Page:Revelations of divine love (Warrack 1907).djvu/101

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THE FIRST REVELATION
15

of all things the beholding and the loving of the Maker maketh the soul to seem less in his own sight, and most filleth him with reverent dread and true meekness; with plenty of charity to his even-Christians.[1]

CHAPTER VII

"The Shewing is not other than of faith, nor less nor more"

AND [it was] to learn us this, as to mine understanding, [that] our Lord God shewed our Lady Saint Mary in the same time: that is to say, the high Wisdom and Truth she had in beholding of her Maker so great, so holy, so mighty, and so good. This greatness and this nobleness of the beholding of God fulfilled her with reverent dread, and withal she saw herself so little and so low, so simple and so poor, in regard of[2] her Lord God, that this reverent dread fulfilled her with meekness. And thus, by this ground [of meekness] she was fulfilled with grace and with all manner of virtues, and overpasseth all creatures.

In all the time that He shewed this that I have told now in spiritual sight, I saw the bodily sight lasting of the plenteous bleeding of the Head. The great drops of blood fell down from under the Garland like pellots, seeming as it had come out of the veins; and in the coming out they were brown-red, for the blood was full

  1. "to his even cristen"—fellow-Christians ("even" = equal). Hamlet, Act v. Sc. i. "great folk . . . more than their even Christian."
  2. i.e. seen at the same time as, or in comparison with. See the note to ch. iv. p. 9.