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Saints of the Week: Richard Rolle, Walter Hilton, and Margery Kempe

11/12/2025

Richard Rolle, Walter Hilton, and Margery Kempe

14th Century English Mystics

Richard Rolle, Walter Hilton, and Margery Kempe were three prominent figures associated with the development of English Christian mysticism.

Richard Rolle, born in 1290, was an English hermit about whose early life we know little. Although he grew up in a poor farming family, the Archdeacon of Durham sponsored him to attend Oxford. At age 18, however, he dropped out of Oxford to live as a hermit, out of which grew his ministry of prayer, writing, and spiritual direction. His writings were among the most widely read spiritual works in England in the 15th century and include several scriptural commentaries, some theological writings, and many poems. Rolle spent his final years near the Cistercian convent near Hampole, in south Yorkshire, where he served as a spiritual director for the nuns who resided there.

We likewise know little about the early life of Walter Hilton beyond his birth in 1340, but evidence suggests that he studied at Cambridge. Hilton spent time as a hermit before becoming an Augustinian canon at Thurgarton Priory. Nottinghamshire in the late 14th century. In his work, The Scale of Perfection, he develops his understanding of the “luminous darkness” which marks the transition between self-love and the love of God. He was influential in England not only leading up to the Reformation, but also during the Oxford Movement. Evelyn Underhill was greatly drawn to his works and in 1923, published an updated translation of The Scale of Perfection in modern English.

Born circa 1373, Margery Kempe and her husband John had at least 14 children. She seems to have had no formal education. Though illiterate, she dictated the Book of Margery Kempe, from which we learn most of our knowledge of her. A mystic who experienced intense visions, she went on pilgrimages to Canterbury, the Holy Land, and to Santiago de Compostela. She also visited Julian of Norwich, whom she admired. Her book describes her travels as well as her mystical experiences and her deep compassion for sinners.

These three writers of vernacular English mysticism, together with the anonymous authors of The Cloud of Unknowing and the Ancrene Wisse, all exerted a great influence on later English and Anglican spiritual writings.


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