The Form of Perfect Living and Other Prose Treatises
E-text prepared by Thierry Alberto, Juliet Sutherland, and the Project Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net)
LONDON: THOMAS BAKER, 72, NEWMAN STREET, W. 1910.
PRINTED BY W. C. HEMMONS, ST. STEPHEN STREET, BRISTOL.
Love is a life, joining together the loving and the loved.
Truth may be without love, but it cannot help without it.
Richard Rolle ( The Form of Perfect Living , ch. x.).
This book is not intended for those who are acquainted with Anglo-Saxon and Middle English; but for those who care for the thought, specially the religious and devotional thought, of our forefathers. My one aim has been to make a portion of that thought accurately intelligible to modern readers, with the greatest possible saving of trouble to them. When I could use the old word or phrase, with certainty of its being understood, I have done so. When I could not, I have replaced it with the best modern equivalent I could find or invent. In extenuation of the occasional use of Rolle's expression, by their lone, I may urge its expressiveness, the absence of an equivalent, and the fact that it may still be heard in remote places. Where possible, I have retained the archaic order of the original Text. Such irregular constructions, as e.g. , the use of a singular pronoun in the first half of a sentence, and of a plural in the second half, I have left unaltered; for the meaning was perfectly clear. In short, I have endeavoured to make Richard Rolle as he was as significant as possible to English men and women of to-day as they are, when they are not professed students of English language. In such an undertaking, it is obvious that I must have presented endless vulnerable places to the learned. I can only repeat that the book was never meant for them, but for those who will perhaps forgive me if I describe them as specialists in religious thought rather than in English Language.
The rendering is made from the texts printed by Professor Horstman in his Library of Early English Writers: Richard Rolle of Hampole an English Father of the Church .
of Hampole Richard Rolle
---
The Form of Perfect Living
and
other Prose Treatises.
RICHARD ROLLE,
GERALDINE E. HODGSON, D.Litt.,
Preface.
Contents.
Introduction.
The Form of Perfect Living.
The Form of Perfect Living
Richard Rolle.
CHAPTER I.
CHAPTER II.
CHAPTER III.
CHAPTER IV.
CHAPTER V.
CHAPTER VI.
CHAPTER VII.
CHAPTER VIII.
CHAPTER IX.
CHAPTER X.
CHAPTER XI.
CHAPTER XII.
Our Daily Work.
(A Mirror of Discipline.)
Our Daily Work.
(A Mirror of Discipline.)
FIRST PART OF THE BOOK.
SECOND PART OF THE BOOK.
THIRD PART OF THE BOOK.
On Grace.
On Grace.
An Epistle on Charity.
On Charity.
Contrition.
Scraps from the Arundel MS.