ON THE DIVINE INTUITION 185 r less from his own inner willing and speaking, hen will the divine will speak into him. By which aspeaking God's will embraces his will in Himself, nd speaks into the image-like, natural, external leason-life; and dissolves and illuminates the arthly imagination of Reason's will, so that nmediately the supersensible divine life and will uds and incentres itself in Reason's will. 18. For as little as the life's own will can, in slfness and will turned away from God, stand till in Nature a moment from its working, unless : sink down beyond all Nature; so little also can tie divine speaking, in the life resigned to the round, stand still from its working. 19. For if the life stand still from its own will, ; is in the abyss of Nature and creation, in the ternal, divine utterance; and hence God speaks herein. 20. For from God's speaking the life has pro- eeded and come into body, and is nothing else tian an image-like will of God. Now if its own nagination and will stand still, the divine imagin- tion and will arises. For whatever is will-less ; with the Nothing but one thing, and is out of r beyond all Nature, which jingroundedness is God imself. 21. Seeing then the Unground or God is an ternal speaking, viz. a breathing forth of himself, ae Unground accordingly is inspoken into the ^signed life ; for the breathing of -the Unground peaks through the stationary ground of the life, 'or the life has arisen from the divine breathing, nd is a likeness of the divine breathing, therefore