divinely supernatural character 
of the Stigmata; Excursion & Bois-l'Haine by M. X., i.e. M.I' Abbe Edmond Jaspar, 
Ducoulombier editeur, Lille, 1872 ; Biographic de Louise Latean by H. V. L., serialized 
in La Bonne Lecture, Paris, 1873-4, by Pere Seraphin, C.P. of Erelez-Tournai, one 
of the two theologians of the Ecclesiastical Commission. See also Rohling, Louise 
Lateau, her Stigmas and Ecstasy, New York, 1884. 

15. I have been fortunate enough to be able to avail myself of notes made by 
contemporaries, as also of private information. Such monographs as Extracto de 
la Causa sequida & Sor Patrocinio, Madrid, 1865, are bitterly inimical to the holy 
nun, and are quite unscrupulous in their inventions. 

16. Wilfrid de FonvieUe, born at Pans in 1828. His writings include Les 
Saltimbanques de la Science, Paris, Deyfrons, 1884, which treats of the "convul- 
sionnaires" of St. M6dard, Mesmer and his followers, the divining-rod, Allan Kardec, 
i.e. Hippolyte-Leon-Demzard Rivail, the spiritist and prophet of reincarnation; 
Les Endormeurs, Paris, du Pare, n.d. (1887), which prattles of hypnotism, hysteria, 
and modern sorcery. Scholars regarded de Fonvielle's output with distrust and 
contempt. 

17. Revista Cristiana, Marzo-Abril, 1891, Madrid. In The Times, i6th December, 
1885, there is a reference to Manuel Quiroga and "his sister the famous stigmatic 
Sor Patrocinio". 

18. A Milan dispatch to the German overseas news agency, quoted by Renter. 
Oxford Mail, I9th March, 1845. 

19. Our Lady of Tears by Fr. Gereon Stach, C.M.M. published Detroit, Michigan, 
with the Imprimatur, 5th December, 1936, of Mgr. Michael J. Gallagher, Bishop 
of Detroit. 

20. Acta Apostolicae Sedis. September, 1924, p. 368. The Tablet, Saturday, 20th 
September, 1924. 

21. With such headings as "Miracle Monk" that gave great ofience. 

22. Histoire de Notre-Dame de Lourdes d'apres les Documents et les Temoins, 
By Pere L. J. M. Cros, SJ. Tome i, "Les Apparitions", Paris, Beauchesne, 1925. 
p. 195. See also Henri Lasserre's Notre-Dame de Lourdes. 

23. De civitate Dei, XXI, 8. 

24. La mystique divine, Vol. I, p. 15. 

25. Les Stigmatises, Dr. A. Imbert-Gourbeyre, ed. PaJm6, Pans, 1873; II, 
p. 258. 



INDEX 



Acarie, Mme, 216 

Adorno, G., 145 

Aeschylus, 18 

Agatha of the Cross, 63 

Agreda, Maria de, 57, 60, 65 

Agrippa, Cornelius, 127 

Agrotera, 14 

Agueda de Luna, 205, 206 

Aguir, Ursula, 169 

Aholiab, 37 

Alaric the Visigoth, 16 

Albertino, Arnaldo, 90 

Albertus Magnus, 32, 33, 66 

Alcalk, 90 

Alcdntovia, St. Peter of, 68, 71 

Alcantarine of Naples, 60 

Alcdzar, Maria de Morales of, 204 

Alcoque, St. Margaret Maty, 99 

Alexander IV, 32 

Alexander VIII, 39, 99 

Al-Ghazzali, 33 

Allicot de Mussey, 128 

Aloysius Gonzaga, St., 77 

Alphonsus Lugnori, 37, 53, 61, 62, 68, 

73> l6 S 

Alvarez, Rodrigo, 52, 96 
Amalia, Sister, 247 
Ambrose, St., 87 
Ana de Jestfs, Maria, 107 
Andreasi, Osanna, 67 
Andria, Duchess d', 169 
Andriani, Maria-Rosa, 63 
Angela of Foligno, 40, 60, 63, 65, 69, 

iii, 186 

Angelo di Montefalco, 133 
Angolini of Milan, 170 
Ann of the Cross, 16, 101 
Anthony of Padua, St., 61 
Antonio de la Cerda, 219 
Apollodorus, 17 
Apollonides, 43 
Apparitions, 65 
Apuleius of Mandaura, 23 
Aquila, Christina d', 169 
Arazil, Melchior di, 170 

254 



Archimedes of Syracuse, 95, 96 

Aristotle, 87 

Ark, making of the, 37 

Anner, Miss, 168 

Arnold, M., 146 

Arrephoria, 15 

Artemis, 14 

Asserbroeck, 37 

Athanasius, St., 58 

Aubrey, J., 93, 94 

Augustin and Augustinians, 26, 27, 30, 

32, 33, 34> 57> 66, 86, 94 
Auriemma, Father, 73 
Austin, H., 40 
Autosuggestion, 119, 126, 127 



B 



Babinski, Dr., 60, 126 
Babylon, St. Pascal, 60 
Bacchos, 16 
Baeza University, 29 
Bagnesi, Maria B., 77, 201 
Baldelli, Father, 88 
Baltellus, 96 

Banneux, Our Lady of, 199 
Baouardie, Marie, 237, 238 
Bartholomew, St., 25, 26 
Bartolo (M.), 134 
Bartolo of San Gimignano, 175 
Bascio, M. da, 141 
Bastide, 75 
Baubien, Dr., 166 
Baudouin, Dr. C., 125, 126 
Baxter, R., 30, 216 
Beads, use of, 38, 39 
Beatrice d'Ornacieu, 37 
Beatrix, Blessed, 196 
Beaucousin, Dom, 144 
Beaunis, Dr., 121 



INDEX 



Beauregard, nuns of, 37 

Beckford, 29 

Beghars, 99 

Bela, King, 60 

Belloc, Mme Jeanne, 221, 222 

Benedict, St., 31, 40 

Benedict XIV, 54, 59, 61, 62, 64, 65, 

78, 88, 92 et seg., 103 et seq, 128, 

192 

Benincasa, St. Catharine, 77 
Benincasa, Ven. Orsola, 62, 72, 208 
Benivrens, Canon, 103 
Benoit de Canfield, 143, 144 
Berchmans, St. John, 77 
Berengario di Donandei, 129, 130 
Berlaymont, Count, 169 
Bernadette Soubirons, St., 76, 250 
Bernard, Dr., 227 
Bernard of Clairvaux, St., 37, 40 
Bernardino, Fra, 33 
Bernardino deP Incarnazione, in 
Bernardo de Raccomigi, 175 
Bernheim, Dr., 121 
Berulle, Card., 216 
Besant, Mrs., 87 
Beyonne, Father, 62 
Bezaleel, 37 

Bicehieri, Emilia, 169, 186 
Biggs, Dr., of Lima, 121 
Bilocation, 61, 62, 78 
Binsfield, Bp., 21 

Birgitta, St., 32, 57, 64, 65, 75, 172 
Black Magic, 44 
Blosuis, 35 
Boguet, H., 89, 90 
BoUandists, 186 

Bona, Card., 67, 97, 103, 105, 214 
Bonaventura, St., 37, 52, 58, 66 
Bondi, V:, 206 

Bonnechose, Cardinal de, 207 
Borgia, Cesare, Duke of Valetinos, 



Borja, San F. de, 107 

Bossuet, 53 

Bourne, W. F., 45 

Bramwell, J. M., 121 

Brancati de Laurea, 67, 103 

Branding, 181, 182 

Bray (Billy), 45 

Bremond, Abb6 Henri, 54, 57 

Brentano, Clemens, 162 

Brown, Sir T., 65 

Bruno, Giordano, 127 



Bruno, St., 28, 29, 30, 34, 54, 68 

Brusmin (Brumsin) Helena, 170, 186 

Buddhism, 87 

Buol, C., 130 

Buoncompagni, Ugo, 220 

Burdach, C. F., 123 

Butler, Abbot, 25, 26, 30, 31, 35, 37, 42, 

Bythiael, 43 



Caillet, A., 56, 57 

Calaguritanus, Jean, 62 

Calderon, 16 

Calinet, A., 128 

Calomet, Dom Augustin, 95 

Camaccio, P., 107 

Camaldolese, 31, 32, 37, 38 

Camille, 121 

Camisards, 119 

Campbell (L.), 18 

Campocavello, 37 

Canfield, B., 32, 33 

Canori, Maria E. C. G., 234, 235, 

253 

Capistrano, Fra G., 167 
Capuchians, 33, 141, 149 
CarafFa, Maddalena, 169 
Caravaggio, 37 
Cardano, G., 93, 94 
Carmelites, 44 
Carriere, Dr., 123 
Carthusians, 31, 33, 34, 37, 45 
Casset (Holy Carmelite), 60 
Cassidorus, 95 
Castellinus, 54 
Castrucci (M.), 136 
Caterina da Sezze, 207, 208 
Caterina di Benincasa, 187, 188, 190, 

191 
Catharine de Racconigi, 63, 127, 164, 

17^.175 

Catharine de Ricci, 62, 175 
Catharine Fiesca Adorna, 35 
Catharine of Alexander, 100 



INDEX 



Catharine of Genoa, St., 58, 72, 76, 79, 

170 
Catharine of Siena, St., 40, 57, 60, 63, 

65, 67, 72, 74, 80, 97, 99, 100, 164, 

194 

Catterall, Misses, 104 
Catytto, goddess, 23 
Cavell, Miss, 202 
Cavriani, C., 19 
Cecilia dei Cesarini, 34 
Cecilia, Mother, 19 
Centorbi, 32 
Cepari, Father, 71 
Charcot, 121 
Charles II, 94 

Cherubino of Avigliana, 170 
Christina of Stommeln, 69, 109, no, 

*55 
Chrysostom, St. John, 181 

Ciaulina, C., 169 

Ciruelo, P., 90 

Clairvoyance, 66 

Clara di Damian, 129, 130 

Clara of the Cross, 130, 134, 135, 136, 

IS* 

Clare de Bugny, 158, 175 
Clare of Montefalco, 129, 130, 135, 186 
Clare of Santa Clara, 122, 123 
Clement XI, 33, 119 
Clement XII, 76 
Clement XIV, 61 
Clement, Dr., 227 
Clement of Alexandria, 20, 24 
Cloud of Unknowing, 209 
Coconnier (P.), 125 
Codipietro, Padre Raffaele, 209 
Coiri&res, Clauda, 90 
Colette, St., 63 
Collins, Miss, 168 
Coloriti, 32 

Coltrano, Antanio Maria, 101 
Conel, Dr., 26 
Contelorius, 65 
Corderius, 52 

Corona, Sor Maria de la, 170 
Cou6ism, 126 

Croce, Joanna Maria della, 154 
Crocq, Dr., 120, 239 
Crogi, Passitea, 137, 138, 139, 141 
Crowe, Mrs. Catharine, 62, 64 
Crucifix, 132 
Cuthbert, Father, 144 
Cybele, 182 
256 



D 



Dacia, Peter of, 109 

Dalyell, St. John Grahame, 89 

Danemarie, Mme Jeanne, 79 

Delrio, Martin, 65, 97, 122 

Degans, Abbe, 222, 223 

Delgado, Don Sebastiano, 107 

Demeter, 16, 20, 22 

Demographism, 125 

Demonianism, 122 

Dennys the Carthusian, 35, 36, 57 

Dessoir, Max, 120 

Deyche, Canon Pierre, 223 

Diana, 14 

Diana d'Andalo, 134 

Diego de Cadiz, 206 

Dionysius, the Areopagate, St., 25, 

Dionysius Zogreus, 22 
Dionyson, 16 

Discernment of Spirits, 67 
Dodo of Hascha, 33, 185, 186 
Domenica dal Paradiso, 60 
Dominic, St., 33, 34, 39, 68, 109 
Dreams, Supernatural, 63, 64, 65 
Drego Jacinto Paceco, 19 
Droste-Vischering, C. A. von, 161 
Dubois, Dr., 119 
Dulmen, 70 
Du Prel, Carl, 121 
Durante, Consalvo, 93, 103 
Durelo, 29 
DUrer, Albert, 68 
D'Urfey, 119 
Dyneis, Jonka, 89 



Earle, Bp., 80 

Eberle, Father, 166, 167 

Ebullitions, 135, 136 

Ecchymosis, 122 

Ecstasies, 60, 95 et seq., 126, 

"Ecstatic Doctor," 35, 36 

Eleusiania, 16 



INDEX 



Eleusinian Mysteries, 16, 17, 19, 20, 23, 

25 

Eleusis, 1 6, 21, 22 

Ellis, Dr., 166 

Emmerich, Anne Catherine, 57, 65, 76, 

159, 161, 162, 164, 165, 171, 201 
Epheboi, 20 
Eremites, 32 
Espe* ranee de Jesus, 166 
Euios, 16 
Euler, 94 
Euripides, 16, 17 
Eustathius, 15, 22 
Evans, Colin, 14 



Francesco de Onesti, 105 
Franchi, A., 74 
Franchi, D., 31 
Francis Borgia, 60 
Francis de Sales, 58, 62, 69 
Francis of Paola, St., 62 
Francis, St., 4, 5, 68, 183 
Francois di Paola, in 
Fyens, T., 127 



Faber, Father, 40, 41, 144, 145, 221 

Fabrini, Father, 71 

Fabrini, Sebastian, 31 

Factor of Valencia, Nicolas, in 

Farge, M., 56 

Farges, Mgr., 95, 105 

Fasting Woman of Tutbury, 63 

Fasts, 63 

Fatima, 37 

Felix, Sister, 140 

Felix of Valois, St., 106 

Ferdinand, St., 44 

Ferdinando di San Luigi, 236 

Ferita, the, 118 

Ferrar, Nicholas, 63 

Ferrer, Vincentia, 169 

Fescennius, 25 

Feuillet, Jean Baptiste, 156 

Field, Dr., 26 

Fitch, William, of Canfield, 142, 143 

Flores, Marianna di Gesti de Paredes 

y, 107 

Focachon, 121 

Fonville, Dr. W. de, 243, 244 
Ford, 121 
Forel, 121 
Forester, 26 
Fragrances and perfume, supernatural, 

62-3 
Francesca, Maria, 60, 78, 139 



Gabriel of the Sorrowful Virgin, St., 

101 

Gabriel, St., 77 
Galgani, St. Gemma, 69, 70, 72, no, 

170, 232 

Gambacorta, Pietro, 31 
Gandillon of Aranthon, 90 
Garcia, Beneto Pelegri, 199, 200 
Gaspar a Rejes, 64 
Geley, Gustav, 66 
Gemma Galgani, St., 60, no, in, 

172 

Gentili, 172 
Genzano, 37 
Gerlac, St., 186 
Gerlich, Dr., 183 

Germano of St. Stanislaus, no, in 
Gerson, Jean, 53, 64, 67 
Gerson, John, 204 
Gertrude de Oosten, 1 1 
Gertrude, St., 57, 65, 187 
Giacomo, Ser, 188, 189 
Gibbons, Cardinal, 162 
Gilberti, Gentile di, 133 
Gildas, St., Convent of, 76 
Giles of Rheggio, 60 
Giles, St., 68, 131 
Giovanna, 129 
Giovanna della Croce, 175 
Girolamo da Narni, Fra, 72 
Giuliani St. Cronica, 57, 60 
Glanvil, J., 30 
Glyn, Sir J. A., 45 
Gnosticism, 55, 87 

25? 



INDEX 



Gonzalez, St. Peter, 68 

Gorres, J. J. von, 40, 43, 55, 168 

Gourbeyre, Dr. A. I., 55 

Gower, J., 21 

Goyau, G., 159 

Gozzolini, St. Sylvester, 31, 64 

Gracian, Fray J., 192, 220 

Grand, 1'Abbe, 226, 227 

Grandelot, 205 

Gratian, Jerome, 60 

Gravina, 91 

Gray, J., 170 

Greek Festivals, 14, 15, 16 

Gregory, St., 27, 28, 30, 62 

Gros, Jeanne, 205 

Groz- Jacques, 90 

Gualbert, St. John, 31 

Guasto, Andrea del, 32 

Gu&ranger, Dom, 162 

Guevara, Mariana Ladrau de, 107 

Guex, 170 

Guigo, 146 

Guinta, Fra, 186 

Guzman, Bianca, 170 



H 



Hal, 37 

Hall of Initiation, 16 

Haloa, mysteries of the, 15 

Hcematidrosis, 127-8 

Hcemophilia, 127 

Hayneck, Dr., 247 

Healing, gift of, 67-8 

Helen of Hungary, 155, 186 

Helen of Veszprim, 156, 157 

H&yot, 31 

Hendriks, Dom Lawrence, 33 

Hensel, Louisa, 76-7 

Heredotus, 16, 17 

Herman, Joseph, St., 60, 62, 73, 156, 

'58 

Hermando de Custro, 219 
Hermits, 35 
Hervas, Sancha y, 125 
Herve, St., 68 

Hesychius Lexicagraphus, 45 
258 



Higginson, Teresa, 60, 61, 69, 70, 103, 

104, 165 

Hildegarde, St., 57, 64, 65 
Hilton (W.), 146 
Hippo, Bishop of, 27; See of, 33 
Hippolita of Jesus, 169 
Hogan, Father S. M., 91 
Home (medium), 61 
Honorius III, 34 
Hiigel, von, 55, 76, 145 
Hugh of Grenoble, St., 67-8 
Hugh's, St., 37 
Hypnotism, 60, 124, 125 
Hysteria, 60 



lacchos (lakkhos), 16, 22 
lamblichus, 86 
Ida of Louvain, 60 
Ignatius of Loyola, 1 1 1 
Imbert, Josephine, 227, 228 
Imbert-Gourbeyre, Dr., 62, 63, 78, 125, 

127 

Incendium Amorts, 70 
Incorruption, Supernatural, 75, 76, 77, 

78 

Infused knowledge, 66, 78 
Inge, Dean, 37, 42, 43, 55 
Innocent XI, 39, 99 
Innocent XII, 39 

Isabel de Flores (see Rose of Lima) 
Isabel di San Diego, 169 



J 



Jahenny, Marie- Julie, 247 
James of Arragon, King, 64 
James, Prof. W., 45, 58 
Jane, the meatless, 60, 166 
Janet, Pierre, 119 



INDEX 



Jansenism, 41 

Jarrett, Father Bede, 33 

Jendrassik (Dr.), 121 

Jerome, St., 68 

Joanna de Jesiis-Maria, 122 

John, Dan, 109 

John of St. Samson, 52 

John of the Cross, St., 14, 25, 29, 33, 

35> 36, 3% 3^, 55> 5<S 73, 80, 92, 
Jones, Rufus M., 55 
Jonson, 80 
Joseph of Copertino, St., 33, 60, 66, 101, 

*5 

Joseph, St., 62, 64, 69 
Jourdain, Mme, 169 
Joyeuse, Henride, 141, 142 
Juan de Castile, 109 
Juan, G. Arintero, 35 
Juvenal, 23 



K 



Kempe, Margery, 74, 75 

Kenealy, A. J., 248 

Kiev, Pescery at, 75 

Konnersreuth (see Neumann, Theresa) 

Kosmeter, 20 

Kostka, Stanislaus, 72, 77 

Krafft-Ebring, Dr. R. von, 121, 124 

Kumi, Maria Josepha, 158 



Lateau, Louise, 63, 120, 166, 238, 239, 

240 

Latour, 123 

Lauraea, Cardinal Brancati di, 94 
Lazzari, Maria Domenica, 63, 165, 166, 

167 

Le Bee, Dr., 206-7 
Lechat, Pere, 156 
Lee, F. G., 62, 64, 167, 168 
Le Fanu, 63, 64 
Lefebvre, Dr., 128, 239 
Legrand du Saulle, H., 88 
Leibnitz, 94 
Lejune, 55 

Lenglet-Dufresnoy, Abb6 Nicholas, 31 
Lentulus, Paullus, 63 
Leo XIII, 34, 101 
Leonardo da Lettere, 170 
Lepanto, Battle of, 66 
Leto, 14 
Leuba, Prof., 14 
Levitation, 61, 78, 105 
Liebault, 121 
Liegeois, Dr., 121 
Lille, Arthur, 88 
Limberg, Father, 160, 162 
Limpias, 37 
Locatelli, E., 31 
Locutions, 65 

Lodovicus de Paramo, 221 
Longo, Maria Lorenza, 149 
Lopez, Maria de los Dolores, 206 
Lorenza Murga of Simancas, 205 
Loreto, 37 

Louise de J6sus, 101, 166, 169 
Lucia de Nari, 78, 175 
Lucian, 23 
Lucida, 170 

Lucy of Aldenhausen, 60 
Luis de Granada, 219, 220 
Lull, Ramon, 55 
Lusignan, Etienne de, 219, 221 
Lutgarde of Tongres, St., 127, 172 



Labre, B. J., 101, 102 

Lambert, Jean Martin, 160 

Lambertini, Cardinal Prospero, 197 

Lambruschini, Cardinal, 230 

Lancetto, 31 

Lapa, Monna, 188, 189 

Laplace, 94 

Laplanders, sorceries of, 89 



M 

Mabille, Dr. H., 122 

Madonna della Pieta, Church of, 71 

Magdalen of Tuscany, 186 



INDEX 



Magdalena de la Cruz, 216, 218 

Malleson, 32 

Manasseh of Juda, King, 64 

Mantegazza, Dr. P., 88, 120 

Marasco, Georges, 198 et seq. 

Marcecalea, Galtano, 56 

Marcellus, 95 

Marchese, Domenico Maria, 172 

Marchese, Francesco, 97-8 

Marchi, Domenico, 137 

Marcus Aurelius, 20, 23 

Marechaux, Dom Olivetan, 94 

Margaret of Cortona, St., 60, 69, 186, 

187 

Maria de Cervellione, St., 68 
Maria de la Visitacion, 218, 219, 221 
Maria de Moerl, 166, 167 168 
Maria Luisa, 77 
Maria Maddalena de' Pazzi, St., 65, 69, 

71, 77, 99, 104, 105, in, 193, 194, 

19 - 5 
Mantan, 27 

Marriage, Mystical, 72, 73, 74 

Martha, 28 

Martina de los Angeles, 169 

Martindale, Father, 16, 18 

Mary of Bethany, 28, 34 

Matteo, Blessed, 170 

Matthaeucci, 102 

Mechthild of Hackborn, St., 57 

M6dard, St., 119 

Melgarcyo, Louisa de, 109 

Mercedarian Order, 64 

M6ric, Elie, 120 

Michael of Florence, 101 

Mjgne, Abb6, 54 

Miguelo de los Santos, 104, 105, 195 

Mirandola, G. F. P. della, 164 

Molino (Molinos), Michael de, 59, 

99 

Moll, Dr. A., 120 
Monnin, M., 70 
Moore, Anne, 63 
Mora, Elisabetta Canari, 106, 237 
More, Dr. H., 85 
Moses, Stanton, 88 
Mount Carmel, 35, 38 
Mrazek, Bertha, 198, 200, 201, 203 
Mrazek, Ir&ne Ad&le, 201 
Murray, Gilbert, 16, 18 
Mystic Mount, 35, 36 
Mysticism, 42, 43, 79 
Mythraic Mysteries, 16 
260 



N 



Neophytes, 20 
Neo-Platonists, 40, 86, 87 
Nero, Don Vincenzo, 106, 107 
Neumann, Theresa, of Konnersreuth, 

63, 79> J 66, 182, 183, 244, 245, 

246 

Newman, Cardinal, 41 
Newton, 94 

Nicolas of Tolentino, 68 
Nicolas, St., 136, 137 
Nobertine, 186 
Nolasco, St. Peter, 64, 68 
Nonnato, Ramon, 182 



O 



Oignies, Mary of, 60, 105 

Olivetans, 31 

Oliveto, Giralamo da Monte, 100 

Oneirology, 63, 64 

Oringa of Lucca, in 

Orpheus, 16, 18 

Osanna Andrease, 19 

Osanna of Mantua, 78, 100, 105, 154 

Osimo, 31 

Ossowrecki, Stephan, 66 

Ottoboni, Pietro (Alexander VIII), 

39 

Ovid, 18, 21 
Oxford Book of English Mystical Verse, 

56 



Paradiso, dal, 60, 63, 105 
Parrot, Dr. J,, 122 
Patrocino, Sor, 241, 242, 243, 244 
Paul V., 32 



INDEX 



Paul of the Cross, St., 40 

Pazzi, Maria Maddalena de', 57 

Pedecini, Cardinal, 71 

Peers, Allison, 26, 35, 55, 56, 57, 73, 193, 

220 

Peter I, St., 75 
Peter of Alcdntara, 33 
Peter of Toulouse, 60 
Petrucci, 141 
Philip Neri, St., 6p, 71 
Philip of the Trinity, 53, 97 
Phillipe d'Acqua, 186 
Photorius, 15 
Piergigli, G., 130, 135 
Pierre du Queriox, St., 61 
Pitrelcina, Fra Pio, 248, 249 
Pittriatism, 60, 126 
Pius: IV, 32; V, 32, 66; IX, 101; 

XI, 34, 36, 45; XII, 60, 1 10 
Pizzoli, Gabriela, 169 
Plato, 20, 95 
Pliny, 43 
Plotinus, 86 
Plutarch, 20 
Polacti, Dr., 168 
Pompanazzi, P., 127 
Ponzo, Domenico de, 145 
Porphyrius, 86 
Porphyry, 20 

Possi, Suor Tomassina, 244 
Poulain, P&re, 94 
Poviet, Pierre, 56 
Prejalmin, 121 
Pr6mont, Order of, 33 
Prendergast, Father, 168 
Preyer (W.), 124 
Procus, 86 
Prophecy, 65 
Puccini, Vincent, 57 



R 



Raby, R., 40 

Rader, 60 

Radestock (Paul), 123 

Ragliano, Bernardo de, 32 

Raunondo, Fra, 191 

Ramon de Pefiafort, St., 64 

Ranbeek (Aegidius), 30 

Raparo, Suor Angela, 106 

Raps (Rapts), 60, 88, 98 

Rapture, 101, 103, 104, 105, 107, 109, 

no 

Rasconi, Prudenza, 169 
Raupert, J. G., 90, 91 
Razzi, Serafmo, 172 
Redemptorists, 62 
Red patches, 121, 122 
Reggio, Fra Benedetto da, 172, 173 
Reginald, Father, 214-5 
Relics, 37, 127, 134, 136, 137, 192 
Remy, 122 

Restitutus, priest, 94, 95 
Revelations, 65 
Reverdy, Josephine, 166 
Ribadaneyra, 215 
Ribet, Canon, 53, 55, 69, 251 
Ribot, 98 

Richardson, Thomas and son, 40 
Richet, Dr. C., 125 
Ristori, Suor Teresa, 151 
Rita of Cascia, St., 78, 173, 174, 175, 176 
Roberts, F. T., 126 
Rolle, R., 45 
Rolli, Fr., 94 

Romana, St. Francesca, 31 
Romuald, St., 30 
Rose of Lima, St. (Isabel de Flores), 19, 

40, 60, 80, 107, 108, 109, 166 
Rossalina of Villeneuve, St., 37 
Roters (Fravilein), 160, 164 
Ruysbroeck, John, 26, 35, 58 
Rybalkin, Dr., 121, 122 
Ryland, Susan, 69, 70 



Quietistic doctrines, 38, 39 
Quinzani, Stefan, 154 
Quiroga, Maria R., 240, 241 
Quito, the Lily of, 107 



Sabazios, 16 
Sabbat, 89, 90 
Sailer, J. M. von, 162 



261 



INDEX 



Sainte-Foi, C., 43 

Saiandri, Sister Gertrude, 101, 102 

Sandaens, 53 

Sandreau, 103 

Santa Maria, Sisters of, 34 

Santos, Miguel de los, 33 

Saponification, 75 

Scacchus, 54, 65, 97 

Scapular, wearing of the, 37 

Scaramelli, Gianbattista, 53, 72, 104, 

208 

Scheffer, J., 89 
Schmogen, Father, 161 
Schram, Dom D., 55, 94, 95, 96 
Schrenck-Notzing, A. P. F., 121 
Sebastian de Senlis, 144 
Segneri, Padre Paolo, 34 
Seidl, Dr., 245 
Semel, 16, 18, 22 
Serafina di Dio, 71, 195, 196 
Serefina, Margherita, 154 
Serougne, Canon, 223 
Serrone, Francesca de, 169, 170, 175 
Seth, Prof., 57, S 
Sezze, Carlo de, 170 
Shekinah, 37 
Silvestrine Monks, 68 
Simon de Roxas, 101 
Simone da Spello, 133 
Sixtus, Convent of St., 34 
Sixtus V, 32 
Skirophorea, 15 
Sleep, supernatural lack of, 63 
Socrates, 95 
Sola, Jacques, 123 
SSntgen, Clara, 159, 161 
Sophocles, 19, 20 
Soueges, Thomas, 156 
Spencer, Capt. E., 224 
Spracchi, Ascensione, 135 
Stanislas, Marie-Victor, 223 
Starbuck, Prof., 14 
Stedman, 126 
Stenia, 15 

Stevenson, Robert Louis, 147 
Stewart, Dugald, 120 
Stigmatization, 60, 61, 63, 78, 118 et 

seq. 9 121 etseq., 137, 138, 158 
Stoa Poikite" (Painted Chapter House), 

20 

Stolberg, Count von, 162 
Stromata, 24 
Suarez, 58 
262 



Sufis, 33 

Suso, Blessed Henry, 32, 40, 58, 60 

Sylvestrians, 31 

Symonds, J. A., 130 

Symons (Arthur), 73 

Syon Abbey, 32 

Sythians, 43 



Taigi, Anna Maria, 47, 66, 71, 197, 201 

Taifiepeid, 30, 67 

Taine, 120 

Talbot, M., 45 

Tamburiani, Ascano, 31 

Tamisier, Rose, 223 et seq. 

Tanner, 67 

Tardera, Archangela, 170 

Tardy, Lorenzo, 130, 133, 135, 136 

Tauler, J., 25, 32, 33 

Tavernier, Nicole, 216 

Telekenesis, 65, 66, 78 

Telesterion, 16 

Temple, Father, 102 

Teodorico of Orvieto, 134 

Teresa of Avila, St., 29, 33, 35, 44, 52, 

53> 55 60, 65, 69, 73, 74, 80, 97, 98, 

100, 103, 105, in, 192 
Tertullian, 22 
Teste, Dr. A., 123 
Theatine Nuns, 106 
Thebaid, 35 

Theresa of Lisieux, St., 76 
Thesmophoria, 15 
Thomas, Mary, of Tanyralt, 63 
Thomas More, St., 33, 34, 44, 62, 66, 

80, 85, 88, 93, 94, 96, 101, 103, 105 
Thomas of Brabant, 89 
Thomas of Jesus, 91, 97, 105 
Thomas of Villanova, in 
Thyraeus, P., 70 
Tignosi, M., 134 
Tocco, W., 95, 96 
Tolomei, Bernardo, 31 
Tommaso della Fonte, 189 
Tomer, Dom M., 62 
Trances, 60, 88 
Transverberation, mystery of, 106, 192 



INDEX 



Trappists, 31 

Trench, Abp., 16 

Trocasani of Milan, Colomba, 172 

Tuker, 32 

Tuldo, Niccolo, 100 



Visions and Apparitions, 65, 78 
Visser, Dorothea, 168, 169 
Vitriaco, Cardinal Jacques de, 105 
Vive, Louis, 122 



U 

Ulrich, St., 68 
Ultimate Union, 38 
Urban II, 28, 29 
Urrea, Countess of, 219 
Ursula (see Veronica Giuliani) 



V 



w 

Waffelaert, Bp., 53 

Walter, Prior, 186 

Warlomont, Dr., 120, 239 

Warren, Howard C., 119 

Welscher, Dr. Te, 169 

Wenceslas, St., 44 

Westener (Wesener), 161, 162, 163 

Wichmann, Canon Augustine, 72 

Wichmans, Abbot, 186 

Wiseman, Cardinal, 40 

Witches, 89, 90, 125 

"Wraiths," 62 

Wlitz, Frantz, 182, 183 



Valentino, Duke of, 135-6 

Vallis Umbrosa, Order of, 31 

Van der Elst, Dr., 122 

Vanna of Orvieto, 169, 186 

Var, Carthusian nuns of, 37 

Vaughan, R. A., 39, 40, 42 

Vegri, St. Catharine, 77 

Venturini of Bergamo, 63 

Veronica of Binasco, 60 

Veronica Giuliani (Ursula), 127, 129, 

149, 150, 151, 152, 172 
Vezins, Mgr. Jean Aime de Levezon de, 

223 

Vianney, St. Jean, 70 
Villalpando, F. T., 90, 91 
Villani, Suor Maria, 71, 72 
Vintras, Pierre-Michel-Eug&ne, 223 
Vio, Tomaso de, 89 
Virchow, Prof., 120, 239 
Virginie, 222, 223, 232 
Visconti, Cardinal, 135 
Vision through opaque bodies, 66 



Yogi (Hindu), 87-8 

Yves de Paris, Pfere, 32, 33, 44 



Zacchia, Paolo, 93, 94, 95, 215, 216 
Zacharie de Lisieux, 33 
Zahores, Spanish, 43, 44 
Zefirini, Ugolino, 170 
Zita of Lucca, St., 44 
Zurburan, 68