376 pages
English

Vous pourrez modifier la taille du texte de cet ouvrage

Découvre YouScribe en t'inscrivant gratuitement

Je m'inscris

St. Teresa of Avila , livre ebook

Découvre YouScribe en t'inscrivant gratuitement

Je m'inscris
Obtenez un accès à la bibliothèque pour le consulter en ligne
En savoir plus
376 pages
English

Vous pourrez modifier la taille du texte de cet ouvrage

Obtenez un accès à la bibliothèque pour le consulter en ligne
En savoir plus

Description

A short biography of the Saint who reformed Carmelites and gave a host of Saints to the Church. She helped bring back the original strict observance of the Carmelite rule, founded numerous new convents, became a celebrated mystic, and was canonized only 40 years after her death. In 1970 she was declared a Doctor of the Church. Here is a popular biography for young and old of this spirited and colorful Saint. Impr. 119 pgs, 5 Illus.,

Sujets

Informations

Publié par
Date de parution 01 janvier 1999
Nombre de lectures 0
EAN13 9781505102482
Langue English

Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,0400€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.

Extrait

Saint Teresa of Ávila
A Biography
William Thomas Walsh
Nihil Obstat:              H. B. Ries Censor Librorum
Imprimatur:            Moses E. Kiley Archbishop of Milwaukee January 5, 1943
Copyright © 1943 by The Bruce Publishing Company, Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Fifth printing 1944.
The typography of this book is the property of TAN Books and Publishers, Inc. and may not be reproduced, in whole or in part, without written permission from the Publisher.
Library of Congress Catalog Card No.: 87-50928
TAN BOOKS Charlotte, North Carolina
1987
To
Mother Grace C. Dammann, R.S.C.J., President Manhattanville College of the Sacred Heart New York City, whose friendship has made so much of my work possible
Saint Teresa at the age of sixty-one, from Friar Juan de la Miseria's portrait, for which she sat at Sevilla, in obedience to a superior's command, in 1576.
WORKS BY WILLIAM THOMAS WALSH
The Mirage of the Many (1910)
Isabella of Spain (1930)
Out of the Whirlwind (novel, 1935)
Philip II (1937)
Shekels (blank-verse play, 1937)
Lyric Poems (1939)
Characters of the Inquisition (1940)
"Gold" (short story)
Babies, not Bullets! (booklet, 1940)
Thirty Pieces of Silver (a play in verse)
Saint Teresa of Ávila (1943)
La actual situatión de España (booklet, 1944)
El caso crucial de España (booklet, 1946)
Our Lady of Fátima (1947)
The Carmelites of Compiègne (a play in verse)
Saint Peter, the Apostle (1948)
ACKNOWLEDGMENT
Y EARS ago, when I read an English translation of Saint Teresa's Autobiography , as it is improperly called, I wondered whether a woman in whom the divine and the human so strikingly met could really have been as banal, as priggish, as self-consciously "literary" as she often appeared in those pages. Later, when I was able to read the Spanish text, I discovered that the irritating qualities were not hers, but her devout translator's. What a vital book to be embalmed in so much stuffy rhetoric! I resolved that whenever it was necessary to quote that work, I would make my own translations, and as literally as possible, even at some sacrifice of euphony; not excluding the occasional slips in grammar, faulty reference, careless sentence structure, and vigorous colloquialisms of one who wrote with no eye to bookish effect, but just as she spoke, rapidly, tersely, wittily, now and then quite awkwardly. Only thus could one convey, in another language, the characteristic quality, the timbre and rhythm of writings which, whatever their technical faults or peculiarities, were always honest, gusty, human, interesting, and stimulating, often aglow with the beauty and sublimity of genius directed by sanctity. When I came to her letters and later treatises, there were some good translations at hand, notably the excellent ones by the Benedictines of Stanbrook Abbey, England. But having gone so far with my own, it seemed imperative to continue for the sake of uniformity of style — the style being, I hope, Saint Teresa's rather than mine.
The material now available for a new life of this glorious doctor of the science of love is such that the situation seems to call for selection, arrangement, and simplification in a single volume for general use, rather than further research or critical hairsplitting. The chief sources are still the several volumes of letters, treatises, and narratives by Saint Teresa herself, the depositions of witnesses for her beatification and canonization, and the contemporary biographies, of which the most useful is that of Father Ribera, S.J., followed by those of Father Yepes, Father Julian of Ávila, and Fray Luis de León in the order named. Any attempt on my part to go much beyond these would be presumptuous in the light of the vast achievement of Father Silverio de Santa Teresa, O.C.D., who has edited and annotated all of her works in masterly and exhaustive fashion, besides publishing, as the crown of a lifetime of study, a biography of her in five huge volumes.
My first acknowledgment, then, must be to Father Silverio for making the results of his labor available to me in fourteen tomes of the Biblioteca Mística Carmelitana (the B.M.C. to be mentioned so frequently hereafter), which he has sent me from Rome at the request of my good friend Dame Beatrice, O.S.B., of Stanbrook Abbey, one of the greatest living Teresian scholars in her own right, to whom also I am indebted for notes, advice, and many other kindnesses, besides her excellent renderings of the Saint's letters, poems, and other writings, which I have so often had occasion to consult when working on my own translations. For the use of books, theological counsel, and other invaluable assistance I must thank the Reverend Father John J. McSherry of New York City; the Reverend Father Ferdinand Pedrosa, O.P., of Letran College, Manila; the Reverend Father Joseph Husslein, S.J., Ph.D., editor of the Science and Culture Series , who suggested this work to me; the Reverend Father Eugene A. Moriarty of Bridgeport, Connecticut, and the Reverend Father Leo W. Madden, Lieut. Commander, Ch.C., U.S.M.S.
To my colleague, Miss Mercedes de Arango, M.A., for proofreading; to Miss Carmen de Arango, for scholarly help of the most expert kind in preparing some of my preliminary notes; and to other friends, particularly Miss Angela Williams and Miss Lucille Flagg, I am greatly obliged. I have had unfailing encouragement from Mother Grace C. Dammann, R.S.C.J., and Mother Eleanor M. O'Byrne, R.S.C.J., president and dean, respectively, of Manhattanville College of the Sacred Heart, and all my other associates there. And I have no words to express my thanks for the patience, loyalty, and intelligent criticism of my wife, who has typed the entire manuscript more than once.
No bibliography is furnished here because I could not improve upon the easily accessible ones of Father Silverio, both for Saint Teresa and for Saint John of the Cross.
Finally, it must be obvious that no powers of mine could have brought to a conclusion a task for which I am so ill-prepared spiritually. There have been many discouraging moments, even with such treasures of scholarship as the works of Father Silverio, Dame Beatrice, and others beside me; and I know I should never have completed the book, such as it is, without the prayers of far better persons to aid me. I am especially grateful to several women who, like Saint Teresa, have dared to take the words of Christ our Lord literally, and to accept all the consequences of regarding Him not merely as an historical character, but as the One, together with the Father and the Holy Ghost, in Whose presence and by Whose power and consent we live and breathe: to Mother Saint Mary Catherine, C.N.D., of Notre Dame College, Staten Island, who first introduced me to this marvelous Saint in 1929; to Dame Beatrice, O.S.B., of Stanbrook Abbey; to Sister Mary Ignatia, S.M., editor of the Magnificat , Manchester, New Hampshire, and her Teresian household; to Religious of the Sacred Heart at Manhattanville; to the late Sister Mary Boniface Keasey and others of the Missionary Servants of the Blessed Trinity in Alabama; to the late Mother Augustine of the Mother of God, C.D., prioress of the Discalced Carmelites at Santa Clara, California; to the late Sister Mary Gabriel, a Carmelite at Chichester, England (born a Neopolitan princess), who offered Him all the Friday penances of the last year of her life for this my intention; and to my daughter, Sister Mary Concepta, S.M., of the Sacred Heart Convent, Belmont, North Carolina, who has given Him the lovely flower of her youth. If there is any good here besides the human interest of an amazing life story, I have these dear friends to thank.
W. T. W.
Manhattanville College of the Sacred Heart New York City
December 24, 1942
CONTENTS
A CKNOWLEDGMENT
           I   F IRST I MPRESSIONS OF H OLY Á VILA
         II   A V AIN L ITTLE G IRL AND H ER F ORBIDDEN B OOKS
       III   A DOLESCENCE, AND THE A UGUSTINIAN C ONVENT

         IV   R UNNING A WAY TO J OIN THE C ARMELITES
           V   T HE Q UACK D OCTOR AND THE B EWITCHED P RIEST OF B ECEDAS
         VI   A D ARK N IGHT OF D IVINE AND T ERRIBLE A DVENTURE
       VII   T WENTY Y EARS OF C ONFLICT
      VIII   V ICTORY IN S URRENDER
         IX   T HE D EVIL'S R EVENGE — F EAR OF THE H OLY I NQUISITION
           X   T HE A NGEL WITH THE F LAMING D ART
         XI   T HROUGH A H ELL OF T ORMENT TO THE E ND OF F EAR
       XII   P ETER OF A LCÁNTARA — "T OWN C RIER OF THE L ORD G OD"
      XIII   B EGINNING OF THE R EFORM, AND F IRST D EFEAT
       XIV   E XILE IN A P ALACE AT T OLEDO
         XV   S TEALING A M ARCH ON S LEEPY Á VILA
       XVI   P ERSECUTION AND V ICTORY
      XVII   L IFE IN THE F IRST C ONVENT OF THE R EFORM
   XVIII   "T HE W AY OF P ERFECTION"
       XIX   "H AVE C ONFIDENCE , I H AVE O VERCOME THE W ORLD"
         XX   M IDNIGHT C ONQUEST OF M EDINA
       XXI   A F RIAR AND A H ALF FOR THE R EFORM
      XXII   W ARNING TO P HILIP II
   XXIII   T HE O NE -E YED P RINCESS OF É BOLI
      XXIV   S ALAMANCA AND A LBA DE T ORMES
       XXV   P RIORESS OF THE I NCARNATION
      XXVI   S TRANGE V OCATION OF THE P RINCESS OF É BOLI
   XXVII   A D REAM C OMES T RUE AT B EAS — F IRST M EETING W ITH G RACIÁN
XXVIII   T HE D EVILS OF A NDALUCÍA
      XXIX   T ERESA IN "P RISON " AT T OLEDO
       XXX   A NGUISH AND A FFLICTION AT T OLEDO
      XXXI   D E P ROFUNDIS
   XXXII   T RIUMPH OF THE R EFORM
XXXIII   " ARISE , M AKE H ASTE , M Y L OVE , M Y D OVE , M Y B EAUTIFUL O NE, AND C OME "
Chapter I

FIRST IMPRESSIONS OF HOLY ÁVILA
S AINT TERESA of Jesus, popularly known as Saint Teresa of Ávila from the place of her birth, has a double claim upon the interest of posterity, for she not only set the impress of a rare spirit upon the life of her chaotic century and all subsequent history, but she escaped and transcended, in a fashion more than metapho

  • Univers Univers
  • Ebooks Ebooks
  • Livres audio Livres audio
  • Presse Presse
  • Podcasts Podcasts
  • BD BD
  • Documents Documents
Alternate Text