Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 January 2025
The Church has produced much spiritual writing in the five and a half centuries which have elapsed since this extraordinary genius of the Middle Ages, this woman of strenuous action, left us the written expression of her contemplative life. She, and the friends who wrote it for her, always spoke of it simply as ‘The Book,’ and after five hundred and fifty years it may well retain the title, for it has lost none of its unique character in Christian literature. It was written under peculiarly arresting circumstances : dictated by a woman of thirty-one, while in ecstasy, to three or four members of her famous circle: Barduccio, Stephen, Neri, Tuscan youths of noble family, who were her ardent disciples, and Christopher, a Sienese notary. This is the Saint’s own description of her mental and bodily state when in ecstasy:
. . . . the bodily powers alone departed, becoming united to Me through affection of Love. Then is the memory full of nought but Me; the understanding uplifted to contemplate My truth as object; the will, that follows the understanding, loves and unites itself to what the eye of the understanding sees. These powers, being united and gathered together and immersed and inflamed in Me, the body loses its feeling, so that the seeing eye sees not, and the hearing ear hears not, and the tongue does not speak, except as the abundance of the heart will sometimes permit it for the alleviation of the heart and the praise and glory of My name.’