Page:Purgatory00scho.djvu/62

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again returned, but so brilliant that her friend could not look at her. She visibly approached the term of her expiation. Finally, on December 10, during Holy Mass, she appeared in a still more wonderful state. After making a profound genuflexion before the altar, she thanked the pious girl for her prayers, and rose to Heaven in company with her guardian angel.

Some time previous, this holy soul had made known that she suffered nothing more than the pain of loss, or the privation of God; but she added that that privation causes her intolerable torture. This revelation justifies the words of St. Chrysostom in his 47th Homily: " Imagine" he says, " all the torments of the world, you will not find one equal to the privation of the beatific vision of God."

In fact, the torture of the pain of loss, of which we now treat, is, according to all the saints and all the doctors, much more acute than the pain of sense. It is true that, in the present life, we cannot understand this, because we have too little knowledge of the Sovereign Good for which we are created: but, in the other life, that ineffable Good seems to souls what bread is to a man famished with hunger, or fresh water to one dying with thirst, like health to a sick person tortured by long suffering; it excites the most ardent desires, which torment without being able to satisfy them.


CHAPTER XI.

The Pain of Sense — Torment of Fire and Torment of Cold — Venerable Bede and Drithelm.

If the pain of loss makes but a feeble impression upon us, it is far different with the pain of sense: the torment of fire, the torture of a sharp and intense cold, affrights our sensibility. This is why Divine Mercy, wishing to excite a holy