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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 30 August 2024
It is not difficult to trace in the works of Walter Hilton a direct line of prayer from its inception until it reaches the union of marriage with God. And though for this reason many will be familiar with the plan, it may be convenient to extract the holy Englishman's teaching on the subject from both books of the Scale of Perfection and to combine them here into a single and brief account of an English way of prayer.
We may begin with a rather profound definition of prayer as ‘naught else but a stying desire of the heart into God, by with drawing of the heart from all earthly thoughts’ (Scale i, 25, p. 44). This desire rising direct to God himself is indeed the guarantee of true progress in prayer. Indeed it is impossible often to tell from any other sign whether or no one is praying at all. Distractions and dryness flood the spirit to such an extent that it would seem no corner had been left for prayer.
1 All references are to the edition in the Orchard Series with an Introduction by Dom Noetinger London, 1927).
2 cf. “The Song of Angels’ by Hilton, published in The Cell of Self-Knowledge. Edited by Edmund Gardner (London, 1910).
3 Compare Scale ii, 24 with Dark Night I, i.