INTRODUCTION
Cloud of the Unknowing
The little family of mystical treatises
which is known to students as “the Cloud of Unknowing group,” deserves more
attention than it has hitherto received from English lovers of mysticism:
for it represents the first expression in our own tongue of that great
mystic tradition of the Christian Neoplatonists which gathered up, remade,
and “salted with Christ’s salt” all that was best in the spiritual wisdom of
the ancient world.
That wisdom made its definite entrance into the
Catholic fold about A.D. 500, in the writings of the profound and nameless
mystic who chose to call himself “Dionysius the Areopagite.” Three hundred
and fifty years later, those writings were translated
6
into Latin by John Scotus Erigena, a scholar at the court of Charlemagne,
and so became available to the ecclesiastical world of the West. Another
five hundred years elapsed, during which their influence was felt, and felt
strongly, by the mystics of every European country: by St. Bernard, the
Victorines, St. Bonaventura, St. Thomas Aquinas. Every reader of Dante knows
the part which they play in the Paradiso.
Then, about the middle of the 14th century, England—at that time in the
height of her great mystical period—led the way with the first translation
into the vernacular of the Areopagite’s work. In
Dionise Hid Divinite, a version of the
Mystica Theologia, this spiritual
treasure‑house was first made accessible to those outside the professionally
religious class. Surely this is a fact which all lovers of mysticism, all
“spiritual patriots,” should be concerned to hold in remembrance.
It is supposed by most scholars that
7
Dionise Hid Divinite, which—appearing as
it did in an epoch of great spiritual vitality--quickly attained to a
considerable circulation, is by the same hand which wrote the
Cloud of Unknowing and its companion
books; and that this hand also produced an English paraphrase of Richard of
St. Victor’s Benjamin Minor, another work
of much authority on the contemplative life. Certainly the influence of
Richard is only second to that of Dionysius in this unknown mystic’s own
work—work, however, which owes as much to the deep personal experience, and
extraordinary psychological gifts of its writer, as to the tradition that he
inherited from the past.
Nothing is known of him; beyond the fact, which
seems clear from his writings, that he was a cloistered monk devoted to the
contemplative life. It has been thought that he was a Carthusian. But the
rule of that austere order, whose members live
8 in
hermit‑like seclusion, and scarcely meet except for the purpose of divine
worship, can hardly have afforded him opportunity of observing and enduring
all those tiresome tricks and absurd mannerisms of which he gives so amusing
and realistic a description in the lighter passages of the
Cloud. These passages betray the
half‑humorous exasperation of the temperamental recluse, nervous,
fastidious, and hypersensitive, loving silence and peace, but compelled to a
daily and hourly companionship with persons of a less contemplative type:
some finding in extravagant and meaningless gestures an outlet for
suppressed vitality; others overflowing with a terrible cheerfulness like
“giggling girls and nice japing jugglers”; others so lacking in repose that
they “can neither sit still, stand still, nor lie still, unless they be
either wagging with their feet or else somewhat doing with their hands.”
Though he cannot go to the length of condemning these habits as mortal
9
sins, the author of the Cloud leaves us in
no doubt as to the irritation with which they inspired him, or the distrust
with which he regards the spiritual claims of those who fidget.
The attempt to identify this mysterious writer
with Walter Hilton, the author of The Scale of
Perfection, has completely failed: though Hilton’s work—especially the
exquisite fragment called the Song of Angels—certainly
betrays his influence. The works attributed to him, if we exclude the
translations from Dionysius and Richard of St. Victor, are only five in
number. They are, first, The Cloud of
Unknowing—the longest and most complete exposition of its author’s
peculiar doctrine—and, depending from it, four short tracts or letters:
The Epistle of Prayer, The Epistle of
Discretion in the Stirrings of the Soul, The Epistle of Privy Counsel,
and The Treatise of Discerning of Spirits.
Some critics have even disputed the claim of the writer of the
Cloud to the
10
authorship of these little works, regarding them as the production of a
group or school of contemplatives devoted to the study and practice of the
Dionysian mystical theology; but the unity of thought and style found in
them makes this hypothesis at least improbable. Everything points rather to
their being the work of an original mystical genius, of strongly marked
character and great literary ability: who, whilst he took the framework of
his philosophy from Dionysius the Areopagite, and of his psychology from
Richard of St. Victor, yet is in no sense a mere imitator of these masters,
but introduced a genuinely new element into mediaeval religious literature.
What, then, were his special characteristics?
Whence came the fresh colour which he gave to the old Platonic theory of
mystical experience? First, I think, from the combination of high spiritual
gifts with a vivid sense of humour, keen powers of observation, a robust
common‑sense: 11
a balance of qualities not indeed rare amongst the mystics, but here
presented to us in an extreme form. In his eager gazing on divinity this
contemplative never loses touch with humanity, never forgets the sovereign
purpose of his writings; which is not a declaration of the spiritual favours
he has received, but a helping of his fellow‑men to share them. Next, he has
a great simplicity of outlook, which enables him to present the result of
his highest experiences and intuitions in the most direct and homely
language. So actual, and so much a part of his normal existence, are his
apprehensions of spiritual reality, that he can give them to us in the plain
words of daily life: and thus he is one of the most realistic of mystical
writers. He abounds in vivid little phrases—“Call sin a
lump”: “Short prayer pierceth heaven”:
“Nowhere bodily, is everywhere ghostly”: “Who that will not go the strait
way to heaven, . . . shall go the soft way to
12
hell.” His range of experience is a wide one. He does not disdain to take a
hint from the wizards and necromancers on the right way to treat the devil;
he draws his illustrations of divine mercy from the homeliest incidents of
friendship and parental love. A skilled theologian, quoting St. Augustine
and Thomas Aquinas, and using with ease the language of scholasticism, he is
able, on the other hand, to express the deepest speculations of mystical
philosophy without resorting to academic terminology: as for instance where
he describes the spiritual heaven as a “state” rather than a “place”:
“For heaven ghostly is as nigh down as up, and up
as down: behind as before, before as behind, on one side as other. Insomuch,
that whoso had a true desire for to be at heaven, then that same time he
were in heaven ghostly. For the high and the next way thither is run by
desires, and not by paces of feet.”
13
His writings, though they touch on many
subjects, are chiefly concerned with the art of contemplative prayer; that
“blind intent stretching to God” which, if it be wholly set on Him, cannot
fail to reach its goal. A peculiar talent for the description and
discrimination of spiritual states has enabled him to discern and set before
us, with astonishing precision and vividness, not only the strange
sensations, the confusion and bewilderment of the beginner in the early
stages of contemplation—the struggle with distracting thoughts, the silence,
the dark—and the unfortunate state of those theoretical mystics who,
“swollen with pride and with curiosity of much clergy and letterly cunning
as in clerks,” miss that treasure which is “never got by study but all only
by grace”; but also the happiness of those whose “sharp dart of longing
love” has not “failed of the prick, the which is God.”
A great simplicity characterises his
14
doctrine of the soul’s attainment of the Absolute. For him there is but one
central necessity: the perfect and passionate setting of the will upon the
Divine, so that it is “thy love and thy meaning, the choice and point of
thine heart.” Not by deliberate ascetic practices, not by refusal of the
world, not by intellectual striving, but by actively loving and choosing, by
that which a modern psychologist has called “the synthesis of love and will”
does the spirit of man achieve its goal. “For silence is not God,” he says
in the Epistle of Discretion, “nor
speaking is not God; fasting is not God, nor eating is not God; loneliness
is not God, nor company is not God; nor yet any of all the other two such
contraries. He is hid between them, and may not be found by any work of thy
soul, but all only by love of thine heart. He may not be known by reason, He
may not be gotten by thought, nor concluded by understanding; but He may be
loved and 15
chosen with the true lovely will of thine heart. . . . Such a blind
shot with the sharp dart of longing love may never fail of the prick, the
which is God.”
To him who has so loved and chosen, and “in a
true will and by an whole intent does purpose him to be a perfect follower
of Christ, not only in active living, but in the sovereignest point of
contemplative living, the which is possible by grace for to be come to in
this present life,” these writings are addressed. In the prologue of the
Cloud of Unknowing we find the warning, so
often prefixed to mediaeval mystical works, that it shall on no account be
lent, given, or read to other men: who could not understand, and might
misunderstand in a dangerous sense, its peculiar message. Nor was this
warning a mere expression of literary vanity. If we may judge by the
examples of possible misunderstanding against which he is careful to guard
himself, the almost tiresome reminders that all his remarks are
16
“ghostly, not bodily meant,” the standard of intelligence which the author
expected from his readers was not a high one. He even fears that some “young
presumptuous ghostly disciples” may understand the injunction to “lift up
the heart” in a merely physical manner; and either “stare in the stars as if
they would be above the moon,” or “travail their fleshly hearts outrageously
in their breasts” in the effort to make literal “ascensions” to God.
Eccentricities of this kind he finds not only foolish but dangerous; they
outrage nature, destroy sanity and health, and “hurt full sore the silly
soul, and make it fester in fantasy feigned of fiends.” He observes with a
touch of arrogance that his book is not intended for these undisciplined
seekers after the abnormal and the marvellous, nor yet for “fleshly
janglers, flatterers and blamers, . . . nor none of these curious, lettered,
nor unlearned men.” It is to those who feel themselves called to
17
the true prayer of contemplation, to the search for God, whether in the
cloister or the world—whose “little secret love” is at once the energizing
cause of all action, and the hidden sweet savour of life—that he addresses
himself. These he instructs in that simple yet difficult art of
recollection, the necessary preliminary of any true communion with the
spiritual order, in which all sensual images, all memories and thoughts, are
as he says, “trodden down under the cloud of forgetting” until “nothing
lives in the working mind but a naked intent stretching to God.” This
“intent stretching”—this loving and vigorous determination of the will—he
regards as the central fact of the mystical life; the very heart of
effective prayer. Only by its exercise can the spirit, freed from the
distractions of memory and sense, focus itself upon Reality and ascend with
“a privy love pressed” to that “Cloud of Unknowing”—the Divine Ignorance of
the Neoplatonists—18wherein
is “knit up the ghostly knot of burning love betwixt thee and thy God, in
ghostly onehead and according of will.”
There is in this doctrine something which should
be peculiarly congenial to the activistic tendencies of modern thought. Here
is no taint of quietism, no invitation to a spiritual limpness. From first
to last glad and deliberate work is demanded of the initiate: an all‑round
wholeness of experience is insisted on. “A man may not be fully active, but
if he be in part contemplative; nor yet fully contemplative, as it may be
here, but if he be in part active.” Over and over again, the emphasis is
laid on this active aspect of all true spirituality—always a favourite theme
of the great English mystics. “Love cannot be lazy,” said Richard Rolle. So
too for the author of the Cloud energy is
the mark of true affection. “Do forth ever, more and more, so that thou be
ever doing. . . . Do on then fast; let see
19
how thou bearest thee. Seest thou not how He standeth and abideth
thee?”
True, the will alone, however ardent and
industrious, cannot of itself set up communion with the supernal world: this
is “the work of only God, specially wrought in what soul that Him liketh.”
But man can and must do his part. First, there are the virtues to be
acquired: those “ornaments of the Spiritual Marriage” with which no mystic
can dispense. Since we can but behold that which we are, his character must
be set in order, his mind and heart made beautiful and pure, before he can
look on the triple star of Goodness, Truth, and Beauty, which is God. Every
great spiritual teacher has spoken in the same sense: of the need for that
which Rolle calls the “mending of life”—regeneration, the rebuilding of
character—as the preparation of the contemplative act.
For the author of the
Cloud all human virtue is comprised in the
twin 20
qualities of Humility and Charity. He who has these, has all.
Humility, in accordance with the doctrine of Richard of St. Victor, he
identifies with self‑knowledge; the terrible vision of the soul as it is,
which induces first self‑abasement and then self‑purification—the beginning
of all spiritual growth, and the necessary antecedent of all knowledge of
God. “Therefore swink and sweat in all that thou canst and mayst, for to get
thee a true knowing and a feeling of thyself as thou art; and then I trow
that soon after that, thou shalt have a true knowing and a feeling of God as
He is.”
As all man’s feeling and thought of himself and
his relation to God is comprehended in Humility, so all his feeling and
thought of God in Himself is comprehended in Charity; the self-giving love
of Divine Perfection “in Himself and for Himself” which Hilton calls “the
sovereign and the essential joy.” Together these two virtues should embrace
the sum of his responses
21 to the Universe; they should govern his
attitude to man as well as his attitude to God. “Charity is nought else . .
. but love of God for Himself above all creatures, and of man for God even
as thyself.”
Charity and Humility, then, together with the
ardent and industrious will, are the necessary possessions of each soul set
upon this adventure. Their presence it is which marks out the true from the
false mystic: and it would seem, from the detailed, vivid, and often amusing
descriptions of the sanctimonious, the hypocritical, the self‑sufficient,
and the self‑deceived in their “diverse and wonderful variations,” that such
a test was as greatly needed in the “Ages of Faith” as it is at the present
day. Sham spirituality flourished in the mediaeval cloister, and offered a
constant opportunity of error to those young enthusiasts who were not yet
aware that the true freedom of eternity “cometh not with observation.”
Affectations of sanctity,
22 pretense to rare mystical experiences,
were a favourite means of advertisement. Psychic phenomena, too, seem to
have been common: ecstasies, visions, voices, the scent of strange perfumes,
the hearing of sweet sounds. For these supposed indications of Divine
favour, the author of the Cloud has no
more respect than the modern psychologist: and here, of course, he is in
agreement with all the greatest writers on mysticism, who are unanimous in
their dislike and distrust of all visionary and auditive experience. Such
things, he considers, are most often hallucination: and, where they are not,
should be regarded as the accidents rather than the substance of the
contemplative life—the harsh rind of sense, which covers the sweet nut of
“pure ghostliness.” Were we truly spiritual, we should not need them; for
our communion with Reality would then be the direct and ineffable
intercourse of like with like.
23
Moreover, these automatism are amongst the most
dangerous instruments of self‑deception. “Ofttimes,” he says of those who
deliberately seek for revelations, “the devil feigneth quaint sounds in
their ears, quaint lights and shining in their eyes, and wonderful smells in
their noses: and all is but falsehood.” Hence it often happens to those who
give themselves up to such experiences, that “fast after such a false
feeling, cometh a false knowing in the Fiend’s school: . . . for I tell thee
truly, that the devil hath his contemplatives, as God hath His.” Real
spiritual illumination, he thinks, seldom comes by way of these
psycho-sensual automatism “into the body by the windows of our wits.” It
springs up within the soul in “abundance of ghostly gladness.” With so great
an authority it comes, bringing with it such wonder and such love, that “he
that feeleth it may not have it suspect.” But all other abnormal
experiences—“comforts, sounds and
24 gladness, and sweetness, that come from
without suddenly”—should be set aside, as more often resulting in frenzies
and feebleness of spirit than in genuine increase of “ghostly strength.”
This healthy and manly view of the mystical
life, as a growth towards God, a right employment of the will, rather than a
short cut to hidden knowledge or supersensual experience, is one of the
strongest characteristics of the writer of the
Cloud; and constitutes perhaps his greatest claim on our respect. “Mean
only God,” he says again and again; “Press upon Him with longing love”; “A
good will is the substance of all
perfection.” To those who have this good will, he offers his teaching:
pointing out the dangers in their way, the errors of mood and of conduct
into which they may fall. They are to set about this spiritual work not only
with energy, but with courtesy: not
“snatching as it were a greedy greyhound” at spiritual
25
satisfactions, but gently and joyously pressing towards Him Whom Julian of
Norwich called “our most courteous Lord.” A glad spirit of dalliance is more
becoming to them than the grim determination of the fanatic.
"Shall I, a gnat which dances in Thy ray,
Dare to be
reverent.”
Further, he communicates to them certain
“ghostly devices” by which they may overcome the inevitable difficulties
encountered by beginners in contemplation: the distracting thoughts and
memories which torment the self that is struggling to focus all its
attention upon the spiritual sphere. The stern repression of such thoughts,
however spiritual, he knows to be essential to success: even sin, once it is
repented of, must be forgotten in order that Perfect Goodness may be known.
The “little word God,” and “the little word Love,” are the only ideas which
may dwell in the contemplative’s mind. Anything else splits his attention,
and soon proceeds by
26 mental association to lead him further and
further from the consideration of that supersensual Reality which he seeks.
The primal need of the purified soul, then, is
the power of Concentration. His whole being must be set towards the Object
of his craving if he is to attain to it: “Look that
nothing live in thy working mind, but a
naked intent stretching into God.” Any thought of Him is inadequate, and for
that reason defeats its own end—a doctrine, of course, directly traceable to
the “Mystical Theology” of Dionysius the Areopagite. “Of God Himself can no
man think,” says the writer of the Cloud, “And
therefore I would leave all that thing that I can think, and choose to my
love that thing that I cannot think. “The universes which are amenable to
the intellect can never satisfy the instincts of the heart.
Further, there is to be no wilful choosing of
method: no fussy activity of the surface‑intelligence. The
27
mystic who seeks the divine Cloud of Unknowing is to be surrendered to the
direction of his deeper mind, his transcendental consciousness: that “spark
of the soul” which is in touch with eternal realities. “Meddle thou not
therewith, as thou wouldest help it, for dread lest thou spill all. Be thou
but the tree, and let it be the wright: be thou but the house, and let it be
the husbandman dwelling therein.”
In the Epistle of
Privy Counsel there is a passage which expresses with singular
completeness the author’s theory of this contemplative art—this silent yet
ardent encounter of the soul with God. Prayer, said Mechthild of Magdeburg,
brings together two lovers, God and the soul, in a narrow room where they
speak much of love: and here the rules which govern that meeting are laid
down by a master’s hand. “When thou comest by thyself,” he says, “think not
before what thou shalt do after, but forsake as well good thoughts as evil
thoughts, and 28
pray not with thy mouth but list thee right well. And then if thou
aught shalt say, look not how much nor how little that it be, nor weigh not
what it is nor what it bemeaneth . . . and look that nothing live in thy
working mind but a naked intent stretching into God, not clothed in any
special thought of God in Himself. . . . This naked intent freely fastened
and grounded in very belief shall be nought else to thy thought and to thy
feeling but a naked thought and a blind feeling of thine own being: as if
thou saidest thus unto God, within in thy meaning, ‘That what I am, Lord, I
offer unto Thee, without any looking to any quality of Thy Being, but only
that Thou art as Thou art, without any more.’ That meek darkness be thy
mirror, and thy whole remembrance. Think no further of thyself than I bid
thee do of thy God, so that thou be one with Him in spirit, as thus without
departing and scattering, for He is thy being, and in Him thou art that thou
art; 29not
only by cause and by being, but also, He is in thee both thy cause and thy
being. And therefore think on God in this work as thou dost on thyself, and
on thyself as thou dost on God: that He is as He is and thou art as thou
art, and that thy thought be not scattered nor departed, but proved in Him
that is All.”
The conception of reality which underlies this
profound and beautiful passage, has much in common with that found in the
work of many other mystics; since it is ultimately derived from the great
Neoplatonic philosophy of the contemplative life. But the writer invests it,
I think, with a deeper and wider meaning than it is made to bear in the
writings even of Ruysbroeck, St. Teresa, or St. John of the Cross. “For He
is thy being, and in Him thou art that thou art; not only by cause and by
being, but also, He is in thee both thy cause and thy being.” It was a deep
thinker as well as a great lover who wrote this: one
30
who joined hands with the philosophers, as well as with the saints.
“That meek darkness be thy mirror.” What is this
darkness? It is the “night of the intellect” into which we are plunged when
we attain to a state of consciousness which is above thought; enter on a
plane of spiritual experience with which the intellect cannot deal. This is
the “Divine Darkness”—the Cloud of Unknowing, or of Ignorance, “dark with
excess of light”—preached by Dionysius the Areopagite, and eagerly accepted
by his English interpreter. “When I say darkness, I mean a lacking of
knowing . . . and for this reason it is not called a cloud of the air, but a
cloud of unknowing that is betwixt thee and thy God.” It is “a dark mist,”
he says again, “which seemeth to be between thee and the light thou aspirest
to.” This dimness and lostness of mind is a paradoxical proof of attainment.
Reason is in the dark, because love has entered “the mysterious
31
radiance of the Divine Dark, the inaccessible light wherein the Lord is said
to dwell, and to which thought with all its struggles cannot attain.”
“Lovers,” said Patmore, “put out the candles and
draw the curtains, when they wish to see the god and the goddess; and, in
the higher communion, the night of thought is the light of perception.”
These statements cannot be explained: they can only be proved in the
experience of me individual soul. “Whoso deserves to see and know God rests
therein,” says Dionysius of that darkness, “and, by the very fact that he
neither sees nor knows, is truly in that
which surpasses all truth and all knowledge.”
>“Then,” says the writer of the
Cloud—whispering as it were to the
bewildered neophyte the dearest secret of his love—“then
will He sometimes peradventure send out a beam of ghostly light,
piercing this cloud of unknowing that is betwixt thee and Him; and show thee
some of His 32
privity, the which man may not, nor cannot speak.”
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
Numerous copies of the
Cloud of Unknowing and the other works
attributed to its writer are in existence. Six manuscripts of the
Cloud are in the British Museum: four on
vellum (Harl. 674, Harl. 959, Harl. 2373, and Royal 17 C. xxvii.), all of
the 15th century; and two on paper (Royal 17 C. xxvii. of the 16th century,
and Royal 17 D. v. late 15th century). All these agree fairly closely;
except for the facts that Harl. 2373 is incomplete, several pages having
disappeared, and that Harl. 959 gives the substance of the whole work in a
slightly shortened form. The present edition is based upon Harl. 674; which
has been transcribed and collated with Royal 17 C. xxvi., and in the case of
specially obscure passages with Royal 17 C. xxvii., Royal 17 D. v., and
Harl. 2373. Obvious errors and omissions have been corrected, and several
33
obscure readings elucidated, from these sources.
The Cloud of
Unknowing was known, and read, by English Catholics as late as the
middle or end of the 17th century. It was much used by the celebrated
Benedictine ascetic, the Venerable Augustine Baker (1575-1641), who wrote a
long exposition of the doctrine which it contains. Two manuscripts of this
treatise exist in the Benedictine College of St. Laurence at Ampleforth;
together with a transcript of the Cloud of
Unknowing dated 1677. Many references to it will also be found in the
volume called Holy Wisdom, which contains
the substances of Augustine Baker’s writings on the inner life. The
Cloud has only once been printed: in 1871,
by the Rev. Henry Collins, under the title of
The Divine Cloud, with a preface and notes attributed to Augustine Baker
and probably taken from the treatise mentioned above. This edition is now
out of print. The MS. from which it
34
was made is unknown to us. It differs widely, both in the matter of
additions and of omissions, from all the texts in the British Museum, and
represents a distinctly inferior recension of the work. A mangled rendering
of the sublime Epistle of Privy Counsel is
prefixed to it. Throughout, the pithy sayings of the original are either
misquoted, or expanded into conventional and flavourless sentences. Numerous
explanatory phrases for which our manuscripts give no authority have been
incorporated into the text. All the quaint and humorous turns of speech are
omitted or toned down. The responsibility for these crimes against
scholarship cannot now be determined; but it seems likely that the text from
which Father Collins’ edition was—in his own words—“mostly taken” was a
17th‑century paraphrase, made rather in the interests of edification than of
accuracy; and that it represents the form in which the work was known and
used 35
by Augustine Baker and his contemporaries.
The other works attributed to the author of the
Cloud have fared better than this.
Dionise Hid Divinite still remains in MS.:
but the Epistle of Prayer, the
Epistle of Discretion, and the
Treatise of Discerning of Spirits,
together with the paraphrase of the Benjamin
Minor of Richard of St. Victor which is supposed to be by the same hand,
were included by Henry Pepwell, in 1521, in a little volume of seven
mystical tracts. These are now accessible to the general reader; having been
reprinted in the “New Medieval Library” (1910) under the title of
The Cell of Self‑knowledge, with an
admirable introduction and notes by Mr. Edmund Gardner. Mr. Gardner has
collated Pepwell’s text with that contained in the British Museum manuscript
Harl. 674; the same volume which has provided the base‑manuscript for the
present edition of the Cloud.
This edition is intended, not for the
36
student of Middle English, nor for the specialist in mediaeval literature;
but for the general reader and lover of mysticism. My object has been to
produce a readable text, free from learned and critical apparatus. The
spelling has therefore been modernised throughout: and except in a few
instances, where phrases of a special charm or quaintness, or the
alliterative passages so characteristic of the author’s style, demanded
their retention, obsolete words have been replaced by their nearest modern
equivalents. One such word, however, which occurs constantly has generally
been retained, on account of its importance and the difficulty of finding an
exact substitute for it in current English. This is the verb “to list,” with
its adjective and adverb “listy” and “listily,” and the substantive “list,”
derived from it. “List” is best understood by comparison with its opposite,
“listless.” It implies a glad and eager activity, or sometimes an energetic
37
desire or craving: the wish and the will to do
something. The noun often stands for pleasure or delight, the adverb for
the willing and joyous performance of an action: the “putting of one’s heart
into one’s work.” The modern “lust,” from the same root, suggests a violence
which was expressly excluded from the Middle English meaning of “list.”
My heartiest thanks are due to Mr. David Inward,
who transcribed the manuscript on which this version is based, and
throughout has given me skilled and untiring assistance in solving many of
the problems which arose in connection with it; and to Mr. J. A. Herbert,
Assistant‑keeper of Manuscripts in the British Museum, who has read the
proofs, and also dated the manuscripts of the
Cloud for the purposes of the present edition, and to whose expert
knowledge and unfailing kindness I owe a deep debt of gratitude.
EVELYN UNDERHILL.
|