IN SEARCH OF THE SOUL
sive lights, and submit and allow our minds unmolested by the influences of the body to be illumined with the rays of the spiritual power: then for the first time truths flow in, for they all emanate from that power as their peculiar fountain. Nor when they are present, are there wanting a multitude of signs by which they attest themselves—namely, the varied forms of sweetness and delight attendant upon truth attained, and affecting the mind as the enjoyments that result from the harmonies of external objects affect the lower and sensitive faculties of the body: for as soon as ever a truth shines forth, such a mind exults and rejoices; and this joy is the ground of its first assent, and of its first delighted smile. But the actual confirmation of the truth proceeds from its accordance with numerous reasons, confirmed by experience by means of the sciences, and each point of which accordance receives a similar assent—the mind going onward the while with assiduous attention and pains by the analytic way, or from effects to causes. In addition to these delights there are still more universal signs, as the desire and the passion for attaining truth, and the love of the
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