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Serious Hours of a Young Lady

Chapter 10 THE IMAGINATION.

Word Count: 1804    |    Released on: 29/11/2017

cess, it forms the wax that gives us light and the honey that nourishes us. Your soul is like a bee-hive, full of activity and life. The external world is like a flower-ga

that the will fails to discharge the duties of its office, the imagination and the senses, like bees deprived of the

e province that God has allotted to them, and that no disorder may arise from the attempted encroachments of some upon others. This point becomes one of grave importa

h often facilitates the perception of the truth, and the accomplishment of good, by presenting them to the mind and heart under colors that render them amiable and attractive. When properly employed, it is an invaluable gift of God, who has given it to us to aid the infirmity of

to us it is because we let it act independently of the will's control-in which case it is sure to become the slave of the senses. Separated from the intelligence, from which it receives light, and from the will, which points out its course of action, the imagination is a blind instinct, precip

rms it; it feasts on suspicion and anxiety, fictitious hopes and deceitful reports; it seizes with avidity on the things that please it, but scarcely is it in possession of the sought for objects when it aband

the agreeable forms which it assumes, and which flatter the mind and senses by their rapid and constant changes. Hence it is that women endowed with this doleful gift have the sad privilege of drawing around

d. Her thoughts, affections, desires and occupations never rise above trivialness. Among the multitude of persons of her acquaintance there is not a single one whom she sincerely loves, or to whom she can render herself amiable. In the multiplied interviews to which she has devoted her life-tim

of our natural qualities, and God knows well, when He pleases, how to come to the assistance of the soul's faculties, and plant the germs of solid virtue in a heart that is frivolous and badly disposed; still it is an evident fact that among souls there are some better prepared than others t

or the effect they produce in the imagination. All this unfits her for the reception of those supernatural truths which fortify the mind without troubling the imagination, and, consequently, she remains insensible to the sweet impressions of grace which acts so mildly on the heart as to be unperceived by the senses. To

Then, and not till then, do they discover the truth which, though seeing, they did not perceive during life. Then, in do

yet time; train your imagination from a tender age, keep its activity under control,-then,

which it needs in order to govern the imagination; without a strong will, that remains always self-composed in the midst of t

ou are unable to see things rightly and execute them properly. When in this state of mind a project is proposed to your consideration; you will find that your heart is already fixed upon it before you have duly

wait several days, or weeks, or even months if necessary; for a final determination taken in the midst of confusion and agitation will inevitably entail bitter regrets. Even prayer will not obtain for you, while in such a state of mind, all the light that you need. What you should first ask is,

o enlist the service of the imagination to aid your will, and get it interested in the work that you have to do, in order to impart new

y, and to act with prudence; and that whatever tends to diminish this liberty should arouse your suspicions, no matter w

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