Then is the soul able because of cleanness to feel
the touching, the speaking of good angels. This
touching and speaking, it is ghostly and not bodily.[164]
For when the soul is lifted and ravished out of the
sensuality, and out of mind of any earthly things,
then in great fervour of love and light (if our Lord
vouchsafe) the soul may hear and feel heavenly sound,
made by the presence of angels in loving of God.
Not that this song of angels is the sovereign joy
of the soul; but for the difference that is between
a man’s soul in flesh and an angel, because of
uncleanness, a soul may not hear it, but by ravishing
in love, and needeth for to be purified well clean,
and fulfilled of much charity, or[165] it were able
for to hear heavenly sound. For the sovereign
and the essential joy is in the love of God by Himself
and for Himself, and the secondary is in communing
and beholding of angels and ghostly creatures.
For right as a soul, in understanding of ghostly things,
is often times touched and moved through bodily imagination
by working of angels; as Ezekiel the prophet did see
in bodily imagination the soothfastness of God’s
privities;[166] right so, in the love of God, a soul
by the presence of angels is ravished out of mind
of all earthly and fleshly things in to an heavenly
joy, to hear angel’s song and heavenly sound,
after that the charity is more or less.[167] Now,
then, me thinketh that there may no soul feel verily
angel’s song nor heavenly sound, but he be in
perfect charity; though all that are in perfect charity
have not felt it, but only that soul that is so purified
in the fire of love that all earthly savour is brent
out of it, and all mean letting[168] between the soul
and the cleanness of angels is broken and put away
from it. Then soothly may he sing a new song,
and soothly he may hear a blessed heavenly sound,
and angel’s song without deceit or feigning.
Our Lord woteth there that soul is that, for abundance
of brenning love, is worthy to hear angel’s
song. Who so then will hear angel’s song,
and not be deceived by feigning of himself, nor by
imagination, nor by the illusion of the enemy, him
behoveth for to have perfect charity; and that is
when all vain love and dread, vain joy and sorrow,
is cast out of the heart, so that it love nothing
but God, nor dread nothing but God, nor joyeth, nor
sorroweth nothing but in God, or for God. Who
so might by the grace of God go this way, he should
not err. Nevertheless, some men are deceived by
their own imagination, or by the illusion of the enemy
in this manner.[169] Some man, when he hath long travailed
bodily and ghostily in destroying of sins and getting
of virtues, and peradventure hath gotten by grace
a somedeal[170] rest, and a clarity in conscience,
anon he leaveth prayers, readings of holy scriptures,
and meditations of the passion of Christ, and the mind
of his wretchedness; and, or[171] he be called of God,
he gathereth his own visits by violence to seek and
to behold heavenly things, or his eye be made ghostly