The Golden Asse
THE GOLDEN ASSE by Lucius Apuleius "Africanus" Translated by William Adlington First published 1566 This version as reprinted from the edition of 1639. The original spelling, capitalisation and punctuation have been retained. Dedication To the Right Honourable and Mighty Lord, THOMAS EARLE OF SUSSEX,
that act of choice, while they have forfeited the world and the world's
favour, have attained to the spiritual riches of the Kingdom of God.
They are those to whom God is the Supreme Good, in whose possession they
gladly count all things but loss. These are they who here in the pilgrim
state have already attained to the enjoyment of God because they want
nothing other or beside Him.
Supremely blessed, therefore, is Mary our Mother, who never for a moment
even in thought was separate from God. From the earliest moment of her
existence she could say, "My beloved is mine and I am His." We try to
think out what such a fact may mean when translated into terms of
spiritual energy, and it seems to mean more than anything else boundless
power of intercession such as the Church has attributed to S. Mary from
the earliest times. We see no other way of estimating spiritual power
save as the power of prayer. It is through prayer that we approach
God--for we remember that sacrifice is but the highest form of prayer.
The blessedness of S. Mary, that peculiar degree of blessedness which
seems signalized by the reiterated attribution of the quality to her,
must for our purposes to be understood as "power with God," power of
intercession. It means that our Lord has chosen her to be a special
medium of approval to Him, and that through her prayers He wills to
bestow upon men many of His choicest gifts. Naturally, her prayers, like
our prayers, are mediated by the merits of her divine Son; nevertheless
they have a peculiar power which is related to her peculiar blessedness
in that she is the mother of Incarnate God, and by special privilege is
herself without sin. Of all those to whom we are privileged to turn in
THE GOLDEN ASSE by Lucius Apuleius "Africanus" Translated by William Adlington First published 1566 This version as reprinted from the edition of 1639. The original spelling, capitalisation and punctuation have been retained. Dedication To the Right Honourable and Mighty Lord, THOMAS EARLE OF SUSSEX,